Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-04-30 - Orange Coast Pilotl I . : 1.0NOOH (AP) -The three 1urvlvin• ex-Beatles -Geor1e Harrl.ICft, Paul McCartney and Rln•o Starr -perform toaether on a new record ·a1ngle com- memorat.i\\1 alaln Bealle John LeMOD, Warner Broe. Records Hid today. J"All Thole Vean Aio." to be released May 15, la the flnt rec- ord featurin1 all three aurviv- lDI BeaUes pla)'i.QI totetbit Oil the 1ame record' track alrice \ht eroup 1plit in mo. · A apokeaman said the IOftl was wrttt.eo by Harrison UMl is one of the cuts oD bla albwD, ·'Somewhere ln Enlland," be1nl released worldwide ln June. The album ta the flnt by Ha.rriJon since bis "Georl• Harrlaon" LP nearly two years ago. f "All TboH Yean A10" bat references to LenDOo, who wu '•laln outside hJ1 New York •apartment D~c .. I, the spokesman said. But be reluled to dlaclote the lyrics. On ••All Tboee Yean Aao," Harrison plays lead ,Wtar and la the lead vocalllt, McCartney , plays bus and be and bla wife, Linda, alng backup, and Starr plays drums. Since the 1roup spilt, ex- BeaUet have played for each othtr'a aolo albums but au three bad not prevtou1ly recorded to11ther in the same studio. Starr , Harrllon and McCartney 1ot to1ether Monday nl1ht l.n London for Starr's wed- dlnl reception after the drum· mer'a marrta1e to American ac- treae Barbara Bach in London. Although 1ultar1 and other equipment were brou1ht i.nto Raa1 nllbtclub for the affair. the three did not perform. Starr bu not released a aoJo reeord.lq ln three years an~ has instead concentrated on an act- lnt career. McCartney's 1roup, "Wings," received a setback Wednesday when foundin1 member and lead guitarist Denny Laine suddenly qult after McCartney halted all public appearance•. Hla ~·­partUN left only McCartney aDd hie wtre as permanent members. The New Standard, LOlidoft'• evenin1 newspaper, re~rted that McCartney batted WIDP' concerts after recelvln• ddtb threats followln1 the 1laYtnt of Lennon. But a McCartney spokesman denied that death threats irtfluenced his decision. 1.TenniS star to sue· hairdresser I I Cooler readings expected Low clouds and fog are expect· ed to' end a two-day unseasonal holspellthatsentUtousandstothe beaches along the Orange Coast. A National Weather Service spokesman said there will be fog and low cloudiness along the coast tonight and Friday with tem- peratures cooling to the mid 70s to 80·degree range. The 20 mph Santa Ana winds that buffeted Orange County Wed· nesday should diminish today, the spokesman 1 said . Southern California Edison Co. officials said the wlnrus caused no prob- lems for electric customers in the county. Near 00-degree temperatures w4re recorded throu1hout Orange County Wednesday. J . Sherman Denny, a HunUnaton .Beach weather buff, laid at 1: 30 p.m. lt was 91 deerees in that beach city. Area beaches for the second day in a row reported larae I crowds for this time of year, wttb water temperatures warmln1 to .. the mid60s. <See ROT, Pase Ai> Wet sand catches reflection of fem.ale "beach visitors cooling ojf Wednesday . 'I Leslie Hering, 4, of Fountain Valley finds pool refreshing, while motorcyclist naps in th~ sun. • • DA tells tough views on cnme Hicks lashes 'rehabilitation' in Costa Mesa talk, pushes stiff penalties Oranee County District At· torney Cecil H1ckl had these iou1h words about crime and punlahment durinl a Town Hall of Califomla meeting In Costa Mesa Wednesday. ••A penalty for any offen21e must be aWift and sure." -"I'm alck to dealh of the wbole subject of rebabWtaUon <ol those Incarcerated>. 1he purpoee of any penalty la punlab· ment. • -"How abodt a mandatory llve years (in priaon) for-use of ·• sun (in tbe commlaalon of a crime), and a requirement that tbt penoc1 serve all flvt yean." • -Of the SS75,000 betn1 1penl :,by the flide1al aovtmment to U· i •bt in tile HHttl•ment of bOmoHaual Cuban refu1tea, IUtU told tbt Wecbield~ DOOD .: aHlenee at South Cout Ptau ·Roe.I: "It'• our mcney -,~ • i:n.tM -boJ, would 1 Ut• to • '" that put to a better UM • • • • ~· crtmie." • While admlttin1 be bad no "bandy solutions" to crime pro· blema, Hlcka dlacuaaed several areas in which he said improve· mentl could be made. Hicks said proce11tn1 of criminal caaea ln the courtl must be speeded and limit• placed on the number of pr•· lri•l motions that a criminal de· fendant may punue. Citin1 a case in which more than one year wu spent on a pre-trial motion, Hicks said ~e defense attorney tried to create an l11ue where none existed. Hic~a Indicated he wu pleased wtlh a recent declaloo ol the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Ap- peals overturnlna a U .s. l>iJtrlct CoW't J""•'• order that federal priaonen be ent!Ued to aeparate Still raided in Maryland M ECHANJCSNIL'4E, Md. <AP> -A 48-year~ld tmuruce •sent Ml bten cb&r1ed 1'ttb m alc:lnf lll•aal moonablnt 1Jhlakey ln a 1tlll la hi.I baH· meat, otftdalt ea1d. Manhl ~•P'Oketman lot the ·ltat. 1\1 an4 ll Tax DlvUlGD, •aid ttate ud tu .,.u CCJlillK• 1anom ol moonahtne wb!M II UGn Jara dul'lQf a rald C111 • Billie Jean King says claims in 'palimony' suit unfounded LOS ANGELES CAP> -Billie Jean King's attorney says the tennis star will file suit against a hairdresser who contends she and Mrs. King lived to1ether as homosexual lovers during the early 1970s. Marilyn Barnett. 32, a former employee of Mrs. King, filed a "palimony" suit Tuesday seek· ing an interest in the house that she says Mrs. King bought for her. Ms. Barnett. confined to a wheelchair after a fall in the late 1970s, .has lived in the house since 1974. Mrs. King said in a statement Wednesday that Ms. Barnett's allegations were "untrue and unfounded." The professional tennis player also said she was "shocked and disappointed" by the action of her former secretary, who used to make her travel arran&e· menta and screen telephone calla. Mra. Kine's attorney. Denni.a WHaer, said he will flle suit to have Ms. Barnett evicted from the house, owned by Mrs. Kin& and her husband, Larry. Wasser said he was an expert in defending such ''palimony" cases, which have proliferated an California since Mic helle Triola Marvm won $104,000 from her long-time lover, actor Lee Marvin, after they split. Wasser cont e nded Ms . Barnett's lawsuit stems from the Kings' attempt to empty the Malibu house so it can be sold. Ms. Barnett contends Mrs. King promised to take care ol her financial needs and gave her access to blank checks signed by Mrs. King. "On or about May 1972 in Los Angeles,·' Ms Barnett and Mrs. King met and began datin1 on a regular basis," the suit said. ''Sexual intimacy between Barnett and Mrs. Kine com- m eo ced approximately aix mooths after their first date." Ms. Barnell said she eave up a (See TENNIB, Page A2) Boston slur .irks Cleveland mayor CLEVELAND <AP> -Mayor George V. Voinovich, milled when his counterpart in Boston said financial woes are changing the Massachusetts city "from Camelot to Cleveland," said today be would mail Kevin H . White a talk entitled, "Prescription for a Dying City." Bo6ton's mayor made the remark Wednesday as he dis- cussed the possibility of his city's going bankrupt. The school system there bas exhausted its budget, and the city faces a tremendous loss in revenues because of a law limit- ing property taxes. Voinovich heard White's comment on NBC's "Today" this morning. Voinovich planned to deliver a speech tonight called "Prescription for a Dying City" at Ohio University .. The mayor also planned to send White a letter with the speech, asking him to refrtfn from comparing Boston with other cities in the future. Kidnapping, sex claims challenged By DA VlD KUTZMANN .,, .. Deltr,.... .... The credibility of four women who claim a suspended Oranie County Sheriff's Department dep- uty kidnapped and falsely im- prisoned them baa been assailed by a def enae lawyer who said bis client was 1.nnocent. ln opening statements to an eight-woman, four.man Oran1e County Superior Court jury, at· tomey Al Stokke said Wednea· day that deputy Geor1e Loudermilk was beinl accused by "two hysterical women, a proaUtute and an admitted per· jurer." Loudermilk,· 37, of Costa Meta, I.I char1ect with takin1 tbe WQ!DeD to isolated area• after atosJlMI their vehicles while on duty. In the most aasravated ol the cases, accordina to proaecuton, the law elllorcesnent officer la • aJteaed to ban tbreattned tq rape and till a lll11lbn Viejo woman after t.a.lllna btr 1ntO tb• bill• near lrilne. Tb• alleaed abducUona oe· curred between July • and Oct. 21 ol last year. But Stokke, ln hll remarkl to tbe Jllf1. Nld b.11 cUent aner forced any~ the wom•n tO IO with blm and that tbetr preMDCe ln bl• CndMr -ln mOlt HNI -wa1~ti&al. "Tbll WU not I lddDQIMt 1lt"•~" be •aid. '1He1 afdD't force~ to do aJlJtblu." Stokke al10 clalintd~ tbat Loudermilk made no Improper I • . ' sexual advances against tbe women, who in most cases were pulled over on suspicion of drunken drivin1. The defense lawyer said ~e <See DEPUTY, Pa1e A2) DRAICI COAST 1111111 Low clouds night and morning. Sunny Friday If. ternoon. Cooler with low. toniabt of S6 alon1 the coast, 62 inland. Hi1b1 Friday 70 to 75 at the beachei, Tl to 84 inland. 111101 TDUY ABC Nftll and CBS N.w are tnvoh,.d tn a c.nou dog/"1ht OM' 0 ,....,..,. ,.. port. Ste PoQ. C12. 11111 I, I I 1 APW...,._ BiUie Jean Kmg <shown with husband Larry m 1972) wiU 1ue hairdresser who etc.ams to have been heT Lesbian I.over. From Page Al TENNIS ••• hairdressing career to become secretary, confidante, compan ion and cook so that Mrs. King's energy ··could be totally directed toward playing tennis " Ms. 6arnett's lawyer, Joel Ladan, refused to say whether the alleged homosexual rela· tionsh1p took place while Mrs. King was l1v1n~ with her husband or whether Ms Barnett paid rent for the house He said thoi.e matters had nothing to do with the suit Wasser said Mrs King was married in 1965 and the couple have never been separated ln 1971, Mrs King became the first female athlete ever to wm more than $100.000 an a year She was thl' No I rnnked woman tennis player 1n the world through most of the 1960s and 1•arly 1970s. and won or shared a 1 ecord l)'ln~ 19 Wimbledon t 1 t ll'S In a stat(•mc•nt n.-l1•ascd IJy puhlici<;t Pat Ktni::!-.ley and the Womf"n's Tennis A-,so1·1at1on \f1 s l\1ng<,,1id · · W ht•n I <Jc<:1dc·d to cut down on some of m:> business a<.' tiv1lles and concentrate more on pln}ing 1t•nn1s Martl)n s work wa.., phased out • .ind sht' rNurnt·d to her form'-'r profl·ss1on as a ha1rsl>hst 1n Rl'Vl'rly Hills My husband I.arr) i.lnd r hil\l' heen \ t•r) s~ mpatht•t1r to her µlight 111 the last (l'\\ ) ears ' Windfall tax issue unclear SACHJ\M f~NTO I A I' t Oil tom pan1l'"> eould not l<ike $70 rn ii hon 111 :.latt' tax deductions for the federal windfall profits oil tax under a bill approved by the Assemhl} lax l'omm1ttee By a 9 7 vote Wednesday, the Revenue and Taxation Commit· tee sent AB746 h) Ass1•mbl)man Lawren('l' Kapiloff. D San DH•go. to the Ways and Means Committee Don Vaughn, yachtsman, dies at 54 Uoo Vaughn. a colorful ) achlsmen whose sai ling achievements gained him in- ternational recognition, died Wednesday while crewing on a yacht during Antigua Race Week 10 the Caribbean. Vaughn. 54, was an expert foredeck man on some of the worfd "s best-known yachts engaged in world competition The 6·foot-5, 243-pounder col- lapsed on the foredeck or the 65· foot sloop Mehitabel owned by Don RusseU of Newport Beach and skippered by Burke Sawyer. Newport Beach. He had recently completed the rugged Southern Ocean Racing Circuit out of f''londa m which he was the sail· ingmaster and foredeck man on the 72 fool yacht Windward Pa~sage Reports said Vaughn was t·ngaged in a heads'! change when he collapsed. Feijow crewmen tried to revive him by arltciftcal res piration and a doctor was called from a nearby yacht. The doctor pronounced Vaughn dead Cause of death was not im - m<>rliately known \"aughn was born 1n Santa Ana Nov 13.1926.thesonofFranltand Louise Vaughn Hi1 father -a flgurt· as colorful as his son was thl• f1r~t constable in Costa Mesa Don Vaughn attended elemen tan ~l·hool<; in Costa Mesa and "as d ">tar athlete in football and track at Harbor High School an Newport Beach After graduahng r rum high school he attended San· l<1 Ana College where he obtained an A A degree He was also a star football player al San Jose State lJn1 \'ersity where he graduated with a B.A. degree. He took post· ~r aduatework at UCLA Hi s prowess on the football field in high school and college resulted an his being drafted by the Chicago Cardinals where he played three years as an end. During his high school and col· lege career he also served as a Newport Beach lifeguard Dao• Point rtttaurateur Robert M&rdian Jr., C'Ollridid of reek.ten drlvtna bi a 1m aed· dent tbat left a teen·a1e boy with crlppllna lnjurte11 te.tifled in a $2.5 mUllon clvU trial wecme. day he never aaw the youtb before lo1\n1 control of hl1 sports ear. Mardlan, owner of several restaurants ln Southern California and ffawaU, said be lost control of bis Ferrari automoblle on eastbound Del Obispo Street near Doheny State Park near Dana Point when be believed another vehicle was a bout to tum left in front of blm. 1'be restaurateur, who served four months in Orange County J all on bis criminal conviction, said he slammed on his brakes when he saw the other car "nudge" into bis lane and Wt1,t into a spin "as ll I were on ice. ' His sporta car spun into a curb and struck 13-year-old Michael Dawes of Capistrano Beach, wbo h ad been walking on lbe s idewalk toward the park carry- ing a fishing pole: The youth, now 17, suffered disabling inj uries that left him in a coma for six weeks. He still has speech impairment, poor memory, movement problems and psychological damage, lawyers say. His family, which moved to Santa Cruz after the accident, is d emanding $1.5 million in damages against Mardian for the boy's loss of earning ability and for medical expenses and another $1 m illion in punitive damages. During Mardian 's criminal proceedings, evidence was pre- sented to indicate the then 31- y ear-old businessman was drinking before the Sunday af- ternoon accident. A drunken dnvmg charge was filed against the restaurant owner. but it was dismissed by an Orange County Superior Court judge who ruled insuffi- cient evidence existed to support it Questioned Wednes day by Dawes family lawyer Jay C. Horton, Mardian admitted he had co nsumed alcoholic beverages before the accident. However, he denied that he ever had any discussion with a passenger in his car, Larry Hall, about the other man agreeing to take responsibility for the acci- dent as driver because Mardian had a previous convict.ion for drunken dnving. Pohce reports m1tially listed Hall as driver A Cal ifornia Highway Patrolman testified at Mar- d1an 's criminal tnal in July, 1978, that a sobriety test was never given to the defendant because be had identified Hall as ~raver of the car . M a rdian. recalling the acci- dent Wednesday, said he closed his eyes when his Ferrari went out of control on Del Obispo. He said he reme mbered hearing a "loud, high impact thud" which ne thought was a fire hydrant. · When he got out of his car, he said he saw the boy lying behind the vehic le. apparently un- conscious. He said he covered Dawes with shirts and a beach towe l a nd wailed for paramedics Tht' issue of whether 011 firms <.'an deduct the federal "indfall profits tax on their state taxes has not been resolved The stale Franchise T<tx Roard. which ad ministers lhe stale personal Ill· come .ind bank and corporation taxes, has discussed the ques· lion but not made ;J ruling Ma Nature strikes back Klans111an' s CS F speech scratched CA RSON CITY, Nev <AP> Members of the state Senate Fin ance Committee may be movers and shakers, but some are wondering if an earthquake here was aimed at them On Tuesday, they voted to kill a bill seeklng just over $20,000 for a seismic safety council. Wednesday. a quake measur ing 3.9 on the Richter scale shook lhe area No damage was reported Sen . J i m G i bso n . 0 - Henderson. said "the ground especially shook under the hotel" where Finance Chairman Floyd Lamb lives during the session. Lamb was a vocal oppo- nent of the measure. OAANGI! COAST A. scheduled appearance toda) at Cal State Fullerton by Ku Klu11 Kla n member and former con gressional ca ndidate Tom Metzger was canceled when school authorities concluded violence might break out. Metzger, a Fallbrook television re~airman . was to talk to a polt ti cal science class. A .spokesman for the college said 1t was learned this week that a student group known as the Ad Hoc Committee Against Fascism was planning to form a picket line In frontortheclassroom. ·'There was some concern that things could get out of hand," the spokesman commented. Metzger , reached today at hia repair shop, said it's not the fl1'8t time he's been asked to scrub an appearance. He said a taJk he'd scheduled at San Die10 City Dally Piiat MAIN <>F'tCE Thomas P Haley ,......... Robert N. Wffd ,,,....,. M. Thomas KHvil ... Thom.u A. Murphlne ......... , .... Chartee H LOOI ........................ Bernard 8e1tu1man ec.tllll ~L~ Kennetfl N Goddard Jr ' CllNUliMlo oi.... UOW111 a.ysc_ eai..tMM, CA. Mall adcl.-. 8o11 IMO, Cotti Mt.a, CA '21126 College was cancelled last week when violence was feared. "These lenlst groups gel out there and do a lot of saber- r a ttling," Metzger suggested, "and then it's convenient for the establis hment to back off. • • He said officials at Cal State Fullerton have asked him to send a videotape so the class can hear his views. "Due to these cancellatiooa," Metzger said, "l'U be taping a half-hour show to pass around. lt won 'l be as good as the real thing but it'll still be a no-bolds-barred format." M et.zger aroused controversy lasl year when be was nominated to the Democratic ticket to challenee Republican incumbent Clair Burgener. Met.qer was soundly defeated, though, loain1 by a marlin of 86 percent to 13 percent. Sign language life saver MARINA DEL REY (AP~ A suicidal youna deaf man wu placed under obsertaUon at • hospital alt.er a 1heritf'1 deputy used siln l~le to convinee' him to come away ~m the ectae of a m ·story P.atklnC structure • autbonU• aata. aa~ Scott Butcher, 11, ot . Lo• ADaet• • .,., taken to Coun· ty Hartior·UCLA Medical C~t.11" for 72 houri OI obMJ'Yadon AftA!l' tbe incident early WectrMiihi. aald Lo• An1elu Coa11t1 1benrr'1 DeputJ Merlyn .,... plet.Oft. This old building refused to collapse in Santa Ana after being accidentally nudged by a bulldoUT at a project next door Building evacuated after corner falls About 18 apartment dwellers who normally live in one of the oldest buildings in downtown San- ta Ana woke up instead today in modem motel rooms. Their old brick and wood home al Fourth and Ross streets in the city's redevelopment district was evacuated Wednesday after a bulldozer excavating next door apparently dug too close, causing a cornerottbelr building to fall A crowd of people braved the heat Wednesday to stand outside the bullding to see if it would col- lapse, but it didn't Ins tead, a wreckinJ{ crew was called m to pull the bulldozer to safety and to knock down the potentially dangerous overh ang so the building can be braced Bulldozer operator Bob Reyes Ailing mom can keep kids BOISE, Ida ho <AP l A parent's health is a valid con· sideration in determining child custody, but a district court overemphasized Lynnae Moye Baughman's epilepsy in award- ing custody of her two children to their fathe r , the Idaho Supreme Court says. The court ruled that Mrs. Baughman's condition, which requires medication and gives her migraines, did not suffiCient- ly support the conclusion that tbe cbildren's best interests lay with their father Other relevant fac tors we re not duly con sidered, the court said. The Supreme Court sent lhe case back to District Court for new consideration of Norwalk wasn't injured. but said he was shaken when the debris fell around him. The building is part of a block of old commercial and offices build- ings to be renovated as part of the redevelopment south of the civic center. Owqer Steven Keiser, an Orange dentist , has approved plans to link the buildina with a new. two-story $2. l million office com pl ex next door The excavating was for that new project . called Parkside Plaza. Jim Stevenson. assistant direc tor of disaster services for the American Red Cross. said the apartment residents were given food and cloth10g and placed 1n motels Thursday night The accommodations will be of rered at least through Friday and perhaps the weekend. he said, while questions of contractor liability are answered Tonti Dev·Co. of Irvine is the general contractor. Dollar higher on world market LONDON (AP > -A new surge in U.S. interest rates pushed the dollar higher against ·most major foreign c urrencies today. Gold prices also rose. The dollar soared against the Japanese yen in hectic trading in 1'okyo, following a market holiday Wednesday. After open- ing higher al 214 80 yen, the dollar closed at 215 yen. up from Tuesday's finish of 212 45 yen For your first lady on Mother's Day. Our cl~ver ~ndant in diamonds, Lucite:-and 14 karat yellow gold wm tell her she takes first place with you. S300. SLAVICK·s lllftt,........ Since 1917 ll•J' U' omc.r WU ool1 tm.ni Jl to CounM1 the .omen wbell be l1ttr 4roH them to ltolated area1. "' • Ducdbm1 tbe lour women who wUt tHtlf)' acalnwt bl• clleat. tokh said two ., .... .. b71\etical,'' one worlltd ln a ma1aa1• earlor and another •d·. mltted to tying at a preliminary bearlna about who 1be w .. out wttb before beJn1 stopped by; Loudennllk. However, a t Loudermilk's. Central Oran1e County Munlclpal Court preliminary hearin1, the Miulon Viejo woman tftlified that the deputy drove her to an orchard near the. Newport Freeway and told her she was "very vulnerable to be- ing raped." She ~aid he later drove her to: a hill area near Irvine, where· she pleaded with him not to till' 11\er The defendant, the woman· ~Id. eventuaUy took ber baack to= her car m Tustin. where she bad been stopped. Loudermilk is charged wttb four counts of kidnapping and· three counts of false imprison- ment. He was suspended "from duty pending trial and is free on his own recognizance. From Page A1 HOT ... Newport Beach lifeguards said 45,000 people showed up to beat' the heat No rescues were report-i ed and no major incidents.' However, a lifeguard spokesman said beachgoers were plagued by: an attack of ladybugs. · Reportt!dly there were so' many, some of.the ~ach crowd was driven away by mid· afternoon "It's a great plot for a movie, don't you think?" one lifeguard commented. Laguna Beach reported a crowd numbenng about 7,000, with no rescues or incidents. Hun- hngton city ltfeguards said 16,500 people crowded onto the sand. Lifeguards said they had 31 rescues because of numerous rip currents throughout the day Huntmgton Stale Beach and . Bois a Chica State Beach reported a combmed total of 50,000 people Ten rescues were completed at the two beaches Lifeguards said surf Wednes- day was a small one lo three feet Air temperatures on the beaches ranged from 79 to 86 degrees. Lifeguards said the 60-degree waler temperatures were un seasonably warm for this time of year * * * Record heat to continue d y The Assodat~ Press Record high temperatures were expected to continue in much of Northern California to- day, but sea breezes were ex- pected to increase during the day. cooling temperatures som ewhat Increasing fog and low clouds with a chance of rain in the far north were also forecast . The warm weather extends to the Sierra Nevada, where Lake Tahoe expected a high of 73° and Yosemite expected to reach 86 today Doctors hopeful WASHI NGTON '-AP) -Doc- tors say they are optimistic a bout White House press secretary Ja mes S. Brady's re- covery despite the probable ex- istence of a small rip in the lin· ing surrounding his brain. F .. h1on blan4, Nfwpon C.ni.r, ~port 8euh, 7141~·1380 WHl~f I l..tpM Hiit I Mba\Oft VWjo f Nof\h Onnp I Th. Cl~ Loe Cfffttll • In• wan. Aleo c-WT Loe Anplft I San Ditto I \.a• v..,.• u._ ........... ~ ..... ,..,..., "-"""~VISA. ....... o.i... Mm*r f11t, ,,..,,,,.,. C11iM 't • • •• ~eath elUes sagg~t:. Private eye tries to clear NB man - Rep. Clement Zablocki, Democrat, subdues en· thusiasm as he listens to President Reagan's economic address to a joint session of Congress. ............. A flag-waving crowd of 75,000 cross~ the moat to the Imperial Palace to wish Em· perior IUrobito well on bis 80th birthday. The cutaway-clad em· peror, the world's longest reigning monarch, appeared four times on a bullet-proof balcony and told the crowd, . . r hope for the continued good health of all of you." Peter Sweeney, 8, of RockvilleCentre. N.Y., holds a copy of his get-well Letter to President Reagan , as Peter's second grade teacher. Mrs. Fishkind, beams. Parts of the letter were quoted by Reagan in his speech to Congress Tuesday night. Ou repairs irk senator A state senator who couldn't get h is car door molding fixed so 1t wouldn't leak in a car wash proposed that the stale certify auto repair shops Sen Robert Presley. D Ri verside, said his ex· perience with the leaky door molding produced "total ex- asperation" and set him to investigating the car repair question He said he discovered in· competent auto repair is the No. 1 consumer complaint in both California and the Unit· ed States //# ....... Lady Gabriela Marina Alexandra Ophelia Windsor, newest member or the British royal family and 18th in line to the throne. left a London hospital four days after her birth Lady Gabnela. known to the ramtly as . Ella: IS the daughter of Prince Mlcbad of Kent. first cousm to Queen EUubeth II, and his wire. Prlacess Michael, the Auslnan-born former Baro- ness Mane Christine von Reibn1tz South Korea President Chun Doo-Hwan shoots an arrow from an ancient-style bow during ceremonies marking the birthday of Korea's most famous Navy hero, Adm. Yi-Sin at a shnne south of Seoul "I reel extremely well. I am very lucky," the princess said as she left London's St Mary's Hospital , Pad· dington, with her husband and the couple's 2 year old son. Lord Frederick Windsor. The 16-year-old daughter or the Rev. Robert Schuller, founding pastor of Crystal Cathedral in Garden Grove, and host of the television show "Hour of Power." un· derwent surgery in Whittier lo amputate her left knee Carol Schuller. one of five Schuller children, was 1n jured in a motorcycle acci dent in July 1978 in Sioux City, Iowa Doctors at an Iowa hospital amputated the leg below the knee shortly after the crash. However, after nearly two years, the knee failed to re· gain the ability to flex and doctors recommended further surgery. She was reported resting comfortably and may be re- leased within a week. Summer gives preview Temperatures unseasonably warm U.S. sununary hmperet.,.... -re unwa--.., i.oc In Ceflfonll• a<>d owr tt.e C-rat a..O _,.-.. AU....11~ ll.alH \111- NJ, w1111e ---comlnlM4 o.,.,, tlle c-•• GUif •i..IH Tlllt_...,ma•~ from Uft. tr•I Louisiana acrou ce""•I •1-.me -Mrtllem 0eoro1e Int• lM ......... C-011,..., H rel" .. 11 over Ille ~ Mltebf~ \/alley •!Id , ........ ~-I ll•tley. llut 1lld ••re talr lro~ Ille Paclll< CM•t tllro119ll Ille ,.taint trom ,..,,.,." Teo• 111ro11011 tll• Oekotat. Tiie tone.I '°' toes.., calla lor ,,_.,. '"""' Ille upper Greet Lek" •<rOH ""'I-Ofllo Valley 11110 the central ~!Kiii-. 0-CHt 1111o1 were preflc1ed ler "°'',,.'" New ltttlan<t. Su11ltllM_f..._t 1~ MOSt•f tlleretlof .. lllltlen. r.,,,._.._ •t mldNy w-... Uy rM9111 ff..m a low Of '2 ....... In c.r ...... l.lfftftl-. MelM, "' a ll191>efl4lf'~ll!llJthe l'~Of \,.el ....... -· K • c........-.......... ~. IMKllad ta Ille ..... • IM ._ralllA fMC .... ... ..,... ......... "*'" of '° tiw UWdeteMtlnlttt. Weattwr ~~ _,..,_ M• wllldl ..,.. petclly <M*I ,., .-......... .._..,, • Ill\ ..... .., .. ...... , .. ,,,.~, .... Met----•b blemed "'* ..-tine .. ,,.,..,et.wet en • 111"' prH111r• 1rste"' W1Wc11 ~ HMtlo9"11 llM Cantrel c.Jlfllrnl• ..... IMoc'*" , ... "'-... wlML deQrM Ptlg!Wr ,,,.,. the record of '2 Ml In 1'4S. IM mercury el k..,n C-ty Air-' In llelleuf .. ld pe••ed et "· • de9r• ..-. IN" an 1"5 ,... c«d. Stoc•ton't lllofl ot .. KljpMd • 1tn r.corw of"· , E vel\ •••• ,., ..... Wed11UO•y c..,ldll'I -0. .... l 111 downtown s.<#am.1110. ,., lna!MICe. a tem Htlll11re ef '1 .-.-Ml II ,,.... merk ror momtno mllll""""' TM atd recordw•flde9f-. In \'21 Jim Alf'°"" • meteor04o!ll1t fOI' Ille Nat..,,.. Wtather Service, Mid• 1119'1 ,,_. tyMafll -· -· Of lfHWn ""'""' s.-c*'*'nM wit/I •" ~r·lewl ,_ pr-re .,, .. ••• , MtJllCO ,., ..... ., Albvq ... Amar1tlo AM"°'e91 ·-11 .. Allan la Atlal\lC Cly a.iumar-. llrmlnthm lllm•rQ lolw ... ton llllffelo Cnart1t11W\/ .c,_.._ 64 St .. S4 " u " . 11 ,. .. '2 7' S4 IS M M .. '° .. 7' .. 74 • S4 0 n " n Sl <Alifomia Southern Calif omia wrf report. a.. ,,_ ti •• " 10 ._. .......... ......... I 2 IW \ 2 IW 1 ' ~ t I I* We're 1.isten/nn. · •• ~ . ;,, ~ Wbatdo you l._• about the Dally Pllo4? What don't you Uke? Call UM nomber below and your meuate will bei recorded, tranteribieid aNl delivered to tlMt appr~rtat. eclltor. Thi hme 24·how' anaw•rfh8 service m1y bei used to record letten to ~editor on afty topic. Mallbo~ cont.rtbuton must ln· elude tbelr name and ttiepbone number for vertncaUon. No clrcUlitioft cialll, pl a . Tell UI Oil'• OD your mind. 642·6086 ... Clllcev<> '° 41 Cll\CIMell u " c1e .. 1and SI ... Col um-6S S5 Oel l'tWlll " 60 Denver 1' 41 OUMOl,,.1 IO ,. Detroit S2 47 Duluth ,. • FelrtMtMS u ,. Hertford ,, $) ... , .... .. 57 .. _.111 .. ., ., 11ou1ton " 7l lftelrl•oll• ff S2 JeC11111vll• .. u J"" •• " S7 41 Ken1 City ,, ,. LHll99M ,. " Little llocll .. N LOlllSVllle 7S u Memp/lla 13 .. Ml•ml 12 74 Mllwtull• S2 41 Mpla-St.P u 4l Nellllvlllt 7' •2 New Orie-IS .. .... v-7S S7 Norfolk " .. Otll• City IS S4 0.-lla 71 u Orlel\CIO .. ., PMMldpllle • S7 ,.,..,. .. 100 1' Plt111M1rgt1 " Sl P11end, Me ,. ... Ptlend,Ore ,, S4 l'l•plf CllY 11 u l'l•no .. ,. Ill<-I S ., SattUU n '2 S.•ttt• ,. SJ It Lotlla ,. ~ Sl,.·T~ ... .. StSteMat'te ,. " ~ ... 10 .. TWIM .. SJ Watltlf18111 u " (.Ai.I..,. .. , • :=va11ey a lt2 enl• 100 ., .. , .... .. u ··--ta $$ •It•-1' u .. ...., .. .. llYlllt \04 ,. CMtllM n .. II c:.Mrt .. .. ... ,.... ~ .. ,,_ .... ... ~·-., 41 LMthedl .. " LMA,.._ .. u 1Nryt¥Ulil " .. -.. ........ " ., ....,.., Mt.WU-.. . II M ....... ... " .....-rt .... " a.I 0.IW " .. °"' ... .. " ........... ... .. ,, ....... " .. .,...,.... :: ...,.,... ...... . .. ........ CMr .... l: = ......... . .. A private detective who 11 try. lot to dllprove murder char1es a1atmt the accused slayer of a Laauna Nl,uel man le canvu1- ln1 the area around the murder scene seeklnl additional clues. Benjamin Harroll, a San Dhs10 inveati1at.or hired by at· torneys defendtn1 32-year-old Patrick Fo1arty of Newport Beacb, who ls char1ed with committlnc the murder, says he beUeves the accu.aed man la in· nocent. For tbe paat week HarrolJ bu been dlJtributing fliers ln the nei&hborhoods near Ellendale Drive in Laeuna Niguel, where durinl the evenina houn Feb. l, Donald Frank Cook 1tru11led with a llnif e wieldin& attacker, and died after beinl stabbed re- pea tedJy with a long-bladed knife. The 25-year-old Bechtel Corp. engineer was found lying dead in the bedroom of his home at 297'2 Ellendale Drive by his room- mate and co-worker , John Hasircoglu. at 12:30 a .m . on Feb. 2. Reportedly Cook was last seen alive by his roommate at about 6 p.m . Feb. l . o.lly ....... SCENE OF SLAYING Murder clues sought About two weeks after Cook's body was discovered, Fogarty was arrested at Irvine City Hall. where he worked as an engineer· ing technician for the city. The fliers that Harroll has been distributing ask anyone who knows anything about the s l ay ing to contact him . However. resident• aton1 Ellen- dale Drive and aurrouodln1 streets have aald they beard nothln• unusual on the ni&ht of the murder. But Harroll saya he finds that hard to believe. especially since a .45·callber handgun waa fired at the dead man's house on the ni1ht oC the murder. Harroll also said Foearty's at- torneys have• witnesses placin1 him miles away from Laiuna Nl1uel at the time of tbe murder. Defense attorney Thomas Sukall of San Dle10 said "there is a serious questlon as to wbetber Fogarty wu involved at all." Szakall made the statement after a closed preliminary hear- ing al South Orange County Municipal Court after which Fogarty wu bound over to stand trial in Superior Court on first degree t,nurder charges. Deputy District Attorney Paul Meyers has characterized Cook's slaying as a revenge murder Cook had been dating Fogarty's estranged wife, An· drea, according to Meyers . County weighs • raises Clerical salaries said 'below market levels' Even though a three year con· tract for c lerical workers doesn't expire until June 1982, Orange County adm101strators have &greed to consider a new round of salary mcreases The request for the new negotiations came from the Orange County Employees As sociation, which represents the 2, 700-worker clerical unit It is the largest of any county worker group The association, however. wanted new salary talks for five of its units. Workers in each group are receiving a 5.4 per- cent salary increase this year. which association leaders say Is too small. Bert Scott, couqty personnel director. said salary talks for the clerical unit were approved becauae studies indicate that c lerical salaries only have dipped below market levels Higher wages will aid recruit ing, he sald County supervisors have met in private executive sessions during the last few weeks and agreed to new clerical negotia- tions, an aide said. Scott said terms of a new pro- pos a I sent to OCEA are not public. He said it includes pro· UC/ sumrrwr classes set More than 260 classes in· eluding writing, engineering, in- ternational relations and com puter science will be offered this summer at UC Irvine. Two six·week sessions are scheduled. They run from June 22 to July 29 and July 30 to Sep· tember 4. For more information call 833-5493. v1s1ons for salary increases and benefit adjustments. mcludmg cash payments in lieu of vaca· lion A typist-clerk working for the county currently can earn from $884 to $1 ,040 mont hly Secretaries to department heads can make up to $1,390. One or the county's offers 1s to take over administration of op l1onal benefits such as life, ac- cidental death and dental in· surance. Those programs are run by the association for all workers, even if they aren't members. Scott said county supervision would make the system more accountable because of the availability or public audits, and would relieve workers of pres- sure to JOtn unions Meanwhile, association of·J f1c1als say they're upset that only clerical workers are to get rai ses An association spokesman said an "excellent strategical program·· has been devised to force the so-called salary reopeners for four other worker groups the general worker unit community services unit, s upervisory management unit and superior court clerk unit Worker$ have been en- couraged to attend a May 8 rally at the Santa Ana Civic Center and to attend one of five workshops at the OCEA head· quarters Housing sales up slightly for .March WASHINGTON (AP) -Sales of new single-family houses rose slightly in March despite con· tlnued high mortgage interest rates, the government has re· ported. However. an industry group said sales of previously owned houses dropped again during the month. And s pokesmen for builders and sellers complained that high interest rates are mak· ing recovery from the current housing slump very difficult. New houses were sold at a seasonally adjusted annual rate or 511,000 during March, up 0.6 percent from February's newly revised rate of 508,000. accot'tl- ing to the report by the depart- ments of Commerce and Hous· mg and Urban Development. The sales rate had fallen 3.2 percent tn February, the report said The new March rate was still about 9 percent above the level in March 1980, when last year's recession was beginning to take hold Disaster seminar slate d in Anaheim A disaster preparedness sem inar, sponsored by the Oran ge County Chamber of Commerce and designed for business and industry, will be held May 28, 7:30-10 :30 a.m. at the Anaheim Convention Center. For reservation information, call the OC Chamber of Com· merce at 634 2900 NOW IN THE SALE'S FINAL WEEKI i : ~ •. ~· ..... . -.. -. . .. ~~~~~~~·~·::: ~ .... ............... ~ONSTER WORLD -Eight-year-old Marcel LaGrange, intent on roller skating, seems ob- livious to gigantic zebras painted on wall of Portland, Me., housing complex. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Pentagon march slated Anti-war activists gearing up for Sunday protest WASHINGTON <AP l -ln an echo of the Vietnam era a de- cade ago, anti-wRr activists are gearing up for their first major national protest against U.S. military involvement in El Salvador a march Sunday on the Pentagon While hesitant to give a firm prediction on how many people will take part, organizers for the People's Anti-War Mobilization said they expect ·•tens of thousands" to participate from as far west as Te~as and as far north as Minnesota. "This will be the largest m anifestalion of resistance to Reagan's war policies and in· sane domestic policies." said Brian Becker, a national or- ganizer for the march. "We ex· pect th.is to be a kickoff to a new movement " SMALLER MARCHES are planned Sunday in San Fran- cisco, Seattle, Denver , Kansas City and Tucson, Ariz. The focus or the protests will be President Reagan's decision lo increase the number of U.S. .military advisers in El Salvador from 34 to M and to send $25 million in weapons to bolster the ruling junta. But organizers also are trying to link that action to the president's proposed cuts in domestic spending. "Given the cutback in social .services, many black and minority groups see a con- ;nection between another war drive and the money going into an already bloated Pentagon budget," said BiU Roundtree, another march organizer. One of the march 's slogans, a reference to the unsolved murders of black children in Atlanta, says: "Defend Atlan- ta's Children. Not El Salvador's Junta." ALTHOUGH MANY of the or· ganizers are veterans of Viel· nam protests in the late 1960s and early 1970s, march or· ganlzers say a new generation or college students has become ac· live in the anli·EI Salvador demonstrations. ··People who were too young to be involved in the anti-war movement a decade ago are responding to the call," Becker said. M ucb or the opposition bas· come on collue campuses, largely with teach-ins and picketing, tactics reminiscent of the Vietnam era. But unlike the \Tletnam pro- tests, the early leadership of the anti· El Salvador movement came from U.S . Catholic leaders, some of whom ap· parently are shying away from Sunday's march . ~'This iB not an activity they <religious leaders) are support- ing very strongly," said Heidi Tarver, coordinator for the Committee in Sqlidarity with the People of El S'al vador, a group founded largely by Catholic critics of _ Reagan's polities. •'They're not very interested in going to the Pentagon." The Pentagon protest is sup- ported b.Y about 20 civil righta, labor, S'tuden t. re Jtgious. homosexual and community or- ganizations around the country, march organizers said. THEY ALSO NOTE that one of the initial sponsors of Sun· day's demonstration was the Rev. Roy Bourgeois, a Roman Catholic priest who disappeared m El Salvador this week while working as an interpreter for a CBS television crew. Opponents o r Reagan's Salvadoran pohc1es contend that the United Stales is supporting a brutal, unpopular dictatonbip that is responsible for the vast majority of the estimated 15,000 political murders in the tiny Central American nation over the past year The administration argues that Marxist guerrillas fighting for control of the country are armed and directed by Cuban and other Soviet·bloc countries. The ·communist governments in those countries have denied the charge. Bomber convicted LOS ANGELES (API -A jeweler was convicted by a federal court jury of mailing a bomb to a business competitor who had accused bim of over· charging a customer $250 for a necklace that was r eportedly worth only $50. Evidence showed the bomb was mailed Dec. 15 by Pak Shing Lam, 29, who had a booth in the downtown jewelry mart. -------AIOUt II $1 ''GREAT 9 DINNll (1 , g Gooct IOf three PIKH ~I 1u1cy. golckn brown Kentucky ~ F11td Chicken plu1 Slngfe urvlng• ol coll slaw. O mnhe<I po111ots ·~ g111ty. 1no 1 roff Limit two offers Z per pur~M. Coupon good only lor.c~b!IJ.lllon while/ I dtrk orders Cu1t0mtr pays tll 1ppllc1t>~les 11x Olfllf explre1 May 10. 1981 CtC ' I ,,~. ,.,,. ... ""' .. I ptir11clp&U~ IOCll· tlon1 Good only In Southem C.llfott1l1 I •her• you '" Amer1ea·1 l'l•VOtll• Good lor llffw pl.en of Juicy, QOldM brown Kentucky '"eel Ch!Cktfl, ... th four roll•, • larQ4l ~ 111w. 1 latOt ~ Potaloea Ind • '*''"'"' gtlW, LIITlll IWO offen I* pvrcttue. Coupon OOOd Of\IY IOf comblNllon Whllet darii ordtfl Cwtom.r pey1 ell apc>llc~ hi" ti•. Pifer expires Mty 10, l911 CIC PYie may Vlty et otr• llel~llng 1oc;a1ion1 GOOd only In So11thtrn C:.lllor,,le ~htft ~ fft ArMtle1'1 f'le'tOl'lle WlndoW 98n(ltt, WlllOOW Ballnet I -----· ' " rf . . •1 wan:• •. •EAU WA.SfflNGTON CAP) -ID a aeUIDI -Ad a 1ltuatloo Rol)7woocU couldn't bav• mate.bed, Prulden~ RH11n cro~ hla llnt 100 days -and bit co1aebacll from • bullet wound 1'"'f by telllns Con~ tt It Umt fo adOPt hit 1pend.lnf '°' tax p,.crtJ>Uc)p •• th• one and pnty c:"'" for a 1lck economy. Rea110 ii convinced the voten are oo hi• aide, and made 1uu DObocly roraot lt. Tbe words were r1mU11r, but the situation made them apeclal as the president renewed bJ1 peraon1l campalao ror tht economic profram he lnslats ii "the only answer we have letl." THE PERFORMANCE was a J(uaranteed bit, with the leadln.1 man making his first addraa since the attempt on his lire March 30. Tbe scene was stan· dard : the House chamber, before a joint se11ion of Congress, in the glare or television lights for the cameras that beamed the nation its first real look at Reagan since the • shooting. There was no outward sign of the chest wound be auf· fered four weeks a10. He grasped hands, clapped backs along the aisle as be came and went from the 27-minute ap- pearance. In circumstances like those Tuesday night, an amateur would bave been a star. And Reagan is a pro. WHILE HE IS LIKELY TO gain congressional backinJ for bis budget cuts, the House and Senate votes Jt15t ahead do not necessarily foretell the final out· COl)'le. He probably will have to com· promise later on his three-year, 30 percent tax reduction plan, although there is no sign of that now. Compromise is not the mood at the White House, not with a recovered Reagan riding high in the polls, and with leading Democrats conceding that the voters want bis budget bidding done. Reagan underscored that mood, dismissing Democratic alternatives as just about use· less. "THE AMERICAN people now want us to act. and not in half measures," Reagan said. ·'They demand and they have earned -a full and com· prehensive erfort to clean up our economic mess." Not many days ago, Reagan lieutenants were worried that the drive for his economic pro- gram was slowing if not stalling. They said the absence of the convalestlng president was a serious setback in the effort to sell his proposaJs. They don't think so now. House Speaker Thomas P 0' NeilJ Jr. has virtually con- ceded that the Democrats can· not stop Reagan's budget cuts even in the House they control. REAGAN 'S PERSONAL popularity has soared lo the public opinion polls since the as· sassinatlon attempt that wounded 1lim. Politically. he is as strong right now as a presi- dent can be. For all of that. for all the drama, and despite the signs of an administration victory In the first major votes on the budget, there is a long legislative road ahead for Reagan and his lob- l)yi s ts. The measures he ls pushing are resolutions that set the congressional budeet. Still to come are the separate ap- IT WILL JI£ A Jeftl Ud 411· ficult proress. TheN'b a lot al lobbytns, and probably aome v•· tolns. yet to come. Ac~ually, Rea1an already hu won 'on' the concept of bud1et cutting. E•e.n in th• uJl.ltkeJy event that tbe House adopted the DemocraUc ?ftolution, lt woul4 call for most of the cuta he wanta, al~h' with a ablft In aUJt,erity tueeta and a 11taller loereaile In delenM ependlnf. • Reaaan sud that would not ~ neart1 aood enouab. He wanta bit cuts, all of t6em, and his tbr ... year tu bill, not tbe one- yur plan the Demoerall have presented. He said it is the only * * * TBE TAX CUT 18 tbe laue on which Demo~rata mott likely wlll make their atand, later ln the coneresaloaal aeaaon.' So Rea1an paid •pectaJ attention to that phase of bi• proaram. "It 1.bou.ld be looked at u an lnte1ral part of the entire budeet pacltau. not sometbiog separate and apart frOJD the budcet reductions, lbe rec· ulatory relief and the mooetar)' reatralnta," he said. Reagan said the lnmocratlc version wouJd leave taxes too hJgh, and would not produce the jobs and economic growth his plan would. * * * Reagan 'pen pal' awakens celebrity ROCKVILLE CENTRE, N.Y. (AP> -Eight-year-old Peter Sweeney was excited to learn that h.is get-well letter was quot ed by President Reagan in his speech to Congress and the na· lion but said he hoped "this celebrity stuff gets over." The ch.ild was rast asleep al 9:10 p.m. <EDT> Tuesday when Reagan read the letter. and wouldn't wake up despite his mother's attempts to rouse him When lbe boy rose this mom· ing, be said, "My dad told me I was famous. a celebrity. .I dido 't even hear it!" HE ADDED THAT he wanted things to get back to normal "so I won't have to take so many telephone calls." The get-well letter was written as a project for his second-grade class at Riverside school to wish Reagan a quick recovery from the wound he !Ulffered in the March 30 attempt' on bis life. The line Reagan quoted said. "I hope you get well quick, or you might have to make a speech an your pajamas." A postscript added: "If you have to make a speech in your pa- 1amas. I warned you." Reagan wore a blue suit as he addressed a joint session of Congress and read the note. Where did Sweeney get the idea about the pajamas? "Well, 1 thought that if he didn't get better he might get embarrassed. so ir he got em· barrassed he might want to get better soon so he won't have lo make a speech in his pa1amas," he s aid THE BOY'S FATHER, a New York City police sergeant. said his son had been upset when Reagan was shot. "I dido 't know how anyone could get so close to the presi- dent." young Sweeney said to- day $50,000 .awarded in strip-search CHlCAGO <AP) -Jurors have awarded a woman $50,000 in damages for enduring a strip. search following ber arrest in 1977 on a s hoplifting charge or wbich she was subsequently ac· quitted. Soad Iskandar's lawyer John Derose had argued that lhe Forest Park Police Depart· menl's strip-search policies violated a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that searches conducted in connection with a m isde· m eanor arrest where the SUS· peel is not believed to be con· cealing a weapOn or carrying contraband are uncenslitutional. THE V.S. DISTRICT Court jury deliberated two hours Mon- day before assessing $40,000 ln compensatory damages a1ainst Zayre Department Stores Inc. and Sl0,000 in compensatory damages against the Villate ol Forest Park. It also aasessed $100 in punitive damages egainst tb.e village. The award followed th\-ee days of testimony. Tbert was no immediate com- ment from officials of Zayre and Forest Park Mrs lskandar, 39, of Forest Park, was arrested June 2S. 1977. while shopping wilb her husband. William. and wu ac· quitted in October 1977, Derose said DEROSE SAID ms client was led from the store handcuffed and in tears. She was taken to the police department and strip· searched by a woman officer. Her s uit originally sought $245,000 In damages. Delly .... Del•ery l•G-•tHd "4onday-Frlday It you do not Nv9 )'l)Ur peper by 5,30 pm call belote 1 o.m Ind )'Ol.lr OO()Y wUI be dell\IWed. Saturd9)' end Sunday II you do not ~ yOUr COOY by 7 a.rn. a.II betor• 10 • m end your copy 1Mtt be ~ GOURMET MARK·ET DELANEY'S BROS. SEAFOOD · FRESH Nortbena Red Salmoca 'MORNING FRESll PRODUCE· LOCAL-GROWN LARGE SIZE SWEET JUICY STRAWBERRIES. 3 hll bskts. $1.00 Whole or BaU ...................... 3.98 lb. We will 11-dly fllet your salmon for no extra charge DELANEY'S !llOW RAS A UMJTED SUPPLY OF FRESH swoaDFJSR. so GOOD WHEN BROILED oa BAaBEQJED. For your complete uterin1 service. from a complete sit-down dinner perty lo party trays delivered to your home For information call Delaney's CATERING Department. ask for Tom Martin DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR Delanf'y's Prlute Label Cbampape 1750 mil) 2. 75 u . or u ... per caM Bolla 'Soave <150 cnll > • • . • ........... , J.IS e~ Bel Arkea a..la Blue <750 mill ...... · · UI •· f;aH4Jan Qab (One liter l . . . . . . . . ..•..... t.M ea. ·tcoffaby .... l'JIO mU>.. • . • • . . . . . . . . • • .1.16 ... (One Utet) . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. e.as e1. AU llQUC)t and wlne pl-.taxl • " ' . ------· -------~ . .;.;... ....... __________ _ I s AS 'Le010n' ~ ref 1D1ds J I. 4 kids -placed supported SACRAMENTO (AP> -The AasembJy consumer protection committee bas approved a bill tq atve automobile buyesa refunds or new can it they 're 1tuclr with "lemons." • m state care LOS ANGELES (AP) -Four youn1 members of a sprawllnl faintly that has ama11ed some 400 arrests have been placed UD· der the jurisdiction of the state · in a cue that could break new le&al ground on what constitutes an unfit parent. Superior Court Judae Elwood · Lui issued a temporary order tbls week makina the four "Wilaon" cbildren, aeed 10, 9, 8 and 20 months , wards of Juvenile Court so they can be placed in foster homes. One child has since been placed with a grandparent, and the other three were in official custody and were to be placed in foster homes or shelter Mwel.UIU purchaae u million trork LOS ANGELES (APJ -A 17th century painting priced at $4 million was purchased by two Southern Califom1a museums The joint purchase of "The Holy Family .. by Nicolas Poussin was made over the weekend by the J Paul Getty Museum in Malibu and the Norton Simon Museum in Pasadena, with each to show it for a three-month period initial· ly, then exchange it once a year Police study autopsy results LA VERNE <API Pohce said they would review resuJts of an autopsy on a 21 year-old bar patron before deciding to file any charges m connection with hus death followtng an un hcensed, amateur boxing match at the Last Chance Saloon. Unofficial autopsy results in· dicate Vic Ayvaziana of Duarte died from head trauma after the March 10 bout. said John Finken of the Los Angeles County cor· oner's department. Tuition vew eyed SACRAMENTO CAPl The Leatslature effective veto power over tuition at the University of California. Gm1emoi'a pay to be hiked? SACRAMENTO (AP) -The governor's salary would jwtlp 58 percent and the other constitu· Uonal officers would also get hefty raises under a bill ap· proved by a Senate committee. The measure, SB238 by Sen. Alfred Alquist, 0 -San Jose, would raise the governor's salary from $49,100 a year to $77 ,409, the salary of the state chief justice. A 6·1 vote this week of the Senate Governmen· tat Organization Committee sent 1t to the Senate Fmance Com mil\.ee Brownfiks suit on oil I.eases LOS ANGELES CAP> -Ac· cusing Interior Secretary James Watt of "unbalanced" and ··ii· legal" actions. Gov Edmund Brown Jr. has filed suit in federal district court to attempt to block the Reagan administra- t10n 's plan to issue offshore oil drilling leases off the Northern Cahfomia coast. Brown's 35-page suit alleged among other things that Watt had illegally ignored Brown's re commendations and that the drilhng was a threat to the southern sea otter and gray whale Condor breeding agenda soughl SACRAMENTO CAP ) The California Department of Fish and Game wants an agenda for the first 33 years of the proposed captive breeding program for California condors The department 1s advising the state Fish and Game Com· m1ss1on, which meets today on an application by the U.S. Department of Wildlife to start capturing the condors Only about 30 of the huge birds are believed to eitist Assembly Education Committee has advanced a bill lo give the ~---~~----- TRIAL PROTESTED -Demonstrators outside the federal building in San Diego protest trial of three men accused of conspiring to bomb power transformers at the National Steel and Shipbuilding Company in San Dieszo. Defense ,.~ ......... attorney Leonard Weinglass told a federal court jury that Rodney Lewis Johnson, Clyde "Mark" Loo and David Phillip Boyd, all fired employees, never intended to carry out the plot. ---- Car buyen told the committee about cars stoppln1 on the freeway over and over, of brakes (ailine 10 times, and of st.eerina wheels fa1Un1 off. Representatives of the car manufacturers, who oppose tbe blU, countered with descriptions of new arbitration committees they say they are aettll'll up "to hopefully end up with a aatqfied c"5tomer. TJte "ote tbia week by the Consumer Protectioo and Toxic Materials Committee was S-3 to send the measure to the As· semblv floor. The bill is designed to define "reasonable" in the current con- sumer protection law It re- quires such a refund or replace- ment after ··a reasonable number of attempts" at repair Panel hacks handgun training SAC RAMENTO (AP > - Caltfomjans now have to take a training class to use tear gas but not to get a handgun, and an As· sem bly committee thinks it should be the other way around. In lengthy hearings this week lo beat a legislattve deadline, the crime committees of the two houses also approved a variety of sentencing measures. from crimes using a knife to sale of drug equipment, but turned down wiretapping proposals. It was the last scheduled meetmg of the committees lo pass money-related bills to take effect m 1982 on the year's hot- test topic. crime And gun- control supporters scored a rare, modest victory The Assembly Cri minal Justice Committee, by a bare- maJOrtly 8-0 vote, approved AB1169 by Assemblyman Mat· t.hew Martinez. D Monterey Park, sending 1t to the Assembly Ways and Means Committee. STARTING J ULV I, 1982, it would prohibit the sale, transfer or delivery of a handgun to ----------- anyone who had not either com- pleted a safety course or taken a safety test. It would not apply to police, the military or private investigators "I think it' II cut down on the a m ount of accidents in the home." said Martinez. who also said the requirement would prob- ably decrease the number of new handguns in circulation. A more ambitious gun-control bill. AB1984, was shelved by its author. Assemblyman Elihu Harris, D-Berkeley. who saw that 1t would not pass It would have required a safe- ty test and a state permit for everyone possessing a handgun. weapon and legal requirements Goggin said there aren't enough classes to meet the de· mand now, and questioned why "it's much easier these days to obtain a gun than to obtain tear · gas" The bill was opposed by the schools that give the c urrent training courses Michael Su Iii van of Personal Protection Systems said people find the courses worthwhile. and predict· ed the bill would bring tear gas products into the state that were ineffective or dangerous Two wiretapping related measures were shelved for the year when their authors saw they would be defeated THE CRIMINAL Justice Com· AB374 by Assemblyman Dave mittee voted 9·1 for AB177l by Stirling, R·Hacienda Heights, in Assemblyman Terry Goggin, D-the Criminal Justice Committee , San Bernardino, which would let was Attorney General George Californians use tear gas Deukmejian's annual attempt to weapons in self-defense without legalize police wiretapputg if a having to taJce the currently re· ·court approves it. quired training claas. SB67'1 by Sen. Ollie Speraw, R· The bill would require onJy Long Beach, aJso sponsored by that a buyer of tear gas read and Deukmejian, would have al· fill out a state-prepared form lowed police with a search war· bers dialed from a particular telephone. In putting the bill orr until next year. Sen. Omer Ratns, D- Ventura, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, suggested that Speraw address the l8sue, "To what extent do we want out privacy invaded?" BUT CONSERVATIVES scored several victories Ill the Senate committee. and at one pornt threatened lo make in roads in the 1975 slate la~ re ducing penalties for marijuana possesMon The committee also voted to ban plea bargaimng the com- mon practice or tradmg a guilt y plea for a reduced charge or sentence for most serious crimes City halts tests SAN FRANCISCO <AP I -A federal Judge has ordered the city or Salinas to stop testing firefighter applicants until progress is made in settling a lawsuit allegrng racial dis · cnmination. containing information about the rant t.o get records of all nwn· ~---~~..;.__-=-~~---'-~~~---~~-----~-~~~- -w A Superb Adventure In Dining PUBLIC SALE ONE DAY WAREHOUSE SALE OF OLD ITALIAN CUISINE •Courtesy Boot Slips • Banquet and Pnvate Porty • Foc1/Jt1es with Bay View 642-?MO JIJI w •• COPI HJc.li••.Y Newpon B•d1, CaJlfoniM ...... ....... ....... FULLY ASSUMABLE INTEREST ONLY 2ncl TRUST DEEDS OWNER/NONOWNER OCCUPIED Call Wilham B. ~1itchell Call today for QUO ... No 01>11ga11on Irons notlOf'\Ol lundtng (7141 975-1128 =~:E~ RAcm·s FOURTH AHHUAL GRADUA'TB> DISCOUNT SALE ALL OVERSTOCK&> AND LOHGSTAHDIHG JEWELRY WILL IE LICjMllDA TED AT SAVIHGS YOU'LL HEYER SEE AG AIM! KIRRY! 3 MORE DAYS! ihcJhWncJ W.ct. 29tti -800/o off remaining items °" Sat •• Mery 2ttd -OMl Y I Oc on the dollar C.Ome 1n early while selection 1s greatest. All items to be sold first come first serve ' - UNUSUAL FURNITURE & COLLECTIBLES Sat., May 2nd 9 a.m . -5 p.m. 2110 s .. Grand, Santa Ana • old oak piano • cabinets • dining sets • tables • desks • iron toys • chairs • buffets • cedar chest • dressers • watches • sewing machines • old Italian loveseat • Cushman motor scooter • handmade dolls from Ireland lrillcJ Yow Tl"llCb & Trollert & H•I Away "OM D.y o..,.. * Ho Credit Cardi * "O•• D.y O•fr .. Learn Cake Decora~~na CLASSES ST ART THE WEEK OF MAY 1 1 th Join our Cake decorating classes and discover your creat1v1tyt In 1ust six 2-hour weekly classes. you will dis· cover the marvelous Wilton method of cake decorating CLASS SIZE IS LIMITED 1 5~E~ so REGISTER TODAY1 , ... Ul'Pl•ESEXTRAI FREE C AKE DECORATING DEMONSTRATION .. SAT., MAY 2 12 :00-4 :00 FREE HOT MITT OFFER A WILTON SIGNATURE OVEN Min' IS YOURS WHEN YOU PURCHASE SELECl ED WILTON PANS OR DECORATING SET -WHILE HOT MITT SUPPL V LASTS LOS ANGELES LA MIRADA 1213)627·1631 l213)D44 D891 Cl:RRIT09 (213) S.24·0133 OA"OEN GROii! 111 4)638 3 0 ... ' I 1 I I I • The pluses and minuses are oot all ln but, on the surf ace, a proposal to annex a portion of South Lquna into the City· of Laguna Beach appears to be a good idea. A group of South Lagunans approached the City Council last week and asked that a feasibility study be done to weigh the possibility of bringing part of that unincorporated community into Laguna Beach. Specifically, the group wants a II of South Laguna from La~una 's southern border to Aliso Creek brought into the city. That would include the Treasure lsland trailer park, Blue Lagoon, Lagunita and Hobo Canyon. City officials are preparing a "quickie" study on the revenues Laguna Beach can expect to de- rive from such an annexation, plus the additional costs for police and fire protection and other services that would have to be provided the new Lagunans. It appears the South Lagunans have the most to gain from such an annexation. They complain of being ruled by a Board of Supervisors that ts remote ln distance and, they say, concern about the future of the small seaside community. Specifically, they say they would prefer to see Laguna Beach council members render decisions on such issues as pro- posed high-rise condominiums replacing 266 mobile homes at Treuure bland. And they say county officials turn a deal ear to fears of traffic congestion shoufd projects in Hobo Canyon and other South Laguna locations be approved. Laguna Beach's strict or- dinances on height limits, and the council's concern about conges- tion, storm runoff, and environ- mental issues are favored by the South Laguna group. Council members will hear the results of a preliminary re- port by City Manager Ken Frank when the panel meel3 May 5. And if things look favorable for s uch a move. the city will probably broach the subject before Local Agency Formation Commission members May 13. Official can't drop rol.e Fountain Val1ey Coun- cilwoman Barbara Brown has taken the helm of a campaign to halt what she describes as an in- trusion of hard-core pornography in the city. She said magazines of this type have surfaced al several local liquor stores and have been placed within easy view of youngsters who come in to buy soft drinks and candy or to play video games. Gathering support from about 30 residents who share her concern, Mrs. Brown has con- ducted several strategy meet- im?s. She has vowed to orJ?anize picketing in front of local stores if their owners ref use to get rid of offensive magazines. Apparently, reports of the an- ti-porno campaign -already have contributed to the removal of the offensive magazines from two stores targeted by Mrs. Brown. The courts have had a dif- ficult time defining pornography, and community standards vary widely. Few would dispute. however. that store owners should be en-. couraged to keep adult materials well out of children's reach. Some stores also employ opaque panels that hide offensive magazine covers, while leaving the titles visible. Mrs. Brown's mvolvement in the anti-porno campaign raises some interesting questions. Although s he is an elected city official and works as an aide to County Supervisor Roger Stan- ton, Mrs. Brown insists she is act· ing strictly as a concerned private citizen. She said she has been told that the city can do nothing legally to keep out the of- fensive magazines But Mrs. Brown cannot re- move her government hats just by pretending they're not there during her anti-pornography meetings. Her presence lends credibility to the group and may add weight to ultimatums direct- ed to store owners. The council woman should keep in mind that even it she isn't representing the city officially in this group. her participation pre- vents it from remaining a strictly private concern. Second spot just fine It's tough to lose the close ones. espe~ially when the score is 19712 to 1961/•. That's close in anybody's league. Such was the plight of Orange Coast College's speech team last week when the tally came in on the weeklong National Speech Tournament for community co lleges in Sacramento. A lesser team might have been thrilled with the results that saw the Pirates so close to the winning College of DuPage in Glen Ellyn, Ill. But Orange Coast's talkers are accustomed to the best. Their speech teams took sweepstakes honors two years in a row after garnering another near-miss second place in Sacramento four years ago. • This year. the Pirates took more than a half -dozen gold medals. a handful of silvers and several bronzes. But especially significant was the number of special awards captured by the coasters. Coach Michael Leigh earned the national "Coach of the Year" title; Marty Cronin was named "Speaker of the Tournament," Dave R iek won the Bell -Sc roggins Award in Lincoln-Douglas debate and the aeader's Theater team took the coveted Huffer -Go ldman Reader's Theater Award The team narrowly missed its third national title, indeed, but there is little tarnish on its glittering image. Congratulations. Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views ex· pressed on this page •re those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is invit· ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Phone (714) "42-.C321 . L} M. iJoyd/ Ancient uildom Scholars at the University of Chicago labored long to translate an ancient Egyptian messaie written on part of a broken cookin1 pot retrieved from dicglnga expected to ctve great insights Into the old •culture. Finally, they determined it wu -. dispatch from a man t.o his son. And they eventually deciphered lt: "Oo not take liberties with a woman whose husband la llstmina t.o your worda." Q. Wu there a real-life Popeye? A. No, but the cartoon's creat.or Eble Crisler Se1ar said he got the notton for the character from a town personality named Rocky Fie1el In Cheater, IU. Q. What proportion of the people in this world have no contact with television, radio, telephones or news papen? A Seven out of 10. Personal letters a lost art There ought lo be a 5·cent stamp for personal letters Letter writing is one of the good thmgs about a civtUzed society and it should be encouraged. It's a shame that everything is conspinng against letter wnhng Our whole postal system has deteriorated to the pomt where mail is no fun at all. The excite- ment we used to feel about the arnval of the mailman 1s gone It costs 18 cents for a regular stamp now That's a terrible number and you don't dare buy a roll of 18-cent stamps because you know it 's going to change before you get used lo 1t and certainly before you use up a roll I OBJECT TO the fact that it costs me more to send a letter to a fnend than it costs some fly-b} night real estate operator to send me a phony brochure in the mail telling me I'm the pro- v 1 s ion a I winner of a $10 ,000 sweepstakes I don 't like strangers knocking on my door trying to sell me someUung. and I don't want m) mail cluttered with advert1smg H anyone wants to accuse me of feeling that way because I make a IJ\.ing from the ad· vert1sing found in newspapen. and on television. go ahead and acruse mt• of it It isn't true I don't get fl\e good, genuine, personal letters a year The time is cominJt when the letter. written with pen and mk and sent as a personal message from one person to another. will be as much of a ranty as the gold pocket watch .earned on a chain It's a s hame There is somethmg special about a personal lett<>r It's better than a phone -AND-Y -RDD-Nl-Y -~ call. no matter what the telephone com pany says. A phone call disappears mto the air as soon as the receiver is put back on the hook A good letter can last a lifetime. SOME OF M\' most pret·1ous possessions are letters that have been "rittcn to mt• sometime m the past. I dofl 't have a single memorable phone call stored m u box m my attic or base menl I've never thrown away a good letter, and lake any real treasure. f don't C\ tm have to look at them to enJO) ha\'lng them I knou. I have them Tht> lc,ephone tails coml' and go They make no permanC'nt impression on me and ha' e no place in my memor) A personal letter JS a good thmR because you sav th1n~s yo~ tan 't say in a crowd and might not t.>\'en Sa} to the person face to-face rr vou feel like it. a letter allows you lo take yourself and your thoughts m ore senously than you would dare take them m tonversation And you can say things \\lthout mter- rupt ion t\ GOOD I.ETTER is, 1n many ways. the e'act oppos1t(.' C1T a pol1llcal speech A poht1c1an addrt•ssing a cro" d has to talk so broadly and generally about the issues in order not to offend an~ one of the thousands of people hstemng. that he usually ends up saying nothing. A letter ran b<.' specific. and 1f the writer has some bias or preJudacc. he can even reveal his true self by letting this show. Writing a friend. you shouldn't have to be careful Abraham Lincoln's lt'ller to his stepbrother telling him he wasn 't going to loan him the $50 he a:.ked for. tells you more about Abraham Lincoln than the Gettysburg Address dot's Some of our best hlstory has come that "a~ from personal letters of famous people that scholars haH' dis eOVl'rt•d You gel a better idea of whal somc•one 1~ reall:-. hke from a rwrsonal lettt-r the~ v.eren t cxpl'ctm~ ~ou to read than you get from u t·arcfully con sidert>d puhhc statement the) ·ve madl• We s:.n real than(:?'> 1n letters Pl•rsonal letters should go for a 5-ccnt stamp Hiring by 'auction' irks job-seekers To the Editor After a year away from work because or family Illness, I am starting a JOb search I have good secretanal skills and an excellent employment record. After studying ads. I have decided not lo answer any ad that does not state salary I am an executive secretary There are many. many ads for secretanes However, you wnte carefully worded lelters. enclose carefully planned res· um es, drive many miles, fill out lengthy (usually poorly planned) ap- plication forms. wait hours in reception offices, endure mept interviewers, and finally you learn the salary 1s lower than what you earned 10 years ago BEFORE MY last Job. I workf>d m a personnel department On many oc- tasions when we received applications from obviously very well qualified ap· plicants, the personnel director would say, "But he (or shel would want loo much money," and a m ediocre or even less qualified person would be hared, MAILBOX who, of course, would actuaUy cost the firm money. · My brother is an artist and my husband is a writer. They, too, have ex· perienced this tedious and disturbing procedure. hiring by "auction." And they are asked to put together portfolios or folders or previous work each time. If you call in and ask the salary, you get the same answers: "The pay is commensurate with your experience," or "The salary is between $900 and $1600, depending on your quallfaca· lions." And you know that means, "We'll hire the cheapest one we can get." That usually means the person who is most detperate takes the job. Although I'm not on unemployment insurance, I will boycott any firm that does not Indicate salary in the ad. Un- fortunately, meny unemployed people c•nnot afford to do this, so the racket continues. M.GREEN Hayden power play To tb.e Ed.ltor: Re your April 23 artkle 1bout Tom Hayden'• viJit to UC Irvine student.I: Hl1 bralnwublna attemp\I wtth atudenu across tblattate paintlnt a bleak p&eture of the future for them ts simply his v. ay to gather votes for his run for the 1982 Senate This man has not c hanged his approach since he began his calculated climb into power Quite efficiently he has used well placed people. includmg his wife. to further the Campaign for Economic Democracy ICED l In reality the cause and effect 1s has personal power play which JS to un· dermine this country through its youth The octopus Hayden has created has spread its many arms and threatens a deathly grip unless our sleeping societ} a wakens lo his de st ructi ve ideology ELIZABETH LAU FORD Auet abandoned? To the Editor~ Jean WaU. PresidentofSPON, makes a statement that the extension of Universi- ty Drive would be disaster to the Upper Newport Bay. What in the world is she talking about? Evidently she has not taken I.he time to look at the present con- dition of the Back Bay. What used to be a lovely blue water bay has deteriorated to an ugly mud slough. Arter rive years of abuse. procrastina tioo and total lack of maintenance by the Fish and Game Department and other government agencies. it has already reached the disaster stage and is goln~ from bad lo worse with the passing of each year Also. it would cer · tainly appear that the Friends of the Bay have abapdoned what was at one time. a very valuable environmental as- set. MARY EMILY BARTON Supports gun bill To the Editor: While riding with my husband lo the Angels game April 21. an editorial in the Daily Pilot caught my attention Jt was titled "Opposition too quiet." I had no idea that Sen. Kennedy and Congressman R6dino had introduced to the Senate and House a Handgun Crime Control Bill. And what•' 1urprised me even more is the political clout that the National Rifle Association packs. I do understand why the NRA might feel threatened by a too stricl gun control but it aeems to me what this blU calla ror l• crime control and not so much aun control. AFTER READING your editorial and wbal the mea1ure1 nd prQposals or the • lAUn• from r~• art tAlflcorM. Thi right to ~ lilt.rt to /U ~ or tJJmtnotf li~l ii ttwrvtd. Lltttr• of JOO ''J dOD't Ullnt Con•.ra• ever intend~ worcb ot,.., tO(U be~ pttf~. All that ~ «5epartme.ot ... oui9 tie worc:ll;J lfUn• rrwd 0.Cludt ~MN and MUftg Dll.US'I that rel•te u leiJlu.a ot bt• ,1&fdrta ht 110tN• mot bf wlUllwl4 °" ,... baf r aDd aid.tu Md whet.bet JOU com& ,.,.,, If 111/fk:lnt nca10tt ta opporns. 1chooJ bttless or with bra.•• -...._atW -po.tr; wW ftOt ht ~l*t. LAU.rt moat" bl SeerttarJ f ,R. WI, wbo wanta to acr-.p tft~ to ~. Nam. and phoM r~lea tlloWinc 1l\adenta to ftle ftekr&.l 11umbtr of tlw Cclfttrlbulor mud bit'"'" for compllinll ebOUhtt'l!lll codtil. vm(fcotlotl JMPOH•· Kennedy Rodino hill art'. r \\Ondered "ho 1n ih1s country 1n their nght minds. "ould obJec·t to or feel thrc•atent•d b~ this bill" ;'llo" mind 'ou. I said v. ho m the ir nghl minds. because r fe('I it's thf> people out of their right minds that con tribute so O\erwhelm 1ngly to the stat1st1cs of "20.000 murders. suicides and accidents involvrng hand(:?uns vearh · · I 'm· really excited by this bill and feel an overwhelming urge to get the word passed to the maJOrily of Amencans "'ho "ant some sort of control and would support the Kennedy-Rodino bill 1 f thev in fa ct we re aware that the bill existed l 'm goin~ to contact my congressman and find out just what l can do to con Jure up support for this bill J thmk its Just what the doctor ordered, and f thank you for making this information available to me. DEBORAH GERBER Leaming violence To the Editor: l am inclined to agree with Karen Gibson (Mailbox, April 9) The youth of today hve by TV! lt means nothing lo them to see a head lopped orf "and roll like a ball!" They laugh and scream like it was funny' H we don't curb violence on the screen kids will think nothing of killing each other like they do in horror movies while eatin~ their popcorn at the same time~ THE VIOLENCE and guns should be on the late late show. (plus naked sex). Even the toddlers in diapers are bowlegged from carrying play guns on each side a nd their cowboy hat 1 They grow up with that "bang, bang, you're dead!" Heaven help those that don't get up after they have been hit with a real bullet! Children do not know any better, aa they aJways like to copy whatever they see! EMMA HYMAN Why must our tase1 be apent bn PJ'HChers of &loom (poUUCll practi· Uon•r•> on loc•I campuses? Tbtlr rbetorlc ts Ml ol tllUetil\f 1eneralitiea1 never po1ltlve probltm·•olvtn1 tbouthta. :t.S. ViCtory near for Reagan's econQnµc package I W ASHlNGTON -tn contrast to tac- Ut1 I defeat.a sulferbd before the Euter receaa, President Re.can's ~omtc pro1ram 1s oo the brin.lt ol etzate1lc vlc- lorl in the Democratic-controlled House II Congress reconvenes. The preliminary headcounts show a 1tn1ll but seemln1ly wldenine Rea1an . mara,ln on the comln1 budaet resolu· tlon, built. by a coalition of the nearly tolld Republican minorlty and 30 or more conservative Democrats. The payc holoelcal momentum of that pivotal victory would point toward a Republican triumph on the tax cut a few wee.Its hence • Despite months of conjecture about deep trouble for the tax bilJ and the need for a general compromise, the truth is that victory is at hand or very close lo it for Ronald Reagan's economic package . Unless the Democratic leadership discovers some way to retrieve the situation. effective control of the House on economic ques- tions is being assumed by that bipartisan coalition. DETERIORATING SUPPORT ror the Democratic alternative budget tubloned by Bud1et Committee Chairman James Jones <less deknse, more social welf¥e. thinner t._. cut.a) h aa produced at least so turd Democratic defections. Tbere are no aa· sured Republican defectors and the possibWty of only a handful at th• out- (...r.:, 1-,.-.-. /-.-0,-•• -....... ~ side. That suggests a current House headcount yielding about the net l<MJI of 26 Democratic congressmen needed for a Republlcan victory But the post-recess mood oo Capitol Hill may produce much wider Democratic defections, going beyond th e 44 -member Co n serv ative Democrallc Forum <CDFI the "Red· neck Caucus ." Such non -C DF Democrats as Reps Eugene Atkinson of Pennsylvania (celebrated target of a Reagan telephone call>, Elliott Levitas or Georgia and Charles Wilson of Texas are moving out of Democratic ranks in- to tbe cor>aervatlve coalmon. Thal fortifies prospect.a of a comfort•blt Reas an victory. Democrats will not ltave to voe. for a Reaaan propoeal but • "compromlJa" co-sponsored by Repa. Delbert LaUa. of Ohio, the Budiet Co0tmittee11 Nftior Republican, an(l a CDf' member, Rep. PhU Gramm ol Tuu. The Gramm- Latla 1uhltitute is 1leefuUy described by one White House aide as "103 per- cent of the Ret1an budtet" -that ii, what the president wan&a lo buclset cuts plus a little bit more. DISASTER LOOMING for the re1ular Democratic leadership under Speaker Thomas P . O'Neill cast a long shadow on the lax stru1gle . Conservative Democrats are putting together a new tax package that will bring only smiles from the While Houae. Just as Gramm- Lalta is more Reaganite than Reagan, so is the compromise tax package in embryonic form. It includes an immediate end to the distinction between "unearned" and "earned" income with the top tax rate on "unearned" (interest and dividends) falling to 50 percent. Simultaneously, tb• effective rate on capital catns would be pushed from 28 percent all the way down t.o U percent. At a sweetener to the farm contUtuen~ of many CDF m e mbers, the lnbertt.ince tax would be repealed, None of this is contained In the president's p1c11ace. Among tu reductions that are in the Reagan package, the accelerated depreciation allowance would be re- tained. But lbe Kemr· Roth formula or 10 percent ln annua acr<>1s-the-board Individual r.ate cuts for three years would be modified from 10-10-10 to 5· \0· 10 and the effective date delayed as well. THE DELAYED efrect1ve date would be hard to lake for the White House, but the rest of this stil l gestating alternative dellghts the prl?sident's men as superior to the original AJthough Reagan in his Tuesday night address to Congress adhered to his no·compromise position, the time will come -not far off when deals will be made The deal right now looks like 103 per- cent of Kemp Roth, without a partisan Republican Ke mp Roth label that drives ort Democrats (a prospect long recolJllzed u inevitable by Rep. J1ct Kemp ). If such a bUI emeried. perbapt bearins the names of Rep Kent Haoc, of Texas, senior CDF member on t.bt House Ways and Means Comm1tlff, an6 Rep. Barber Conable of New York, lta senior Republican member, It would be endorsed by the president aod so to floor with irresh1Uble appeal. A Hance-Conable bill would poae severe problems for the new chairman o f Ways and Mea n s. Rep Dan Rostenkowski of Illinois, who doea not relish being rolled on the floor ln his de· but. If that is the fate of Jimmy Jones on his firs t budget resolution, Rostenkowski might be templed to em- brace a multi·year compromise in ex· c hange for leading a grand alliance with Reagan The one sure means of the Democrat& escaping retreat on all fronts is for Tip ·O'Neill to win the budget resolution (a prospect not helped Monday when he re· turned from Austraha to aMounce that .. m a ny Democrats" had defected from the J ones budget> Another is for Ronald Reagan to m ake a serious blunder, an event congressional Democrats have been wailing for ever since Jan. 20. Americans have stopped trusting one another When we look back on our lives, 1t is not the great events of history the headline-making news stories that will tell us what things were like Rather. 1t is the mundane details of our daily existence that will come back lo remind us of what our society had become And years from now, when we think back to the period in which we are liv- ing today, those bats of daily hfe wall tell -BO-I G-Rl-IN-1--~ us that an awful thin g happened Somewhere along the hne. "e stopped trusting one another You can see al every day or th e year When vou check into a hotel, the desk clerk will automatically take a credit card from you before giving you your room key The clerk wall then make an imprint from the card The reason is th at the hotel as afraid you will try lo sneak out 10 the morning without paymg your ball , 1( they take your card as soon as you arrive, they can make you pay anyway THAT NEVER used to happen In years past, when a person checked mto a hotel, he was laterally treated as a guest. The thought never occurred that he would try to walk away wlthout set lling his account But like all the other examples m our new world. the practice appears to be here to stay The mos t famous one - the one that has become so com monplace that we don·t even think about it anymore IS the installation or X-ray machines and metal·detection sheds at airports An airport used to be .~~~--~ a place a person could go to lelSurely watch the planes come in and out: now we are erriciently and routinely elec- tronically frisked, because the assump· lion as that we might want to highjack or blow up the plane. At clothing, luggage and department stores, large whale circul ar tags are at tached to every piece of merchandise These arc not price tags. They are m adc of a special material that will cause an alarm to go off if they are car- neci past. When you actually purchase the item. the clerk will snip the lag off. But 1f you try to walk out of the store with the merchandise without paying for at which is what the owners think vou a re gomg to do the tags will help security guards catch you That's why they are attached to the goods AT STORES that carry cassette re- cordings of popular songs, the cassettes are not displayed on racks from which they can be removed The c;assettes are· too small, and the proprietors know that af people had access to them, they would stick them in their pockets. So many record stores put the cassettes up behind big Plexiglas sheets with r<?und holes cut every few feet. the holes are Just big enough for you to stick your hand through, but not big enough for the cassette to pass through. You knock the cas.,ctte off the shelf and onto a con tmuously moving conveyer belt, and 1t as carried to a spot where a store employee can watch you as you ex- amine 1l The old practice of customers being allowed to take a record into pra v ate booth for a test listen, of course, has been gone for several decades At many plac es of business, employees are required to wear passes that are visible at all times This is not just the case at high-security installa- tions. all kinds of orcices are beginning to demand it, hecause anyone from the --~-- Apple Pie with Mom•s Fresh Rowers! and they'll be delivered by a Tuxedo-clad driver• Helium Balloon lloucpf fust Sl 5.00 per douft. • •25 00 or more -local delivery Lam•t one per customer Whtie supply lasts -order early ,. 962:.6681 21562 If ouldliintSt. H....._.•IHch.Ca. OrfHDJJLH_. V1SA' o utside , anyone unknown , is automatically suspicious. Al many stores, you are required to leave your briefcase, purse or shopping bag with a security guard as soon as you enter the door. The idea is that the real reason you are carrying those things is so you can shoplift, or hide merchandise: it is no longer considered in the least impolite to ask customers to check their bags al the entranceway. AT MANY GROCERY stores. the owners will still cash your personal checks but now take Polaroid pie tures of you every time you do it. The theory is that if you are a forger, or you are trying to pass a bad cheek, you can more easily be traced It 1s merely an extension of the ceiling-cameras that have long been used to photograph bank robbers. • After the president of the United States was shot in Ma rch, a network television correspondent mentioned on the air that he always became nervous when "civilians" insisted on ap proaching an area where the president was going to appear His point was clear: "Civilians " who used lo be called "citizens"-can no longer be as sumed to be interested an getting a quick glance at the president so they can tell their grandchildren they once saw him It has become increasingly likely that if a ··civilian" wants to be close to the president. he also wants to kill him If you go down those examples one by one. each of them makes perfect sense The people responsible for institut.ing the practices are simply react_ing logically to the way things an the United Stales have turned out BUT WHAT has happened as that, m m eeting every possibility for deceit head-on, we have robbed ourselves of one of life's most pleasant and precious commodities the idea thal we trust and believe m one another That as gone now : America 1s a land where trust and faith are foreign, and m ay never come home again These are not things that wall ever make the ha story books But v. hen we look back upon the story of our time, they define our society so clearly that they almost make you want lo cry How to address your lawmakers U.S. SENATORS Crauton, Alan ( 0 ), 11100 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles, 90012 (21.3) 824-7641 Hayakawa, S.l. CR>. 3848 Campus Dr., Suite 213, Newport Beach 92660 (714) 545.7175 During Congressional sessions · New Senate Office Bldg .. Washington . D C 20510 12021 224-3121 U.S. REPRESENTATIVES Orange County Badbam, Robert (4oth District-R>, 1649 Westcliff Or , Newport Beach 92663 ga1.0040 Patterson, l erry (38th District-DI . 34 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana 92701 83>3811 Lungren, Dan (34th Districl-R). 120 Landen Ave., Long Beach 90802 (213> 435 5631 During Congressional sessions : Badham, U08 Longworth House Office Bldg~. Washington. O.C. 20515 ; Pat- terson. 2238 Rayburn House Office Bldg , Wa s hington , D.C 20515 ; Lungren, 315 Cannon House Office Bldg . Was hington. D C 20515 STATE SENATORS (Or ange County> Schmitz, lohn (36th District-R I. 4600 Campus Dr , Newport Beach 92660 979-9670 Brlgcs, John V. <35th 01stnct R1, 1441 N Harbor Blvd , Fullerton 92635 879·2345 Carpenter, Paul R. <37th Distnct-Dl. 5400 Orange Ave. Suite 20'3, Cypress, CA 90630. 952-3201 During leg1slat1ve sessions Stale Capitol. Sacramento 95814 1916 ! 322·9900 STATE ASSEMBLYMEN (Orange County> Ber&eson. Marian (74th Oistnct-R>. 4400 Campus Drive. Suite 344, Newport Beach. 92660 641 7441 Frlzzelle, Nolan < 73rd D1stnct·R J. 18600 M aln St , Huntington Bea<'h 92648 842 7335 Johnson, Ross C69th Distnct·R >. 1501 N. Harbor Blvd . #201 . Fullerton 92635 738 5853 Wray, Chet <7 lst Dis tract-D I, 12777 Valley View, Suite 161 , Garden Grove 92645 636 4691 Lewis, John <70th District R>. 920 Town & Country, Orange 92668 542-4775 During leg1s lat1ve se~sions State Capitol. Sacramento 95814 f916J 322·9900 NORDSTRQM ~ AT SOUTH \COAST PLAZA IS 3 YEARS OLD • Celebrate ~ us as vve begin cu fourth year of service. The run staltS Fl'iday, May I .Joli us tor cake. cha~ and ~inmen< .ac 2:00 and 7«J. e>m« ~ conanue ttvooghout the weekend COOY n and fi'ld out what 'NOrlderful sixpnses vve haven szore fc::K you. Sootti Coast P1az.a only. 405 F~ay at Bnsrol. Costa Mesa . (7 I 4) ~9-8300. .. . ' , ' ) . f eopen · ay !,9am ' • AN DIEGO ' ' @ N ' Produce fresh .from lhe fields .daily ' . "' . . ' 2651 Irvine Ave., Costa Mesa 631-4404 ~ 14002 Myford Rd., Irvine 838-2851 ; 13152 Newport Ave., Tustin 838-9570 · 8. YOUR CHOICE ' -9.88.a. A. HAMIL TON BEACH MIXER Model #97. $2.00 mf1. rebate B. HAMIL TON BEACH JUICER Model #2109. C. RIYAL CROCK POT Model :t3200. 0. PROCTOR SILEX IRON Model :t 1117 B. YOUR CHOICE 12.88.a. E. HAMIL TON BEACH 4 QT CROCK POT Model '454. $5.00 iafl. rtbalt. f. HAMILTON BEACH ELECTRIC KNIFE Model #29()/354. 6. HAMILTON BEACH IRON Model #749. $3.00 mfc. rebate. H. RIVAL CAN OPENER/ KNIFE SHARPENER Model :tJ40. DAY: ,May "10th YOUR CHOICE 16.88ea. I. HAMIL TON BEACH 10 CUP COFFEEMAKER Model #]94. J. HAMILTON BEACH 7 SPEED BLENDER Mode(#600. · K. WARING MIXER Model #HS~8. L PROCTOR SILEX TOASTER Model #T5228. YOUR CHOICE 19.98ea. M. TOASTMAnER TOASTER OVEN Model 15230. II. PROCTOR DELUXE COFFEEMAKER Model NA100W. 0. HAMILTON BEACH tlOT AIR POPCORN POPPER Model #511 . ... I I ~ ) 1931 ~port blvd. costa mesa. ca. (half block north of 19th st.) 548-551'8 anaheim area toll free 546-1262 barzllay, glenn callf. de1lgn car'dlnal. mollf dav)d Page • unlfactor, tomes custom chair I charlton. landes <Sesignsklll westbrook. thonet glass arts custom style design trends artisan house san dieQO design ) dilllnghim, laure! domani 100's of values The store otters a complete selection of contemporary home fumlehlnga in earthy natural fibers, natural aofld woods and gleaming chrome and glass Owner. Norbert Balsam. with more than 25 years of furniture experience. has displayed fine contemporary furniture with the latest styles at budget prices. decorator • service . . available new • spring styles have arrived Al'W .......... , COOLIN' IT Farrell Lynn, 21 months old, · laughs off the 80-degree heat at Salinas by sitting in the family ice chest filled with cool water. A high pressure system off the coast has pushed temperatures up. ---------j British change boots LONDON <AP> Calf-length combat boots re- sembling those used in the US. Army will become standard issue for British troops starting next • year. the Ministry of Defense has ann ounced. Officials said the boots. to be made in England. w11l be easter to clean and last longer than the ankle ·length black shoes the British army has used for many years The new boots also will make obsolete the spats required when the current shoes are used with a dress uniform. DEA TH NOTICES ltBLL ing. Jntermenl will be at JOHN EDWARD BELL ii Harbor La°"'n Memorial resident of Burbank. Ca Park Services under tbe Passed awa~ on April 28, direction of Harbor Lawn- 1981 He 1s survived b> u Mount Olive Mortuary or dauRhler Jacquelyn_ A Costa Mesa S40-~ R o -b e r t s a n d 4 grandctuldren Services are GILLERMAN scheduled for Thursday T H A D I A D April ~ 1981 at 11 OOAM at GILLERMAN. a resident o The Church of J t'SuS Chni.t Cypress Passed away on of Latter-day Saints. 801 April Z7. 1981 She had just _ Dover Or , Newpcrt Beach. received her . RN Degree =- C• wolh B"hop K"lh ""'' Sh• " '""'"d by hH 1_;. I pres1d10g Interment will be husband Lionel G11lerman of at llarbor Lawn Memorial Cypress. Ca . 4 children, Park Services under the Karen, John and Richard d1rei:t1on of Harbor Lawn Gallerman all of Cypress. Mount Ohve Morlu:iry fJf Ca and Kathryn Schnee of Costa MPsa 540 ~'>4 Lakewood. Ca , a grandson BISHOP Jason Schnee. Services are DA VIO LEE BISHOP res schedulded for Wednesday. _._ 1dent of Santa Anu 'C:.i April 29. 1981 in the Harbor Passed away on Ap~1I 26. Lawn-Mount Olive. Memo.rial 1981 He 15 survived by ht!> Chapel with Rabbi Henn ~ mother and rather Mr & Front of Temple Beth David Mrs Orville Bi shop of offlc1allng Jn~ermenl will be Garden Grove. Ca . a at Mount Ohve Cei:nete~y daughter Shonoha Byrd of Services under the dtrecllon Anaheim. Ca . 3 brothers of Harbor Lawn·Mount Ohve Steven D . Orville G and Mortuary of Costa Mesa ~ Randle Bishop all of Santa S40·SSS4 ~ Ana. Ca. 3 sisters Ellen KERBER Jeager of Garden Grove. VIVIAN ANGELI NE _ Ca. Jern Meeks of Santa KERBER, a resident of Ana. Ca and Patricia Hunhngtoo Beach. Ca for 10 =- Bishop, also of Santa Ana. years Passed away on Apnl Ca Services are scheduled 28, 1981 She was a member for Thursday, Apnl 30. 1981 of the First United at 2 OOPM at the Harbor Methodist Church of San Lawn Memonal Chapel with Gabriel and also a member Pastor Gill Moreno of the of the Eastern Star lodge Apostohc Assembly in Jesus She is survived by her Name of Placentia offic1at husband Roland A. Kerber. a son David A. Kerber of Santa Monica, Ca .. a --------... daughter Virginia A Walter IALn lllGllOM SMrTH & TVTHILL WHTCUH CHAPEL 427 E 17th SI Costa Mesa 648-9371 of Los Angeles, Ca .. 3 grandchildren• 2 brothers Gerald Scheltens of Florida and Ronald Scheltens of M innesola. 2 sisters Irma Lauster of Maryland and ;:::; Bernice Johnson of North ;;;;;;;;;;:; Dakota and several nieces .. '· and nephews. Services are ,..Cl UOTHllS scheduled for Friday, May SNITMS' MOITUAIY l . 1981 al U :OOAM at the 627 Main St Harbor Lawn Memorial HuntmQton Buch Chapel with Rev. Ford R. 536-6539 Miiier of the First United PACIAC ~W ......,..~, .... Cemtl8fY Mortulr/ Chapel-Crematory 3500 Pac1f1c View Drive NewPort Bdch &U-2700 MllCOl...c:K MOITUAUS LaQuna Beach 494-&41~ laQuna Hilts 7el-0933 .., Juan C.p1atr1no 4&1776 Methodist Church of San Gabriel orriclaling. Inter· ]!"'l!!9 m e nl at Harbor Lawn Memorial Park. lo Ueu or flowen contributions may be made to the American ; Cancer Society Services un der the directloo ol Harbor Lawn·Mounl Olive Mortuary of Costa M~a. 54().,5554. SllllTllE&MAN DIANE BETTY SMITHERMAN. raldtnt ol Cotta M!!~ Ca. Patted away ~' l't.pl'll 25, 1•1. She t• 1urvlved by ber bdlbHd tloy Smltherm•n of Cotta Me... Ca., mother RoH l)awt of l'J\1lud1 2 children k>erek &nltjerman ot ~ Nevada and BTent Srnlthennan ot COita Mna, Ca. M•monal airvlcea are 1cbedul•d for Th•racb1, April IO. 1111 at U:OOAll at th• Mart.Gr Lawn Memo&"fal Chapel with Patber H&C"lata ~ Coy\endatl Ol St. lamH Epllcoi>al Church o NewPOCt 8tath otndath\t .• s.rvlc.a under' Ute du.c:ticie ol Hart. l..awn·.llOUD\ OUv MdHuU't or Coeta •••• MO-llM. I. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, Aprll 30, 1881 * Quality life lecture goal Grade school students' skills improve, but not teens' How couplu ca eptnd qualU)' Um to11tber will be di• OUHed ln a two-bour I ture May 14 at 7:30 p.m,: in room 207 of Oran1 Coa1t Collete' CbemJatry Bulldln1. W'5HINGTON <AP > -Elemtntll'J eebool Jtudeotl ue readtnt better tban their count.rparta did a decade a10. but teen·aa•re have shown no improvement, accord.ins to a f.cierally 1poneored teeUn1 prolJ'am. Educaton and politiclana balled th• ftndln11 11 a vindication of pro1rama to improve read.inc at the elementary school level but said more work needs to be done with junior and Hnior hilb 1cbool students. I The }lialional Assessment of Educational Proeresa, 1n lta third readinc 1urvey, tested 108,000 students aged 9, 13 and 17 1n the 1979·80 school year. Many questions were repeated rrom similar tests conducted ln 1971 and 1975. Tbe tests show that 9-year-olds 1cored an average of 67.9 percent correct, up from 84 percent in 1971 and 65.2 percent in 1975. Black 9-year-olds gained 9.9 percentaee points, "one of the larcest gains ever found by National Assessment" Their averaie score waa 59.6 per- cent, up from 49.7 percent in 1971 and S4.S percent ln 1975. Although black 13-year-olds narrowed the l•P between their performance and the national average, test administrators said there was no significant change in the readin& scores for 13· year-olds overall. They scored 60 percent in 1971, 59.9 percent in 1975 an<l 60.8 percent in 1980. Test results for 17·year-olds also showed no significant changes. They went from 68.9 percent to 69 percent to 68.2 percent over the decade. But the 17 -year-olds did show a marked decline in their ability to infer an idea from a read· ing passage in which it was not explicitly staled. They got 62.1 percent of those questions right in 1980, down from 64.2 percent in 1971. "Three groups at each age -students in the Soutbeut, blacks and males -narro•.ci th• l•P between them and the nation, altboup tb1y con- tinued t.o perform below the national level," the re- port aatd. The Nlu!ll · 'etronaly eu.,est that our federal educaUon proaram1, especially Title I, which la focUJed on elementary atudenta from d!tadvan- ta1ed bacll:l?'ounda, are wortina well," aaid Rep. Carl Per,kln1, D-Ky., chairman or the House Education and Labor Committee. Ptrkins criUcli"1 the Reagan admlnietratlon's plan th cut Title I and other prog.rams by 25 per· cent and to merae them into block granta. The National Assessment, runded by the Department or Education's National Institute of Education, periodically has interviewed and teated nearly a million youths and young adults in 10 sub· ject areas since 1969. It is administered by tbe Education Commission of the Stales in Denver Stress topic of seminar "Managing Stress for Res ults," a three-hour seminar, will be held May 9, beginning at 9 a .m ., in Orange Coast College's Fine Arts Hall 119. Effects of stress on the mind, body and emo· lions will be discussed at the free seminar . In- formation is available at 556·5880. Huntington C.enter 12 lush vanet1es , .. po ..... 288 ... Re1latration for th free lecture will be con• ducted at the door. In· formation Is available a( 556-~. Honor told David Alan Butcher ol Costa Mesa was namel to the honor roll at Norl~ Texas Stalt University for the fall sem ester. ____ __.... TELL YOUR MOM! 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. Rogers Gallery is also full of special and unusual gifts for the occasion. Say "I love you" in a beautiful way from Roger's. ··"¥· jA-~}:_ MOfHERS LITfLE HELPERS The Gilmour alr-<rmatic sprayers are the easy way to spray fertilizers and insecticides. They are self -mi xing which means no fuss and no waste. reg.i12.98 NOW 110.98 Help keep mold, mildew and fungus out of your roses and the rest of your garden with Ortho Funginex. 16 oz. reg. s9.98 NOW 18.98 FROM THE NURSERY WITIIIN THE GARDEN Marguerite Daisies are the light-hearted f avorltes everywhere. At this special price, you can surround mom with year around color. 5 gal. reg. s12.00 Now7.99 Agapanthus (dwarf blue lillies of the nlle) Is a good peren· nlal landscape plant that loves surprises; from time to time It shoots up clusters of blue fireworks. One of our favorites, you'll find it planted at Roger's. Now'6.99 2 gal. reg. sa.50 Hydrangea produces bonu!rslzed clusters of flowers. The long4astlng blossoms are available In several pastel cotors. •a 99 5 gal. reg. •13.00 NOW • " Azaleas offer h~ndsome foliage and spectacular flowers In a choice of colors. ' ~25 Now'1.99 1 ga , reg.v. Ptic.t tfftcttve ttiru M1y 9, 1M1 •net •u6jeet to qu1nlltle1 on t11n<1 DEAR TO HER HEART A Roger's English garden basket is a special treat. A com- plete miniature indoor garden with a ri ch blend of colors and foilage. This living centerpiece keeps on delivering pleasure day after day. •29 95 NOW • 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 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 April ~h. you can save up to 35% on fine qua~ity patio furniture in Roger's Gallery. A great way to surprise mom and add to summer enjoyment. A BOUQUET FOR MOM Delight .her with a special fresh-cut bouquet of roses, car· nations, Iris, mums and daisies. •24 95 . reg. •29.95 SPECIAL • . I I ' t .............. 1 COOLIN' IT -Farrell Lynn, 21 months old, . laughs off the 80-degree heat at Salinas by sitting in the family ice chest filled with cool water . A high pressure system off the coast has pushed tempe ratures up. British change boots LONDON (AP> -Calr·length combat boots re- semblin g those used in the U.S. Army will becom e standard issue for British troops starting next year, the Ministry of Defense has announ ced . Officials said the boots, to be made in England, will be easier to clean and last longer than the ankle-lengt h black shoes the British army has used for many years The new boots also will make obsolete the spats required when the current shoes are used with a dress uniform DEA TH NOTICES Jt&L&. In g. Interment will be at JOHN EDWARD BELL, a Har bor Lawn Memorial resident of Burbank. Ca Park. Services under the Passed away on April 28. d1rectton of Harbor Lawn· 1981 He 1s survived by a Mount Olive Mortuary of d aug_hter J acq uelyn_ A Costa Mesa. 540·5554. R oo er ls a n d 4 gr andctuldren Services are GILLERMAN scheduled for Thursday T H A D I A 0 April JO. 1981 at 11 :OOAM at GILLERMAN, a resident of The Church of Jesus Christ Cypress Pasi.ed away on of Latler·day Saints, 801 April 'n, 1981 She had Just oo,•er Dr .. NewPorl Beach. received her RN Degree Ca. with Bishop Keith Duke She 1s survived by her presiding Interment will be husband Lionel G1llerman of al Harbor Lawn Memorial Cypress. Ca . 4 children, Park Services under the K~ren. John and Richard rlirect1on of Harbor Lawn G11lerman all of Cypress. Mount Olive Mortuary of Ca . and Kathryn Schnee of Costa MPsa 540 5554 Lakewood. Ca , a grandson BISHOP Jason Schnee Services are DA VIO LEE BISHOP schedulded for Wednesday. ident of Santa Ana · te~ April 29. 1981 in the Harbor Passed away on Ap;1I 26, Lawn M~t Ohve.Mem~rial 1981. He is survived by his Chapel with Rabbi Henn E. mother and fa ther Mr & Front of Temple Beth David Mr s Orville Bishop of offlc1allng In terment will be Gar den Grove , Ca .. a at ~ount Olive Cemete~y. daughter Shonoha Byrd of Services under the dlrect~on Anaheim, Ca . 3 brothers of Harbor Lawn Mount Olive Steven o .. Orville G and Mortuary of Costa Mesa Randle Bishop all of Santa S40·SS54. Ana. Ca. 3 sisters Ellen KERBER Jeager of Garden Grove, VI VIAN ANGEL I NE Ca .. Jerry Mee ks or Santa K ERBER. a resident of An a , Ca. a nd Patricia Huntington Beach. Ca for 10 Bishop. also of Santa Ana , years Passed away on April Ca Services are scheduled 28. 1981 She was a member for Thursday , April JO. 1981 0 r t he FI rs t uni l ed at z·OOPM at the Harbor Methodist Church or San Lawn Memonal Chapel w1th Gabriel and also a member Pastor GiU Moreno or the or th~ Eastern Star lodge Apostolic Assembly in Jesus She 1s survived by her Name of Placentia official husband Roland A. Kerber. IALTllHGUOH SMITH & TVTHtlL WISTCUff CHArll 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa 648-9371 a son David A Kerber of Santa Monica, Ca . a daughter Virginia A. Walter of Los Angeles. Ca . J grandchildren; 2 brothers Gerald Scheltens of Florida and Ronald Schelte ns or Minnesota. 2 sisters Irma Lauster of Maryland and Bernice Johnson of North Dakota and several nieces . "· and nephews Services are '1HCI MOTHllS scheduled for Friday, May IMITHS' MOITUAIY 1, 1981 at ll :OOAM al the 627 Main St Ha r bor Lawn Memor ial l'tlnllnQton Bttach Chapel with Rev. Ford R. 536-6539 Miller of the First United r•clftC ••w MINDllAI. ru • Cerretety Mortuarv Chapel-CrematOf'Y 3500 Pac1f1c View Drive Newport Beech 644-2700 MsCOltMta MOITUAlllS leQuna Beach 4!M-i415 laouna Hills 7&8-0933 Sen Juan C.otatrano 49S-1776 Methodist Church of San Gabriel ofrl clatln1 lnter- m en t at Harbor La wn Memorial Park. In lieu of flowers contributions may be made to tbe American Cancer Society Services un der the dJrectJon ot Harbor Lawn·MOWlt Olive llortuar'} of Costa llesa. :M0-5554. " SIOTllEaMAN OIANB BETTY SMITHERMAN, re91dent ol Costa M•111 Ca. Pa11ed away on · A.pnl 25, 1811. She ta autvived b)' Iler buabaod Roy Smlthen:nu of Cotta Meu, Ca .• mother RoH Dawe ol l'llaland, 2 cblldren Del'tk Smlttilrrman ol ~ Nevad1 and Brent Smitherman ot Colta M .. a. Ca Memodal Rr"Ylc• are 1cbedultd ror Thara41ay, April •t,UIJ It U:OOAll at th• Har_. Lawn MemOiial ChaDfl wtC.b Fat.her KatlaD Co:rlcendall of St. Jasntt Epllcopal Cbureb o NeWport Bea~ll otnctatlq. S.rvletl mmr the 4lredl0a of Hartlir Latl1l·llouat OUY9 Mortuery OI. C01ta ll•H ~~~~~~~~,14().NM I ' Orange Coa1t10A1LY PllOT/Thul"lday, Aprfl 30, 1981 * Grade school students' skills improve, but not teens' How couplu ca 1pend qu1llt1 Um to1etb•r w1ll b• dt1 CUiied ln • tWO·bour le ture May 14 at 7:30 p.m.; in room 2'11 ot 01an1 Coa1t C oll•1 •' Che miJtry Bulldln1. WASSINGTON <AP> -Elementary 1cbooJ ttudenta an read.lq better tban their count.rparta did a decade a10, but teen-qen have 1hoWD no improvement. accordiq to a ftdually 1pouored teaUn1 prosram. Educators and poUUclam bailed the ftndini• u a vtnd.lcatlon of pro1ram.1 to Jmprove readln1 at the elementary school level but &aid more work needs to be done with Junior and Hftlor blab aebool atudenta. 1 Tb• JllaUonal Aaaeaameot of Educational Progreu, ln ill tbJrd readint survey, teated lOl,000 atudenta aged 9, 13 and 17 ln the 1979-80 1cbool year. Many questions were repeated from 1imllar tests conducted in 1971and1975. The tests s how that 9-year·olds acored an a vera1e of 61.9 percent correct, up from M percent in 1971 and 65.2 percent in 19'15. Black 9-year-olds gained 9.9 percentaae point.I, "one of the large.t gains ever found by NatJonal Assessment." Their averaje score was 59.8 per- cent, up from 49. 7 percent lo 1971 and 54.5 percent ln 1975. Although black 13-year-olda narrowed the l •P be tween their performance and the national ave rage, test administrators said there was no significant change in the readlna •~ores for 13· year-olds overall. They scored 60 percent in 1971, 59.9 percent in 1975 an~ 60.8 percent in 1980. T est results for 17-year-olda also showed no significant changes. They went from 68.9 percent to 69 percent to 68.2 percent over the decade. But the 17-year-olds did show a m a rked decline in their ability to infer an idea from a read- ing passage in which it was not explicitly stated. They got 62.1 percent of those questions right in 1980, down from 64.2 percent in 1971. ·'Three groups at each age -students in the Southeut, blecu and mal• -nurow9d tu 1ap MtwMn them and tbe naticln, altboulfl they con· Unutd to perform below the national level," the re· port Hid. The retulta "1tron,1y 1u11eat that our federal tducatloq pro•ram1, e1pectally TtUt I, which l1 focuaed on elementary atudenta from diladvtD· taced backlfOU,ndl, are won.to& well.'• said Rep. Carl Perkin•, D·KY., chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee. Perkins crtUclzed the Reaaan admlni1tration's plan to cut TiUe I and other pro1nm1 by 25 per- cent and to m erae them into block arants. The National Assessment, funded by the Department of Education'• Nationtl In1titute of Education, periodically bas interviewed and teated nearly a million youths and young adulta in 10 sub- ject areas since 1969. U is administered by the Education Commission of the States in Denver . Stress topic of seminar "Managing Stress for Results," a three-ho ur sem inar, will be h eld May 9, beginning at 9 a.m., in Orange Coast College's Fine Arts Ha ll 119. Truckload Plant Sale Huntington Center 12 lush varieties Re1l1tratlon for th free lecture will be con· ducted at the door. lrl- formatioo is available 556-588>. Honor told David Alan Butcher ci Costa Mesa was namel t o the h o no r roll North Texas Statf Univers ity for the fa' sem ester. { Effects of stress on the m ind, body and emo- tions will be d iscussed at the free sem inar. In· formation is available at 556-5880 . "''° ..... 2s a ... w· •••• TELL YOUR MOM! This Mother's Day1 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 a beautiful way from Roger's. MOTHERS LITI'LE HELPERS The Giimour alr-0-matic sprayers are the easy way to spray fertilizers and insecticides. They are self-mixing which means no fuss and no waste. reg. s12.98 NOW 110.98 Help keep mold, mildew and fungu s out of your roses and the rest of your garden with Ortho Funginex. 16 oz. reg. S9.98 NOW 18.98 FROM TIIE 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. s12.00 Now'7.99 Agapanthus (dwarf blue Ii Illes of the nile) Is a good peren- nial landscape plant that loves surprises; from time to ttme It shoots up clusters of blue fireworks. One of our favorites, you'll find It planted at Roger's . Now'&.99 2 gal. reg. SS.50 Hydrangea produces bonus-.slzed clusters of flowers. The long-tasting blossoms are available In several pastel cot ors. 5 gal. reg. •13.00 NOW'a.99 Azaleas offer handsome foliage and spectacular flowers In a chotoe of colors. · 1 gal. ~.13.25 NOW 11.99 PttoJ enecU\lt tlltu May t , 1811.and aubject to qu.nllti.t on hand DEAR TO HER HEART A Roger's English garden basket is a special treat. A com- plete miniature Indoor garden with a ri ch blend of colors and tollage. This living centerpiece keeps on delivering pleasure day after day. ,29 95 NOW • 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 will also be presenting these special seminars: Aprll 23, 11 A.M., "Pest Control" May 11 , 11 A.M., "All About Tomatoes" May 25, 11 A.M., "Planting for Summer'' Give a 1<Y Roger's Color Pot, the unique gift that keeps giving. NOW '9.95 PATIO FURNITURE FOR MOM Through Aprll 30th1 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 enjoyment. A BOUQUfil FOR MOM Delight ,her with a special fresh-cut bouquet of roses, car· nations, Iris, mums and daisies. ,24 95, reg. 129.95 SPECIAL • 10. 9591 Chapman Avenue. Garden Grove 11. 3166 Admiralty Dnve, HunJinKton Bl'ach 12. 15672 SpringdJle Str<..'<-'l, Huntington Bt'<H. h 13. 299 Ocean Awnue, Laguna Be,1<. h 14. 11 262 Lo., Al.1mito-. Boull•v,1rd. Loe, Alamilo.., 1 5. 26821 Tr,1buc.o Ro,1d, Mi!.s1on Viejo 16. 4101 M.KArthur Boulev.ucl, Newport Beach • 17. 1016 Irvin<.• Avt•nul', Newport Bt•,1c h Us. 1. 1701 E. Katella Ave., Anaheim 2 5640 E. Santa Ana Canyon, Anaheim 3. 1141 N. State College Blvd .• Anaheirp 4. 290 S. State College Blvd., Brecl 5. 8968 Knott Ave., Buena Park 6. 3333 Bri!.tol St., Building B. co ... tJ Me)a 7. 17430 Brookhur'>t Street, fountain V.1lll'y 8. 1901 N. (uc lid St., Fullerton 18. 500 Newport Center Dnw. Newport Beach 19. 3444 Via L1clu. 1'.ew1x>rt &>.1<. h 20. 345 Ea.,t Chapm,·rn Av<..•, OranRt' 21 . 2680 North Tu..,tin Aw .. Orange 22. 160 E. Yorb,1 L1ncl,1, Pl.1u.•nt1a 23. 31872 Camino (Jp1-.tr,mo. SJn lu.in ( .1p1.,1r,rno 24 801 North M,1111 C.,t., '),int,1 An,1 2 5 1 500 E. W.1rnt>r Avt•nu<.•. S,int,1 An,1 2.h. 2127 E. 17th )hl't't, ),inta An.1 27. 11 ~41 Nl·wprnl Awnut•. lu-.t1n If you're a Bank of America customer, ~ign up for your VERSATEL® card at any branch. If you're not a customer, we can't think of a better time than now to make Bank of America your bank. Want more information? ca11 toll~~~oo~~;~M ERICA m BANI< OF AMERICA NT&SA • r.IEM8ER FDIC nger? Star's death, writer strike has 'Dallas' cast guessing LOS ANGELES <AP> -A lingering writers strike could cause a real-life cliffhanger on "Dallas," the CBS-TV series known for its Machiavellian plots, as executives agonized over whether to kill off the late Jim Davis' Jock Ewing role. Should another actor try to fill Davis' shoes. or should his reisty oil baron role be written out or the series with an on-screen death or with one or the Byzan- tine plot twists that "Dallas" fans have come to expect? "ONE OPTION that none of us wants is the possibility of recast- ing the part," producer Leonard Katzman said Wednesday from his offices at MGM Studios where Lorimar Productions was scheduled to begin shooting May 14 on five scripts already com- pleted for next season. A fictional cliffhanger will end the "Dallas" season Friday, similar to last year's "Who Shot J .R . !" controversy, but Jock Ewing is not lnvolved in this episode, Katzman said. Would the striking Writers Guild of America make an ex- ception and allow its members to go back to work on TV's most popular show? That was a possibility, said Katzman, noting that be would ask the guild next week to re· consider ita refusal earlier this week to exempt ··Dallas" beca~ of Davis' death. He said he thought the writers' refusal was only "conditional." He did not elaborate: "THERE IS ALSO the possibility that the Writers GWJd is counting on -that we will not shoot at all -which is very doubtful," he added. Davis' death also raised another possibility : that Lorimar would defect from the producers negotiating commit· tee and reach a separate con· tract agreement as an indepen· dent. "There was much speculation (a bout a Lori mar defection). "But I think Lorimar is going to hold firm," Katzman said. DA VIS DIED last Sunday at his suburban Northrldee home where he bad ~n recuperatin1 from surgery performed last month on a perforated ulcer. A memorial service was to be held Friday at 1 p .m . at Forest Lawn 's Church of the Recessional in Glendale, Lori mar officials said. The May 14 production start dale was earlier than usual, Katzman acknowled1ed , because of the possibility that the Directors Gulld of America will strike when its contract ends June 30. A directors strike -unllk' the writers walkout -would virtually shut down film a d television production an Lorimar had hoped to get five shows completed before that time. Hot-air balloona, above, provided tethered, 10- minute rides for 30 minutes to .tay.at-hm'M• at the Gordon B~t Balloon Race launching in Foun- SailirJg buffs take part in Newport to Ensenada Yacht Race See Page.87 tain Valley's Mile Square Pcirk. Below, long tanker trucla IUpf>lied helium to fiU flattened balloqna to aend them aloft Saturday. Vision led.to. flights By PIUL SNEIDERMAN °' -Oelty,.... ..... Bob Wallace was in New Mex- ico, on business three years ago when he caught the fever. His visit coincided with the an- nual Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta, and Wallace awoke one morning to find 350 huge colorful globes floating out· side his window. "l didn't know if I was in Kansas or Oz," he recalls. Wallace, a Long Beach resi- dent who works as an engineef in Santa Ana, returned to New Mexico the following year on his own time and learned to fly. HE OBTAINED his com- mercial balloon pilot's license and in March 1980 purch .. sed his own craft, dubbed "Shout." Since then he's embarked on 153 hot air balloon flights, usually weekend launchings Crom Perris. Calif Last Sunday he placed third in the first Fountain Valley Classic balloon race, landing in Zody's parking lot rather than bis declared target, Brookhurst Community Park in Anaheim. Wallace, 34, claims he and his navigator, Ron Whitaker of Irvine, would have landed right on target had it not been for a map error that caused them to steer toward the wrong park. • Even though he didn't claim first prize, Wallace says he's still hooked on ballooning. "YOU KNOW, there's no elevator effect lo it," he ex- plains. "People think they'll leave their stomachs on the ground, but it doesn't happen that way. "It's a very s mooth ride, a very quiet ride. You can hear every dog bark, every screen door slam . . " Propane gas ts burned to in· Hate Wallace's nylon-dacron balloon, which when fi1Jed gains the height of a seven-story build- ing He usually mes at an altitude of 1,000 to 1,200 feet, but enjoys cruising low over a neighborhood as ·he drirts in for a landing. WALLACE SAID the balloon takes 20 to 30 seconds to respond to heating or venting changes. ''Ballooning is not a sport in which you can run out and be frivolous," he explains. "Some people think 1 must get 'high' and then go up in the balloon. But l tell them you can't do that. The joy of balloon- ing is doing everyt hing perfectly.·· 11 for the price of four ELFAST, Northern Ireland <AP) Huo11r 1tr\kH 1Utt tb• on• t bu Bobby Sandi at death'• door a a Umt·tai.d tactic ot \be lftlb apubUcan Army. In Ult count ol I., yeu campalp to .-id Brltiab rule Jreland, 12 lfU•frlllaa have died P'l tutJn1. ' be huncer atrtke ii a particularly ah form ol protest -and one that. d ea to tbe ela'btb century. n those daya, Irishmen with a I levance acatnat an Important n ighbor fasted out.side the offending p y·s door until the dispute was s tled. SANDS, 27. servine a 14-year sen- tef)ce for weapons possession, is fast- ing in hopes it wilJ force restoration of special privileges for guerrilla in- mates. He was in his 60th day without food Wednesday at the Maze prison near llelfast. According to Sinn Fein, the IllA's political wing, he "could die at aay moment.·· The Irish Republican tradition of hunger s trikes was s tarted by Thomas Ashe. a leader of the 1916 Easter Rising in Dublin. Jailed by the Britis h in the city's Mountjoy Prison, Ashe stopped eat· ing to demand that he and other na· tionalist leaders be treated as prisoners or war. He died after fi ve days as a result or force-feeding. More than 30,000 people followed his coffin through the streets or Dublin. THE MOST famous Irish hunger striker was Terence M cSwine~J..rebel lord mayor of Cork, who died m Lon- don's Brixton prison on Oct. 25, 1920, a(ter a 74-day Cast. Two other na- tionalists died with him in that hunger strike McSwiney, a member or the out- lawed IRA enebrllltd tbt 9tbol that w11 to lDIPlN later hunaer 1trtken. He dtclued: "Tbe cont.tit on OW' aide lt . . . one ot ...Su.ran~. It ta not tboee who can tnruet tM mott, but tho•• •M> can 1Utf1r the molt who wUI conquer:· , Later dHtb• oar:oe in the af • termatb of tbe ltteb clvU war betw"q the IRA, aeektni fUll ln· 4ependlace from Brttaln, and the "Free a.le" forcH, which support· ed limited home rule. Ireland became an independent at.ate in 1921, but t.be predominantly Protestant North remained under British con- trol. TWO lllA men, Dennis Barry and Andrew SUll.lvan, A.led in Mountjoy after 43 days without food lD October 1923. In UMO, Jack McNeela and Tony d ' Arey died after a M-day fut ln the republic's Arbour Hill Prtaott. Another IBA man , Sean Mccaughey, died in May 1946, after a 31 -day hunger and t.birat strike in the top security Portlaoise Prison, west of Dublin. The hunger strike became an lm· ~tant guerrilla weapon in the early tl?bs after Northern Ireland's sec- tarian feuding began in Auaust 1989. Arter a 38-day mass hunger strike by I RA men in Long Kesh prison camp near Belfast in 1972, the British Conservative government gave in a nd granted jailed guerrillas "special category" status, allowing them to wear their own clothes, do no prison work and run their own arrai,. in their "cages" or compounds. The "special category" status was withdrawn in March 1976 by a Labor government. It is special category rights that Sands and his followers are demanding be restored. A~..,...._ dov. Edmund G. Brown tours the Gregory BateJOn Btdlding in Sacramento 1.11hich uses a variety of active and paa.rive aolar technologiea cu its energy SflStem. Building solar showcase Edifice uses active, passive technology SACRAMENTO IAP) What has ato tons of river rock, four 50-foot golden Chinese lanterns, soalts up <f'Jity sun and releases it at night and u.Jes only one-sixth the energy of its neighbor ? It's the state's newest office build- ibg, the first built since 1968. It's also • s howcase of how energy can be ~hed through passive and active 901ar design while at the same time providing attractive and comfortable Of fi ces for 1,200 people. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. will ded- lJate the new Gregory Bateson Building, which spreads over 2Y-J acres three blocks from the state Capitol, on Friday as part of a day- long fair at the city park. BE AND state architect Barry asserman, who with former state rcbitect Sym Van der Ryn designed e building, conducted a tour (or re· rten Wednesday. The architect said the building is e first attempt to apply on a large, blic scale many principles of ac- ve and passive solar deslen. State otfice buildlnes constructed o decades aeo, like the t.owen arby, use 120,000 t.o lS0,000 BTU per square foot per year, be said. The s tate building code now requires commercial buildings to cut that to 55,000 BTU. The new building should use 20,000 BTU per square foot an· nually, be said. The building's energy system is run by a computer. THE MOST striking (eatare is a huge central courtyard 150 feet square and stretching from the brick floor to the skylit ceiling. The active solar aspect Is the col- lectors on the roof that will heat 75 percent of the waler used in the building. The courtyard's skyllgbta can be changed in angle so that winter sun enters or summer sun does not. The concrete frame of the buildlne ls designed to work Ulte a laree rock along tbe river, Wa11erman e~· plained. It is cool in the mornlng, gets warm during the day and stays warm int.be evening. (Tom M~ fa lookmg for eWphantt m Sllvmado. Hit column wUl rd1'm W~ Mtdofl.) Has Excess Weight Made You Feel ~----Uke A P~lsoner In Disguise? .. WEST CLIFF PLAZA ~1'S 1 1'\ ~,. Snail and Slug Control 20% Off CROWM HARDWARE WntclHf Piasa • ~ Vlew c.ftht- CoroM def Mer --- 'AlllNCllR -.. Herman," a youna dach· ahund , rldea 1 n a t d e Motorcyclist Morrleett'e Jacket at Albu-querque,. N.M., but Morrlaett eaya this cozy arrangement can 't go on be ca u's e Herman's get-ting too big. BAN FRANCISCO (AP) -People wbo tulftr from HVeH pl0riul1 can beoeftt from a ttebni4u• that Nduc11 tbtir need for ultr1vtolet radiation and tbt risk of akin cancer from tbat treatment, two dermatololi1ta ••Y. Dn. John l»arrl1h and Kbolrow Montas, btN for tbe meetin1 of tbe Soeltty for IDv•Ulatlve Dermatolo1y, saJd that they combined two •xlttlnt tech~~:!iea to create a futer, aafer curt for tbe skin ent paortul1. The 1ccompl11bment. they aald, may mean re-· ll.ef for tbe estimated 4 to 10 million Americana wttio auffer from the red, scallne patches of akin that characterize paort11sts. I P a.rriah said that research showed that many people who had restated standard treatment bad refpooded to the combined technique, which in· volves drug therapy and exposure to ultraviolet radiation -the same kind of rays in sunlight which causes sunburn. Parrish said with the new treatment, patient.a need only 10 to 12 treatment.a, rather than the usual 25, before the psoriasia begins to clear up. . -. GIFTS FOR MOM SHIPPED FREE! Mother1s Day 11 May 9! Select from a wide variety of gifts. packed in pretty yellow boxes iust for Mom. They're filled with tempting cheeses. sausage and sweets. ffick~r1 fctrm~. Of OHIO FASHION \\'ESTCl.WF ISLAND OPEN PLAZA Nrwport fk1rh ltAJt Y tlth •nd tn1n~ "''"'P)f"l ~•rh 640-6030 642 0972 SPECIAL! SUE BU HONEY a.. ... 0r ... a3c UN.WI u Contact 1AnM1 Ey•wHr Styling A.tractl"9 PrHcrlbtng .......... heci.-I 020 .,......., WMtclff ..... Dr. Lou Elder OPTOMETRIST 642-0720 1124 Irvine Ave. Newport Beach PUSHIMIOOO AND SHYtclD&I SPICIALS Fresh Hot Golden FRIED OtlOCEN .:.:=. 5.99 Wll1'CIMI ft.A1A lllO .... Aft,,Mli• ........ Quality In f ashlOo and 1ervtce1 with that peraonai touch ! • The wise investment of money can be a complex decision. But it doesn't have to be. The simplest path is often the most profitable. As well as the safest. While some oth~r people are trying to decide what involved finan- cial step to take next, you can simply be making money. Risk free. Newpo~ Balboa Savings offers a full range of financial services, with each account federally insured to $100,000. Smart. And safe. Stop by our nearby office and talk to your friends at Newport Balboa Savings. Discover what the bulls and the bears are m~ing. .. Write yourself a profit check. Why pay for a checking account when your checking account can pay you? Our new Profit Check service actually pays you 5 Yi 3 interest on the balance in your checking account. Very interestingl • .JN ~NEWPORT BALBOA Saving$ 4 ·~ Envoy delays irorry Europe LONDON <AP> European diplomats and mmeotators are concerned that many key U.S. mbassadorial posts have not been filled even ough the Reagan administration has been ln of. ce more than 100 days. The lack of a full team of ft4agan envoys ii ampering the smooth elaboration of U.S. foreign licy during a period of critical strain in East· est relationships, they suggest. An Associated Press survey of Western and astern European countries shows that at a doaen mbassies, Carter appointees have left and harges d'affaires have temporarily taken over. AMONG AMERICA'S top allies, Paris, Bonn nd Rome are without new ambassadors, although ohn J. Louis Jr has been confirmed by the ate Foreign Relations Committee as the new . . ambassador to London and is expected to ar· ive in a few weeks. Reagan has nominated other new am· assadors and they have been accepted by host otmtries, but they still have not been confirmed ause of a snarl involving Sen. Jesse Helms, the o. 2 Republican on the Foreign Relations Com- ittee. Helms, wanting more conservative appoint· ~nts in some cases, is fencing with Sttretary of tlue Alexander M. Haig Jr., who is pushing for bderates. I ~ ON TUESDAY, three nominees opposed by elms were confirmed by the Foreign Relations QJnmitee: Myer Rasbish, undersecretary of stale or economic affairs; Chester Crocker. an assis· aJlt secretary of state for African affairs and obert Hormats, an assistant secretary of state or economic affairs. u But there has been no U.S. ambassador in oscow since Thomas J . Watson Jr., a Carter q)itical appointee, left Jan. 15. Jack F. Matlock, a o~ American speciaHst on the Soviet Union and istem Europe, is sitting in. Matlock had been de-i~nated by Jimmy Carter as ambassador to i'ague, but he is still itwaiting word from Reagan nd confirmation The Moscow ambassadorship has been a r1Jstrating post for many years, since the Soviets Mve generally preferred to do business in ashington through their veteran ambassador tlfre, Anatoly Dobrynin. But Moscow is still con· si_4ered a key post. :l THE BONN embassy was stripped of its am- bllssador, Walter Stoessel, who became un- dirsecretary of state for political affairs. Likewise, Belcrade lost Lawrence Eqlebur&er,. p~· k.ed as assistant secretary of state for ..European a airs. • ' . tl. A U.S. foreign service officer in Brussels said • .. A.he worst thing about not having an ambassador s not that work piles up ... (others) can handle thually everything. The problem is that am· tssadors are people who usually have clout back ri Washington. They can register at a higher level o report concerns and get some action." thlnese to see ~ericanf~ 81 HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Five U.S. films -only cilk of which is less than 13 years old -will begin i6five-city tour of the People'• Republic of China on .,._Y 1 tn. the first significant screenin1s of Aranerican movies in China in more than 30 years, i(has been 81)nounced. The movies wlll open in Peking as part of a cylt1i1ral exchange agreement signed in 1979 between the United States and China, according to John Pavlik, executive administ,rator or the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. b The mms, which the Chinese selected from a tat of 2S films submitled by the International Com· ~nkations A1ency, are: "The Black Stallion" (1980), "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner" (1968), ''Shane" (1963), "Slngin' in the Rain" (1952) and "8now White and the Seven Dwarfs" < 1931). "TRIS IS THE first Ume since about 30 yeara ~o that a group of films ls beinl sent to play in a iftse number of theaten, et,irt to 10 theaters, for .r>week each," said Pavlik, notlnt that the Chinese tt.d chosen a claaalo western, a eluate animat44. Qlm and a classic musical. , "Pethaps Lb~lr knowled1e of rllma la 30 year) Why they chose the m()fe recent •Black• lion.' we have no idea," Pavlik aald. ! Tbe film, to be subtitled ln Cblrtete, will be ac- mpanled to China by Academy praldentil1• nln, film crttlc-hlltorian Arthur Knllht nd ln&tn' tn the Rain" co-star C)"d Cbarbse, vUk said. Y Ila. Kanin will narrate an latl'Oduction to the IUms written by Knlaht. . 6LITE 6 LITE Wrrtl '\'IMBR 12 LITE WITH TIMER S9e97 8'.97. 89e97 159~97 I DOUGLAS BOSE REELS · ' WALL MOUNT 13.88 CART TYPE 18.88 <let your hoM all hooked up and ready to go. Then just reel it up out of the way. MArvelowt what old Doug worked out. DEADLINE SNAIL KILLER l?r~ Someone told me they originally brought •naile here from Europe to eat ( eccch ) and look what happened. BLACK A DECKER TRINMDS 7" I TlmC TllJOID Lightweight and euy to handle, gnat to get tha.e hard -to -reach place.. 12~1 10'' COJOUD FEED CUii/WiED TIDiilEI 37~1 The tough guy, h .. vy duty, h old. 90 feet of line you can feed with a touch of the thumb. 2.8 Amp. VARllUll FLASBUGBTS 2CELL 12.97 3CELL 113.fl7 4CELL l•e97 Adjustable bean\ &om tight spot to full flood, rugged C&M, shockproof and watuproof. STORALL CROSSBED TRUCK TOOLBODS WIDE BED, MINI. S'rEPSIDE YOUR CHOICE 74!? ILUI POLI on.STEP NI.I SW.UT . 5 99 ie oz.1am: LIQUID OR PASTE 55 EA. SEAVY CEDAR SllAIF.S 13?!.' -...c........,.,~-~.:.i· APPROX 20 SO. FT. A roof jwst oet-bettar lookin.cr with N&l h .. .y shals.e. Talk about ,...... of. ..r.ice. BED SUPD • SPAR VAlllSB 13 oz. 8PRA y 2e27 OT. Ce77 -lr:=::-::::i-. --GAL. 12.77 Choice of h.leh glo. or •tin finiah. Th.U nune'• been around a t.w deca.d-. hasn't it? MURRAY I-CYCLES 20'' IOfS' TRI BMX type, 20" blue knobbi .. , motocroa type handlebar, BMX tn-fork. c!uome finiah. 69!! F urniture that looka and f .. la comfortable. Y ou won't worry about h ow the lrid.8 treat it, the rustic look ia hard to spoil. Easy to assemble. IEDWOOD DIAMOND PATTDI LATTICE 997 4s8 1997 A guebo, a pri•acy 8Cr'Mn, a 8Uft\n\er hou.M. Th.U gi"8 one a lot of id .... all good. JAS llDUSTllES WllDOW STOP "Ju incleecl." And you wd you couldn't buy anything for under a buck that worked. IEW! . SBIL TOI I CW.LOI WET /DRY JETVAC 5197 N ew non -rusting tank. won't scratch or chip. w .. ha.ble cartridge filter, for wet or d.ry UM; ball -bearin9 motor. 26" MEI'S 10 SPEED a..-----------t TOURING BAJA 1149 !.12 I ID DIYU. SUPD GLUE 39:GRAMS ALLISOI SOLID FOAM BIGB IUC:IET CUSBIOI ·~~ I r ,. D&AR PAT DUNN: I ....... t pt mJ tu HtW1> .,_ tht mall by Apftl lJ. ~m not IUN I •na wut to find out, b.rt m&Jbe you eaD tell ' m• bOW ~ lnteiwt t.M Internal Revenue Stnlce ebra• for late nturm. W ,T., c.o.ta Meta ne Nd..,. 1a aut au eta.rs• u ,.,.. Hwa.,,.,,_. fw late ftlen. T'lle IM' .... fer e&Mr taQa1en •M tiled ., AaN1J U a. tlaat *'" lll&erelt rate alM • ....._ &o .refbcll "w~tela an_. ,aW lty Ute la8'1rl&Mi,'5 da1• ., tlae ........ ., dae retvll. ,..... .w .. , ... '1 dlle IU fn• ettlaer &lie ... Ute ., tlae ntww .,. th ft.bl •te, wlalO.ter la latn. llMUYla•I aad eorpora&e ettl•a&ecl taaeaMll,...laflLll•tlaedaedatealloare1•b· jffta.&ka .. elatere.tra&e. DEA& aEADEaS: More dtu 151, ... tea• -fer electrical teat meters are bellll • reulle4 YOl•atarlly by Radio Sllack la eeeperaU. 1'1U. &Ile Cou•mer Procla~t Safe- ly Co ..... IOll. Ea~ kb ~a. ol 11 aeparate pletta, laclad.iq two prebea wlllcll an pl•Cled halo lead wire U,. aad aed to &at eleetrteal cm· reat. Ead .,.. la dctlped la Rell a way &Ut metal rel6alu eapMff en• wlte• h la 1•111 luened lato tlae lead wire Ups, Utu po•l•t a pGteaUal at.eek llasard to uen. Tiie kit. were mu•factared from lt71 thro.p .luae 1•, aad were aokl aatloawlde la aadlo Sltack retail •&om lor $4.tt eacll. Tiley cu be Identified by eatalo1 Hmber 27t-33Z wlllclt appeua oa tbe pachse. Ceaaamers llMMa14 retara Utelr kJta lo lite aearest &ad.lo Sllack 1tore for a laU refud. DEAR PAT DUNN: I drive two people 1n my office to work every day and they each pay me $50 a month. Arter I'd filed my tax ' return, someone told me the money 1 get from my riders is taxable income. Is it? Also, my grandparents told me they are eoing to give me $2,!iOO for my 21st birthday this year. Will that be taxable" H .R., Fountain ValJey Tiiie $51 a monU. Is couldered reimburse· meat for Ute expeue1 of DIUti you car. Tile b&eraaJ aevetuae Service la)'I It woald.a't be taxable maJes1 )'CMI were ID Ute trade or ba1l- ae11 ol traupol11n1 worken for ldre. Yoar ~Y 111t -ud uy otkr llll -11 aever taxa•le &o Ute reclpietlt. Bat. las PUBUC NOTICE M..ew&V.. ·-~Dr ......... ........ Ca.t17U ,, .. , ...... , Pvi.11"'*' Or ..... c-t o.i f'llot, II•, M9y 7, 1.-. JI, "" I PVBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUI aus•••ss NAMalTATaMaMT PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUI au11MaH NAM• ITATUoUrNT T ... I-Nie ~ la clolf>9 IMKI· ....... 11 OILUG4$ JI LOVACATOR, U. PtJBUC NOTICE MSJtur f'ICTITIOUI au11NaU 1441, .. , laee•• dethed r... U.. ,iil at a later date, 111di u ....,._., ...W bil taubJe. Training required DEAR PAT DUNN: I've beard that acupuncturlab in this state mu1t be "certified." What lJpe of tra.lnlnf ts required for this certlflcation? S.E., Irvine To be • eertlfled acupaaetulat la Callforma, 1 ,.,.... •••t Jaave completed a allte·atPron4 coane er t.a.tal proaram la aeapandare, or lift ~ad a& leall ~ 1ean ol esperleece, lD addltloa to pauba1 a prac· tlcal eumlDatloa. AJU.oafb acapuaetarl1t. are certified medical pracUUGaen, their services prob· ably will no& be eovered bJ m..i medical la· 1uance, lnclaclJnc Medicare ud MeclJ·Cal. More Information caa be requs&ed by writ· lai to the Department of Couamer Alfalra, Aeup1111dure Advlaory Committee, 1'31 Howe Ave., Sacramento t58Z5. De&k..top comput,en atudied DEAR PAT DUNN: I'm thlnkine about buying a desk·top computer Do you have any comparison shopping tips? S.E., Corona del Mar Cb~k your library for tbe April l11ue of Consumers' Research magadae. It baa a very informative article 1bout bome com· puten, lncludlng comparisoa of several key features of systems now oo the market. The magaabae advises consumers to note several cbaracteri1Uc1 wbkb affect a com- puter's capablUtles and convenience. These In.elude the ease with wbkh the computer'!! keyboard can be used, the slze and quaUty or tbe video cllaplay and tbe readabUlty of the printed Information. The magaalae also recommend• "dtac drive" laformatlon· feeding devtces rather than the lea• expenalv,e cassette loaders. • "Cot a problem" Thtn wnte to Pat ..... 1 Dunn. Pat will cut red ta~, gdtmg • the a~r1 and action you nud to • 101~ u1equita.e1 m povenment and ,... bulineu. Maal )IOMr qw1tion1 to Pat I I Dunn, At Your Service, Orange Coaat Dail11 Pilot, P 0 Boz 1560, Cotta Mew. CA 92626. As many tetten a1 pouab~ will be Ol'l$'U¥Ttd, but phoned 1nqu1ne1 or lette-r1 not including the reodn'1 /ull name, addreu and bu.linen hours' phone m.m~ cannot be conaidered. Thu column a~art dail11 ez. upt Sundays " --------- PUBLIC NOTICE 111 IUf'IRICHll COURT Of' CAUf'OIU04,COUNTYOf' ORM•• PUBUC NOTICE N·121f1 "CTITIOUS eusu••U PUBUC NOTlCS PICITITI~ 9USINHI PUBLIC NOTICE 'ICTITIOU~ auSIMaU MAMa ITAT•M•NT Tl\e loll-lnQ --a a r• Hlllt Fl-.U PuDll-Or-CO.al Pally Pllol, "Prll JO, #My 1, t~. 21, 1'e1 ,,...., PUBLIC NOTICE SU .. llUOll CO\llH Of' CALI 'OtlNl4, COUNTY O' o•AMO& c:AHllO.A-CMAMO• Of' NAMa In I"" ~ ... Of N Alll)ll<ollon ol DANG, Tl41 XIEM Fot c~,... ol l'i•m•. ORDER TO S140W CAUSE f'OR CHANGE OF MAME DANG, THI XIEM '-lllW a ,..Ullo<> lfl tlllt C-1 ..... ITAHMaNT PUBUC NOTICE Tiie lollowl119 l*'Mlftl ere doh1e ---------Dlnlnosa .. : TM!t&ll 0 t•D & a.ATM, V.,._ 5"'"lfte CMtlf', f9 .... AM C:. ""911 R .... """'9"'1,c:allfenlf•'97 TllrH 0 Delt!W""11M•. ll'lc., • starts Friday, 9:30 a.m. many limited quantities ... not all sizes may be available In each grouping ... colors and styles limited to stock on hand, so shop early for best selection! • 1n our Huntington Beach . store -·· women's sportswear 86 JUNIOR TEE SHIRTS 26 MISSES' PANTS 24 FULL FIGURE PANTS 34JUNIORTURTLENECK TOPS 96 JUNIOR SKIRTS 44JUNIOR P~NT TOPS 78 JUNIOR TEE SHIRTS 176JUNIORTURTLENECK TOPS 29JUNIOR PANTS 53 FULL FIGURE TOPS 54 MISSES' TURTLENECK TOPS 92 MISSES' TOPS 33 JUNIOR BLOUSES 42 FULL FIGURE TOPS 78 MISSES' PANT TOPS 63 JUNIOR PANTS 31 JUNIOR TOPS 66JUNIOR PANTS 49JUNIOR PANT TOPS 101 JUNIOR FAMOUS~AKER PANTS 45 MISSES' PANTS dresses and coats 39 JUNIOR ANO MISSES' DRESSES 68 JUNIOR ANO MISSES' DRESSES 23 JUNIOR JACKETS 91ALLWEATHERCOATS NOW 1.98 1.98 1.98 1.98 3.98 3.98 3.98 3.98 3.98 3.98 3.98 4.98 4.98 4.98 4.98 6.98 6.98 6.98 6.98 9.98 11 .98 NOW 9.98 14.98 15.98 29.98 lingerie, loungewear Now 26 CONTOUR BRAS 28 FAMOUS MAKER BIKINIS 53 JUNIOR BRAS 51 SCUFFS 64 FAMOUS MAKER STRAPLESS BRAS 29 SOFT CUP BRAS 113 SHORT SLEEP TEE SHIRTS 22 CAMISOLES 34 SOFT CUP BRAS 29 LONG GOWNS 43 LOUNGEWEAR 57 LONG ROBES 98c 98c 1.98 1.98 1.98 1.98 2.98 2.98 4.98 5.98 6.98 7.98 women's accessories Now 194DICKIES 267 KNEE HIGH SOCKS 49-SOAPS 149BELTS 41 CHINA DOLL SHOES(HOSIERY DEPn 49SOAPS 18 CERAMIC POTS 49BELTS 88 CANVAS BAGS 53 NYLON HANDBAGS 51 RAINCOATS 161 COVER UPS 24 CAMISOLE TOPS 21 EVENING BAGS. 39 TWEED HANDBAGS 29 LONG SLEEVE SWEATERS infants and toddlers 23 TODDLERS' SLIPPERS (GIRLS DEPT.I 26 TODDLERS' KNIT HATS 21 INFANT BOYS' TOPS 22 TOOOL£ft GIRLS' SLEEPWEAR 20 TODDLER BOYS' TEE SHIRTS 48 INFANT BOYS' DIAPER SETS 33 TOOOLER BOYS' PLAID SHIRTS 22 INFANT GIRLS' DIAPER SETS 27 INFANTS' DRESSES buys for girls 98c 98c 1.48 1.48 1.98 1.98 2.48 2.98 2.98 2.98 3.48 4.98 4.98 4.98 4.98 9.98 NOW 41c 1~ 1 .~ 1.98\ 1.98 1.98 4.98 4.98 NOW buys for boys 39 BASEBALL CAPS 53 TUBE SOCKS 19 LITTLE BOYS' L SL V. TEE SHIRTS 37 LITTLE BOYS' SHIRT/SWEATER SETS 39 UTILE BOYS SWEA TEAS 65 SKI PAJAMAS (SIZE SMALL) 51 S. SLV. SHIRTS 19 FAMOUS MAKER SWEATSHIRTS 27 LITTLE BOYS' SWEATSHIRTS 25 LITTLE BOYS' 3·PC. SUITS 39 BIG BOYS' SWEATSHIRTS 29 FAMOUS MAKER SHIRTS 27 FAMOUS MAKER PANTS buys for men 27 S. SL V. TEE SHIRTS 23 L SL V. TURTLENECK SHIRTS 43HATS 275.SLV. FAMOUS MAKER SHIRTS 29 S. SLV. SHtRTS 19PAJAMAS T7 S. SLV. FAMOUS MAKER SHIRTS 27S.SLV. SHIRTS 23 DRESS SHIRTS 147 FAMOUS MAKER CASUAL PANTS 71 S. SLV. POL Y/COTTERRY SHIRTS 25 L SL V. HOODED SWEATSHIRTS 27 S. SL V. WOVEN PLAID SHIRTS 64 L SL V. SPORTSHIRTS 37 FAMOUS MAKER Sp0RTSHIRTS 31 S. SL V. TROPICAL PRINT SHIRTS 37 L SLV. WOVEN PLAID SHIRTS 21 JOGGING SUITS 27 S. SLV. FAMOUS MAKER SHIRTS 23 FAMOUS MAKER SPORTCOATS shoes for the family 29WOMEN SCASUALSHOES 12 WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES 54 INFANTS' DRESS SHOES 48 BOYS' SLIPPERS 16 WOMEN'S SLIPPERS 53 MEN'S SLIPPERS 14 GIRLS' CASUAL SHOES 11 WOMEN'S LEATHER CLOGS 23 WOMEN'S THONGS 26 GIRLS DRESS SANDALS 47 BOYS' LEATHER OXFORDS 29 BOYS SUEDE CASUAL SHOES 22 WOMEN S SPORT SHOES 18 CHILDREN'S SPORT SHOES 31 MEN'S CASUAL MESH SHOES 26 WOMEN'S CASUAL SHOES 59 WOMENS SANDALS 17 MEN'S GOLF SHOES 12 WOMEN'S GOLF SHOES yardage and notions 173 EMBROIDERY FLOSS 51 OUICKPOIHTSTITCHERYKITS 148 VOS PLACEMAT FABRIC 71 PANELS HOLLY HOBBY QUILT 28 VOS PLACEMA T QUILT for your home 34 WASHCLOTHS \ 89 PRINT NAPKINS 17 ARTIFICIAL POTTED FLOWER,S 49 Pl.AC EMA TS 37 HANO TOWELS 48PLACEMATS lt KITCHEN CURTAINS 37TWIHPOLYICOTPEACALESHEETS •FULL POLY /COT PERCALE SHEETS 13 NYLOM SATIN PCLLOW CASES 21 NYLON SATIN SHEETS tA~OMATlC BLANKETS jewelry buys ' a~Nea<LACEI ..• "~IU!DJIM\.AVSETS toOECORAT'CVl"" ..... W GEll·S'rOHI 'AACl!L!TS •G£M.SroNI MeCKLACE9 NOW 98c 1.18 2.98 2.98 2.98 3.98 4.98 5.98 5.98 5.98 6.98 9 .98 9.98 NOW 1.98 1.98 1.98 1.98 3.98 3.981• 4.98 4.98 4.98, 4.98 6.98 7 98 7 98 9.98 9.98 9 98 11.98 12 98 14.98 29 98 'I NOW 98c , qs ; 9A 198 1 9~, 3 98 ') 98 7 98 7 9t q 9 9 9 9lt 9 98 10.98 12.98 13.~ 19 98 19.9ft 22.96 NOW 4Q 48c 1.68 1.481 4.9-1 NOW 1top to re-tie m'/ aboe. From then on la. lt'a a •low dawdle. I cannot tell you wbat • dJtrereoce thJa baa lilade ln 'ltd aocial We. Wbtn people d.la· cover I run, they tell me how healthy l look and bow much wei1bt I've Jost. They aha.re with m, tbel.r paiD and their aecreta. (A perfect atranier confided to me abe niaht that bia hemorrhoids were no looser a pro- blem.) There la notbi.n& to tet you apart from • the reat of the room like apeUJnt metric. ("Anl.one run the 10,000.meter race wt SUn· day? ') And not the least of lt hu been the actual time I've spent walkinf around the park. Hne you any ldt1 what It doel to a woman in ber mJd·llfe to hear somecne brutblq heavily down her bacll7 You can't buy t.Mt kind ot excitement over the counter. The charade liaa beeft •orttni for weeu now, but yesterday, u I wu atreUbJ.q followed by my "run, .. a breathlesa, ••ealy woman next to me aaked bow far I bad hm that day. I 1bru11ed, •'Four or five mila. I 'm havtna such a 1ood tJme, f lost track." ··1 nncI it bard to believe you're tbat kind of a runner." "What 1ave me away?" I asked. "Tbe bandba1. Few runners carry 'em when. they run." Wears girdle, basic black Kelly Lange Dr. Bobbe Sommer Bruce Kemohan 'Breaking Free' due Sunday Kelly Lange, Emmy Award winning NBC NewsCenter 4 anchorwoman, will be one of the featured spe{lkers at the Women's International Success Systems motivational show, "Breaking Free" Sunday at the South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa. "It takes the theory of the left brain/right brain and makes it an unprecedented experience for learning. The music engages the riJbt brain and allows for a more lasting and involVUlg process or learning." DEAR ANN LANDERS: Right now I am so mad I could eat nail~. It so happens I have bad three children and gained 10 pounds with each one. I have tried very hard to get rid or the extra weight but it is ·impossible. I do all my own housework and laundry. and I need to eat to keep my strength up. I am also a good cook and I'm a laster. Diets are no good for me, and neither are the self-help groups. I can't get to the meetings. Actually, I look pretty good when I have on my good girdle and wear basic black. La.st night it happened again, for the 20th time. My husband and I were eating out with another couple. A huge woman walked by -and I mean enormous, she must have weighed 300 pounds. My husband nudged me and said. ''That's you in five years, Kiddo." This was supposed to be funny. but I failed to see any humor in it. Can you think of a ~ood answer? - PLEASJNGL Y PLUMP IN BISMARCK Dear Plamp: Who are yoo pleaalng? Certainly not yom basband -or yourself. The best aonrer la to see • doctor and uk blm to pat you on a diet you can stay on. You don't need to starve. If you take off &he excess pound• alowly, lbey wlll stay off. U'a Wlld.Dd and tacky of yoar baabaod to needle you like that, but be u tryln' to tell you someth.lag-and you should be wtae enough to Usten. Get control of your mouth. Othen laave done It and you can, too. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm having a terrible problem with my mother and I need your help. I 'm getting married in May. My fatbet passed away in the late '60s, and my mother re· married in tbe early '70s . My problem is thls: I have a brother I dearl1 love. I have asked him to give me away at the 111 LllDIRS wedding. My mother is a very domineerlnt woman. She Is putting unbelievable pressure on me lo give that honor to the man she is married to. l have no desire to hurt her second husband, but I strongly believe this honor belongs to m1 brother. I have told her this several times, but sbt refuses to see things m y way. Yesterday she threatened me by refusing to pay for the wedding. I want my brother to give me away not only because I love him, but because I believe it is the proper thing to do. Please give me your opinion. - UN HAPPY BRIDE WHO NEEDS GUIDANCE Dear Unhappy: Tell yoar mother your de· clsion ls firm. If she doesn't want to pay for tbe wedding, have a simple ceremony In tbe clergyman's study -no reception, no party, J111t the nuptJaJs. Stick to your prlDclples, boney, I td· mire you for your penerveraoce, and others will toe. Lange will be part of the 4'h-hour show that skillfully blends theater with motivation. Her por· tion of the program will be directed at helping women become more successful. Her topic will be ··Rask Taking, an Essential to Success." Lange worked her way from helicopter traffic reporter to one of California's first network anchorwomen and co.host of the "Sunday" show. She wiJI share her steps to success. Prior to the production of the show, one rear was spent in research. More than 1,200 mterv1ews were conducted over the United States to de· termine the anatomy of success for women. With the help of noted psychologists and behaviorists, the findings were distilled to easy-to-apply prin· ciples . Doors open at 12:30 p.m. The show begins promptly at 1 p m. Tickets are $48. Price includes workbook, music tape and fruit buffet. Tickets w'll be sold at the door on a space available basis. Due to advance interest it is recommended that tickets be purchased in advance. Insomnia hard to diagnose Also appearing in the show of "Breaking Free " is Dr Bobbe Sommer . noted psychotherapist, and JoAnne Aslrow. president of the American Federation of Comedians. Songwriter Bruce Kernohan has premiered a new musical concept that blends music with motivation for the show Kemohan commented, Reservations and additional information are available by calling Lois Morton at Women's In· lernalional Success Systems (714) 751-8702. Master Charge and Visa. Phone orders accepted. DEAR DR. STEINCRORN: I differ with my doctor. He tells me I gel enough sleep but I tell him I have insomnia. Isn't the patient better able to make this decision? I recall when I used to sleep through the night. I'd jump out of bed in the morning with a great zest for life. I'd be fresh and look forward to work. I couldn't wait untiJ I reached my office. Scorpio: Keep low profile But what a difference insomnia has made. My energy is near zero It's an effort even to get out of bed. I've lost my enthusiasm. my memory is bad and I can't concentrate. After a few specially bad nights I become ir ritable <my family jumps out or my way). Al times I actually become depressed. Wouldn't you agree that these symptoms fit into an insomniac's complaints? -MRS. 0 . Friday, May 1, 1981 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES <Mar. 21 -Apr. 19). Press any advan· tage this is your power-play day. Emphasis on money and love. It is all or nothing -the "tem· perature" is hot, tepid areas have no place in scenario. Judgment and timing hit mark -with resounding thud! TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): Secrets dominate -you learn how to close deal -and you learn HOROSCilPE where you stand in "love department." Aries .native figures prominently. You gain more rec· ognitioo. additional funds -and plenty of affec· tion! GEMINI <May 21 -June 20): Wishes are fulfilled, investments pay dividends -member of opposite sex professes love. Focus on step-by-step program leading to financial achievement, greater emotional stability. You make valuable, new con- tact. CANCER (June 21-July 22): You receive moral and other support -aspirations come into sharp, clear focus. Another Cancer figures prolil- inently as room is made for you at top. Hunch pays off -intuitive intellect "works overtime." LEO (July 23-Aug. 22>: Emphasis on com- munication, movement, travel, social activity, and expansion of personal horizon. Intellectual curiosi· ty Is stimulated by message, call or assignment. Gemini, Virgo. Sagittarius natives play significant roles..r VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Money discussion MEDICAL TIAM M.S VOLUNTEERS WITH · DEPRESSION A Medical Research Team Is ~ng the UM of an anti-depressant medication. •_,,,.rm••••• S11lf: Voluntffrs must b9 ovM 1e 'YM'lt of a;• and exptrienclng deprenlon (f..eing ud °' blue for any l'tilaOn) for at i.at 4' weekL c• 714 1s2.1t21 ' 752-5926 is highlighted; family member desires luxury item or art object Domestic adjustment is on agenda. Key is diplomacy. Revelation occurs in connection with "inner feelings ... You learn about interest rates, credit, financial reports. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22) : Read between the lines ; analyze agreements, legal documents. Defer to judgment of one close to you, including partner or mate. Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius persons figure prominently. Someone is trying to tell you something! SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Maintain low pro- file. Job gets done through quiet efficiency. Em- phasis on employment, dependents. recreaUon and health programs. Taurus, Libra and another Scorpio figure prominently. SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec 21): Give logic equal time with emotional responses. See places, people as they are. not m~rely u you wish they might exist. Means avoid sell-deception. Define terms, streamline techniques. Aura of romance prevails. CAPIJJCORN C Dec. 22-Jan. 19): EmphasiJ on construction, security, safety measures ana re· union with.older family member. Taurus, Virgo and another Capricorn figure prominently. Baste costs come into focus. You'll learn where yoi.i stand and what to do about it. AQUARIUS C Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Finish what you start -restless relative is sincere, but could be misinformed. Calls, messages, short journeys dominate scenario. Aries, Leo, Sagittarius natives play important roles. You'll decide to let go or past. PISCES (Feb. 19· Mar. 20): New project could result ln added profits. Empbuia on special col· lecUoos, initiative, originality and pioneeriJli con- cepts. Leo, Aquarius persons figure prominenUy. One you admire returns compliment. Start! Dear Mn. 0.: Ask your doctor eucUy wby be discards your own dJagnosu. Voar description fits the usual symptoms wbicb sleeplessness produces. But it lso't a simple problem to solve. Here are some facts about •leep tbat sbou.Jd lnterHt you. Stady ol brain waves Indicate tbat there are five distinct phases of sleep. Staie 1: Thia lasts about 10 minutes. There's some muscle relaxation, lowered pulse rate and regular breathing. When awueaed durlDf tb1s llgbt stage, one may even deny having been aaleep. SJ>ri"I 11 "°"' ;,, fall bloo!". Yt1lll fiwl" u,pnb 11/ttti•,. •I tOfllb '""'"" *'''"'" If 1•li•b th. wo"'"" wbo 11t1>«t1 oNIJ th. h.11. ' ( Stage %. Altbougb sound asleep, one may e .. 1. ly be awakened by sounds. Body activity baa decreased, so bas brain activity. Stage 3. Almost complete rela:uUon. Only a loud voice or other soand will awakee the sleeper. Blood pressure, pulse rate, breatJdng coetl•ae to lessen. Stage 4. Tbls deep level caues complete 1'9• laxatloo. It's most profound ID cbUdbood <wbd • ·DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE youngster can sleep throagb a Uumderatorm aad other loud noises). Stage s. For the nrat 80 to to minute• tbete stages aJternate in the sleeper. The brain •••._. change. Eyes begin to OHUlate back and fertai rapldJy. This ls called KEM sleep (rapid eye mo•· ement) uad ls the atage during wblcb dream• ... cur. During a typical al&llt yoa travel back ... forth tbrougb these varioua stages. Eac::lt cyele lasts at least 90 minutes. Your problem, Mrs. 0.? Now yoa ca• .. . derstand It uu't a simple oae. Find a doctor .... .. interested lo insomnia. A complete llhtory aad la· vestlgatloo of your sleep llablta are Important. . ·= i: ~ .. .. ·: t . ·~ \ \ ' . Party time in Medco Festivities galore greet Newport fleet 1 SANJ>la IOY '4 .............. · ~. SJiliq enthusiasts and ~ers ot fun from the Orange Coast went soutb of the border last weekend to partleipat~ in festivities surrounding the 34th r'UDD.lng of the Newport to Ensenada International Yacht Race. 'they gathered by the thousands in Ensenada, including more than 180 members of the Newport Ocean Salling Association <NOSA> which runs the race. The weekend officially began Satur- day morning under sunny skies with a col- orful parade of b\Uldreds of boats out of Newport Harbor and NOSA President Don Moss and hJs wife Betty hosting VIPs on the Luna V to view the race start. Hosting the press boat this year on the Fleetwood were Jack and Carol DeKramer. Then it was on by land and sea to Ensenada where the NOSA folks set up shop at the Bahia Hotel to await the sailors who began coming into the Mexican port on Sun- day. JeN'fl ana Alice Brame. 1le's junior past president for tile roce. RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTHY .... ..._.. ...... l tU .HAllOI IL YD. · co•• MISA-141-1116 SENIOI C S SPECIAL 25°/o OFF AU. SH M-., T--.. WM. 0111J HAii HAMDLEIS ........ _.MU4M ALFRBOS OdJ'~ W~do ltall ... \'OR MEM ANO WOMEN FoClcla .. " Elec1rdvlll . . . (P91rnanent hat r9IT'IOVOI) FOR WOMEN ONLY CeUte .... Spot Reducing Diet Progrorru Wox'lr'Q. EY9iolh TWlng . • ~ ..... . Among official doings in Emenada wu a · reception Sunday night boa:e. U.S. Navy Admiral and Mrs. Justin L e Ill at the Naval Officers Club followed a dlnn~r. a Mexican-style banquet, hosted b' the Ensenada Chamber of Commerce. Laneille is commander of the U.S. Naval Base at San Diego. Honored at the chamber dinner were NOSA officials including the Moues, race • -t HAPPENINGS I general chairman Alan Oleson and bjs l\'.i(e Jean, race assistant general chairman John Ballew and his wife Barbara, and race publicity chairman Bette South and her cinematographer husband Leonard. Mrs. South has handled publicity for the Ensenada race for 23 years. Newport Beach Mayor .Jackie Heather also was a reception and dinner guest alooe with her husband Dr. Loren Heather. Others attending in~uded Jiffy Woods, who is race entertainment chairman, and her husband Roderick; Jimalee Hubeli, assistant entertainment chairman, and her bl,l.Sband Don; Jerry Brame, who is race junior past president and his wife Alice, and Admiral and Mrs. Alfred Manning Jr. MalUliJll ls commander of the 11th Ca.ast Guard Dlltrict. The director of the Ca.U(ornia Depart- ment of Boating and Waterways, Salvatore Mercado, attended the fesUvltiea as a representative of Gov. Edmund Brown. Ac· companying Mercado wu his wUe Marty. A1so attending were Mr. and Mn. Robert Ezelle <he's consul &eneraJ of the United States>; Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Av1Ja Escoto Che's Mexican coordinator for the race); Mr. and Mrs. Rene Ruelas Granados, representing the Mexican Tourism Bureau; and Ensenada Mayor and Mrs. Raul RamJrez Funke. More festivities on Monday included the trophy presentation luncheon, official an· nouncement of race winners and, finally, a cocktail fiesta poolside at the Cortez hotel hosted by the Mosses. In addition to those alte*1y m~ed. among folks gathering for the gran finale were Dale and Suzie Karjala o Newport Beach, Nan Wheeler. Robert and Mary Carolan, Daily Pilot Assistant Manaring Editor Charles Loos and his wife Judy, and Daily Pilot Boating Editor Almon Lockabey and his wife Virginia. • w * Everything handm.de or handcrafted l••"M t ' wC'114 ,._. COMSI_.. DISIGH ~w.iiatlfOf ...... ,oz.~...,. Ha... NOSA Prendent Don Mou and wife Betty (at left ) celebrate con- clusion of race. In photo • above are cocktail ~1ta partiers Len and Dottie Emery (left) and Lyle and Alice Kerr. In photo below are Bev Holcomb (left ) and Bonnie Zillgett, both wives of past NOSA prelident1, "> with Bill Arens of San Diego. MAY SALE 20 0/ OFF BLOUSES /0 · & JEWELRY .. .. I ,. •' ay Ramirez, left, and Rick Castro of The Reycards • . yTOMTITUS ~Mt,,....,..., Shakespeare, Ibsen and Rodgers and Ham- erstein take the spotlight on Orange Coast stages · s weekend in the form of three new productions 11 with May Day openings. ''"A Midsµmmer Night's Dream" is the am- itious fare at the Westminster Community ti.eater, opening a five-weekend run. "Hedda abler" settles in for two weekends at Saddleback otlege, while "The Sound of Music" launches a ingle, sold-out weekend at the Newport Theater rts Center 1 : ART WINSLOW is directing "Midsummer," fhe first local community theater production of a iJERMSSION . • Shakespearean play in more than 15 years. Head- lhg the ~ast are Laurie Sondag as Puck, Clark flurson and La Donna de Barros as the king and queen of the fairies, Woody Jones, Maureen ~hrubsole, Kent Elofson and Beth Titus as the lov- ~rs and Chariest Taylor. John Greenslade, Rod Carter, Robert Leibovich, Rona! Grigsby and (:harles Lolcoma as the tradesmen. The production will be staged Fridays and Saturdays al 8:30 through May 30 at the Westminster Theater, 7272 Maple St. Reservations 995-4113. • Lynn Wells plays the title role or "Hedda gabler" in the Henrik lbsen drama at Saddleback ollege under the direction of K , Wynn Pearce. lher$ in the cast include Maline ~tson, Beverly A:nowsmith, Gerry Litlletofi. LowemG.aspar, Lyle Brooks and Cam Knight. /""" Performances will be given Fr1day and Satur- day of this week and next at 8 p.m. with additional stagings Sunday at 7. May 9 at 3 and llay 10 at 3 1n the Studio Theater on campus. Reservations 831-4747. ,,. ... "THE SOUND of Music" is a special produc- tioa of the Newport Beach Parks, Beaches and Recreation Department and all performances - MAU SOUTH COAST SYUFY CHll.,OME Costa Mesa 549 3352 Orange 634-2553 llO PUlll ACClPTlD FOR Tllll fm1Gl"'11T Friday and Saturday at 7:30, Sunday at 1 -are sold wt. Standby tickets may be available at the door of the theater. 2501 Clllf Drive, Newport Beach. Joan Simonek stars at Maria wtth Ted Knorr playing Baron Von Trapp, Coreen Ehlers aa Elaa and Don Hamilton as Max. ~bin Smith and Jay Delcamp are the young lovers with Jeff Lewis, Gary Kerr, Sherry McPeak, Missy Bradshaw, Katherine Smith and Deanne Jacobs playing the Von Trapp children. Drawing their final curtains this weekend are these three productions: -A VIEW From the Bridge,. at the Sad- dle back Valley Community Theater, 25741-C Obrero, Mission Viejo (8JC>.9Z2>. playing Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m . -"Girl Crazy" at the San Clemente Com- munity Theater. 202 Ave. CabrlJlo, San Clemente (492-0465), on stage toniaht through Saturday at 8 p.m . "Chapter Two" at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse, 3503 S. Harbor BJvd., Santa Ana, coq- tinuing tonight through Sunday at varying curtai.D times. THREE OTHER shows are continuing their respective runs. They are: -"Childe Byron" at South Coast Repertory, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa (957-4033), playing nightly except Mondays at 8 (weekepds at 2:30) through May 17. -"Babes in Arms" at Sebastian's West Din· ner Playhouse, 14(\ Ave. Pico, San Clemente (492-9950), playina hfghtly except Mondays at varying times through May 10. -"The Paisley Convertible" at the Hunt- ington Beach Playhouse in the' Seacliff Village shopping center oo Main Street at Yor~to..-n Avenue, Huntineton Beach (847-4485), runnin1 Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 through May 23. • ACl'ORS LOOKING for professiooaJ training may schedule an audition for South Coast Repertory's Summer Conservatory oo May 7, 14 or 21 The conservatory, now m its lllh year, runs from June 22 to Aug. 14 To schedule an audition, contact SCR at 957-2602 MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPl.E' llW_....olN,..... elo .... -·-"" ...,,....,. "' ....... -........... Dy __ ~ lllU. AGn M*ITTID ~ o.-.i--liiiil ,_LL AOU AOMITTIO ~,.....,.,o.,...,,ci,..,~ RINGO STARR "CAVEMAN" '"'. rm I" NIGHTHAWK" (R) . I "UONOF THE DESERT" <NI I "THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE" IRl ti ' "THE~·-1 SINGER'' (PG) . BY-:'10al.UL DOVO~ ~ ............ Wben cou.tlna IUck CutrO ud Ray .Ramlra • teamed up Jn the PiaillppUMI to am, to Ameitta nrvlctmeo at Clark Alr Jl'Otte Bate, lh•Y didn't foretee 1 caretr In Lu Ve1u But the Re1c!lrdl, a1 t.bey call themHlv ... jU1t llft1lbed a five.year run oo tbe Vesu Strip, a tour of the Orient a.ad a movte ln lbeir home Islands. They' II be boldin1 forth tbrou1b tlii• weekend wlth two nl1htly 1how1 at the Kona Hawall ln Santa Ana. Their act le a crot• between every 1oun1e 1ln1er you ever heard and the Marx Brothen. It'• success ill due in i.r1e part to the antics ot CHtro, who uses bis outra1eou1 factaJ featuret to w.oo ln· tlmldate, mock and cajole the audience-Into gleeful participation. "When we started we wefe Just dolnt atral&bt singing, but people were la~ at me,'' be ex-• plained. "You know what they~ call me ln the Philippines? Monkey, or hon.." CASTRO said that bothered him "for •bout six months," then he lncorpyrated bla appearance into the act. While Ramirez ls the 1trai1bt·man, stand- ing on stage and s1n11n1 the Uke1 of "My Way" and "Get Back," Castro dives into the crowd to create havoc, sometimes pulling audience- members onto the stage for a little good-natured humiliation. Otherwise, he ducks behind the cur- tain for frequent costume chanaes Cin some of their shows, the Reycards to fever ). What results ls a slUy and ~ times, highly entertaining act. There are a tew sluggish mo- ments, but on the whole it works. .,....,.,.,. .... CAVEMAN (POI 11•·••·4••• .. ·••·u• ·-• .. tel ··-nllWMl 'Tilt• .. FKlllly A .. YOCll.OGC"l....,..NN.........,. -' c.ndl•-THE HANO CR) tll/SJl .. 5'0 ..... , ........... .. IY&.ftl,.._,. ITA.U.Ottl: Mii NIGHTHAWKS {A) , •• , ..... 111•t1l•tt11 ...... ,...._ ..... CAVEMAN (PG) ... , .................. , .. ....,.,., .. .... ~---­THI LAIT CHAI! (PO) ~Ill SUANOUT {..a) .. MIAY«:J GA ft THI LQN9 "'°'"' nn • ...-.-.~-"'~ THI HO~INQ (ft) THI CHILDAIN 1"1 Scott, Hutton star ' • WAYNE, Pa. {AP) -Two hUDdred years ago, ' Valley Forge was the scene of George Washington's harrowing winter encampment. Now it's the scene or George C. Scott's latest movie - about student revolt. Filming of "Taps," which also stars Timothy Hutton, began at the Valley Forge Military Academy here Wednesday. The 20th Century Fox film features Scott as the headmaster of a fie-~ tilious military academy and Hutton as a re-t bellious cadet, according to a spokesman for \ Howard and Stanlev Jaffee Productions. ~ ~~~~~~~~~~-~ "THIEF"' ' tlON-'"""'9 7:11, .... ''MODIRN ROMANCE" -.. -. . ., .. . .......,,,,_ "RAGING BULL" 1111 f't.ue • "ELEPHANT MAN" I Ill I<"''" ~EVBMG­ MOIGeNIWI .,.._.WOMAN Hordle of epec;ied-out IOI· -..nc11on tane compll· · cat• ~·1 purlUlt of Ille lllW of .,, ullt~ i-cryatlll D TIC TAC DOUGH • ti1•A•l•H When It'• found • robull nutM 11 lonely 1nd Nd. 11\e OU-nur-decler• lh9)1 wlll hold l>aclt their f•~ untM the 11911 a boyftlend G) OOOOTIMEI An angry Housing Authoft. COUNTRY MUSIC -Don Meredith will host "The 16th Annual Academy of Country Music Awards" tonight at 9 on Channel 4. ly offlciat "*" tile Evana family •fter one ol Mlcl1 .. f1 lett.,1 to 1111 9dit°' 11 publlahed 83 TOMOAAOW / TOOAY A report on •lrcralt ot t111 2111 c»nlury; en eaam1n1- tlon of l\Nt and -.C:trlcity prOducad by '°'" power. • ~ at the ap\nlll injury e-unit et Viii.-,, Medlcll c.n1... -predlCtlON f()( revolutionary cn•ngM In Ametlean work nablta due to ad.,ences In telec:ofnmunleatlOns G ELECTRIC COMPANY IA> (fDj ABCHEWS UO '1J JOK£A'8 WILD G) WELCOME BACK, KOTTE.A Wnen lh• flu 1weep1 through Buc111nan, 111a 41f'trtched 1tuden11 1r11 put In with Ille s-athogs Cl) BEHM'HIU Benny demonstUllH how people communicated bef()(e Mr Bell and 1111 ·~ CHANNEL LISTINGS &l) KCET NEW88EAT ~ 8TU0t08EE 'RlverBoata"(R) ®) a.ARNEY Mtl.LER The 12th precinct prepar .. tor a shock when a t>omt>- er teavee • br,.1c... by Del Wilson I desk &:68 6 EOITOAIAL. 7:00 8 C88 N£WS CJ H8CNEW8 0 HAPf"Y DAYS AGAIN R1ch11 hu trouble with a coworlcer wllen lie gelt 11 )Ob on 1111 loading dock ot •MW&PIPlf Q A8CNEW8 '1J BULLSEYE G) M•A•S•H l'1th11r Mulcahy takes being pasaeO over 101 a promotion p111101<>phleally unltl lie heats ol lhe rapid adv&~I ml<)e lly II heroic MileoPt.,. pilot Cl) STREETS OF 8AN FAAHaSCO Stone conoucts a retenl 11111 search !or a pun~ whO shot down a cop thtM davs belate hos •11t1remen1 f) KNX.l .C8 $1 LO'> Anq1•l"" CJ KNBC 0N8C1 Los AllQt'll''> 0 KTL A lnel 1 Lll<, AnQt'lt:''> Q KABC rv 1A8CJ Lo., Ang .. 11 ., I' "f'M B 1CBSI S.in Dit>qo 0 KHJ TV (ln<l I L os An l~ ,,.., t~ 11.CST ABC• S.in D·qc Q) II. TIV tln<.J I LO~ Anqt'I•·~ Q) KCC'P TV 11n 1J 1 Los Anqt:'1.,c, ED 11.CE 1 rv 1PBS1 Lo!> An4""'" ml KOCE TV 1PBS1 Hunt ntiion B;>,1ch al OVEAEAIY Guesl Helen H1ye1 (Fl) m> MACNEIL I L.EHAEl4 REPORT (I) TIC TAC OOOOH (!DJ MERV GAIFFIH Gue111 Bobby Vinton 81&11' Faulngton ~· James Mercel, Eleyne BooSler. O.an Conn 7:30 f) 2 ON THE TOWN HOSIS Steve Edward• and Melody Rogers A l<>OI< at th11 Brlllsh ColOny or Hono Kono 0 FAMILY FEU0 0 !»1A NANA Guests Th11 Lettermen Q EYEO..LOS ANGELES Hosts rnez Pedroza Paul Moye• 0 FACE THE MUSIC Q) ALL IN TliE FAMILY Conven11on·t>Ound Ar<:hie 1s m1ss1ng tor almost 24 hours and Ille lemlfy la gr aspong tor clueS lo Ills whereabouts I Part 2) €D MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT m> NEWS (1) P.M. MAGAZINE A woman whO t>as won numerous contests inner c11y yo utt>s who are accomp11sned acrobola 8:00 t) CJ) CHECKING IN Florence mutes bu5tness .ind pleasure and winds up with neanbreak and trou- ble Q NBC MAGAZINE WrTH DAVID BRINKLEY 0 MOVIE • • ·~ "logan·s Run" ( 111761 Mlehlel York Jenny AQul!er Logan. a young man hv1no In a futur11oc CBS • wms big NEW YORK <AP> -CBS entered the rerun portion or the 1980-81 prime-time season in the week end· in& April 26 in full stnde, claiming the five highest-rated shows and six of the first 10, figures from the A.C Nielsen Co showed CBS' average rating for the period was 16.7. lo 16 for ABC and 14.2 for ~C Nielsen s ays that means in an ayerage pnme·lime minute during the week. 16.7 percent of the nation's homes Wlth television were tuned to CBS. A repeat of CBS' "Dukes of Hazzard" was the week's highest rated show. with a second episode ~ from the same senes -pre-empting "J>allas" the runnerup. The rating for the No I show was 24 No 26 position, was 17 5, compared with the 24 for the week's No. 1 show. NBC and ABC each had two shows among the week's five lowest-rated "The Gangster Chronicles" NBC was No. 63, followed by "Palmerstown" on CBS, "NBC White Paper," "ABC News Closeup" and "Those Amazing Animals" on ABC. Here are the week's 10 highest· rated shows INllCy, II ....,... to .. ..,. • .... eGIM> wher• b•~•nd hi• ----..:c eO-MO ...,, MM••~·-­Oll 'TV,....... end ~hie ewn,...,,.. r~ ........ * •i. "TM Unfof~" ( ,. Alltdtwf Hepburft, lun~A~ family etNtolll ~ Ute ltoetlle Kiowa lndlant. who olatm th1t Ill• ~· lldopl.O ~ ter le 1 "*"b« of 1/ltlt tribe. -~ ...... ~ A -wno llM won numeroue oont• .. : MllY H111 talltt with TWl\MI Rand. tN peydllc to lM 1t1r1. Ind IT'Mta linger Dionne W1r1Wlck who ahltM 101M of Mt eil.,.,t· -U\11 -e .... predicled, JIWlll Wlrldlllm , will feYiew "8-ckroeda." I Cl) MOVIE • • 'h ··v ictory At Entet>be' ( 11178) Burt Lan· cut.,, Kirk Oouglu A band of 111 ae<t cornman- doe ••aoe• • dating •lrlllkl r11d to frM t04 Jewtlh lloelAQU t>el"Q held 1n Uganda by Atat> tatronata. • JOHH HUSTON: A WAA~ Thia q>ecill loc;u-on 3 World Wit It documenll· rtee by renowned dlract0t John Hu1ton "Report From Tiie Aleutians·· ( tll42); "San Pielro" ( 194l4•t. '"Let Tlllte Be Light"' ( 11145-4fl) eno mcludea ahort tnteNlew• Wllh ho1t Cle•• Roberta tlllt ..,,. as 1ntro0ucuons 10 1111 hims '1!) AMERICAN St«>RT STORY Rappac:cin1 a OIUQhte« by Nathanlel Hawthofna In 181h·C•nlury Padua. e young Italian acholer (Krts- tolle< Tal>Ot•I lall~ tn tove Wllh a myaterloua ac:ien- 1111'1 d1ughl8r (Kathleen Beller) WllOse very touch cen br"'Q dHltl IRI 8:30 f) Cl) PAAK PLACE A respected judge breaks und« Ille strain anO sends Delfld and alt ol hll ettor neya but one to )a11 for contemot ol court 0 (!m 8080M BUOOIES Amy end Kip scneme to tu1tner the.r romantic 1nvolvemant w1111 their raspec;t111• lavontet. Henry and Sonny m CAAOl 8URNETT ANOFRIEN06 SkolS Entet Mra Tud- balt · · Tna Fruitcake 9:00 iJ Cl) MAGNUM, P.I. A hllle terrier becomes the Ob)ICI ol reQelted kidnap 1111mpts by his tormer owner.• gangll.,. (RI 0 ACAD8l'I Of' COUNTRV MUSC AWAA08 KTLA e 1:00 -"LOI••• Run ... Fututlltlc movie about l*li>le llvinl in a hu1e bubble who 111ume· then•• no life· out.aide. . . KCOP • 1:00 -"Victory at En· tetibe ... MoVfe 1tarrtn1 Elizabeth Taylor and Klit l>otialu dramatizel the Israeli rescue raid in U1anda. KCET 9 8:00 -"John Huston: A War Remembered." Three 1001· suppressed documentarle1 from World War D by director John Huaton. 1t:OO. (J) MOMILWf & .... WtlMa Meo II CM1 ~. 11111 ..,.,,,._. la bombed and the ._ P90ple lie .... 1oe1* It to -lllllM . • MOVW L•rry Gatlin, Temmy Wynell• and Don Ml'edlth 11«* the 18111 annuli edl- 1104\ ot th... awerda, honoring eacellence 1n lhe country mualc field, to be t•lecaat Uva from lh• Shrine Audllooum •n Los A'191f" 0 ®l BARNEY MILL.£1\ A IOCAl community gtoup atafla a lull--le riot In prot"t or POO< polic. pro- 1ecuon o G) MERV GRIFFIN Gu1111 Bobby Vinton. Blair Ferrington Deneen. Jamaa Marcel. Eleyne Booller. ONn Conn Pete Berbutu. Pia Zac10t1 m> SHEAI< PREVIEWS · Roger Ebert and o- Slll< al review Nighthawk a Cave- man "Modern Romance" and ··eacall- t>ur t-.300®) TAXI Bobby's VICIOUS l1111er lo a lllted critic 11 aafvaged trom lhe wutebl5ket and sent to the nawspape< by • g1eeru1 Lou11 m> TOMORROW I TODAY A IOQI. at whets oeong done lo predict aartt>- quekes an 11ncoun1er with backyer<l inventors an 1n,,.stogatton ol the high C09tl of ~ care, WI PCNlrt opinion on Ille nMd '°' mot• medlc:el ,_ell ~-(I) NUME On • day wherl evetylhlng _,, to be going wrong, a report., atoowa up to wr111 a INture on Ina hoa- pltll Bomm Hews 9 20/20 t&..30G) NEWS CD INOEPEHOEHT H2lWONC HEWS '1!) MYSTERY ··s..gaent Crtbb Some- th 1ng Old, Something New·· SergHnt Cribb auapecll thll an Old man naa fellen \rletlm lo a mar. rflge-fo1-proltt 1c111me (Pert 2) 11:00800(1 ®,NEWS 0 STARTREK The landing party ot the Enterprise 11 eapoHd to a strange OllMl&H that ages people a1 an incredible rate '1J NEWL YWEO GAME G) M'A'S•H Kt1nge1 se1m1 10 lack Radar'• ~nack tor cumng lhrough rad tape to gel aome much neectllO sup- ph•• lor the unit (Pan 2) ti) BEHNY HILL Benny trlel hts hand u a news announcer • * '" "Jet Ov•r Ttt. A«enllc" ( 1959) Guy MMl- eon. Virginia Mayo. ea CtWt...m'9 ANQIL.t Tlw Angete take on the king of con artllt• and actMlnle to bMI the tnan 11 his own QMll. (Fl) 8 GUNIMOM.a • ....aN: ~ m~ THIATI'f ··r here11 Requln" Tiie tplrlt of Tl--·· deed hu1b1nd Cemllle poleona ""l'Y aapec1 of her mer. riaoe to Laurent (Pllr1 3) 12-.IO it T()M()Afk)W Gue.I Chucit Mangione Cl) Of« 8Tl.P MYOHO ··To Know The End'" An Engltan 1t1><11l1n, vw:atlon· Ing on • southern Frencto town. '°'-Ille deelt\ In battle of a stranger wftO 11 to become her huM>lnd 1:00 8 PSYCHIC PHEHOMENA, TWE ~ltEY()H() '"The Dyadic Cyclone·· Hotta Dam..,, Slmpeon Stacy Hunt G.-1 Ton1 L1lk m MOVIE * • * Liiith" ( 11164) W11- ren Beatty, Jean Seberg Frfdat1'• Bayt i•r Mo.,l~it -~~ 11:00. * "Ride<• Of Oee11ny" 111133) Jotm Wayne. Gabtry Hay11 11:IO '1J * * * "'Sitting Pretty"' ( 11148) Cllhon Webb, Rob- ert Young • -AFTERHOOH- 1:.t:oe> CD * * • ··Tne Story Ot Wiii Rogera" 11952) J- Wyman, Wt/A Rogera Jr 1:00 G) • * '1> "Born To Be Bad"' (11150) Joan Fon. talne. Robert Ryan i:aa 0 * * 1h ""The Dey Thi I F1811 Came 0ut·· ( IN'T) I Cendlce Bergan. Tom Cour11n1y JOHN DARLING by Armstrong & Batiuk ,--~~~~~--~~----~ Viewers fleeiiig By PETER J . BOYER A,. Te...,._ Writer LOS ANGELES -Observers of television, insiders and outsiders, are spending a lot of cocktail dialogue on • the s ubject of the networks' dwin· dling share O( the prime time aU· dience. The favorite·question: Where are the viewers going? New Technology zealots claim the answer is obvious With nearly 18 million homes hooked into cable, they say, networks have to lose au· dience. gramming by independent statiooa, to amateur athletics. Sound reasoning, all around. Bui to the other question, less asked but no less central -Why ? The question has become passe in Hollywood, possibly because Us answer is taken as an incontroverti· ble truth, beyond discussion. The answer, the simple truth, is that most network television, the front-line, day-to-day product. isn't very good. To put it another way, here are some prime lime attractions, aa described by network publicists: From ABC's "Vegas" "Insane Professor Believes He Is The Real Wayne Newton . . . " Or at least, ec· centric. From NBC's "Friday Night at the Movies'' -"The Harlem Globetrot- ters on Gilligan's Island." Nielsen says that means of all the country's TV-equipped homes. 24 percent saw at least part of the ~bode. "Dukes of Hazzard," with a rating of 24 representing 18 7 million homes, "Dukes of Hazzard," JO p m . 23.3 or 18.1 million. "MA S-H," 23.2 or 18 million, "Private Benjamin,·· 22.5 or 17 5 million. and "The Jeffersons," 22 4 or 17 4 million. all CBS: "Three's Co mpany." 22 or 17.1 million, ABC ; "Di ff' r ent Strokes." 20 8 or 16.2 m1llaon, NBC , "Nurse," CBS, and ·'Too Close for Comfort." ABC, both 20.4 or 15.9 million, and "Facts of Life." 20 or 15.6 million. NBC James Best and friend from "Dukes of Hazzard." Detractors of the New Technology are currently in vogue. They like to go on about how tiny is the percen· tage of American homes equipped with video cassette units or booked into cable. They have other suspects in the prime time audience theft - ranging from a new interest in books (is it possible?>, to improve pro· That's why. ABC's "Three's Company" was the bl1hest-rated non-CBS program, in si.Xth place, with NBC's "Oiffrent Strokes" seventh. CBS had the only two original programs in the week's Top 10 "Private Benjamin'' in fourth place and "Nurse" lied for etghth. , NBC's last-place rinish was the network's eighth in a row, though the plcture was not entirely bleak. "NBC Magazine," a flop in the ratin~s all season, opposite the year's No. 1 show, CBS' "Dallas," more than ~ubled its rating in a new Thursday oi1bt slot <See story, right>. • The rating for "Magazine," in the "'Cinematic dynamics." -A•cner W1ne1en NY POST 'Magazine' gains NEW YORK 1 AP> "NBC Magazine," the season's least- watched prime lime teler1s· show opposite .. Dallas" on CBS, more than doubled its rar in a new Thursday night time slot, the network said Saturd . NBC said audience figures from the A.C Nielsen Co. showed "Magazine'' in the new time period with a rating of 17.5, compared with an average for the season of 8.1 in the old Friday night slot opposite ··Dallas " Nielsen says the ratinc means of all the homes in the country with television, 17.5 percent saw at least part of the NBC program. "Magazine" now competes with situation comedies on both CBS and ABC. ~G}f/. ; /P L ) ' c..Yrtu"/lad o~ NOW PLAYING IMA lll&llOll"WI --WUT ... m Ill"" l!U flu• ~-di V,... I-C-E-• C-\lots! ~19 S339 uo Q90 1342~» "I 1'3$ rOUllTA• Hun ...... , IUCI .... • ,..... PK•llC fouft\11" v11111y EO.OllO ,._, S\aCl!vlll °'"'' 'n ACCIPtu °'"' lft !167 2•11 64• 0160 139 t 110 .. "" --~ SHOWTIMES- WHkdaya 7:00 & 9:30 P.M. Im Sunday 2:00-4:20-6:40·9:00 I. I If you suffer back or leg pain from a slipped disc or spinal muscle strain, a chiropractic examination should be performed. A proper examination and diagnosis of this condition usually results in successful treatment without drugs or surgery with minimum loss of work time. According to a recent issue of Medical World News, over 50 million Americans used chiropractic services last year for the relief of these and similar health problems . The primary reason is because CHIROPRACTIC 'NOAKS! Chiropractic seeks to correct . the cause of back and leg problems and not just tre~t symptoms. Our staff of well-trained personnel and chiropractic doctors study all the symptoms of back disorders, which often include leg pain, tingling, numbness, and· cramping in the calf, thigh, and buttocks. We then offer prompt corrective treatment to minimize pain and encourage health recovery. Whether your back problem is a result of an accident, recent stress or lingering condition, or even if you are under the care of another doctor, do not content yourself with partial results or prolonged periods of loss of work or bedrest. Information concerning chiropractic care and your problem may be obtained by calling 646-0516~ Also, information concerning chiropractic coverage e under WORKMAN 'S COMPENSATION, AUTOMOBILE INJURY INSURANCE, GROUP HEALTH INSURANCE, and other programs is available. This is a Public Service by: To~o's electronics district is a huge flea market. • I shadowed by the cuatomary 8-S to 8-5 &booter, lt'a not a matter ol ~ packa1e of muscles that dominates ln· any IOld at all with Gan ( Flaueroa) within a.-3 lnchel lf he la t.o be 1uc· eesaful. "Four to ftve. inc he. la a lot of l••way," aaya ~rtaon. "U you mlu by that-much, you're probably not 1oln1 to makelt. LONG BEACH -The United States tematlonal water polo. gone. We're a very balanced team." • water polo team reaumea action tonl&ht Second, be just happen.a to play Ftaueroa, camlde~ one ol the fln•t at Lona Beach State ln wbat m.ipt be about two feet over bi.a bead every time shooters ln the world, la currently Ill· 1 couldered runnin1 the faunUet -ac· out, u exemplified by All-American Un1 lt out, optln1 for dvWan duties J c.&ptina the challent.e of Cuba, honors FOUR Umea at the Univenlty of after the disappointment ol the 1980 YuaoaJavia and Hungary on con.aecutJve California, in addlUon to bis hleb school Olympics boycott. n11bt1. honors while at Newport Hart}or, An artlat ln a sea ol muscle., the Tbe openlna sprint la at. 8:30 a.a the culminated by CIF 4-A Player of the lM·pound Robertson reUea on fiJlale, , Americans attempt to regain res~· Year laurels. rather than tbumpln1 beada with the op· ' tabUlty behind the runaway leader. 1980 Entering tonight's action Robertaon poaltJon, and with h1a speed, dexterity Ol)rnpics champion Rwsala, here at the bas popped in 10 goals, but he's hardly and left-banded touch, be lends a facet FINA Cup champion.ships. the gunner that those credentiaJJI would to the American attack that appean ln· Leading Coach Monte Nitskowakl's make it appear. Quite the contrary, ac· dJa~able. American entry ls scoring phenom cordin.e to the 22-year-old Robertaoa. • Slie ia important to a point," said Kevin Robertson, who bas stood out in "I was just open," js b.11 explanaUon Robeii;Lson, "but water can be a great several categories during these games. for striking for four 1oa11 a1ain1t equallier." . . first -be loota like he ia stand.in& in Bulgaria and another four asaJnst the Robertaon says the main objective ia a pothole when be takes his position in Soviet Union. simply to shoot when the hole la there, -:t::-h:-e_ll_n_e_up ___ h_is_5_·_9_s_t_a_tur_e_o_v_er_· ___ "_l...,.don __ 't_r_ee ..... 1_a~n...::y_.:....pr ..... e.s~sur.;;.;..:e_a~t:...a::;U::...::•~•-=a=---_.::.bu::.t:_:a:.:c:.:c:..:u:.::.r.::.a~cy ls usually necessary Al for tonlebt'1 duel, in addition to Yuaocslavia and Hunaary. the aUver and bronze medallatl at the 1980 Ofympica, Robertaon eclloea what b1a eoacb baa been preacbin1: ''We've just &ot to win the rest ol our games and aee what hap- pens. We're a pretty youn1 t.eam and we're trying to keep things ln penpec· live." While the Americans are a young out· flt, trylna to fill five boles from the team which qualified for the Moscow Olympics, Robertson isn't one of the younger ones iii terms of experience. He wu a member of this national <See ROBERTSON, Pa1e CZ> Kevin Robertson Angel~ jackknifed o.1" pte.e "--n •Idle,,. ........ Surf'3 Vidal Fernandez (left) and Vancouver'3 Buzz Parsons meet head-to-head at Anaheim Stadium. Surf's new spirit starts to pay off , 8y CURT SEEDEN Of ... DllllY ~ SWt Coming into Wednesday night's game with the Van· couver Whitecaps, California Surf forward Steve Moyers had taken 20 shots at six North American Sotcer League oppo· nents' nets. He missed on all 20 occasions. He also missed on the first six Wednes day night, but his seventh and final shot -coming with a mere 12 seconds remain· ing on the Anaheim Stadium clock -didn't miss. It really couldn't. Moyers was six inches away from the aoal. And in typical Moyers fashion, he beaded it into the back of the net for a 1-0 Surf victory before 6,456. placed on waivers, and the move was not his doing. "I don't think the players were affected t.oo much. Right now, there's good team spirit out there As Car as I'm concerned, if they continue to play like this, they'll all stay here." Wall said. Vancouver, whkh came int.o the game with a 4·1 record and sitting pretty atop the NASL's Northwest Division, looked sur- p r isl n g l y lethargic . The Whitecaps did not get a shot off in the first half, and it wasn't un· til midway through the second half that they started to put some pressure on goalkeeper Alan Mayer. Mayer was equal to the task, however. mal<ing four saves. AT THE OTHER end, the Whitecaps elected to use 21· year-old David Henderson ln !he netl. It was the 1981 NASL debut for the 6-2, 180-pounder from the lrisb Under-21 league. 1 · Henderson really wasn t ~l­ ed until Moyers scor~d. and there waa very lltUe;be could do to stop the U-year-old Blond Bomber. As the clock slowly ticked away, Surf m.idftelder Charlie Coote croaed a pass from tbe left side in front of the net. Hen· deraon went up to atop lt, but the ball bounced off the croa1 bar and came down 11' front ol the net. Moyers wasted little time headlq lt in. "The ioal couldn't have come at a better tilbe " undentated Wall "Sten'• ~en T1ortln1 real bard lately. He really want· ed ll" TllS ASAL itOr1, bowever, u It wW *1wQS M under Wall'• M' IJltal, wu tbe Surf de-fe DI t. In atYtD ,aqae1, Callfonila bu now allowed J1ilt MT•• .. al1, and Ma7er bu b&ck·~Uek ibutouta u.Ddtr bit iU:AF I lie Umpire thumbs Carew, after heated incident OAKLAND (AP) -Anaels first baseman Rod Carew and American League umpire Bill Kunkel engaged in a heated ex- tbange Wednesday afternoon and, aft.er Carew t.old tbe umpire to take a knife from bis pocket, he was ejected from Oakland's 6·4 victory. The trouble·plaaued game in· eluded two fights between the teams. the first apparently lrig· gered by Oakland's complaint t.hat Dan Ford of the Angels was usiJ)I a cork-filled bat, which •ould be illegal. Kunkel told newsmen -be needed a knife ii he had t.o check on the bat. CAREW'S RUN-IN with the umpire took place in the second inning after the A's Jeff Newman doubled. Carew moved toward ftnt base as the runner beaded to second. The An&els' first baseman aaJd be always does that t.o make sure the run· ner t.ouchet the base. "He <Kunkel) said if l did it aeain -ll I disrupt tht runner again -be would call it,·' said Carew. "l said bow can you call it? I'm not having him cbanee direction. I didn't touch him or anything. ''So be started screaming and yelling at me and said I said, 'You'll have t.o call it.' He said: 'If you say another word you're gone,' and I said 'take the knife out of your po<:ket. · Then he threw me out. "The reason I said take the knife out or your pocket," added Carew, "was he (Kunkel) stopped the game Monday night in the eighth inning and told the A 's tie record (S.. pege C3) bat boy t.o bring him a knife. Why would he send for a knife to keep in his pocket for the rest of the game?" NEWSMEN SAID Kunkel had explained to them that the knife was to be used if he had to check for cork bats. A fight in the eighth inning, which involved Oakland catcher Mike Heath a nd Ford, apparently started over the A's complaint about Ford'a bat. " I· m going t.o report < Kunkel' s knl/e) to the Commiaaioner. I'm going t.o report it to the head of tbe umpires and tbe Players M · sociaUon. Ballplayers are not al· lowed to have knives in their pockets on the playing field and umpires are not going to be al· lowed to do it either," said Manager Jim Fregosi. Both teams were very touchy regarding the suspicion of doc· lored bats. •'If other teams can ask um· pires t.o check balls our pitchers are throwing and to check their gloves," said A's Manager Billy Marlin, "why can't we check their bats'? "ANY TIME IT appears our pitcher bas made a good pitch and the ball jumps out or the park like that, our catchers are alerted to take a look at the bat. Mike had a perfect right to pkk up the bat." Added Heath: "I picked up the bat and asked (plate umpire> John ShuJock to inspect it. Ford came across the plate, grabbed the bat away from us and it dll· appeared. They never did in· specl the bat. Ford asked me what I was doing and 1rabbed me. Nobody likes to be grabbed. I had to react." "It's not a cork bat," claimed Ford. "He has no right to pick up my bat. We don't complain about their pitchers. This la the second time in this series he did that." There's a giant hole in the Dodgers' bats LOS ANGELES (AP) -The San Francisco Giants don't win often in Los Angeles. Wednesday night's 3·2 victory over the Dodgers marked the first time since 1978 the Giants bad won two games in a row in Dodger Stadium, and the first time since 1976 they won a series here. ADVISED OF that, San Fran· cisco fltanager Frank Robinson grinned and said, "No, I didn't know it, but 1 do know we've won one ln 1981." After Fernando Valenzuela shut out the Giants in the first game or the series. 5-0, Los Angeles managed only three bits Tuesday night against Allen _ Ripley in a 6-1 loss, and had only six hill Wednesday night aaainst Vida Blue and Greg Minton. "The big thing is our hitting," said Los 1Angelu Manager Tom Lasorda, underscoring the rea- son the Dodgers have lost four or their last nlne games and dropped two ln a row for the first time thia season. &th cluba bead Eut for the weekend. San Francisco be&lns a four-1ame aeries Friday nilbt in Philadelphia, while Loe Anteles plays in 'Montreal belin· nlng a four.game series Friday nJ1bt. BLUE WAS two outs awa7 from hl1 38tb career abut.out •hen Dulty Bater . •lnCled and Steve Garvey followed• with his thlnl bome run, cuttin1 the Giants' lead to a ainale run. At tbls point, MlDtoa, who bad not .iven up a boUM run ill 118 innlnp. tool!: over. He walbd Ron Cey, but then 1truek out fincb·ldttei' Rlct llOndaf and "North certainly made two fine catches," said Robinson. "but Herodon 's was even sweeter. It ended the game. "I THOUGHT we played &ood defense t.he last two nights. It's something we've been working on and it's starting to show." Of the Dodgers' recent dominance of the Giants, North said: "We didn't have the talent then, now we do. We're not a great team, but we are a 8ood team. Our manager baa pre- pared us well. "Yeah, I like beating these guys ." No rth co ntinued. ·'They're the class of the leaaue. the class of our division, anyway. "I don't prescribe to that Dodger-Giant rivalry bualnea because they've kicked our tail so badly. But for us to come ln here and take two out of three, how sweet It is." Blue, 2·2, earned the wln and Minton preserved lt with b1a third save. Welch, l ·l, took the loss. The Giants took a 2-<I lead ill the fourt.b when Jack Clerk walked, Herndon doubled and Milt May doubled them home. Johnnie LeMa1ter doubled to lead off the Seventh and even· tually scored on North'• lnfteld out for what developed aa the tte: cisive run. GEORGIA T..4l<fS FUUCOMM4Nll lot enother pJ.ncb·bliter, Reale mltb. to lb' to •hort left fteld. Court Judi• aaiilald wbere Larry Herndon m• a Sweartqer approved tbe die al ftn8 catch. , ber IOft'I ttOdt. PnTloull1, cater fteldeT Bil· Froatlere purebu.ct tM ,. ly North made ,two 1lmllar '1bare1 held lD a ·tNst tor a.iir catcbet, de'prtvlq tbe Doctam l'f·1ear-old aon, Dale CirNU of at leut two nma. ID tbe titrd Roaenbloom, Jr .• uau&lll kiiOWD lnalnf, bl took a bit away from u "Cblp," few a reported $1.a ~•• Laadreaux and tb•D mllliaG. •-W a.lb Welch off MC:Oad. A~ Mike Rafatian Uld AH la tM lbtb, Nortb robbed the lllOM)' blloop to tM .. '1lil' LaD4naus a1ala1 Just before will be bl1d b1 b.11 pi.Hi• - Baker 1ln1Jed and Garvey b11 motW. boa-ll.lu=· There are those In tbe world of s sports who have never heard of a f t Blue H~. Combine t.M1e fans with thoae who han never beard oC Ptiil Nelson' and you iet a whop- ping majority who have never heard of either. Then throw In PatU. Salata and bi11 annual celebration or spoofery on the National Football League draft and the situation gels even more complicated. There are countless millions in tbe world t<>- day who never heard of Irrelevant Week -and in most cases, few who even care If you combine the three (excluding tbe name of Salata). you might find someone in Flor ida, Lou1s1ana, Montana, Color ado or Ohio who may have heard of Irrelevant Week. But c:hances are sltm . despite tbe ract former win- , ners have come Crom schools in their states. What it all boils down to 1s the fact that one Phil Nelson, a light end from the University of Delawar<''s Blue Hens football team, was tbe last player taken in the 1981 NFL draft. He was the 332nd playt•r ('hosen and was picked by Super Bowl champion Oakland The chanc:es ar~ good that he had to look at a map to find th<' loC'at1on of Oakland. And it is a vir tual Cl.'rlamly that h<: had lo look much harder and longer to find Newport Beach where thl• celebration will be held Th<• selection of Nebon fits into Salata's µlans No µrevtous selt-ctwn has ever been able tu muster lime in tht' NFL for any period of time It is doubtful 1f any µlayer from Delaware has t'\'t'f' surpa-.s<'d this dmm Put lht• '"" togl•thl•r and you ha\'e a perfect •wt up as far as Salata 1s concerned Pre\ wus pl<h(•rs honored by Salata and his group mcludt· T> ronc M l'Gnff I Florida A&M l. K c· 1 ' 1 n K 1 r I.. I D a ) t o n > • J i m K e 11 e h e r 1 Culorado1 Le<· Washburn (Montana State>. ;1nd Mike Almond c Northwestern Louisiana I ThCJI s the 11lustrious group :"elson will folio" into the lrrcll'\i.tnt Week hall of fame in Jum· Tlw frstl\ltlcs '>tart on Monday, June 22 and 1m·lu1.IE: J ~olf tournam<•nt \\Ith a shotgun blast to finish the t•vent Nelson 1s :.i 6 Ii. 23R pound tight end who m·vc1 pla) l'd t11gh school football but was a four y1:ar sl<trtl'r al Delaware He played high st•hool be1sketbull and is a 1.·ommun1cat1ons ma· 1ur, 30 units 'ihy of gradual10n But n~ht now 1t 's Phil Nelson, a Blue Hen from th•• stalt· of lh•Jawarl', who will be honored in Jurw at the.• Hulhoa Hay Club m Newport fkal'h Quote of the day Ronni,. Parkhou~<'. as!i1st.mt µrofessor at I SC' on llw 1dt•a th.it \\Omen athletes .111 lil'llt•r prt•J><i rNI lo enter the business \\orlil 'Tht•n· .in• things )OIJ lt·arn on thr h.1sl-.l'lhall ro11r1 \ou appl) m husmess \\ 11h11ut t'\t•n n•:ilt11ng 1t Women must lt•arn tlw rnp<'s "'h11·h to cltmh. \\hll'h to jump .ind \\hlt'h to skip .\nd '""re going tu h;iH· 111 star1 pla\ 1n~ a htllt• more of f PllSl' " MUW ..,caJIS Darwtn'a ~tt bid )U&JiMllDCIW D1aa7 Danila •• t M a OnNI"-' ud_..... GnM amUW :9 ,.~NP Miible ta tM ftnt ~TUH ~ankad ~. ~. to abt American~ acu. W.S· 11e1day. n, 2·1, rtttlnd ta. flnt ~t Boidbft bitten and did not aaJOtr a base blt UQW U·Alittl &I Mw.r IJl~ co left la UM alxth . . . EIHwheu, Daye Wl•fl•I• bit bl1 flnt homer ot the season, t.n lbe third lnnh1J(. leadlnt the New York Yankees to a nar· row ~-2 dectJ1oo ov Detroit, exteodin1 the T11era' lotin1 streak to 10 aamu . . • Dea· ala Marttnu held the heavy· hittine Chlca10 White Sox to seven mt.a and 1ained a vie~ tory with ninth·innln1 relief help from Tf PPY Martlaea u Baltimore woo, 3«0 ... Barry lloa.neU keyed a five-nm Lnnln• with a two-run double that broke a scoreless tie in the 14th lnninc u· Toronto blanked Milwaukee, 5-0 . . . A pinch-hit double by Dulay Gaodwta and Dave EasJe'• triple enabled Minnesota to score three runs in the bottom of the eichth Lnnln1 and tie Seattle, 7-7, before h0eavy rains wubed out the game. The eame will be played in ita entire- ty at a later date, with all individual statistics going mto the record boots . . . Cleveland, plagued by cloudbursts. postponed a double- header against Kansas City No makeup dates were announced Wallach is Carlton's 3,000th victim Steve Carlton became the first Ii left.hander m baseball history to sur- pass 3,000 strikeouts as Philadelphia beat Montreal, 6-2, to highlight National Leacue action Wednesday. Carlton, who bas not lost this season, reached the milestone by striking out the side in the first inning. Ex-Saddleback star Tim Wallach, as a matter of fact, became vic- tim No. 3,000 when he looked at strike three Carlton now ranks sixth on the all-time strikeout hst EAsewhere, BUI Buckner's tie- breaking two-run double triggered a five-run eighth inning that gave Chicago a 6-1 victory over St. Louis in the first game of a double- header. ending the Cubs' 12-game losing streak and the Cardinals' eight-game winning s treak. The second game was called because of dark- ness after 11 innmgs with the score tied 2-2. The game will be resumed in the top of the 12th July J Jose Cruz rapped a two-out, run-scoring smgle in the top of the ninth to give Houston a 5 4 victory over Atlanta Dave Coacepcloa drove in six runs with two singles and a pair of home runs, boosting Cincinnati lo an 8-S win over 'San Diego Jim Bibby pitched a five- hitter as Pittsburgh clobbered the New York Mets. IO o Getting down to the basics SAN FRANCISCO When it Ii comes to baseball. put down Frank Robinson. the manager of the San Francisco Giants, as a fundamen· ta list When a team wins consistently in the big leagues." Robinson commented. "there has to be a reason other than talent In my opinion the reason 1s fundamentals ·1 look at defense first, then offense. Teams that don't gave up a lot of runs obviously have a better chance of wanning than those who do I've found that if the defense holds. the offense will take can• of itself " Baseball today On this date in baseball in 1969: Cincinnati fireballer Jim Maloney hurled the second no-hitter of his career, striking out 13 in blanking the Houston Astros, 10-0. On this date in 1961 : San Francisco's Willie Mays belted four homers off four different Milwaukee pitchers (Lew Burdette, Seth Morehead, Moe Drabowsky and Don McMahon> as the Giants routed the Braves, 14-4. On this date In 1946 : Cleveland's Bob Feller no-b1t the New York Yankees.1-0at Yankee Stadium. On this date in 1939· Lou Gehrig of the New York Yankees played in the last of his 2.130 consecutive games ... a major league record that may never be broken. Today's birthday . Pittsburgh infielder Phi I Garner is 32. Proud Appeal is Derby favorite An undersized colt named Proud Appeal h as e merge d as the lukewarm favorite for Saturday's 107tb Kentucky Derby. which shapes up as a cavalry charge involving 20 three-year-olds. "I'm sure nobody can steal this race," Stanley Hou11a, trainer of the Blue Grau and Gotham s takes winner, said earlier this w«k in the barn area at Churchill Downs "It will be either the horse with a lot of speed or no speed, but the horse with middle speed would seem to be in a lot of trouble because of the large field " ... .. NBC bas ruled out a fall lelt>vision series based on a recent pilot show called "The Stockers," which starred quarterback Terry Bract.haw of the Pittsburgh Steelers . . Pirates President Dan Galbreath, who filed suit against the city to change or break the lease al Three Rivers Stadium, maintains he wants to keep the team in Pittsburgh if the city fathers will only listen . . . During the Golden Age of boxing, Mickey Walker was a headliner and enjoyed the high living and fame that went with it. Walker, a former welterweight and middleweight cham· pion, died at the age of 79. The primary cause of death was Parkinson's Disease, his physician said . Offi cials began picking through a veritable amo unt of mail Wednesday, beginning the selection process for tickets to college basketball's Final Four at the Superdome next year. They faced some lS,600 applications, postmarked April 1·2 -the first two days when the requests could be received Television. radio TV: No events scheduled RADIO: Baseball Milwaukee at Angels. 7:30 p.m., KMPC (7 10> SPORTSBREAK7Yiot.LEYBALL/CREW : The scouts will be out In force this weekeod at Orange Coast Colle1e. and for a ch.use. they won't be examining the Pirate baseball team. They will be taJdne a 1001 look at aome ol Ua• top volleyball players in the state when OCC holtl the Calllornia community colleare championahipa Friday and Saturday. "WE'RE TALKING ABOUT awfully 1ood volleyball," OCC Coach Bob Wetul says. "The fans who come out to the stale tourney this year will see the best JC volleyball this country hH to offer." Four·year schools nurture themaelvea on com· munity college volleyball teams, and this year ta no exception. Among community college players who have continued playing on the collete level are former OCC stars Steve Vrebalov1ch t Pepperdine), Steve Timmons I USC>; LA H arbo r 's J e rr y Kukuroda <Hawaii ), OCC's Greg Klang (UCL).), a nd former Pirate Tim Wetzel <Hawaii>. ''There will be a lot of guys in this tourney who will go on , I 'm s ure," Wetzel says . "Believe me, the big scouts will watch this one." Wetzel's also hop- ing volleyball fans will join the scouts for this Bob Wetzel tournament ACflON BEGINS at 9 30 am. Friday with No. l seed OCC meeting No 8 seed Santa Barbara. The 11 : 30 game pits No. 4 seed Golden West against No 5 seed El Camino. At l · 30, it's No. 3 Long Beac.h CC against No. 6 Grossmont; and al 3:30, No 7 Santa Ana meets No 2 Santa Monica. At 5 30 p.m , Friday, the winner of the OCC match meets the winner of the Golden West-El Camino tiff. The survtvors of the other two matches square off at 7 30 On Saturday, losers' bracket games begin at 9 30 and 11 30, followed by a consolation cham- pionship game at 2:30. T he losers of Friday night's late matches meet for third place at 4 · 30, and the championship match follows at 7 p m GWC's high seeding 1s the result of a current roll for Coach Lou Ann Terheggen's Rustlers. "WE STARTED OUT slowly -something like five losses in a .row. All of a sudden we pie~ up and won 13 out of our last 15," Terheggen sa~. The Rustlers were hurt by a couple of injuries. Hitter Dave Devick sprained an ankle, and hitter Frank Real needed an operation for a double hernia. Both are healthy for the tourney. however. "Right now, we're playmg as well as ever. We finished real strong I just hope it continues on to the tournament," Terheggen adds. OCC's Wetzel has a nother reason for wanting the men's crown this weekend ··1 THINK WE CAN do it We have good talent, we're playing very well right now and our bench is the deepest in the state." Wetzel says T he Pirates are spa rk ed b y ScoH Fraedenchsen, Randy Huffman and Mark Cody. The trio combined to defeat Santa Ana in the South Coast Conference fmale and give OCC the league crown OCC oarsmen healthy ••. and that's bad news It was OCC's 7 l record wh1ch earned the Bucs the No l seed in the tournament Tickets a re Sl for students w1th their ID cards; $2 for a half·day ticket (two matches) i S3 for a one day ticket and SS for a two-day pass. Pirates host four schools in 16th , annual Newport lnvi.tational rowing regatta Sunday Bucs, Rustlers both. win, 1-0 By CURT SEED EN 01 111• D•llY PllOI Si.ft For the first time· this season, Orange Coast College ere"' coach Dave Grant has a healthy group of rowers poor planning if you happen to be one of th<' Pirates· four opponents m Sunday's Newport lnv1tattonal 1ntcrl'olleg1ate rowing re· ~atta. llosting the 16th annual event on North Lido Channel , m Newport. the OCC rowers are making their '\Ccond c;tra1ghl appearance on the home l'Ourse Lasl "<'<'kend. OCC swept four races m blitz· 1ng UC Irvine and Un1vers1ty of San Diego. The Pirate crew was victorious in the JV eight, freshman eight, novice eight and novice four races ON SUNDA \', LCI will be out for a little re· venge. alon~ with Lon~ Beach State, UCLA and UC Santa Barbara m the invitational regatta California. origmally scheduled to participate in the evl·nt. has pulled out "UCLA 1s sure to eave us a l!ood race." cau- tions Grant, whose JV eight boat improved its record to 9 4 with the win last weekend. "And we might see somethmg from UC Santa Barbara, and UC lrvme isn't far behind.·• Still , with his boat m near perfect shape, Grant admits, the Pirates wall be hard to beat. "We're really ready to race," says Grant, who i6 also the dean of s tudents at OCC. "We went \hrough a fair period when one person or another was sick We 've had a hard time getting things From Page Cl ROBERTSON • • • lo~ther Right now, we're pretty close to getting the boat the way we want it for the Western Sprints <in Vallejo>. A BOUT THE ONLY casualty on the OCC crew is Drew Cree who is hampered by a neck injury suffered several years ago. "It 1ust comes back to haunt him. Otherwise, t he boat's pretty darn healthy," Grant adds. Sunday's competition kicks off with the elite singles a t 8 15 a m . The novice eights follow at 8 · 30, frosh eights at 8 ·45, varsity fours at 9, JV eights at 9 15 and the varsity eights at 9:30. Bein~ a community college, OCC does not compete m lhe varsity eights race. but the Pirates are entered in the varsity fours. THE BEST VANTAGE POINT for apectatora 1s at OCC's intercollegiate rowin1 and sailing base, located at 1801 West Coast Hwy., in Newport Beach. Admission is free, which ia a definite bargain "This is a neat collection of oarsmen, and they've worked hard over Eaater vacation," Grant explains. ''The boat is getting faster and faster all the time." Last year In this event, UCLA look care of the varsity eights with a 6:11.S over the 2,000-meter course. UCI was second (8:13.7> and San Dieeo State finished third (6:14.5). OCC took care of the junior vanity eights <6:09.5) and the freshman etaht.s (6:12.0), while From Page C1 SURF ••. the Anteater crew won a second freshman eights regatta I 6: 15.5)" Desiree Johnson hurled seven innings of no· hit, no-run ball and Kirn Nutter supplied the onJy offense with a home run in the sixth as Golden West edged Los Angeles CC. 1-0, to highlight women's community college softball action Wed- OCC also topped the field in the varsity fours (7 :04 .0>. beating second-place UCJ by nearly 13 second and third place UCLA by more than 16 seconds. nesday. • This year's UCLA squad, coached by former OCC rower Bob Newman, figures to be better. In other play, Jan Culp pitched 16 scoreless in- nings as Orange Coast beat Santa Ana, 1-0. "They're a strong crew," cautions Grant. ''Bob's a great guy, but we haven't taught him all our secrets yet." On the high school level, freshman Kelli Thomas threw a shutout as Dana Hills whipped Capistrano Valley, 9-0 Baseball standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Weet Dtvlaloa W L Pd. GB Oakland 18 3 .857 Chicaeo 11 s .688 4 ~ Texas 9 7 .563 6'h Aniei. 10 10 .500 7~ Minnesota s 12 .294 11 Seaitle s 13 .278 11 ~ Kansas City 3 9 .250 10~ E11t Division New York 11 6 .647 Cleveland 7 4 .636 Milwaukee 8 7 .533 BostM 7 8 .467 Baltimore 6 8 .429 Detroit 7 11 . 389 Toronto 7 11 .339 ....... ,..le_ Oell ................ 4 IC•._.,Clty.ftJwtl .... 2. ""·· relfl .... .,. .. S.o.v.ltl S..nt.11.__ J It IMI,., rolftl T ..... a. Mifr**'8 • ( 14 IMlfteitl aeiu....s. ~· r .... s....,.~ l 2 3 3"11 4"11 4~ T-•--MllwOl!Ue IVwcllrtklt •t> ot ~ (Jef. ~WI T""* (Todll M ) at .. n1-. " ........ HI ... _.. t•rk!lwl .. l) -' ....... rr-14) • ~ t~ 1·0 •• Catw+Md (Weill t.tl 1Ce11tH "IY 11,1111~11 f •tl et T .. u (~·· Dtlt~ IWlkdt..J) at leonlt IOINtMt~ Ollly ..,_. llCftMIMIH NATIONAL LEAGUE West Division W L Pct. GB Dodgers 14 5 .737 - Cincinnati 10 7 .588 3 Atlanta 9 9 .500 4~ San Francisco 9 12 .429 6 ~ Houston fl 12 .333 71h San Diego 6 13 .316 8 East Division Montreal 12 4 St. Louis 9 3 Philadelphia 12 6 Pittsburgh 6 6 New York 4 9 Chicago 2 13 _.,..s.c- s.., f'r.ni;lt<O >, o.etn, 750 - .750 1 667 1 .500 4 .308 61;1J .133 9""'9 Chic ... •2. $1. I.ANIS M (IKoM ·-11 I,._ n11111 • ..__. d«tlnntJ ~·~·.-rNl2 Hwtlell S, Ali.nu • Clflclnrwtl I, s.rt OI .... S ~ltbtlWgll '°· .... y-0 T ........ tO-. HOOllliDfl CJ. NMllro 1-ll ot At~ I ..... •·V S.fl 0-.. IMwo W) OI CIMlflNll C9enflyl 2.01 ~lltttMirvll tCofldelorl• O.l l et Mew Yen t" ... .uo.oor ,,_Wl GWC 81.0immer leads charge BY cun SErtDEN °' .. ...., ..... ~ "We doc\'t ba ve anyone capa- ble of winning three events like <Bill> Babaahoff dld last year, but I thJnk we are stron1 enough lo realistically shoot for the top three or four team s in the stat e," Golden Weal College swlm coach Ken Hamdorf was sayin1 laa.t week. Face it-, Hamdorl 11 a man who knows there are very few Bill B•bashoffa ln the world, let alone at 'Golden West. Bu t while B•bashoff swam into the record boob In the long- dislance events, another Rustler swimmer was quletly poppmg into the water. and just as quick, ly out with some Impressive performances in the sprints. He also performed ably. although anonymously on three G WC re- lay teams HIS NAME IS Matt Whitmore, often known more for his role as t he hole man on GWC's state champion water polo team tor the past two years. Whlt111ore. along with 10 other GWC men's swimmers. is out to challenge favorites Dlablo Va lley and West Valley as the community college state cham- pionships kick orr today at Trojans crush UC Irvine LOS ANGELES use pounded out nine hits for eight runs in the first three mnings and the TroJans breezed to a 10·5 decision over UC Irvine here in non-conference baseball action Wednesday Dave Leeper, Bob Batesole and Jim Cess h1n1 earned the big bats for the Trojans, 30-21, as Leeper went 2-for-4 with a home run and two RBI ; Batesole. 2- for·4 with a double and three RBI . and Cecchini, 2-for 2 with a double and one RBI. Tim Kammeyer <4·4), the first of four USC pitchers . picked up the win. while John LeClerc <2·11, the firs t of four UCJ hurlers. was lagged with the de feat UCJ's offense was supplied by first baseman Dave Ghck. who went 2-for 5 with a homer. and Dave Gines. who also hit a solo shot. The loss dropped the An teaters · record to 26-J 7 for the season Artists capture volleyb a ll title INGLEWOOD Laguna Beach High defeated arch-nval San Clemente m straight sets. 15·7 . 15 4 to capture the Inglewood state vol leyball championships here Wednesday. The Artists' Lance Stewart, a setter, was named the tourna ment's Most Valuable Player. and he was JOined by teammal<ffi Eric Clark and Doug Parson!'. San Clemente placed Craig Karanaze s on the all · tournament s quad . Craig 's brother, Dean, was an honorable mention Laguna defeated Pacific Palisades in the quarterfmals and North Torrance m the semis to reach the finals San Clemente beat Mira Costa and Los Altos Dl•blo V•Jley Colle1e In ~leuant Hills. Whitmore hu been a pleuut. surpriJe tor Hamdorf, simply because he'i at GWC. Three of Matt's older brothers went to Oran1e Coast College, and the reason was simple. Being graduates from Costa Mesa HlJb, they literally had a short w•lll \() coUege. "I r'eally wanted to concen- trate on my academics an<f Orange Coast was just too close to high school," Whitmore re- calls. A !our-year varsity let- terman in swimming and water polo for the Mustangs, Whitmore has fit In nicely at G WC HE HELPED the Rustlers to their fourth straight Southern Cal Conference championship earlier this month with in- dividual titles in the 100, 200 '1Jld 500 freestyles. Hts 47 .92 effort in the 100 free was the only men's record shattered in the meet. "Whitmore may have our best shot at winning an event," Ham· dorf says. "He has the talent to win any of the three events he's entered in." Last year. Whitmore earned .\ll·Americao honors in those 1 hree events, although the iaurels for his performance in the 500 were unexpected "The first time I swam the 500 was two weeks before I earned All American in that event.· Whitmore recalls · · The 500 1s really open to me right now It's a new experience and I've still got a lot to learn .. Still. his favorite race 1s the 100 "AND IT probably always will be I remember when I was a junior in high sc~ool and I set a school record in the 100. I got real jazzed and said to myself, ·wow . a school record· · · Whitmore s ays he never felt he was swimming 1n the s hadows of Babashoff <now a PCAA record holder in three events at Long Beach State). " ( never expected to beat Bill in any race, and often he wouldn't swim anything less than the 500." Whitmore says This year. with Babashoff gone, the team benefits from greater depth, and the 20-year· old Costa Mesan says he's hav mg the time of his life "A LOT OF people are SWlm ming more events now It's a fun team to be on. The general al· titude is a lot better. It's a nice change of pace ·· Whitmore may see a big change o~ pace once the state championships end Saturday While up north. Whitmore ana teammate Todd Pickett, another Costa Mesa High graduate, are taking a close look at Cal State Hayward where swim coach Cal Caplan would like lo see them wind up. "I'm considering ~·t ." Whit· more admits . "To and I already have ful 1de scholarships to Indiana Stale . but it's just so far away." ln the meantime. Whitmore will concentrate on GWC's goal a third-place rinish in the state championships "Diablo Valley, Wes t Valley and Fullerton are all very tough," notes Hamdorf "With a little inspiration and if the kids believe m themselves. we can do better. Our goal is third. but to do that, we have to beat Fullerton." ---------------I COUPON SPECIALS I Molt Whitmore FV stays undefeated in Sunset Steve Southward and Bob Erickson posted double victories as Fountain Valley kept its Sunset League record un- blemished at 5-0 with a 991,7.33~ win over Huntington Beach to highlight high school track ac- tion Wednesday. In other results, Edison dumped MarinA, 72-63, and Newport Harbor tripped Westminster, 73-62 in Sunset ac- tion, wtule Dana Hills thumped San Clemente. 98-36, and Untvers ity handled Irvine, 78·58. At Huntington Beach the Barons did almost everything right as Southward claimed the 100 meter dash < 10 8) and 120 high hurdles ( 14 8 ). while Erickson took care of the mile 14 36 2> and two-mile (9.56.6) AT E DISON, senior sensation Jon Butler scored a triple by winning the 880 (2:00.4). mile (4'329> and two-mile (10:23.8) as the Chargers improved their league record to 2-3. The Jackson brothers -Mel and Duane also performed well with Mel taking the 100 in 10.2, while Duane took the 220 in 23.6. Both also ran legs on the victorious 440 and mile relay teams At Newport Harbor the Sailors 12 3 i kept Westminster winJess <0·51 as Kevin Jeffries threw a season-best in the shot put < 58 912 ) and won the discus < 172·9). whale Paul Bretthauer won the 440 (54.7) and ran a sizzling split on the winning mile relay team. The Sailors and Lions were both hindered by extremely windy condillons at Newport. OAKLAND (AP> -Jf Oakland A'a were pla11ftc tod•Y. they'd have the opportcanltJ to ellablllb am.Sor teaiu reCord for Aprtl vlctortet. But they'll bave to MUie for an 18-3 month ud a sh are of the record. Tbey have tbe day off, •nd Manas r 8lll1 Manin couldn't be happier. "WB NgBD 1'HI aa£il. It'• perfect Umlni, comln.i after a b11 wlft and wttb the Yankees com· int in next,'' Martin Hld u he iced down a sore foot bruised ln the brawlln1 which took Pl•ce dur- in1 'and after Wednesday'• M vlct.ory over the Aniels. Th~ New York Yankees aren't aetuna the d•Y off noted M.art.ln., their former manaier . ' "1 undenland they're workin& out here ln the mornm, under orders from (te.m owner) Geor1e Steinbrenner," be said. Sellout crowds are expected for the three-day, four-game series which opens Friday ntebt between the A's and Yankees. curreot divbion leaders. d · Right-hander Mike Norris, wboee S--0 recor is best in the American Lea(Ue, tossed a five-hitter against the Angela W ednelday and bi& bit tin& a~p­ porl included homers by Tooy Armas .and Tim Hosley as the A's broke a two-game losing streak. "WE HAD TO END that streak. and 1t was m_y job to be the stopper," said Norris, who got bis second decaioo ol the s~asoo-over .$be Angels and Geoff zahn, 3-2. Two of the Aneels' hits were homers. b~ John Harris in the second and by Dan Ford in t~e eighth. As Ford crossed the plate, he grabbed his bat away from A's catcher Mike Heath, w_ho had asked home plate umpire John Shulock to inspect it for a possible cork insert . "The bat isn't corked, and Heath had no right to pick it up," said Ford. "He crabbed me. and nobody likes to be grabbed. I had to react," said Heath, who~e con· frontation with Ford was the start of a ma1or on· field brawl. The hard feelings lingered. obviously, because Vaqs , Mustangs post baseball uins Pitcher Steve Westbrook went six strong in· nings before need mg relief help in the. seventh to lead Irvine to a 6·3 Sea View League victory over Corona del Mar \o highlight high school baseball action Wednesday In other Sea View League play. Co_sta. Mesa scored seven runs in the top of the sixth mm~g for a come-from-behind 9-7 decision over Estancia .. In the South Coast League. Laguna Hills scored four runs on one hit as 1t beat Laguna Beach, S-4. . At Irvine. Westbrook. 4 I. had struck out n!ne before losing his control in the seventh and walk· ing four batters. CdM , the league leader at 10-2. rallied for two runs in the seventh but Bob Perry came in with two out and the bases loaded and re· tired the next Sea King batter on a ground out. Al Estancia, Costa Mesa parlayed four singles, three walks, .two fie.lder's cboace'a and a triple into seven runs 1n th~ s1~th . The b1& blow in the inmng was ~upphed by Ribby Sink, who drove m three runs _with a ba,es- loaded triple to right with two out. Sm~ _ended the day 3-for-t as be also opened the decisive frame with a sinele to get the rally going f"fth At Laeuna Hills, the Artists let. a 4-1, i . · inning lead slip away when Laguna Hill~ used five walks. an error and one hit, and turned 1t mto four runs 9layera, coache1 and m•naaen t•nsled med.ia~y alter the 1amt. "I GOT STEPPl:D on ud have three bola ln my shoe, and I dJdn't even 1et to throw a punch," added Martin. He aald he was ready t.o punch An1e.1J pltchln1 1 coach Tom Morgan before Callfornl• Man•1er : Jim Fre1oel pulled him aw•y ln the post·1arne fi&ht near the entrances to the t.eam locker room•. Tempers were hot throu1hout the unusually · bot Northern California d•y, starting with a seeond-innin& incident in which umpire Bill Kunkel ruled that Ap&ela ltnt baseman Rod ' Carew blocked Jett Newman'• path as Newman beaded to second bue on a double. Kunkel was part of a three-man crew. The fourth member of the crew, Vic Voltaaaio, was absent because of a strep throat Carew was ejected from the game. and Fregosi said later, "I just wish Kunkel bad stayed home in bed instead of the other guy " Rams improve their defense By JOHN SEVANO Ot tll• -y PllM , .... Feeling an obvious need to. imp.rove themselves defensively, the Rams continued m the pursuit Wednesday during the final six rounds of the NFL draft After picking two linebackers, .t~o defensi~e ends, a defensive tackle and an offensive center 10 the first six rounds Tuesday. the Rams added a de- fensive end, a linebacker and a defensive back in three of their next seven picks The team also selected a tight end, two running backs and an of· fensive tackle The sleeper or the secondary phase might be 6·0 \85-pound running back H.obert Alexander or West Virginia. Alexander carried the ball 204 tJmes for 1,064 yards and ftve touchdowns m 1980 He had a career average of five yards per carry at West V1rg1rua, and his 5 2 average m '80 was m_ain· tained despite defensive opposition from the likes or Syracuse. Pittsburgh and Penn State Alexander was a 10th round pick Jn their first c:hoice of the day on the seventh round the Rams grabbed a much· needed tight end m the form of 6-3. 220-pound Ron Battle of North Texas State With their other pick <the Rams had two in the seventh), they took 6-4. 240-pound Mike Clark, a defensive end out of the University of Flonda. In the eighth round the Karns took 6·7, 260· pound Art Plunkett (no relation to Jim of Oak land), a massive offensive tackle from Nevada Las Vegas The Rams selected their third linebacker of the draft in round nine, picking 6 1. 220-pound Ron Seawell of Portland State rn the 11th round the Rams made a surpnse choice by drafting Marcellus Gr~ne, a defensive back from Arizona who had already signed a con- tract with Toronto of the Canadian Football League The move msures the Rams w1U have first rights on Greene 1f he returns to the NFL Here's how the Rams fm1shed their draft. Round 7 Ron Battle, le, North Texas Stale. Mike Clark. de. Flonda. Round 8 Art Plunkett. ot. Nevada-Las Vegas , Round 9 -Ron Seawell. lb. Portland State. Round 10 Robert Alexander. rb. West V1rg1ma , Round 11 Marcellus Greene. db, Arizona: Round 12 Ja1ro Penaranda, rb, UCLA Al San Clemente, the wind didn't bother the Tritons as 1 much as the Dolphins' Jim 1--------------------il MERCEDES-JAGUAR-VOLVO SPECIALISTS Gleed and Shaun Hobson did in TAX SHELTERS their South Coast League battle. GLEED HAD A double in win- ning the 100 00.3> and 220 (22.6). while Hobson scored a triple in capturing the triple jump (39 01 2). shot µut (45-4'h) and discus <145-101 '.! > At Irvine. the Trojans im· proved their Sea View League mark to 3 2 as the Vaqueros dropped to 2·3 Senior Brad Meyer won the mile (4.19.7) and the two-mile t 9. 30 7) for Dana Hills. whll~ Irvine's A J Bryce won the tn· pie 1ump <41-6) and the long JUmp (20 4) Tim McLaughlin also soared 6-3 in the high JUmp for the Tro- Jans J1I Ii WI • 11ecll htat" • "" me Oil Flit« w/$14.95 Oil Chanc)e CHECK OUR COMPfTfTIVE PRICES C.1om~ • ~ L"''"'"l DIDUCTIOHS ur TO 5100/o THIS Yl.U OllAlD L llO'LU ~&Al SBYICIS 7 14/ ..... 2507 ARST & GRAND ARCO 835·4049 1222 E. I st (off 5 fwy) 8-5 b e.pt S-. s.,v.c. nm. 5,., •• , 'OVf OOOf fCllf1 !"tar•,_., .. , YOUI' A'MI CCISTAMUA641 -1289 ,_..__ •••llOel ~95-0401 -c-.Me~-1-oe..,.~ .... ..,~. PRE-INVENTORY SALE COAST GENERAL TIRE 2155 H.t»or lf¥cl. Costa MflCI 540-571 0 BR78x 13 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43.00 DA78x14 . . . . . . . . . . 47.00 ER78x14 .....•......... 49.95 FR78x14 ............... 51.95 GR78x14 ................ 53.95 HR78x 14 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SS. 95 FR78x15 ................ 52.95 GR78x15 ................ 56.95 HR78x15 ................ SI.ti LR78x 15 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63. 9~ ma UIALS -W111l1'11.S Pl8S/Ql3 . . . . . . . . . . . . (~78x13) 3U5 mnsfus ................ 1FR78x1si u P'Z15175Rl5 .............. trl78x15) 5U5 •tM•LE .. STEEL-BELTED RADIAL WHITEWALL BUILT TOUGH AT A..._,~ THAT'S TOUGH TO BE~ BY.ALllON LOCJlABEY -... ~--Yacht1n1 competltlon tb1• •Hkend will be Interspersed wlt.b a bolt. or eoclal actJvtty u maQy yacbt club• have lcheduled openln1 day F•remonl•. ton the loc1l 1cene compeUUoo wUI be mixed with social flamour •• NtwPC>Jt Harbor Yacht Club wUJ bold tu openln1 day race from LOs Aqele• to NewpOrt Beach SatUrday, followed SUD· dar wttb the traditional fta1 raisin• ceremonlea and open BOATING house aboard some of the mOL'St glamorous yachts tn the Harbor area. Yachtsmen who prefer racing competition to "blue blazer" hi- jinx will find plenty of action from San Diego to Marina deJ Rey. Lido-14 sailors will gather at Balboa Yacht Club for the Harry Wood Invitational Regatta Saturday and Sunday. Performance Handicap Rae· ing Fleet yachtsmen returning from the Enstnada race will get a chance to get some homeward- bound competition in the Tri- Port Handicap race hosted by Lido Isle Yacht Club. The yachts will race from San Diego to Oceanside Saturday and from 'Oceanside to Newport Sunday. Another race starting from San Diego Saturday will be the first of the Pacific Ocean Racing Conference in which the yachts will sail to Alamitos Bay. The event iB sponsored by the Yacht Racing Union of Southern California. Also scheduling opening day ceremonJes will be Dana Point Yacht Club with the festivities scheduled Sunday. San Diego Yacht Club and California Yacht Club (Marina del Rey) have scheduled the most prestigious regattas. SDYC will be host to the International Offshore Rule level racers in· volving the Two-ton, One-ton, Thre,·quarter ton, Half-ton and Quarter-ton categories starting Friday and continuing through Sunday At Manna del Rey il will be the prestigious Cal Cup Regatta in which CYC will oit a haJI. dozen six-meters, once known as the "Sacred Sixt:s" or Olympics yachting fame, in a different form.at from the usual two-boat match racing sen es Five yacht clubs m the Los Angeles-Long Beach area will observe opening day Sunday Soul!ltrn C•lllornl• Y •<Ming Auoc:lellon <ilfencMr Us ......... ~ ..... Al.,nltoo S.y Yk!lt Club Oc>enl,,g Oey, ~ O.y Long BNcll Y.cnt Cl..O °'*''"9 0.y, Sun- day, Opening Dey Aee-tta, Little 5111,.. Aeet -OMnlng Day s--.v S.al ~ v.c111 CIUO °"9ftlno 0.y, Sun-day. C•bf'lllo S..C11 v Kiii Club -Ooenlng Dey .wt 1n,,.r1ac1 StM1 r•u. S....o.y. L«K A._IH Yed1I Club HHYC Ocle""'ll Day rKa,S.t-y s-i.-... y C•iltornie Y8Cht Club -C•I CU9 S.rln, Fri· do, Salwda'f, Suncs.y Wlndjem-.1 YKlll CluO Wlndj ........ ,.. Jarnbone (•II c••u .. 1 Sa1urday, S-y. ... Dleee Sa" o._ Yklll Cha -s.n 01990 YkMl"ll Cue> R._.u., Friday, Saturday, Sllftc&ay COHNMllo C..,O Yac:M CIUO Cl-k Serln, $.lturuy. Ocaanalda Yacht Ch•b -Ytarly SerlH (PHRFI S-0.v Sit-0.lt Yacht C.IUb ape ... Int DAy, S-0.., Solltl'lwetttnl Yacht 0 .. - Os>enlnt Dey, S-y Yac:llt Rklng Union -SM 01-toAlamltot .. y l"ORCI tltl'b S.1"rdey, ..... _, ..... Santa---· YtCJIC Clue -Sewing~-1--dtt91, Nnlllc..,) Sttvrday, S-y ,. ac II le Coer1nlllian Y acllt C llib -5'N'lnt s.r1ta, S.tvrUy,........, Pltr~nt llay Yacht Club -Sln111....,_.. rac:t,W-y SM!~ lertler1 S.lllno Cl..O Sc>f'lnQ Str'-. Saturday, S-0.y San FtfftMCIO Vtlley Salling CIUb -5M Scout Syrn-'11m. s.tur.M'Y Cook leads powerboat standings --· ~ . . • • • Alll!JUCAH LIAQUI A'tl,A~4 (.U.1 ..... fA OAIU.MtO C.-llt H.,...,, It lhH'ldPaU" ,.tff,, """"'' ...,, .. ,. Otte laylerclll Orkll c~a 0-...1111 •rll" .. ,,., I I I O HMM 11 I I I 0 I I 0 0 M11rptt,ct JO 0 I 2000 J•sn• tOll 4112 ~lrf Jiii >too Hffltflc >101 ~ : ~ : 'Mwntn tit J 1 I t J t t 0 Mcltey a 4 I l I 4 I I t lllla•tflt tit I 0 I I JOit Hetl•Yllft lltJ I 0 0 t 01'99 tit 0 I I 0 l"k<llMou .Joo o 1111111 21> 4 I I 0 Totals JI • S 3 To&Ab tt • 1 • le-...,, ..... C•llfornl1 010 oto 11»-4 OelUMICI OlO lOO lb_. E -~'-l.iifwl, 1111 ..... non. ~ -0.klend I. 1.08 -c:.11,_.. S, Oell'-7 21 -HewfnM. Hllll -Harris C1), ""'-111, Hoslty (I), Ford IS). Sii -ll;iri.-. S -PlcdOlo. SF -~y Cell..,. I .. H 1111 •1111 ••so s J J 4 • 2 t t s I 0 0 Z.M(L,>21 l~ O'•qulsto l HUaltr t'°'* OHi.M Norrb (W, S.0) t s 4 4 J • HBP -By Norris lllurlesonl WP Horris, S.lk -Norrl1. T l 03. A U,220. Y..._l,TletnJ H•• YOr1l OOJ oot 000-J S 0 Dttrolt 100 001 000-2 t 0 May, A. Davis (1) -"'-: Morris lftd l'*rrlSll. W -May (H ). L -Mon-11 11.1). S -Oa•b (I), HR -New York, Wlnfleld II). "' -11,161 _....,..7,TwlM7 t•-... l S.ttllt OIJ t 10 01-7 ll l MlnneM>t• no 100 GJ-7 IS > Ab0o11, CIMk IS), Or-(61 Mid llvtllng, ltoosmon. v.,.,_,..., Ill, O'Conntr UI, C-11 ,., -Buwo. HRS -SMttl•, Gray m. Mi-. wi1._ m "' -2,111 e>r--.>.MllWS.sl Cruc-oou ooo 000-0 7 I BoltlrnOt"t • ooo to•-> 1 o Trout -Ewan, Hiii Ol D Martinat. T Marllnu ltl ond OemDst., W -0 Mar1lne1 11-11. L -T,...t 11·11 s -T Martinez 12'. HR -a.111,,_., Ayola 111 A _, ... , •....-ns.•ws.11 Boston 000 000 000-0 I 0 hHS JOO 000 011-S I 0 T"dor, C•rnpbell 111 tnd Allenton, Derwin -Cox. w -Derwin 12·2) L -Tudor (f.I) HA -TUH, Oilwr (l) "' lf."32 II• Jays S, lnwen I roronto 000 000 000 000 OS-S 13 I Mll•tua.. 000 000 000 000 00--0 J 0 Gorvln, 11¥•-16), Wiiiis ,.,, LHI ( 111, J. McL•UQ!llln (IC) and Wl'llll, Slaton, Flngan It>, Easlof'ly (14), Clt .. lond 1141 Ind Moort W -LNI 11·2) l -E11t..-1., (0-1) "' -1.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE Giant• 3, Dodgers 2 SAN "llANCISCO .. , ..... North,c9 J 0 0 I ColMll, llD 4 0 1 0 -gon,211 '0 0 0 Evans. Jlt 4 o O o Clork, rl > I 0 0 Herndon, II 4 I l 0 Mty,c ) 0 I 1 LtMslr, U • I I 0 Blve,D l 0 0 0 Mlnlofl, p O O O o Totals JI JS l l.OSANGELAI MrllM T-..os, lb > o o o L•ndru.<I 4 0 I 0 Beker, II 4 I l 0 Gorvo. ID 4 1 1 l Cey. lb 1 0 0 0 Guerrar, 11 J O O 0 Mondy,.... I 0 0 0 Yeoger,c 2 0 0 0 Smlll'I, pl\ I 0 0 0 Ruuell, u t o o o Ferg111, Dfl I 0 O O Cnllllo, p 0 o 0 0 Wel<PI, p 1 0 I 0 L-•·.... I 0 0 0 Frltl, II 0 0 0 0 Totols JO 2 • l ker.llyl..._ San F '""'lsc.o OIO 2110 IOC.-J Lo• Anoalel 000 000 002 2 OP -San Francisco l . LOii -S-Fr-cl1co s. U. ..,,.._, s. lB -Honll, Ht,.,.,,., May, G-y. La~ ..... HA -GM.,.y CJ). S -Blue, T"""-. S.• "•-bu I" H II •II SS IO Blue IW, 1·11 '"' 6 t 1 l 4 Minton ($, Jl ~ 0 0 0 0 I I ............. Wtlcll IL, 1·11 S l 2 Catllllo I 0 0 0 T -t .27. A ->'1,110. "'llllnG-• ca. 6, c.n!INll I St. Louis 000 001 CICIO-I J 0 Chic-100 000 OS•_. I O Rincon, Shlr1ey II>. Edtltn Ill. IC-111. on'" 111 -....._; ic"*-· ~., m Ind a1ac.-1. W -It"*-11-11. L -Iii... c.., (Ml. HA -SI. Louil, Hem-t (2), SECOt!OOAM• ~J.C-.1 St. Louis 100 000 Ola _, 11 0 Cl\lc-000 000 JOO OC.-1 1 I cs••• c.n....._,...__, So,....SMI, SUt\w (7), ~ 110), 1(-Cit) 1114 Pontr: ~Glotllen, Krevec 171, L $mltll (I), e.stwlc:k (II) -8i.k-ll Hll -Ollceoo. t>urNrn 111 "' -4,., ............ Son or.e-1 oo ocw oe»-s 11 o Clnclnnetl 004 100 21•-4 II O C..rtls, UrrM I•>. o 11-. Ul, Lltti.tleld 111 and T ICtnne<ty, Pastor•, Price (41, Moake" 171. """'9 (ti --...Cl\. W -Moue" 11~1. L -Llttlefleld 10-21 s - Hurne (11. HA.s -Cincinnati, Conctpdon 2 m A -12.1'1. ~11 ...... ._1 Montreal 000 001 OI0-2 t 1 Pllll-IPl!il 010 010 .Ox-. t 0 Rottrs, Rtil1tr 11) ...., Cartff, Corlton end II-. W -Cal'llon C4-41 L -II-rs (J.I)."' -l0,1~. ........... _4 Hou1ton 100 000 JOI -s t o A II en ta 001 000 .,._... 11 I Rlltllt, MOuJw ui. S.mblto m. t..ec.rto m end~. W•tk, 11r*"°"' 111. ~ m. cernp m anct a.n.ci+ct. w -i.ec.rto (I~). l -Camp (J.1). HR• -Houstllft, Wolll119 (2), ....,.....,, (I). A~ Mllr1lftf (f).A-~ ,.,.....,., ....... "I~ 0$1 Jfl --IO II t Nt• Y-000 oot 000-0 S 2 lllbOJ -,...,.; 0. Rollffta, Miia. W , ~ llttr-Nft (S), .._,,_ (I), Ali..t ltl .... T""vlno. W -IN~ (I .. ). L -D. lill*'U 10.0. Mii -Plttltlw'lll, G. Alt-(I) A -7,175. 1'9eWOOd toUMafMIU ................ , ........... .......... 8eecrl •. l"Kltlc ~ ...... 11 .... ··~ . Hwtfl Tenanu er ...... _,.. ~11 ""'· H.f. • • II~ C*-W , Mlfa C.ta, .. II, 11 ... Loi At•-·.._... Hlll'I, 11-4, It ... ......... .. ~ IMcll -· .... , .... _. 114. 11~n ci.m.nte •· LAe ..,,.._ , .. ,.., ""· QI I. tJ.':"4'-.... *" Sall a.-i,_ 1 .. 1. High 8iChool YOlfeYbalf MorlM-. Weecm!Mliw, t~), IM, IM. Surf •tadatk:a lc-.lty~ V•nc-0 o-4 CafllOf'~ o 1-1 Scoring 1. Ctlllomle. Moy•ro le-, Abf'lllOMI), ":fl. Sllol• -Vanco.,ver II, Calltornle ti, S•vt1 V•ncouvtr 1Htn4•rson') 1, Colllor·nl1 (l\lltyerl 4, FGOjlt ..., Vanc- ft, Ctllfornto U ; Offtldtt -~ ... l. C•lltorWI J; Cornet kick.I -Vancow• 4, Callfornl•t Alto-. -•.65'. Women's gymnastics HIOHIC~ caeu-1 ... 1.•a1Mc1a1a.1 Vo.,lt -1 Wei-(el, IO; UM--· 1 Molllu (CM), .... hlenu bMm -1. Molllc1 (CM),. I, F-•Hrcl .. -I. Finn CCMI. 1.1 All........., -I. Moille. ICM>, tt. ,..._ Y....., 17U, Hta. e..c11111.t Vt"ll -I. w.tler CFVI. t.A, UM-~ I W-(FV), t.S; llolonu • .,.,, -I, Hoflrn1n (FV), t .s; F-•urct .. -I. Hof-lrn•n IFV), t.f. All--I HOff,,_ IFVl,37 4. LPGA money leaders 111iwwll Allr'N UI 1 N•ncy ~z·M911on 2 Oon<>1<:_.i J Pat Bredl•y 4 JoAnne CMner s s.11y u rue • JeMllMllOO 1 8tt!I o.Ne< • Arny Aic.ct '~ePol.-10 Pally Hayn ~l':...achool track 72,-t> ltt,ttl 7',451 7J,7 ... U,017. 60,m 60,m 51,M. ,..., 45,,,.. ,.,,., 100 I M. Joeklon (El, 10.J; 2 Grett IMI, 10.J, J Mor-(Ml. 10.4 120 I D Jac:a-. I El. 23 •. 1 Groff (M),U 7, J, ~•IMl,13.t. UO -I Malll1y !El. SJ S, 2 M. Jac:lloon (El, SJ I, J. l..'(IMI (Ml, SU NO I a..tler IEl, 2:00.4, 2. Plete~ IMI, 2.!l:J.O; J. Cluff (El.2:07 1 Mlle q. Bvlltr IEI, 4:l2.•; 2. Smith (Ml, 4 :16,t ; J .... "(Ml. 4:ao.3 . 2-mllt -I Blltter (E), 1o·u .1. 2. Plott CM), 10.2' 4, l. Smllll CM). IO:JO.O. 120HH -1. Furmon '"'" U.J , 2. 841ylor C El, IS.J; J L.u1 CM), IS S. l>OLH I. Oubol1 (Ml, 40.S; 1 Fu,,,,_ CM), 411; l lltylor !El, 41.S . ._ r•lty -I. Edison, '5.2. Mii• ...iey I. Edlaon, J;J2.6. I" -1 ~(El, ft.2-. 2. H-y CM>, -'h; J Rlclwrdoorl IE), 4J·IOV.. OT I H-y CM), 1»-6, 2. CM~ (Ml, llt-1, >.SN<..-IE), 101-10. ,.V -1 Lontl9 (M), 14-0, 2. Fonythe (e), IS-0, J Lui (Ml, IJ.4. HJ -I Otvlt -CM), J.10; 2 WoSllll'lll'on IEl,W ;J nollllrd LJ -I. a.croft IE>. 20-1, 1 Devit IM•, ~1. J IC1to(MI, lf.11 T J -I Fr-., I El, u.t, 2 O.vls (M}, U.1, J WatlllflOIOnlE),41-10 Mt..,... H,,_ 71, ..._..._ti 100 I Jl-1 (HH), 112, t Tronl (W), 11.4, l.41-(NHI, II I. no -I Jlmtnei (NHI, U. I; 2 Tron! IWl, 24 J, J Soler (W), 24 J .. -I llrott-r (HHI, S4.7; 1. Vtla IW), SU. J. J-(W), SS.t . -I T,,,_ (NH), 2:01..5, t. M«ton (WI, 2 01.2; 3.11111•• CW), 2:14.I. Miit I. Cel-oy (HHI, 4:SJ.J; 2. ~Ill· l119tr !NH), 4:JU; J ..... ,., (HH), 4:ft.t. • J rnlle -I, (lie) H .... oet .. IWI, Ell· lnobM CW), 10;07.t; J. TIH'Nr (HH), IO:lt.7. UOHH -I. °"'9 .. (W), 11.t ; 2. «"*Y (NH), IU; a. Ev-(HH), ..... J.JOLH -t. lllellne (W), U.2; 2 ..... l>Ortft (W),Q,l;J. .......... CNH),4t.&. '40 reley-1. WfflmlMt«, 4'.&. Miit relay -I. ~ Hortlor, J :Jt.S. OT -I, Jeffet'let (NH), 111-t; 2. 0-(HHI, I,,...; J, Mwrwi IWJ, tlM. SP -I. Jeffer ... (HH), SMY); t. ~ (NH), .... , J. IWnwo (WI. tt-0. .. V -1. ( .. ) C.,....,. (W), .. ._. INH), "-'· J. no tlllrd. U -I. S.W (It), 11-101'°'*; 2, lefry HHI, 11-t~. ,_ UMll '"">.11•. T J -I, ...... tWJ, 4M; l. Ward (NH), U-4; a.~ IHHl,•tt'°'*. "-I -1. -..,.. (W), M ; J. l"orrltfl (NH), f.10;1. ll"*Y(tfH),M, .... V...,tM, ......... *"' 100 -t • .....,._ C'Vl, ti.&; l. llrtftl (HI), 10.j; t. ...... (l'V), 10 ... m -t, llrtftl IHll, tJ.t; l. ~ l"Vl, u.J; a; ...... (l'V), :tJA.. '41 -I, 1--, f l'Vl, JU; I. 0....., (FV),St.S1S.ll-.,(Hl),M.1, --1, MllNr (l'V), 1:11.f; 2. T'*"-(Hll, t~••; J. ,.,...,_ ll'Vl, l :WA. Mii• -t. •rlClllM (PVJ, 41 ... I , t. Slt•'-(l'V), f :4.7, t. Mattlnet (Hll, 4:11.P. l •Mlle -1. •rl<lll•• l'Vl, t :U.•; 2. *t!M' ff'Vl, 11:06.t , a. 1t11•1n (l'V>, ll:Jt.1. lleHH -t. Souttlw•,.. IPVl, IU; a. ~ Cf'Vl. t!J; J. ..,,._ (l'V), 1S '· :ti:':. a.LH -I (l'Vl, &a• l. .,..,_ '"',".!··•u:a.. -~cHa>,_~··· _,.._,_,,.._...ve1w,.~ .. ,.,...,_l,~Vllley,I; .... I l"'i •• t. ~Ill\!), IM, l. L«tM (HIJ, 1M, I.Ill llllN. HJ -I, 99111 (l'Vlt ~te; I ... U (HI), J.!01 I ..._. C'VI 114. "' -t ...... (~), •t"I 2 . ...,_ IHI), 4"; IL C .. > ._... !Hll, T.,._ !"VI .... U -.. MlflMllttll.,.,., .. , ... -(Hll, tM: I. ~ IHtt ... fL~("1Q, l"tt. .,, • 'IAiflM u•v1. *"': t *"" ll'Vf ..... ~,,~ '"''· .. . Of -1 --.. C..VI ..... ; l. ........ CHI), 1..-...titYJ,1•1. •-1 ,.......,.,..,, ........ .,.... C~~,~: .. 11.Y~COtf>,I au.. __ , ..... , ... ,,.,~....,... C~I f. 9.!·tt=,J~ot:,. tu It;• 11 au 2 ..-. •• • llC). tlita.t; o·~ CIC, ll ~ ._.,_I ~ CICJ, 1U; I. COMI ..... ; I._.., CDH), • •- • LH -1, (.art J Ill CIC),CA a.--. ~ COff>, O.JJ a ,,..... cow> ifl..i !' Me,.._ ' ._.. ...,,..,-..; MllO,....,-t,QMaH11-.,,·-... HJ .--I ~ CDMl,"'M; e It ..... co•o.,.......,...,.. .... L'-1 -I, WtlAl• .. r (OHi, H·t t t . Yll ........ CIQ, IN; .. ...,_. CDtO, IJ.tt .. TJ -1 ......... (bMJ.~il VII ...... CIC),»M;I M1!¥..-CDtO,loW. l"I/ -•· V""9ttl tDH>. It .. ; t . ...,.. fOH),M;l.fNIM,.,. $~ -1, ..... COHI, 4W~J t ~ tlCJ,41~a......._c0..1,IN46. OT -....._ tOH), !&IM7 l. k lt.CJ,tato41t.~(OH), ...... u......,.., .. ,,...... . 1• -I, 8"0~ (I), tt.t; I, Kan1t (I), IU; I.~ (Ul1 ll.1. --I. Haffla (I), 2J.ll t, ll'KltlfltlM c11,u .. 1a.~cu1.n... --t. "'"'9r (U), 11.2; t. ,.._ CU), Jt.4; J. MyMt (Ul1 IU --I. lftNtY Cul, t:ft"'; 2. ~ Cll, I'"·'; I. o..t11 IUI, t ;•t. Mlle -1. Mo\'ef' CUI, 4. lt.J1 2. Crnwy CUI, 4:11.J; a. o.i... IU, 4: .. 1. 2·lnlle -t.-.,., (U), •:• 11 L '*-A W , 4,Jt.J; J. ICW! (Ul, t :ft • ._ 120HH -t, KlmMll IU), 1'-t; t ~ (l),IU;J ~(U),11.0. UOUf -1 1(1,_I CU), 40.J. 2. ,,_CU, 41..J; J., Geftery (II, 41..6. •ra••y-1 ln1lft9.~.2. Mlltretay-t. Unlwnlty, J .... HJ -I Mc~ln CUI .... a. 2 ~ IUI, ... 2. J WI,_ (I), J.IO. U -1, ~ (I), »4; 2 H-lnt Ol. lt•7'°'* l. ~ (UI, It-~. T J -I llryce Ill, ..... 1 P Herklnt Ill, •IOV.; >. St-..1 (U), -.11o , PV -I. Hlldl Ill, II .. , 2 lllCk (UI, II .. , J. Watlllne (U), ICM S .. -I -rlaon CUI, .. 11; J Hiii IUI, 4'-11,J St.Moly(l), ... t. OT -I. Hiii (U), 144-.S, 2. 011 (I), l?t-11; t HIHlltr IUl, 1W. Women HIGH ICHOC>t. .,._ Y.iley 71, H•. 8-11 M 100 -t • ........_ (FV), 11.1; HO -I. Hendtrton (l"V), JS.J; 440 -I. Holtltld (FV), l :la1.J ; --I. VJll-vva IFV). 2:37.7; Mlle -I. IClrbV !FVI, S:U.S; 2-rnlle -I IClrby !FVI, 12·u.o. 440 reloy -I, Founi.ln Valley, 51.J; Mlle relay -t. ,...,. ltln Y111e.,, 4 • .0.S; SP -I. VI" (Hll, ~V.; llliL.H -I , 0..ber IHI), 11.4; OT - 1. Vlu (Hiii, IU.J'°'*; LJ -I. Mia.,.,, IFVI, IMV., HJ -1. HllN (FV),4.f. .. ..._, N_... •. Wtstm .. .._ it tOO -I, SN.rp CW), 11.7, 220 -I. 0.1..ac:y (NH), JIA; 440 -I Ol1•-(HHI, t.Ql.J, --1. Htwklnt (HHI, 2 JI.I , Miit -1. lillO'lkln (NH), •;IM.4, llOLH I. 0tl..ac:1 (NH), 1US. 4.-ortl•y -I H-port Hwtlor. SJ 7, Mlle relay -I Newport Hartlor, 4·2U, HJ -1 McC...ntrt INH), '-t, U - I. lrwln INHI, IHI\'>, SP -I ~ (NHI, »l, OT I S.-r IHH), •Mo u•-wt-, ... c,.,...., 100 -I Aogtn !UI, 12 •• JOO -I ._.. CUI, 26.2, 400 -I J-!UI, I 00 4, too -I M<u ...... ln CU), , D.l. 1,600 I. llwrtoe (U), s·tu. u .oo -1 11 .. r1 .. (U), II 29.0, IOOLH -1 Mlllt (VI, 14.7, 400 r•l•Y -I ln1lne, M.•. 1.-reley -I 1.-.lne, 4 111.t, HJ -1 IC.tflty 111, S.2; LJ -I Sw~ IUJ, IH; SP -1. Ktllty Ill, ,._,\lo; OT -I ICtlley Ill, I~. DIM..,.._ ... SM c--.11 100-1. Hagen tOHI, 12.0, 2. UO Cutnl'I (SCI, 21.S, 440 -I Cwnln, CSCI. l:OJ.O; --1. IC-COH), 2 .0.0, Mllt- 1. 0..ln'I 11»0, S.4'.0; 2-rnllt -1. Owlnn, 12: 1t O; 110LH I Ktlllrn•n ( OHi. IS.I, ._ reS.r-I. 0-Hlllt, SJ.I, Mii• rtlty - I San Cl-It, ,.3'.0, HJ I. Cumin ISCI, 4 .. ; u I HtlUrn1n (OH), IS.II, SP -f. Clementl ISC), 44M, OT -1. ci. ..... u !SCI, lll-10. High echool awtmmlng ll ... , •• MMtlWt .. 100 ..._., ....._, I. lldl_,, I st 21 100 Ir .. -I A-(Ml, 1 w SI, 2 s.itlOfl fEI. I 5t ». J Hoc*lfts (Ml, l 00 S2 200 lndo I -"°I El, 2 12 •. 2 Smith IMI 2:1J11,l W-IEl,2 JO• SO free -I Mtlha•l IE), 24 ~ 2 Wllll•m• !Ml, 14 o. J "91Mson !El. 2~ Diving -I Bryant CMI, ne Points, 2 S..I Ion I El. no p00n11, > 0-y IM). no Points 100 fly -I Smith tEI, 5'40, J N119tt11 (M), 1 01 n, J W-IE). I 03 11 100 Ir.. 1 R-k IMJ, 4' ... 2 lilollOy IE>. 4'.11; J Ml~ !El, W 01. SOO Ir.. I "91 .. son (El, S IS.It, l !>mll!I tM>. s 17 a .> EMlo"t (Iii), J "n. 100 bock I M..c:r.o IEI. t.00 ao. J Malloy IEI, I 00 II,) N ..... I (MJ, I 06 SI 100 br-t 1. Smith IE), I GUO. 400 Ir" r•l•y -I Ed!aon, no llmo 'ta. Vell.., UJ, Hbl. loacll 41 200 -y relay I FOU'l .. ln V•ll•Y. f.4'.01, 100 fr .. -1 JOl\nW<I !FVI, t·O S4, 2. Sch .. 111 IFVI, 1'"·'7. l Pennen11 .. (Hiii, 1:51.14. JOO lndO -I Nomura ( FV), 2 10.:16, 1. llrlol'lt (FV), 2 II M, >. Oem-y C fl'V), 2·12.06. SO fr .. -I. Elder !FV), U.40, 2. lltrro IHBI, U.'4, l. Mof'gen IFVI, U .SJ. Olvlno -I "''"'°"' IFVI, 211 41; t H•ltdorf IFV>. u.•; a. no llllrd. 100 fly -I Andltfln (Hiii, 51 'I>, 1 W_, CFV), St 11; J Sev-(FVl, St 7J 100 frtt 1 Eldtr IFV), St.to; J Twyman CFV). SJ.47, J lltrro (Mii, 52.'7 SOO free -I &Miity (FVI, S 0. n. 2 M<C.r11'1y IFVI, S 06 ... J Brown ... (Hll), s n.•. 100 bock -f JOMwn l"VI, 1 Ot.•, 2 Parmentier (HB). l.o:t S., i w ... (FV), I 03 Jt. 100 brNll -I .._ (FV), I OS•, l Btnfl•y utv1. I °'IS; J Netn .... a (FV), 1 01 .. 400 ''" reley I Fountain V•ll•Y. J 29.7' Wo~n HIGH SCHOOL ,. __ VM!ty , .. , H.t. 8oocll M JOO .-Y relay -I F-~lrl Vaflrt, 2:0J.60; -tr .. -I. Arrn•lr~ CFVI, 2:09.t; Jm Indio -I. CIOrll (fl'VI, 2:2>..J; JO ,,.. -I, T'Nl.s (FV), •.•; DM119 -f, Allert C"Vl, no polnll; 100 fly -1. Amutrong (FV), l•Ol.J, IOOfrtt -1. T"- (fl'V), 1:00.1; 500 free -t. Scllvlll (FV), 6:1 •. 1; 1• bac.11 -""'' t'Vl, I: IU; 100 lltHll -I. Clerlt (#V), 1:11.S; 400 ,,.. ,.._ ley -I. H""'1'11fon 9Hcll, 4:11.S. -(__ > • atT_":ftt:=.,tl" ....... Do. O.y (U) .. ,. Rty•ldt, .... •f 8ur9ffa. H , ._. '9 Wall ..... S.O, .... IO L<1tan, 2-'; Metoy !Ul WOii, M. H . lo9l, ... 1 ... Mar911ib ttJl won, ... ,, t-4, lost, M. 2 .. , MerOOfla (U) lost, U, -... 2. -· 1 .. , 1-' ~ Nlckall·O• O•y CUI loat 10 Cau 1t1rn1nltlll, k. 2.._ dsf. Mllltr-Molltlop, ... ,, ... I; Pltrovlc1K4111s (Ul !OSI, U , 1 ... 4-4, llrOll,M . U..-8-•».&....-HMlal ....... ~o ILB) fel. Nguyan, W, clef. Howe, "2, OH. ~ .... 1. dtf. lltf'CL M ; Plalchlnl (LB)-· 7-J. w ..... H ; c-... !Liil lost, U , won, ... I. 6-1, H ; llrOlllafel (Liii IOM, ... ,, -· ... 2. M , H o...i.. Perrv·Boe,_ ILBI dtf. 1t1wlM1·Alten, 6·2, 6-2, dtl. H•rbl1on·Ro11, •·O, •·t; -•lleC•ltol .. lllM (LB) '#Oii, ... ,, •·2, Ml, 6~. HMI. lleacJI ZJ¥a, WnlM~ 41/l ....... lerntrd (HB) llM. ltellel!Ar, •·J, def ~=Wi21.M· .=:n ... :;0._~;:ltr'L:~ CHiii ICIA, U, won, M , ... 1, ..... Carroll !Hiii lolt,"6,U,WOl\,M,•~ o.a.. Bonl•·Gebrlel (1481 o.f "°""-Franco,..O, 6·J, def HMllng.-J-.. 6-0, 6-0, Tl\tll LeConcM IHBI loll, ... 7. WOfl, ... 2. won, 6"2, 1 s ....... II Flt90 !El -· V Pharn, ... 2, def H Tren, ... 1, dtf L.ettl\ac, ... 2, def Worner, 6"1. llrlffs !El won, 6"1 .... 1. 6-2 •... 1. St>lctr IEI 1011, S-1, WWI, ... l ....... lost, 2 ... J Fl*ft I El IOSI, S.1, won, ... J. Ml, 6-3. ~ Barg•r-Brown (EJ tosl to Henson· Mt••onlttl, t•. k , dtf N9'1y..,·V Tron, ._2, ... >. lnoclornl-Gllcrftl !El won, ...... 1·S, """· ,.. ... 2 C.W-*4 Mar D, trvlM I SMtileo Soldal tCdllill def. Miii.,, ..... del ICrlll, •·J. del. Grilfilt\, .. 1, def VtlHCO, ... I, Poul ICdMI -. • ._I, H . "Cl, ._I; Ewln9 !CdMI WO'I, H , 6~. ·~.HI, Mc:Manuo (CdMI _,, • '· •» .... 1 ... 1 OWMea B••un·Brown\Dergtr (CdMI dtl AoH•rtn\·ltnlgllt. 6·3, ..... del Harper c 11 ... .,, ... ,. t-0; GorLt-W.pplwrd (CdMl "'°"· 6·4, ... 2 ......... 2. ~ • • ., " Women's aoftbllll ()l)jlMMllf ITY COLL.aO• ---1,i......-.cce LOI ... _...CC 000 000 ~ 0 0 Golden w.st 000 001 .c-1 • O Grl-and Molina, J °""""' and McBride HA Nutter(GWCI Or .... ~'· s-i. ...... s.1110 ...... 000 000 000 000 000 -1 1 Or-ea.st 000 000 000 000 000 1-1 $ I lt•ll -Aid, Curo -Cr.u 2B-M<i""'y IOCCI HIGH SCHOO\. 0-Hllbt, ~Vallrr I CaplUr-Volley 000 oilo 0-4 1 • 01n• Hiiis 011 SOii .. _. I 0 Htr..-.r, Ari.le 141 lftd Moncur. IC. Thc>rnts -o. n.om.s. w-n.o.nu. L- Htrn•ndtz. JB-Fon1¥, C.rnpOell IOH). Loa Alamltoa WaDHUOAY'S HAIL n ,.,., .. ...._ __ _...,., Flrot rac:a -AoYel Ac.<Wd CIC-), UIO, J .0, 1.60, Nrn11rO Ao1W9k (Sonntvllltl, 1.60, S.00; Trump CMd H (AIA>ln), UD 12 t.ctcl1 11-41 palclMt.tO So<-rac:a -SMrtle Argo (L.llnttonl), r . .o, J.60, 1..0, Rlltty Olaftct IOI-), f..10, l .0. Hale-IWo (~), 2.60 _ Third rece -Qwote Hiii CSllor,...,), J.00, J.00, UO; _.,Hart !Gordon>,>.•, 2 Cl, Dl•MI Engllw (WINIMMI, 2 .•. '2 a.c.ac1e l M l paid SU.Cl. Four111 r«• -~ol Sll""r (Grundy), 11.40, 10.20, S 40, Sfly lluctll'OI ( Oe_,,.,I, • 00, 4.00; Pr...,,..18oy CA"*ln), J.20 F!llll rece -"'-H.0, (U9"111111), ,,40, >.to, 2 .•• 511_,lc OW.e (Wllli.rnt), J.Jll, 2.•; Loyol H...., IWl"-dl. 4 .•• U tQc· la U-t),,...., S" 00 51•111 rac:a -Mlnlman H (Hymall), t4.00. SM. UO; ~I N (ICwbltrl, 4 ... J.00; Corlnge UQM CSlwrren),J.00. Sevtnlh rece -l.urnlter Cllarrntr !Wiiii-), 11.00, S.211, >.60; Hustlln' 0.... ( Shtrrtll), t> .... 7.IO; ll11lly For You l l..0"90),Ull. U ~JUl<i. IHI polcl S11UO. U Pick SI• 11<$.7.~N) IMkl l".ne.lO wllll fo11r winning Ucktl• Hive llonu). U ConlOf•tlan Pita Six Poid W .00-with 11' winning lleht((four ,.._,. 81Clllltl r• -Gee Jft !Aleuncler), t.00, uo, a.oo; lcotdl Doulll• ILl9"t111111, a..oo. IM; H H Olllller IT .. ), J.OD. Nl11111 race -tm .. lkwt>ltr>. •·•· uo, JM; s.-. Hel!d (8-yleta), 4.20, 2-40; Perl· 111Alllltnl,2.9'.'2nacto 11 .. 1 peldsa,40. •nlll l"fCa -.UntOtl 5efl (Al<llln), 11-, ut, UO;',,.....IDrfll A I 0.-rl, '-OD, 4MJ Snwt ~-. (~). S.Jt. U ••· ecte IM) ....... 1.JO. A111Ma!d -4,.Slt. .. ~:~I.Tl c • .,...., ... a •--.> "'rM ,_ -J.-KllWJ (~, '-•· a..e.•uo. ~ ~ 1w•i.e. IS .... 1.40; Oleriwt Centr (Lliptlam), JA. 1KWM1 ,_ -Oil .. 11111.,.,. IPlnceyl, 4.10. 1.40, t .40; 8-119 0. P'• ,,_.. ... rlnl), ..... .. 40; OtriNI (.......,), .... u Dolly 0... .................. Tlllrd •M• -.. rlnceaa 0 ' Oo11nc•rt IMc"at ..... I, lMl.Jl, l.»; Oarlletd (*ft' ccae......,. u.. 2.•1 ,.,,. aAMe ,,... cey>. ••ss.*'9 tH> ,..Id...._., ,_.,, ,_ -..,., ~ 1•1_.,1, 1M ~ lMJ ~ c-.-. (o.&elet), •.•i, J.41; ~IOvo M..,,.. CMuaw11 uo. Plfllit ,_ """.Metefr W.,rttr Cf~, ,., .. , 6M, =~I (WlflleM)J U0. .... ; Cell -, • ........,.), ll ..... eucte CH>..,_ ••A ....... , .. -,...,,.., °"* '"~· . 1.-......... ,.__,o.c ........... . ..... :.:;. ..... Mena (T ....... ... la ,._T.......,.(CUt I at, ti .... Ml, 1Ae; .......... (...._..Ir 1• 4M1 a.ti .... ,...._.,, ut. ...... C1t·lll .-tt7t.& ., l"ldl .. , .. ,., .... tt> ...... .. .... ,_ ....... tlC:llltl c ......... . Ptt• 11.11 ~ 1111at ,... _... .-w Mlllllfta ~, ... .......,, • .... ,..-~~ .....,, Tiit ,_..,.., CTrwtttcN ta ua, 4M: ._ CNdll co.aw ....... ,,.. .... ; c~ ....,, *tMltp """9.1 ....... ..... ....... ,.. -""' """ (LfllllMll), ..... ..... = n~.·---· ~ .... . ............ ...... 911& ......... ,; .. a.u. TtMOll• COi. 'n OOH Atltl, 11. CIMMon, ltM llttlll, .. OlllOllOme • .._. Taytw, dt, .._...,, '"°" OMCll, dt, •a'"ucky. 0'*9 Oen ... t .. H•rllltrll Arlaon•. Tre11I '""''• •1t, Arllln .... Htl4ltft ""'"" w , Ott ........ •rlc ~. S-. s.u4Mt'll ~. 8U,PALO llL.U 11w.rt Hott. wt, e.r1or. s-OoolUU., ltt, Color..,. "'* •~. r1t,. lllllliers\lllle llote Joatlrl Crou, ot. Wtt""' ~ lutltr ...... ti. le, Jae:.._, Sl<lto. IC_.. Clort, tit,.........,, S-.te. CHICAGO l•t.11111 Jell Fl-r. db, Southern C.Hlornlt Sc.a Zoletk, di, Notr• Dorne Frank Dllw, ... ltylOr Tlrn Clltt-. Clb. Inell-.......... Jollnton, '1>, ,,,,,._ loll 5.11....,YI, lb, -Mulco CINCINNATI l•NGAU J•ll SclllAI\, lb, Mlnne...C. lloO lttmD, dt, Col St•t• Fullerton Jlrn Hannula. ti, Norlllern llllnoll S•mo. Sornoo, r1>-411, Wetlllngton Swle H\IOtr1 Sim-. rb, T- llUUe. RoDert Jockcon, dlt, Centre! Mlcl•IOM Mark O'Ceiwwll, qb, llttl S~ll CL•V•UND lllOWNS Eddi• Jolln...n, lb, Lo..lsvlll•. R1,..y Scllltv"""r, 09, N•brtlllt. Deon "••t•r, ... Olllahorn1 Slele. Lury ,r14o, Cltl, Mlt- 1lulppl s .. 1 •• IC•vln McGiii, cit. OrW90t1. DALL.AS COWSOYS Aon Fellows, db, M(H~.rl, l(en Mii~ ;dll, Eastern Ml<hlg•n Peul Phiro•1111, 11t, F lori.cl• Sltlt Ml•• w 11....,. wr. Wohl""'°" Sltlt Pet GrONm, di, Celllon•I• Tim Mof'- rl.on, OQ. ~Oii Nolt O"ndv •r, 1""*"- 0INYEllll lllllC*COS Sltvt llU\l<k, ft, Soulllern Ct lllornlt. AYlly OI ..... de, Wul\inglon Pel Welk.er, •r. Ml.mo IFI• I Jotw\ Han~trd. de. N-e Oeme Monoel AOl>lnton, rb, Wyornl"IJ OITllllOIT LIC*S LH Sc>lw.,, ot, Soulllem 111\t-l•I lie* Nlzloru, te, ~-Hugi\ Jernl-. e , Arunw• o. .. -r11n, db, Vlll-va . ...,., Canntvino, lb, Mic~ Wiiiie J8Ca-, dD, Mln lu lOOI Sltfa O•••N IAY "ACltllllllS Biii Wl\lllk .. , db, Mls-.r1 urry Wwts. ID, Jackson SU.I• Tlrn H .. 11 ....... ot. -· O•rn• Nl<kle 14•11, qb, T u11ne. Forrna Vtlora. lb, OklohOme Cllll L.e•h, lb, Sout!ltrn MlululoDI HOUSTON OtL•llllS °"" wn111noton. db, Teau A&•. w111i. Tullh, •r. Troy Stolt Avon Riiey, tt, UCLA Larry J-1. rb, Cotorlele SIA ... Cl-MIU. ... 09, A-.m Siii ~ •• II, Florido s .... llANSAS CITY CHllEn Ooct l..U<lllt, at, l'lorldl Billy J eo-., rD, Al•blmo David Dorn, wr, Rutger~...,,.. lllon1 v .. _.., db. 5outNto1 .. rn Loulsltf\I, LH St-rd, OQ, Tues. Frona Cow, to, Penn Stitt BobGellano, qb, Ugh S .. te MIAMI DOL .. HINS Mlh Ooutn, 01, Ctl Poly Sin Lwll ObhllO. Wllll•m J-. db, South C1<ollna S.ldt. Jol\n H-..n, wr. Ntoraµe Steve Fol-.., ft. UC•PI Jim J..,_,, Qb. B<Klon Unlwr\ity Jol\n All-. di, South C.arollna Stole MINNEIOTA VIK INOS Oon sn.,,.,. rD. 1Cull1own S .. te W- Wlllon, Ql>-D. Eesl Teus Slate J omos Murphy, '""· UIOll Sl•l• Biii SI-, di. Booton Coll-arian w111i.rns, ... Southenl u NEW ~NOUNO .. ATlllllOTS IC•n TclMr wr, MIUIUlppj I(.., NAllOr, II p Slenlord ltn Oa•1on, le North C•rollne St.le, Brion 11..c:•ley, oD. Harv.rd. Cr.1 Cr1 uy, CIO, Pnncelon NEW OllllLIANS SAINTS lttv1n Wtlhomt. '" So..t,..,.n C•lllornlo. Gen• GI..,.,. lb, Penn s .. te lttvln Evons, db, Ar••nus Tousulnl Tyler, rb, w11111noton Ho•1t G•lan rD, Lo .. 111..., St•I• LHter Ml< ... n1, wr, Kenw• Jlrn Wlla1, di, S-01"90 Swfe N•W YOlllllC GIANTS Loul1 Jack.on, •b. C•I Pol.,·Son L."lt ObllPO J-Powers, 09, Mlclllg.n. Maril AHd, qb, Moorllead St•l• Biii Ard, ... W•h ForHI Byron Hunt, lb, Southern MtlhOdlll Mike Beratr, di, Gr•mllllne Stttt Ml.,. Moller, le, Wnlern llllnols NEW YOllllll JETS Ktnny N•ll, di, I-• State. llo'fd JOllft, wr, Brlo,,1m Young. J C. Wells, db, Okl•Plorn• Admlrol Oewty Larry, dD, N•vada LOI Vag•1 M•rly Welrtl, lb, Tulane Ed 0,11, di. Marrl•nd Mlkt Moeller. ot. a.-.. OAKL..ANOllAID!lU Cur1 Metil, ot, UCLA Fronk He•alns, r11, Neve<11·A-ci.n1er Wllll1, rb, .Auei..r.. Phlf Haloon, It, Dtl•wort PHILAD•Ll'HIA l~aS Alon o.tnca.n, a, T....,.._, Ooeli Field, lb, ll•ylor Otuca Comml•hY, c. Mlsslulp. pl Hu1Mr1 Otlvw, rb, NIZ-. Gell Davit,, di. y1rglnla Union. Ray Ellll, db, Olllo SW•. "''n'SeUllllON ST••L•lll David UIUt, ID, Florkla Frallk W11-. rb, Ritt J•rnn Hu'lttr, ot, So.,tllern Calllornlt Miiie Meyock, db, Bosten C.11 ... Rlcll Tr«-, •• "lttstourgh ST. LOUIS CAllllDINAU lttvln 0.WW.llJ, dll, Nortll 0.llott SU'9. Mlllt Fl-r, wt, a.ytor Stump Mllcllell, rD, Tiit C1tad•I JarnH M•lla rcl, wr, AletMcno Jlrn Jolntr •r. Mlornl CFI• 1. Mike lllffroel, l•, llllnolt Joo ..._..,s, OQ. N•bf'oskt SANOIEOOCHAllllO•llllS Pelt Holollon, t•. Nolrt 01rne lilly M11111ns, wr, s...tNrn ca111orn11. AoCltrt "•rt11rn, rb, Grernbllno Stott. Mott Per1.n1-..ot.Oow1C¥lotllrodley,1-.ww For•ll. Stach Cll•rlH, wr, 11a111.,,... Co61tmon. SAN "llANCISCO ..... c>arry White, rlt, Mlnn•aol1. Ronni• Otllo1t, It, UCLA Mator Oell•lt, rb, Alabama, Jot Adame, •• T•--Slate. HATTl• S•AHAWkl "°" J~, •r, L0119 114tac:ll S .. t •. 8r• Sc•vlll, le, Ptflll s .. te, Eric L•ne. rta, 8tlgllarn Youn9. JI"' Stone, rb, HoU. O.rnt, Jlrn Wtletlty, wr. W•llll119ton s,.., Ken oe._,, rb, $a•afl4'\UI S~ta. "-' Olendtr, l'tl, Colondo. Mtf lled,..,..., ._ l"acltk TAMl"A IAY IUCCANa•1111s Dtll¥tr .-_, ot. Tu111 Miu ,...._-. Stvltlonl Mealodlet. Ken Mc:C.-, ... 1"n· H . JOhnny ll1y Sn>lll\ lb, Le....,. It• Whitt, di, T-. WASHlllOTON •aOllCtNI °'*r1tY ._.,, -· """"" CMellne "-· DarrJI Grlf!C, ... lllU. """' K-1, C111t. Nertllern MlcNCM111 Allan l(t-.y, .._ W•tfllneton Sllttt, Jarry HUI, Wf, ,.... AIOlleffte Clll'll Olcller, wr. l'Wtl-cl ~. Misc. I . • I . . i EV 1 1'.Y SA.VINGS . . ! I : CLOSEOUTS CHANGES OF I.ABELS SIZES OR PACKS WE ACCEPT CASH & FOOD STAMPS ONLY! NO CHECKS CASHED CANNERY DENTS : CANNERY DENTS : SLIGHTLY DAMAGED 'I CONTAINERS i .i. . CONl'ENTS ~1 ; I ,· BELOW STANDARD SLIGHTLY OFF GRADE ~ S·OME IRREGULAR SIZES .. • ti" BRING YOUR OWN BAG OR BOX WE PASS THESE SUPPLY SAVINGS ON TO YOU! ., "Wet enough for you today?" M..\RM..\DlJkl by Brad Anderson DENNIS THIE rtllENACE Hank Ketchum "You timed It perfectly. I Just sat down!" ''Should httle kids have to lay awake at night wondenn· how much ice cream bars are gonna cost this summer?" llJDGE PARl{EB GARFIELD S-4 Fortune 58 A"98f 60 Rellglon a, Be¥ereon· 21'0'dS 63 NolctoMd &C Marble 6S RJgtll Prel 66Pro - 67 Hootly UNITED Feature Syndicate T uesoay's Puule Solved by Harold Le Dow< by Jim Davis f l TUM•LEWEEDI _____ _.. EVEFtV WENIN~ WHEN ·~~~-~---:---1 NAN Cl' SLUGGO, YOU PROMISED YOU'D WORK HARD ANO AMOUNT TO SOMETHING- GORDO VOLi ARRI~ HOMI! I WU.J.. Mettr '1t>U A1' OUR RANCH HOU6e POOR 4 ., ... IAW~ RIGHT NOW I'M LEARNING TOBE A DOCTOR--- by Ernie Bushm1ller ---I'M PRACTICING TAKING WEDNESDAY OFF by Gus Arriola /71U£/oJIAJG /!) .:;wnJ:§g ~ ~Jtl§@~ llexi.I~ 8'.JS~' FUNKl' •tNKERBE..\N by Tom Bat1uk 1 CAN'i GET (('(..) MIND OFF THAI NEW GIRL 1"-1 ((II..) CJ..Ao5 I THI$ I~ A ONCE-IN·A-llFE - 1ilYlE fHING I AND I 00~ CAR£ WHA(li ~t<E.~ ... IHE..Rf.S AB50UJiEL4 Narn1NC7 I WON'I SHOR! OF ,':;()NlffH/f¥:7 CRAZ~ LIKE (.i)1N0 UP AND lAlKING 10 HER I DR. SMOCK SAY, 00 'IOU HAVI!! ,Ap..JY .M.AGAZINl!S Wl"T'H MY PIC"T'UFU! ON 'T'H e: COVI! R ~ 00 m 6E.T m KNOW HER ! j 1 l I REMEre£R lllllElol M" r1~f 60..Qri~M Olf.0 ""°' OAO CAM£ t~fO ""I ~. lNO £tV\..AIMt0 "fl!A"f 'MR.rt~~~· llAO '70Wf.1o bOL0~1SM llEAVhl, ~NO ME 'fOLO ~~};'~;rt; [\_ 'IEA" .. 1°MOSE c1mvMOOO 1RAVMAS CAN 0E Rf.All'i 'fOUbM by Kevin Fagan uJ14Af CMILOMOOO 1"QAUMA? \ltS ll)A~ l.Mf ~tMUfl 1• __ ..., by George Lemont so eveN CHeRY't... ·n eGs ANP euR-r RE?YNOL.PS H.AVI! 'fHE!I R o,:::F PAYS! FOB BE'I' tEa OB FOa •OBIE 1fiE HC'USE. IS ~Rf QUIETtQ\-EN R KID lS SICK. • I 1981 COLLECTION • • • DESKS, DESK CHAIRS, / / Large selection to choose from. Many, many pieces available for immediate delivery. I J \' i Ir \\ i \ /':I I \ \ ! Storage. Display. Utility. With Sophistication. Room sizes of today dictate careful utilization of wall space. The above Wall Systems answer this need for every type room. Beautifully engineered for both flex- ibility and a distinctive, unified look. Compo~ents are designed fo~ television or st~reo _en- tertainment, display of art ob1ects, for china1 hbranes storage. You may include a bar or desk unit. Choose any combination. SECRETARIES and WALL SYSTEMS I The finest traditions of craftsmanship are main- tained and newest techni- ques are used to give you the greatest value in the above home and office furnishings. .. WE FEATURE: ; • ROYAL SEALS • STEELERS Features: • BELTED •Two "1de Po Ly Steel Belts • '\ • Polyester Cord Body Plies • QUALITY RETREADS .. •He ~dewal EXPERT SERVICE AT FAIR PRICES "' WE HAYE CUSTOM WHEELS I/ WESTERN • SUSPENSION :i;~;;: _....._ ~,...., . • ':'J;•ter Cord •OIL & LUBE -~!ion ---'- • HEAVY DUTY . t:'~; ~:w , ~--,-..~ ....... SHOCKS I/ CRAGER I/ AMERICAN I/ PARNELLI I/ TRU SPOKE I/ APPLIANCE .. I/ WELD WHEEL j I/ WILDCATS .. ... J SEE US FOR ALL YOUR TIRE NEEDS . , I • lea market has it all ' TOKYO <AP> -It's the most orcanlzed nea market in the worta, and the money tha\ changes I ' bands each day makes it the bieeest. But it's not antiques that the Japaneae are btl.yine at A.kihabara (pronounced Ah·kee·h•·ba· ra). lt's where they eo to purchase tbelr television Hts and bi-fl equipment, in fact just about anything that can be electrically operated -even plbg·in mosquito ltillers and heated slippers. Here, 500 whol~alers and retailers, aome in six-story glass emporium.a, others in jerq,-bullt lean·tos tucked away beneath the ra1lroad tracks, sell an estimated 25,000 dUferent items, from minuscule translator components to nip-of· tbe-switcb, state-of-the-art microcomputers. IN THE TRADITION of all great markets, Akihabara's merchants display their goods on the sidewalk, not under lock and key, so that prospec- tive customers can play, t.ihker and tune, gape in awe, and finally haggle at 25 percent lo 40 percent below normal retail prices. The first shocks for the casual visitor to this eJectrooic festival are tbe crowds. the noise and the plethora of products on display. Row upon row of stereo speakers are stacked like cartons of pop- corn, and blasting out music ranging from the latest in pop to Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. Similarly, refrigerators, washing machines, rice cookers and other appliances -for some rea· son almost always in garish pink, green or orange, share space with the amplifiers, stereo tuners and tape decks. AU of course, at prices hard to beat. Street hawkers thrust gaudily printed Oyers at passersby, promising hefty discounts on brand· A cuatomer look.! over a device fqr taking blood pteuure. COLLECT AS CORNEA A•r• Caine • 8'9mpa GOLD • SILVER Prtcet tor 4-29-11 C._ ... _. "'-Cl.t11M ~~ === ~;._ ...... N11• ,_ ,.._ WJYI t*.JS "" ... _... .... .,,. ,.~ ... .._ AVAILAA&.a c.11 .. _ ..... (114)55HUO South Coeet fltua Vlff•t• -.. -... c __ ..,._,...., Smiling shopkeeper selll hundredl of cUff~ent electrontc parl1 in TokJ/0'1 Aldhabaro diftrfct name products at particular stores. Children of tourists, Ak:ihabara's best foreign cuatomers are amuse themselves speeding radio-controlled toy Russians, muaUy ln town u members of vi.siting cars down the maze of pedestrian alleyways while sports teams, orchestra.a and ballet companies~ parents look for household bar&aim. It said the most skillful basglers are Southeast Asians followed by the Russians, Europeans and DESPITE THE CARNIVAL atmosphere Americans, with the Japanese at the bottom of the pervading this old quarter on Tokyo's east side, list. •• • • • U. Coaa&ry Safari IH. of Irvine loet '748.290, or 3t ceota a ab*1e, for tlSe year ended Dec. 31 1880, compared with a loes of $630,121, or 36 tenta • bare in the previous year. ltevenues for 1980 dropped to $1.8 million fro $2.3 million in 1979. The 1979 revenues lnclud ~.000 from the termination of the proposed sal of the park as well aa $UO,OOO realized from the sale of the two concessions result.int from th aborted transacUon. Harry Shuster. president, said the company had concluded an agreement with a group o( Orange County investors for the coiutruction and operation of an amphitheater with a seating capacity ol 10,000. Final zonin& fOT the amphitheattr was ob- tained March 24. Conatructioo has commenced and the amphitheater is expected lo o~n this August. • • • Aldhabara is big business. Its annual sales volume Akihabara also demonstrates bow Japan has bas been estimated at about $50b mUllon, some 20 overcome its reputation for cheap and aboddy The WWa.rd Co. in Fountain Valley, manufac- percent of Tokyo's home appliance market. goods. Japanese appliances rarely break dof'Jl. AU turers and developers of sophisticated fiber&lass Akihabara's salesmen are better-dreaaed and products carry warranties, but the service in· reinforced products, enjoyed a proftt gain of 17 more polite than tourists might expect street ven-dustry barely exists, and repairs often coat more percent to a record $194,051, or 44 cents a share fort dors to be. It is considered good business in Japan, than the price of a new item. 1980 compared with $166,484, or 37 cents, for 1979 where great emphasis is placed on form and man-"Here, you never get cheated. You pay a fair based on 444,000 shares outstanding in both ners. price and you know it'll work, .. says Carl Brixley periods, according to a report by officials of thek The larger ouUeta set up special tax-tre~ cor-of Los Angeles, a resident businessman in Japan firm. ' ners for tourists, usually staffed by people with at for 14 years. He says be often visits Akihabara just For 1980, sales jumped 30 percent to SJ.it least a smattering of En1lish. to marvel at the product displays. million from $2.4 million the previous year. d Akihabara is a classic study in how businesses In the United States, he says, there is always Company President Jack 8 . Hochadel sai can make money while allowing fat discounts on the problem of warranties and after-u.Ies service last year lhe firm obtained more than half its busi their merchandise. but "in Japan that doesn't apply. Things never go ness from government defense contracts for• "We buy in bulk, our overheads are low and wrong, do they?" fiberglass logistics products. ' we~y onh~rys~~~ume~au.se~o~~w ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ profit margin," explains Hirosuke Watanabe. of 11 ~ lshimaru,apopularchainstore. ..,.~ EXECUTIVE SUITES ~ CASH-ON-THE-LINE, no credit cards, is the WWl'til' A ~ i rule. That helps to increase turnover and keep DIAMONDS. GOLD JADE MANAGEMENT prices doYin, dealers say. The price tag figure is Jewels by Joseph purchases diamonds, 881 Dover Or., Suite 14 always negotiable, some stores even encourage gemstones, gold .no siMlr from pnva18 indM- bargainiog, and most probably would knock off a <1.lals and esta\89. Careful examination and NEWPORT BEACH few extra bucks rather than lose a sale. evaluatioo by our expetts Highest pnce$ paid 10-9 daily, Set 1~ Closed Sonday Ptlone 71 4 -631-36 51 A typical discount at Aldhabara would brin& the buyer a stereo cassette deck, normally listed IO<lay Allk tor Betty Grace or Erle Zalaakus. for $30S~ for $285. • TMDITIOM or ~' rOf. OVlJ. eo YCAM The higher the price, the ereater the discount. J[W[LS by JOSf:PH A 26-inch color TV set selling elsewhere in Tokyo Soulh Co.st Pfaq, Coet8 Me9a • 54CJ.IOM for $1,155 ls slashed to $850 at Akihabara -even less for the real bargainer. Akibabara's attractions have made it not only a mecca for Japanese with fistfuls of yeo but also for foreign tourist!. Almost every hotel and travel agen~ tour of Tokyo includes a visit to the area whose name translates as "fielJI of autumn leaves," presumably from the days when it was countryside. Before World War II, Akihabara was a fruit and vegetable market, a remnant of which re- mains across the railroad tracb, sharing space with a doll market. BY SOME ACCOUNTS, the area became a major black market for scarce food and other , goods when Japan was emerging from the ashes or its World War 11 defeat. How it came to be an electronics center is ob- scure, but among the first customers were American Gls during the Occupation, when the in- dustry was just getting started. The mart has been the subject of many con- sumer surveys. One weekly magazine, re- searching Japanese buying habita, found that more than half of the applianees bought at Altihabara never get used, and 20 percent wind up on the scrap heap while sWI in serviceable condi tioo. Appliances in seemingly good condition are commonly discarded in this COOSlJmer society. It's not uncommon for foreigners livio& on limited budgets in Japan to boast of having furnlshed their tiny apartments by checking out the trash. ANOTHER SURVEY, by the popular magazine Shu.lean Shincho, came up with some in· teresling conclusions: Aside from the regular run COURTEOUS, PROFESSIONAL. TRAINED ••• Dncrlba TAB Operators and Servtce. CONFIDENCE ' Dncrlbet Our Cu.ttomcn' Feellnp About TAB. \ TAB OPERATORS Will ... Take Messages• Take ~dc!'f •Quot« Pncp • Rclty Calls • Make Appointme.ntt • T cleic· · and FKllmllc Service • ee..,_n for aU Southern California• Wake-up S.M«. $50,000 to $500,000 INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS • l•l-1 -'V ,.,,. I llt . ,._.. ·~ •.Jl..W..d91 •W..W.c-t~u •Moedily......_• • 6 moetMi to S v-n •Sowtai .... C.I._~ l c•rHdt I •lUr • lcNn 1.t ..... lio• Mrvke f.,, uour fon<>ncony """d' (714) 759·1515 AMERICAN HOM£ loll(>RTGAOE 230 Newoon Cenler O""f Oe1111n Pleu Newport Beacl'I. CALL LINDA BLUE FORA Cahlornoa 92660 ·FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN- INTEREST ONLY! 7'/ewporf Equity'Funds Jnc I Licensed Broker Since 1971 (714) 760-6060 THE LIGHT TOUCH There's a new diet lbat calls for lots of Cl~r. Makes sense. Have you ever seen a fat moth? • •• About all you have left over after the deductions Is the job ••• Conscience ts that im· pediment Which so often rudely lblerferes while money lt lalldn( . ••• Heard about the church Janitor who aJao played lbe piano Of\ Sunday? He watched hta keys and pews. • •• Ooe nice thln1 about. i>laylna today's mus.le: lt you make a mistake, nobod.1 noUcw. *'** Come into 'nre City, llfO Ne1'porl Blvd., CO.tta Meta when rou'U lb\d \b• beat valuea in Ure and -wheel Nmce. .-----Q•ID" 8U)lncl» liiin• .. r...M9rwtMXI.,.. ___ __, In Business To Make Business Happen Al Creallve 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 real and personal property. 4425 JAMBOREE ROAD • SUITE 180 •NEWPORT BEACH CAl1f0ANIA 92660 (714) 762·7923 ~ f ~RS BO'" WF·(f.),£1J: DMP~TERS 1 •t In Features, Performance, Prtce! tRS-80 COLOfl COMPUTER 1 '0BN CUNNIFP ........... . NEW YORK -If a ~'I lalet 1HW ,5'1 percent ln nve years, .. tb tales of Cobb JlHOUrca did. ll 1bould make .omebod1'1 lt.t. Jt doet. It I ada "Tb• lDc. 100." Tbe l.ne. 100 ls ~Uk• the Fortune 500, wbicb l1 ortu.ne maaaa.lne'1 list of the SCIO tarc .. t U.S. companies. Inc. ts a masutoe ot "•malhw com· panlet," and It.a list ls based not on sales but on sales erowt.h. That'11 why Cobb, a ml.nlni company based tn Albuquerque, N.M., heacb the U1t with ~les of only $11 million. In 976, the bue year for mea.aur- g companJes on the Inc. lilt, its sales were $3,000. Its compound annual rate or 11rowth alnce then some 678 percent -doesn't mean it ran •way from the others. In second place, DSI Corp., a Nashville, Teno., company thal transfers computer data onto microtlhn ';>r microfiche, grew 606 percent cuNN'"" ;a year, or 248,224 percent in five years. OF EVEN GREATER significance than sales may be the JOb·producing consequences Of sales. Smaller busmesses, rather than the mature giant corporahone, often are the job creators of American society. The work force of the top 500 indu.slrials, writes Bradford Ketchum Jr., who supervised the compilation for Joe., climbed onJy 12 percent, but the work force or the 100 smaller companies leaped 663 percent. This didn't surprise him, because earlier studies showed something similar. A House com- mittee in 1978, for instance. said that between 1969 and 1976 "small businesses accounted for wtiat can be considered virtually aJI the new private sec~or employment in the country." Getting that message across, however. has proved difficult, and all the while the larger com- panies have been gathering in a greater sh~re of the gross national product. Even in dealing with government, small business has had a difficult time, what with regulations that all but eliminated them as bidders or discouraged entrepreneurial ef· forl. IN MORE RECENT years, especially since last year's White House Conference, smaller busi- nesses have been on the attack. We. they say, are the job creators, the 1mprovers of productivity, the PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE "OUalNG A )'EA.II of economic turbuleQte marked by sky·h18b inter.at rata, pun.lJhina Intl•· (ion rates, and a pHudo recovery, the en- trepreneurs wbo nan these 100 companies pU.bed their people to outpetfotm all other bualne11 groups by every meuure. '' Jn lilO, aaya Inc., tbe~atklft'a bluest corpora- tions "maaaced 1alea tnc.reaaes that barely kept pace with lotlaijon, and profit.I that didn't." But the Inc. list shows a aalN Cain of S2 percent, and a surg~ in after-tax profit. ol SO.l percent. ROUJtdinf out the top five on Inc.'1 llst are Gulf Energy, a Salt Laite City oil, gu and coal de- veloper; Tandem Computers, Cupertino, and Tan- don, a Chatsworth maker ol mlnicomputer diH drives. Medical products firm oorrects sellofl report The officers or Luther Medical Products Inc. of Costa Mesa have corrected a report by Stock Research Corp. that stated company officers had sold 168,000 units of the corporation. "We sold only 14,000 units, not 168,000," said Marshall F. Sparks, vice president and treasurer. "We bought the stock at the public offering, and on the advice or our attorneys, sold it before we became subject to the Securities and E.xcban1e Commiuioo's insider tra~ rules. "The 14,000 units ls a tninor portion of the 22 million shares outstanding." Luther Medical Products is traded over-the· counter. A µnit equals 10 shares plus two warrants. Sparks said the shares were sold all~. while the present price is about 2~. No additional units of the company is expected to be sold at this time by company officers, Sparu said. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS IUSINIEH "ICITITIOUS 8USIHUS NQJtca IHYITING llOS NIIMI STATIEMINT ,.ICTITIOUS l lJSINEU N-IE STATEMIEHT Hollo II ... ,.o.,. 111 .. n ,,,., u.. Tiie loflowlno per-.1 •r• CIOl"11 lt4MIE STATllMENT Tiit lolfow1no persons •rt OoinO 80M'd of T....-ol Ult Huntl ....... bustr;:~sK•lsNE WOODWORKS, 2Jl6 bu:1~~,:o~~OwlnQ per.oni er~ Ooin9 b4.tsJn1si... 8e~ Unioft "'tft Sc,._,. Olttrkt WHf lHE GOOD LIFE T"AllEL. 010 "IOU4 SOL, 3101 w Moor• rectivt IHIM bids for supplylne O<ellld Hill Place. Soni• "In• H•IOlllS, " Avtnu., S...t• An•, C•fllornl• •2104 C•rptl C-int Se"'lo mttti119 "' C•lllo•n•• 97107 Comp.,• l>fl•t. Ne•por1 IMocfl, CA-Fr•nk Sorr•nllno, l'fll S Rtnt equal to u. -clflGetlons on lllt In tlle Roberl Wey99nd, 233' Orcllld Hiii ""° Ori••. Soni•""""· Co1tlorn1e 92704 oHlct of wld Olstrkl.' , Pl•co. !>Anlo Ana H•lghl1. C•fllornt• Rose Cr•"""• 44 C•P't Cod. 1"'1"'· Thll l>usonen" <onducted by •n In 8td• 111011 bt cle•rly moratd '11101 C"I '1111 • 01 .. du11 "'carpet CIHftlf'lll Senkt , Bid •4't."' Weynt IMmoto, u1 ~ 1•thSlro•t, P•lro<•• Culmer •:!IS Seton Ro.od, Fr•nkSorrenllno •ddrt11td lo Allyn E . Rowltr, Coll• Mew, C•litornl• .,,.11 Irvine CA "1llS Tf11~ si.1--.1 ••• lilac! wlln 11141 Purc11u1n11 Mon••••. Hvfttin9lon Tiiis bu\IMU 1s conducled by • TflOl """""" '' conOuCltO by • Counly Cltr• ol Orange County on 8••<11 \JMon High Scllool District. ~ne••I por1nt'l111P o~n•r•I port1Wrl/ltp AProl 11 1"1 IOUI Yorktown Aveft .. , HUllll"9ton ROl>ertWtyllOl\O Rov Cr• .. n '1.0Sl:I Bttcll, C:.llloml• ~. and recat"ad Tll" •t.i.nwnt wu t11ac1 wllfl 11w P•tr1<141 Culmer et or IMtfore 2:00 p.m., Friday, Moy u , County Cler-ot Oronoo County on Tiiis it.temenl '""1 llltd wltfl 1"-Pu1>111two Orange Coot O•llY Pilot. 1"1· ot wfll<ll time ond pla<t ~ wlll AP<"ll 14• "'1 ,.1._ ~:;n1y ci.n. of Oron119 on ::~ "IP• n 30 w., 1 u 1"1 1m.a1 ,_ :::~1c:J., ~ :;:;.-:S~ollcl for 0 .!:u~~.":" ~. ::.:,.~~ 0 • 11 y1r;:; ........ a._......... PUBLIC NOT.ICE P"1• •• ~~~ ~ •,,.' ~!..!'°''·!~111' dol• ""~ ..., ' 0 11 C•-Or"'9. ~'-' ~ ... a;_-;., o1 °r-;;;;" .... :;:~ be IN Ne•119rt ........ CA. nwe I .... 1...,.. .,, u. _111, of _.'-1 Publlllw<I o..._ Coast O•llr Pttol. l'ICTITIOUS 8U5'Mall tlfftred -,_._ llw rll!M to reje<t "IPrtl f . 16. 1J 30 1 .. 1 1•11 II NAME STATaMaNT eny °' oil blctl -lo wolv• ony Ir PUBLIC NOTICE 0,. ANNUAL REl'ORT u • -A E A NOTICE o,. 4VAll.A81LITY I huT11lln•,,!o~!ow1"0 .,....,., or• Going r...,ion ty _.,n • 1,.ttrn•I lltven ... COdt "ollC• h PUBLI N TIC V1• Wuttrs, N•wport 11••<11. Oettd Apr1l 2'.1tt t Purt.-1 10 Se<llOn •104 ldl of the I c 0 E PRESIDENT PROPERTIES, no ~Mllnii°::~r Mr•y llf•en lllOl llw .,,,_Ir_, 10< -C•htornlo tl..o ,..,..lllWd Or-'Coosl Delly Piiot. l ll t C •l ond•r Y••r 1'10 ot l'ICTITIOUSIUSINESS Wllfl•m Bloor Arm1lron11. 11 •pr JO.May I , .. 1 ?ells.ti FAIACHILOMARTIN04LE FOUH NAMESTATEMEltT H••bonnt, Newport llta<ll. DAT ION, • prlvale loundotoon. '' Tiie lot1-•"9 per-. 11 doi"9 """· C•lltorni•.,MO owalleD11 •1 llw ,_11on·, P•l11<lpol nena. Tllo,,_ M L•t>dtn. 310 s-iilr•, olflct for ~lion dUtlf>ll r99111ar COUNTRY BOY ·. 21S. Newoon B•IOOO hi-Colll0<nl• , .. , buliMU hours bY •"Y cltlrtft who r• lloultv•rd C0<I• M .. •. C•lllor•i• Edwin A Mntrvt , 120 V ie q ... ab It within l lO .,_,, •lt•r Ille delt l "161• Wazler1. N.,.pol"I lleacll, Gallloml• of this l>Ublk•tlOn Jo AnlW Berube, 14131 Edl\O Plec•. 92..0 Tiie louncMltJon"' prlnclpol ofllU IS CoYOno. C..lttornl•'112l Tllh bullMll ii COftdUCl..S bY a IOCOlld •I IOU Gronvlll• Orin , Tl\ll OUllnft\ IS <onclYClf'O "'an 1n hmlled Dtr1ntrslllp N-port ao.11. Cotllornl• nMO divldu•I Edwin A M9Mr ... T ... ·pr\n(.IJ>ol ..._r Of Ille IOUll JoAtwwBerl>bt Tiii$ tto-1 •• llled Wltll tM O•tion 11 Hury T Marllnd•lt, T1111 s1M...,.,.I wos liltd willl lht Coul\ly Cler• ol 0r ... oe County on TruslM County Cltrk of OrOllOt C-ly on April April J, 1'11 Ullkk McHOM A 11, 1'111 MALCOM & DALY OIOr~ !> F. Koller P16117' 41ot Ma<Attllw ....... , 101 WllSl\lre Boulevard Pu~llllwcl Or-Coo•I Doily Pilot, N•wll9f1 9Mcll, CA '2'6t t..AnQltl ... Colltornl• t0011 April JO. Moy7.14. 21, lttl 19'2·11. Pubtlllwd Orengo CO<lll O•lly Piiot, April 30, 1'111 201M1 PUBLIC NOTICE N$-1 ... "OTICIE 0,. DISSOLUTION O" l'AaTNKAMUP' PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUI 8USIMaH NAMa STATIMaNT TM lo41owl"' pertons o re dol"ll buMMUM J ond M ,SE RVICES, 9Sll Public nouca Is llere4ly 111v.,. tllot \.um111011 Hunt1"11ton •••e ll MANI L. IHAUIWK, -RAHGA L. ColllOrnlaft.. ' 8HAUMIK, llM'etolort ...._ WM-~ Rl<llard ICt"' McKosson 21U _..,. llw lktlt...,. llrm --11' ~ ~e F"lllRICS CENTEll •I La Lind• Cour1, NtWllOJ'f ••<II, •Irle -..__ • lcolllornlo "1WO 2121 Wittl Cliff DrlW. City of Ntwporl John Kurth MCKHSon. llll lltatll, Cownty of Or.,,119, Stott of Lalinde Cowrl. NtwPOrt Buell Ce lllor"I• did on Ille Jhl dey ot C•llt0<nl• ._ ' Oecemw. 1m. by muwal con...,t, r1111 l>USllWU 11 ,_uct..S by a dlU OIU Ill• ••Id port"trllllp ond ilmf1•d PM'1JWMlllP ttrmln•te -· relel1-•• pon,,.,.. R K McKH_, l~~n IJolllfWu In Ille fUlll(• will IH T1111 1i.1_,1 wo1 111..i with tlw conducted by HOME FAlllllCS Cou,.ly Cltrk ot Orenoe Covnty on CENTER, LTD a Colllomlo corpora .Aprol H . lt'1 1'1_,t llOll, wllO wlll pay -dlw:hOrOf •" Publl....., 0r-. Cool! Daily Pilot, llatllllllft -dtlltJ of llw llrm .,.., r• April 30 Moy 1 u 11 lttl 1,....1 <•Iv• •II _.., payable It Ille firm • • • Furllwr noll<A I• .. UOy Ill"" lllOI Ille u..........., wlll not be rt-Ii bit . lrom W1 doy on, for eny ooli .. 11<1n Incurred by tl>t •._•In llwir own nomts or In tlw nome of Ille llrm DATED AT u.. Anoelt•, C•lllO<nlo, '"'' "'" dey of April, "" Tlmotlly S Htrrls Altonwy Pultlltlwd Orenoe C0<11I Dally Piiot, "lprll JO, 1•1 2011•1 PUBLIC NOTICE Jeil Keltll Slndot1 Tllla 1-w• ti ... wllll -C-ly Ciani of 0r_,,.. C-y en AIW'll JA. "'' ,., ... ,....,.i.w ....... .......... ~Or • ....... ,. .....,.._.,CL._ l'ullll .... Or .. (MM Delly P'l!ot, "-'" •• ..., 7. 14, tt. ,.., 19'M1. PtJBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE P'ICTITIOUS IUSIMass P'I...., PubllSIW<I O.enoe Coest Dally Pilot Apr 1•,U.30,Mov1.1ttt ins.ti PUBLIC NOTICE 11\CTITIOUS •UllMaU MAMalTATaMaMT Tll• fotl-lne ...,_. Is dOln9 bw4 ""' ... STREET TOYS AUTO I OOY ANO PAINT,WOW..-t11tlt5""t •U. Costa Mew. C:.lllonll• .-V J•llery Allen Tlbtleb, 412 COlto MeM Str•t, COit. Mew. Colll0<nlo '11621 Tiiis _,_, It C~fe<I by M In dlVlclual Jeffery Ali.n T-U Tiii~ 51.tllt,_.I WM llftd wllll tlw County ci.rk of Orenoe Countr on April u . 1'tl t'l-Publl,,.,. Or-COHI Dally PllOI, Apr 1•. u . JO, May 1, 1"1 11n•1 PtJBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NA·756tl o•P'AATMllNT 01' TUMS~TATI°" HOTICa TOCOtfHACTOltS le•led ll"CIPOIOlt wltl be rtetiveo •I Ille t>ep.rtment of Tr•n-rtotlon, 1120 H Slrw\, ,._,, 1', S.Cr-to, C•lllornlo •llu, u11tll 2 o'clOc• p.m. on M•Y 6. ltll. el which time u,., wlll IH publicly _,,.., -r-In a Al· Mmblr lloom •I wld Address, iJf con- tlructlon on Stolt lll9llwoy In oc-corelonct wltll the specifications IM,.fO<, lo -"1<11 Sll'Kiol '9Mtn<t It "'"'·••fotl-· Soft llenf'° County, in •llCI ,,.., SH J ...,. .-Jsle Md Holll11itr, trom t,2-mllt _. l/11 Al-Slt'9M, In Sefl Jwon 8-Alst., to tlw San tleftl• Rlwt r llrldll• t P o r lloftll COS.SllM~U/9.11, ••lstlne llillflwty 19 lie wldeMd b¥ lll'odlnQ Ond ~OC· 1,.. wltll ........ I COIKr-... ..., ..... baW OWr ........ wbbaM oftd Oft ••1111"9 -*'"' TMJ 'f'.-411 AMI llf"llioel !\et • .... tf I perc.trft m'nor"y buslnus •~ 1-rl .. pwtlc..,..... No Pf'9-bld ,.,...tint Is ICIWcluled IOr '"'' ...-1«1 81•• .,. requ1itd for tM entire w- dtk rl!Hd Mf'9lll. Plen•. -lllUllor'I•, and pr-..J t0<m1 for Oicldl"9 11111 projacl Caf> only bt o.ielM<I ot lllt Otportmtnt ol Tra,._..uOfl, Pl--llCI 0oc ... menu, lloom Jt, Tren-10flon Bui~ tn11, 1120 N Strtet, I'. O. llo• 1499, Sacre..-. Collloml• 951117 (plllone •16-'4S.JJUI, end may be -01 - ebOv• office -.. Ille offlctl ot tllt Olttrlct Olra<lon of Tr.,_ttllon et LK Angeles, s.n Fr811CIM:O, --CllstrlCI In Wlll<ll llW Worlt 11111 ... ted. c Frank ~cor h11· been named dlreetor of enslneert.na for I'M' Jabaco, Costa MetJ, a unit of lnt.maUo.nal Telephone and Tele- araph Corp. Rlebard Kon•aard ~f Lake Forest baa been promoted to executive vice retldent and C•rol Garber of Garden Greve bu been promoted to assistant vice pretldent and manager of American Savings and Loan A•· aociaUoo'• Cot.ta Mesa branch. Setla Leadbeater of Irvine bu been named vice preatdent-commerical loan officer of the Irvine Commercial Center of Security Pacific Natipnal Bank chief operating officer of Eldorado Bw In Tustin. Charle. C. Bond and Victor W. Stoae have been named senior vice presi- dents of United California .Bank Frank Baker of Foun- tain Valley has been named manager or the •OHoAaaD Rita Ergu of Laguna Beach bas been ap- pointed regional director of public affairs for the Southwest Retail District, Mid-California Retail District or Sears. year for the West Coast South Region of the Handyman Super Hardware Store chain Bruce Carter of Fountain Valley has been named president of Ashwill-Burlte & Co., and Theodore P. Vlllalu1, assistant manager, Wells Fargo Bank, has been assigned to the State College office. Anaheim Ed P. Grlffea of Laguna Beach has been named ex- ecutive vice-president. Terry N. Holdt has been appointed vice president. MOS operations, of Western Digitat Corp., in Newport Beach. Ala• Margall1 of Irvine has been promoted to .executive vice presi- dent, operations, of Costa Mes a-h eadqua r tered Master SpeclalUes Co. Sherry A. Pozun has been named assis- tant manager-ope rations at Wells Fargo Bank"s Laguna Niguel office. Rlcbard Randall of cuua ... Newport Beach has been appomted vice pres- dent-commercial contracts at the Douglas Aircraft Co. d.ivisioo of McDonnelJ Douglas Corporation, in Long Beach Babette Doniger Mandell has joined Boze ll & Jacobs/Pacific as account ex- ecutive, pubUt• relations division J~ Allen has also joined the company as manager. ac· count services Carl Bergstrom Jr. has been named manager of the Orange Branch of Home Sa-v. in gs Nancy J. Cassube has been named presi de nt of the National Council of Exchangors She is the bead of Pyramid Excbangon, an Irvine-bued firm. OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS NEW YUMOC. IA .. 1 Clr11<o 6 -1HrpAow llllllo llYtl NICe rG1 NASDAQ quee.1-. CIUSoGe tllt ~ Herl>Gp J711) ll N•EIWO ' -Int hl9'1ftl !Ilda ~UUtA 32 3211) HerifNt U UV. IWtNG1 -•-otter• ~, J.rUtll ~ 2'\lo H•l"'Rw: ~ s"°I ~••PS mertl•i.='J.-..:1 lerllJL Jl\l J2'4 H•Mdf 1 2•..,. Ul<t IO••ll WM. IOWCp I l llo Holoom l'I• l"-N<0<p llKhidenG!lmenn• olrTlt 1111\ 1~Hoovtr I~ 1J.!'o ~lvyM morll...,_ °'comm-ColG.ne>t Hor11R1 IY, ' Poul•yP Inion f0< ~ 11 16 l).l~Hyelll"I Z4Yt 11 I P•ylsCs Sto<ll llld Alli ComCIH _.,., 31 ,IMS Int 21~ 21 PHrMI AEL Ind 14" 1~ CmlSllr I~ 171'>olnlrolnd 1"' 1'14 PM•E"I AFAProt Ill> '"" CmwTtl 17 11'111 lnltl I •'I• •1'>1 P•nlolr AVM Cp ftlo S ConPep 1 • ~ lntrcEnr 9 ... 10 Pttrlt 1 Accur•y 12 12'4 C0<dli l'All 1014 1ntmt01 I~ ~ f>ettlbon A4dhnW U IJVJ CrnTrt 1 ~ Jt 1n8kW•h 12¥> lJ I Pllll•N•I AdvRou ._._ ~ CullrFd 1 Jt,i. J llweSoUt 20 ~ PltrceSS Attl8111 " """ Cycltron """ 17 J am•bY 21\lo 21~ Ptnkrtn Ale•Alt• M M\l'I OonlyM lol\l'I Jt\."J Jerico I 2''.\ UV. PlonH18 Alfclnc 411'> 0111 Dt•Ot• I " ltlol. JlllYFd ~.. ... PIUtllW Allyne '"' 7~ D•YIM•I """ zo JcnfynM -ll~. """ Pouis Allu M't 4 011Mr 1 ... I 1~16 ICalsSI pf ... ..,.. 11'J• PresGM Amoru 11"' 29'14 OtlllbAQ lol'4 )!.,., ICaiv•r 2 11 1' 2.,. PrsS1tyn AFurn M't 6 DtlCOftT II II"" Kamen Jt _,.., Pr09rp 4Gtffl 1"-10 OtweyEI l J\Co llmpAm Ullo U'n PbSvNC AJnlOll .. I'> ~ OMtCry1 ~ 22 l(oywm •1.to S Purtll•" AMI<'" llDVI 10-. Oll<nCrv 1'111 40 KtllJ'h t 4'Yll '71'1 PutOc.i> ANelln1 1 ...... IO• Ooc:ull I »'Ill JI .... K•uffel 21V. l2 o ... krCh AQuow • U UIA. OollrGn 17Va """IKlmbelf I"' lli'J, R-n~ ARttMil lt\11 I ..... OoylOll I ISi'> 14 Klnglnl ~ ~ Aoyc11m 4W.1""9 .. 11 Oun111no Jn• 22"-ICloOfG n11o nl'> Roymnd Am1tll8nc ~ 2• Ourlrn 1 I•"' 17 l(nope\I \~ I• RHveCm AnadHe 11"11 II E1Drl1I Vt... 27" Kr•lcn 17"" II ltepNlle AngSA Hl<t '"' EotnVnu KuilOt 22\"> 1l R....:IE• A1'9AGd ....... tOYi """ 12'"' L•n<tl" ,,... H ... Robe>My AAloCp 11"" II <onL•b 22 n"" L•ndRt1 4'h .-Ros.elon 4pldMll 1'04' 11 IPoiEI ,,.., ''-LMWCo 1114 ~ Rouse ArdenGp ~ ,__ Elderlk •I'> I.,. Llln.s U ll'lt RutSlo• 41dCole ~ 11 El•NIKI 1.-. '"' LldStor I~ IS Sodlitr AllGtll 1•\lt 1~ flMeclul 21i,, Jtl'> Ll•B<sl M"' lS S•leco Allen~ 20 tnrOtv IS'IO 14 LO!lflrn I~ 20\to SIHelGd llolrdCp W•'t I~ EnrMotNI .... S MCIC 16Yi I"' StPa ul llollyPP 12'"' 1l'MI EnAsv 1"' 1••~ MGF 0 1 IS',_ IS"' ScenD JI-HE IO 1~ Ef\twisll I '"" Mod1GE 121'> 12 ... ScriooH lluJcR1 II l 'MI l41 EqulSL ll'MI 12 Mo1191P1 f'lll IOl<t S.nsor ll•MtFr 22 221ol. EqtOil I,_ IJ ... Mor:mP ~ -SvcMer 8ayltlllllk """ """ FSC 2"" 2"' M• rRt l 1~16 •v.1 Svcm11 llHllM "' ... l"obrlTk J J"' Mo IHI "' 4''4 SflMtd BtntP11 l"ermGp ;a ... J)"' Morion s 9" ''°'I Sllwmt I 1~16 2 1-14 FldlCO< 11• ... 1.-MouiLP Jl'h )I 8enllyL " 3'114 FtllkSYI 46 4611o MeyP1 • J2\4 Jl'"'I UPS AND DOWNS &ti.IL.ob Sii'> U Ft ... ln Jlldo 311'> MeynOil 1• 1~ 1 lltwM9t U .... U'h ,.tEm,S Ull> 1l McCotm ~ 10¥to I lllD&GO 11\ft 12 FtW11 lfl ~ Sitt McFarl IS"-IS~, 2 lllrdSon U\111 1~ FleQllh 2111t Jl\lo McOvay 16 """ ! ::;t,,c,::. 1~:: 1~~ ~:''Wt1t ttiw. 2:,"' :tr.:~ mz ~~:.: NEW YORK IAPI Most acllve <Net s 8onenio Sl<t 5"' F1:.F10 2014 20Y, MdldC•P IJ\lo IJV. llle-(OIH\ler stocks ~led by NASO 4 llrwTom $ •1'. ,. Fh1roc:b $ """ 11 MldlRH 114 I~ w~:~ Un Ve;%~ 81~ IU~ CllQ. ~ 8ucllc.. '°"" ""' F-~10 27~ n Mldlllkl 13\4 MV. QuutMd m 100 2~ ,.,, t •utf•t• •'"" u F0<m11111 ~ ... 101e' ,,"" 11~ re 1efMt11 a 'ooo 2 u-16 2 21-» ...: .... 10 !~~ 1= 1riz Fron11c;p 10 II II& IG 14'14 Ullo F•ro"n . 111)00 IYt I ;J.16 -J.J:I 11 ( n l"rel\ltEl lllol. 19"" IH I U •S.V. MCIC 27• JOO 161'> 1•--._ \l ,:;~fl,, ~ .... = FrM SG "'"' '° fCot ~ • TR..) Ind m:-• '16. l\·16 + "1J CMOrMH ,._ • l"rtmnl ' IN ZO ~ JOl'i 2011> AmSur9y 210 000 Jl4 3"' -.,, u r-e; 2-J~ FullrHll ~ ~,,._,Pd 30 -o ... ~1 ..,, "1'100 1'4 11'> U .,,......~ %1 11¥t G•l .. .,0 ._ 10 MorvRes J ,_ GIOllHR1 .. m)oo II... 1114 • ~ " ~~p hAlr 2.., J'h G11Autm I• ... U '-'or911111 12~ 12'h Comd1•1 , .. 100 s..-S4' • I 17 OnO.v<1 6 6.,, ¥0 Ctwll 2l't J ' 11 •r~ ,, .......... GnlUEll 12 IJIA. ~ .. 11... JI l2 A4'fe1Kad ,.. " C:~'iJs 1~ 11: bovEFn • ~ i1to Hrr~ • ,..,,. • .,,. 0e<11Md •.•.•..•••••••. 111 10 ~llrmllo 17 17\lo C),.....M llW. ""' NCI• • 211'> 21~ 11<llo"09d 1,115 II CllortHo a w._., OreyAdV " '211'1 H.l'f~t I~ I"' Total I-Ult t2 C"'"LM tw. ..... 0111~1 161,'t 17\11 HI kOG t ~ 21 Ntw llil!M t4 ll Cl•HUll 17 ll Y, Qyr 61.\ .-NI ol•t 22-. ~ .... IOW$ -. 11 ,. ClllN"Tr 11 11111IH.,..1 JI"' !2 Hltllll A11 ~ ~~I Totol s.tles ».1t0.•1u C1NbO •14 ~ H•rdwkt ~ 7Y, Htllll -_,. MUTUAL FUND NASDAQ SUMMARY DOWNS Nome LAii Ill~ 121'> C••'Ftf 1~ Kty 11'> ~~r.~ ,..,. 1~ Euellb 1'h M0<9Rn 3 Atoun l"' r~~.t l'h 6\0'> Emlltt WI 10 lnlOla 211'1 MerilE un 2\lr lt•ll-ly s- Fl"""° ,.,., Tllreslld 111'> All<h,., 0 • Std Bred s .... z-,., 31.\ O.th• 21.\ C•NJ un 11 LlnclolHo 31,., EnllSot l" HrpR-'°"' llrodY pf '" C"9 _, \II -1~ " -" 1·1• -..... -~ -I -1 -II'> -" -~ "' llol. -I" "" ---" -'"' -2 -" -"' ll't -" Pel Up •.O Up Jl.O Up 1S f Up u.J Up J1.J Up Zl.1 Up 21 7 IJp l•.7 Up 1U Up UA Up IU Up 1U Up 11..S IJp 11.S Up IU Up IU IJp 12.2 Up 11-1 Up 12-0 Up IJ.O Up 11.f Up 116 Up 11.S Up II• Up 11 4 Pct. ~ ... 4 17.• Off 1'-1 Off p.o Off s.o Off "·' Off 14.J Off 1U Off :tt Off Off 13..1 Ofl IU Off 11.0 Oii 12.2 OU 11.6 Off 11.S Off II.I Off '°" Off 10.7 Oft lU Ott Off t.1 Off •.s Off •.s Off u e1v111 a..tlOCk COftgr9 41 fl NNLL I Mutt • 40 10 22 Mid AM 4 U I OS N Horlr II If NL StFrm Ot 10.U HL 811110 !t.71 ll.M Colltld 12.1t Pr09 S.10 S S4 MMkOPI It.. NL Prima ..,.voll SIFrm Bl 12.43 HL C....... t .D 10 5q llK 21.4' HL T ..... 3.10 J.D MONY I" 12 S1 IJ U T• ,.,.. 1AI NL SISlrMt lfW C>lvlCI i n J.20 E•C11 1S M NL Sito 21.11 22.•s MSll Fd 11.u NL Pro Sorvk.. ~ E•cll .. " NL HlllK 10 II 11.45 M ... I 20 •S NL Stlecl 6.SI 1 _QI) Mui .... 11 01 12 OJ MedT 11.JD N F•dl ... ti NL ""'"111 '·" IO u i14un lld 6.U HL Var Py 10_19 II OI Mii' FIA'Odl Fund t OJ N ln .. sl '9.J1 "'-11 ws '1' 10 2' Fidel lf.61 NL Inv "'"' S.11 '1• Fund 115 'SI lncom I.Ji N SIHdmen Funot: ~~ .. ,.. .:11 t .22 Gvt Se< I.ti NL ltltl U... NL Orwlll S " 4 .. Pru 'SIP IJ.11 1'.61 ~!'Tl Ind 3.~ Hl nt ~ 12.Gll IJ 04 Mllnco ,.... HNLL JlvyoF·dtll 10.. NL Nellkl I 3'I '01 P\11 ... m l"wlclla; Tell Mgd ll.}4 l~.47 llerl Fd 1'.G 21... HI Yid 10.n p • 12.IJ U.fl Mut11ol of am.t>e: COft• 1J 74 u 02 Tmpl Gt 0.04 .. ,, tip Dir 20 • NL LI MUii 7.JJ NL JP lnco '·" 7.60 Amtr .... NL Int Eq 11.56 It.It Tmpl W lt.10 20.17 Ila I t a• NL Pllrlbl 11.M NL Janut 10.ll NL Grwtll S.JI S.I• Otorll 12.91 U.11 'Trn• l:ap 10.21 11.10 ~::\ ,..,., S.ltqi LlS NL Jolin Hen<ocll: lncom I.ID 1.13 Grtltl.11 12.01 IJ.1• Trn• Inv 7.t4 I~ ,.lllld 11 12 12 ,. l'"llt '·°' NL II-12.u IJ.S3 T• F•• UJ 10.as HI Yid t•.91> U.S41 Troy IEQ 11.20 "· Orwth 1:0 UO I rtnd J1.2t NL Grwtll It.SI IUI Mui Sllr U.Q NL l11<om UI Ut Tlldr Fd 12.0J L HI Yl•ld 6.72 7.~ Flllefte:IOI Pnla: Belan t.JZ •.04 NHUT 47.st NL lnvul 10 06 10 ... TwnC Gt ll.211 al lll<otl'I .... •M I l>Yn• a.n NL h• "' UD t.57 Not ....... 10.74 NL Ooln 14.0S u.• TwnC Se! 1s.!IO L Opt" 10.• 12.00 lndull .... NL l(etifmn UI NL Nol Ind IHI NL ti11 E• 17.46 ... ,, 'USAA Ot 12.2• L T .. 11119 , .. II 11.63 lncOlft ... NL Kt"l!Mf Funds· N•I S.C11r'lllt1: VI••• 17.14 11.n 'USAA llK •. ,, L =~"'0r .. 'tR ,N:; "1~.::v::~~ u . .-~.'::' 1~:: 1~{~ :::.: 1i:ft 1U~ R:i:t:.o 1\.1: 1'.'.'( ~:r,~~ ,t: :t wtltl co 1:.. 1:a Disco 1o.J1 11.16 HI Yid l . .U '°' Olvld s.u s .• ,_,,,.,. ..,. NL IUnltod l'\#lds; p lkl t.J1 IO 01 Grwtll IO,OI 11.02 Mllft 8 I .20 7.56 Grwtll LOI 1.71 Sefaco S«w. Ac:cm t,'7 UD omp l"d ',. 10 Sl tncom 6.10 1.» Qcllft IUI IUD Prtfd .. ,. 6.71 Etllll tu• NL --4.71 S.IS -ord 21'• NL ~n .. ., 7.47 Summ lt.IO 21."4 lncom 6.t• 6.U Grwtll 17M NL COii Gr u.• 1s.--llc\ll 0etw· oclt 7.,. t.• Ttcll IU1 IU I ~Stock 10.U 10'4 f11<0 11.Jt NL Ceft lftC to.• 11.1'1 ,...... 14.a ISo.W H R• 1.06 IM Tot RI 13-lt 14.42 Tea E• I.Ill tPeul tnwtt: Flduc 27.17 2',tt lllC'"I • 04 '-A .. WIEq Ull 10.n i<•Y''-Mus· ELllt P'llnd. c ._it 14.IS U.tll HI lllC 1U1 n;AS MIM Id .::111 7.14 t4 Well 25.J:J NL Ctn 8! tl.'1. I• 01 Equit 20.'9 22. Gn11111 101 ISM lncorn t.74 '°'1 I lllv IUD IUD ""' Otll S.D s.n Cw 12 16.• lf1't Grwtll II.OD , •. S1 5"<1 2U• NL Munl 6.00 •• _ .. , 0 J040 NL,,........,..~: Cv• .. 120 161 tncorn •. ., 10.14 Serer F-. Ulkl U 7. stltll Moll Orwtll Llf NL Clll Kl 7°41 I 10 Ret Eq 10"7 tUS SI 14.46 NL Vent 12.• 11.TS Mut 7.. NL lfttem 15.71 NL C4ll ru .. ,, 1st THE• U • 6 ID ,,.. ". NL Uld Swn .... NL lry C:. .... ,, ti.JI "'41t411 l.n IO, 1' )~I SI ti. It It.iii Nt11N1'91r lefll'I. IK.,.,, 10.41 NL Velw LIN FG: _,..or..· -..Ct n.w HL c:• sa IOl10 llM Enrwy 211'1 ML 11111 P'd If.OJ NL Fllftd 16.11 14.Alt ~ ,.4 f I s Cll Insurance gaps covered U you're a typical 65·or·over U.S. cltlaeo, Med rcare now pays only about .o ~cent of your health care bUla and the proportion 11 f~llin1 steadJ· ly. In 1969, it wu nearly 50 percent. At the aame time, your medical costs have soared at a far faster rate than for any olher a1e group. Since the mid· 'SOS, your mt:dical costs have skyrocketed 525 percent to an estimated $2,SOO a year against 395 per· cent for the general popula· tion and the outlook is your 8 -,1-VIA-)P-ORT-IR-!? costs will be up to $5,000 a year by l98S. AND THESE CHILLING calculat1ons do not reflect the rising cost of Medicare premiums. Since 1966. these expenses have jumped 220 percent, from $36 to SllS 20 a year and this is what the 65-and· over must pay to qualify only tor Medicare Part B (physician and professional services> covP.rage. On top of this, the deductibles and coinsurance in the Medicare package have escalated about 350 per· cent since '66. The hospital deductible alone has gone from $50 to $204 All of those are major items m the medical budgets of the elderly. a study by the Senate Special Committee on Aging has found. lt is because of this ever-widening gap between what Medicare covers and what e lderly persons must pay out of their own pockets that the "Med1gap·· health insurance policy has been developed -and with 1t havE: come npoffs and scandalously exag· gerated claims that siC'ken even usually cynical ob· servers AMONG THE MOST obvious "Medi Ripoffs :" policies that pay out much less than 60 cents of each premium dollar in benefits; cancellation clauses that make the policy worthless despite steep costs paid by the ignorant buyer. provisions excluding coverage of pre-existing health conditions for more than six months. which in most cases are the equivalent of eliminating coverage altogether With about half of all Amencans 65 and over buy ing supplementary Medigap health insurance policies, the need for honest policies that will help the elderly meet the problem has become so urgent that the challenge finally 1s bemg met Supplementary policies that do provide some de· cent coverage have been developed by the Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans, commerc1al carriers and other private insurers. AMONG THE BEST have been the Blue Cross an'tl Blue Shield policies, which account for about half of all supplementary policies bought each year and which pay back an average of 90 cents for every Sl paid Ul premiums STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES ,:E~O.A:JwAP.J, f'lno1I Oow-J-•-VO ITOCllf AMERICAN LEADERS UPS AND DOWNS MEW YORK (AP! The toUow.nv 11$1 lllOWI the New York Stock ExchanQe llKU a nd werrellU llloll !\ave ge>N <4> lftt -I olftd 00-lhe moll baMCI on C''•~:: .. '"enoe ••vanli.u o• VOlumt ...=. ~~,~~· .::~~~.:':i:.~'!~~ dlffe,.nc• betwnn the pn•IO<a <lc»lnQ prl~• •nd Wf/6ttlnlMJ~'lo Mame LHI Cho Pct I ~In Jllh • 11 UP 47 I 2 C.O.t.ICp :M'-• 3'-Up 11 1 l lllPw c.Olpf ISlllo • '" Up II 5 4 Publlck Ind •'-• '-UP 10.4 S OlllaGE pt •~ • " Up IO O • PlllEI 1.44pt 3''1'1 • l '"' Up I• I OOECO s ll~ • 1''> Up l.S I ContlCP pt8 ll''I • 1°1> Up I I t NevP 2 ,JQpt 11'1> + I" Up 1.0 10 $4dM04A 24 • 11'1 VP U 11 EITI04r•lnc I ,.,_. • ,.. Up •. s 12 QllellSIOll l•'I> • I Up 6 S IJ 5'ftEle< 111'1 + 11141 Up 6.5 14 Texfl Ind 41/. + "• Up • l U Suli.lrCp n U'I• + l'"' Up 6 2 t• OtlEd UOpf 12 ~ 1'"' Up U OOWNlt •• Last C"9 Pct. .. -·· Olf 1!.S GOLD COINS JV, " Olt t.7 "" ,.,._ Olt t' '"" " Olf 1 Jto "" Olf l.O """ J Off 7.1 t \11 \I. ()If 7.3 I I\\ I Off 7.1 2A'-lh Off 7.1 47" ,..., Olf ... Pit " Off u 241.11 llWI Off 6.7 ,. '" Olt ... Slit> -,-. Oft u 1S"--,.,._ Off u 11\.lo -'"" Off u . NIW YO .. I( (AP') PrlCH .... T......., of 9old COIM, COft!IMI'" wllll MoncleY'• Pf'~C.•. ll,.........,tt,..,n,m•.-......., ~&Mil, I troyw., ... IO.eff51.IO. IMUC. • ""°' U ,,.., ea., '11.0I, .. u• • ...,... '°' ,,_, .... ,,..., .,,, ..... --····· JO Ind Oe»n HIOll Low Clow 01Q 20 Tm U Ull i.s Stk Indus Tr"" Vtils IOIS «> 1011.17 ... 51 ICOI »-IHI W 1' 4)4 71 •a IJ 4lO 1'-3.IS 105 7• 106 o 1oc •s 10s u-o.oc J90.17 3'1 '° Jl3 " •1 01 J 71 WHAT STOCKS DID MEW YORK I API AP' 7' TOCS.y Ad•en<e<I '" OKll!Wd 11SI> Uncl\-4 14'1 Tololl llSW\ 1'13 New hlgll.l 37 Mew IOWI ,. WHAT AMEJ 00 MEW VONK CAPI Apt 1' fOdolY Adven<e<I 1M DKllMO «IS Un<Mnged ,,. Talal IH .. I llS New 1110'>• 11 NI# IOW• 11 METALS W-1'clo1y s.1•.soc 1 . .-•• d .«X ""'v O<ty ~ 1179 JU 1'137 73 74 ""'y ~'1 °' 11' ll3 It 10 c-" .. _, '""" .. ~ u s IM\lll>e· lion\ L•,.. • conts •pound lllK CJ\4 unts • PCNM, dell,,.rll<I Tll• s. 5770 Metals w"-comooslt• lb M•rcwy M20 oo per ll•UI Pl•tl-~ 00 troy Ol • M y SILVER Wecl,....,,_Y Ho1"4lf & HMt'l\M, 110 "'"' t•oy ounce GOLD QUOTATIONS Wt<lnftOey L•-· momo119 ll•lno "471.SO, off "4 lS L-o1ll••-11•1"9 '477 25, off U SO. P'erh: •llllr,_ ll•l"O t.510 .o. off $6.ft l'r-""1 llaino MIO 11, off "4 11 X11rlcll; I•!• •II-llxlno. "476 oo. off SA 00, ,.,, 00 ai~ld H "'"'' a H.,,..... only O•llv QVOI• "477.2S,ollU.SO. ,,.......,,., ontv dollly qvol• "471.lS, off u.so. E.._.i"-N: only dolliy quot• fabricated SA'6 3.4, off u.n SYMBOLS I sen probe parks fiery dispute f PETESI. BOYE& LOS ANGELES (AP) -Inveat111Uve Journalism, Geraldo Rlver11tyle, bas taken the Hip One from the Jun1les of Laos to a spat with little Gary C9lemanL wttb the ••1resslve "Look 1t Me" Rlver1 le chuins more thin 1 few bides alonf the w1y. But now Rivera is enmeshed ln a controversy that may threaten his career and calla into question teJevlalon's role .. Ure problnl eye. The rather curious docfl&ht 'erupted between Nl!C News and CBS' Chlca10 st1Uon, WBBM, over a JUvera ''20-20" newsmagulne report on an aUeeed anon·for·profit rinr in Cblca10. In the balf-bour "aG·20'"' piece, Rivera told of an aUeted arson scheme lnvolvtnf one Charles Roberta, identified by "aG·20" as one o several profiteers connected to 29 tlres, some of which were fatal. Roberts bas sued ABC for libel. WBBM 'a documentary te2'm. beaded by pro- d~cer Scott Craig, put together an expose-styled television report on expose·atyled television report· iDj, focusing, in part, on Rivera's arson·for-profit .. story. The documentary. which aired last week, at- ut\ilr ANALYSIS tack~ the "20·20'' report ntn~ on pomts of accuracy and s tyle, suggesting that Rivera & Co. 's "findings" were not valid largely because the U.S. Attorney's office had not been able to get a grand jury indict· ·rnent against Roberts. But the WBBM report further called into ques· n the investigative methods routinely employed Rivera and other TV. Eyes, specifically the flashy hnique dubbed ''the ambush interview." Rivera s chastened for approaching the startled Roberts • o the street, cameras rolling, and giving him the third degree. It's a method designed, suggested the WBBM report, for "picture," not troth. ABC NEWS came down on the WBBM d cumentary hard and fast, and understandably . The news profession. print and electronic, ms to be in the throes of a self-devouring frenzy lbe wake of the Janet Cooke-Washington Post· litizer Prize affair. ABC News and Geraldo vera were being spoken in the same breath as net Cooke, and ABC News didn't like it . Indeed, the "20-20" report in question won t levision's version of the Pulitzer, an Emmy A.. ard. Anyway. ABC issued a nine-page rebuttal lo WBBM's report and is planning a "20-20" rebuttal to be broadcast at least in the Chicago area, and possibly nationwide. "We think we've been maligned," said ABC News Vice President David Burke. WBBM producer Scott Craig says he rather welcomes a "David and Goliath battle," if that's what ABC wants. But he insists that the purpose of his "Watching the Wa tchdog" documentary was merely to "open up a dialogue among journalists about the techniques used by television in in· vestigative reporting, their use and abuse. "IF ALL or this means we've opened up that dialogue, I'm glad." ABC's Burke isn't interested in dialoeue right now "Their inv1 tatJon to the clouds above Mount Olympus to discus s the finer points of television journalism." says Burke. ··is a bunch of bull. "It's easy for them to retreat now and say.. 'Come, come. boys, let's talk about this in a pro· fessionaJ way.' But we took a beating on this thing on the way to the mountaintop." ABC maintains that it will stick by its story and off~rs documentation of its allegations. WBBM points to the absence of an indictment. ABC asks, Since when is an indictment the test of a story's newsworthiness' Anyway, the "20-20"-WBBM brouhaha does bring into question. perhaps necessarily, some of the techniques employed in the TV-Eye game, both as applied by ABC to Roberts and by WBBM to ABC. Interestingly. WBBM producer Craig recently won an award for an investigative report on a Chicago day-care center. And which TV· Eye t.echni· que do you suppose was conspicuously employed in that award-winning report? Yes. The "ambush interview." Buiklings unsafe BAKERSFIELD <AP > Kern County supervisors were told that 56 county-owned adobe buildings fail to meet earthquake standards and Should be replaced Art Show Truckload Unique original gifts for Mother's Day Plant Sde L-----H_u_n_t1n_g_to_n_ee_n_ter--< Call 642-5671. Put a few word1 to work for ou. MIWPOaT BOR CRUISE a SUM>A. y •INCH AT THI CA.ll•t 714 '71-71ll UNDER FIRE G~raldc> Riwra RES}GNED Janet Cooke to stay In hot••• ~allon water heater with energy 11vlng temperature 1hut-off. yn we do hive banlnas Banen1 loung•. that 111 Multl· poaltlon chalMI of 1trong vinyl 1trapplng over 1teel frame. 719 Adjultable. Many COIOf'I. Reg. 14.95. TOO SMALL? NEW YORK (AP)-A 2·1Dcb·blah bealtb warnlnl t1n't con1plcuou1 enou1h on R.J . eyDOlda Tobaceo Co. blllboald 1dvertliementa. •Jury hu found. llanbatt1n that advertlae4 R . .1. Reyn0tds• clsarette brandl. The .. JW"1 dlJafr"d wttb the de· f en•e artument tbat 2·lnch·h1Cb let- terln1 waa 1uye enouah tor tbe aur-••on 1enera '1 warnln1 on the bWboardl. U.S. Attorney Jolln S. Martln Jr. Hid' that Juron fotaad tbe company violated a 11172 order to lnclucle • ''clear and con1plcuou1" health wamtna in lt.J billboard advertialna. The Judie has not .Seclded whether to impose penalties aialnlt R.J . Reynolds. Martin said als Jurors reached their verdJct after takinl a ~ tour with U.S. DlJtrict Judie John Can· ~lla to •et 1 view of 1b1: blllboarda in The other five major tobacco com· pantes settled similar caset prior to trial by acreetna to enlar1• the warn- tn1 in billboard adverUains, Martin said. • feast your eyes on this barbeque Propane gaa b,arbecue feature• heavy duty con1tructton and high-domed lld. Tank In· eluded. #9230. Reg. 393.70. 26995 a grill tor the outdoor gourmet Propane burning barbecue with tank. Eaay to clean atalnlea ltMI cooking gratea. Durable construction. #9240. Reg. 457.75. 29995 let It flow, let It now, let It flow Sleek modern 1tylecl faucet to mount on deck or wall. 8" wtth swing action faucet for added 24'' fleiclblllty. From Price Pfleter. #35·121. Reg. 36.95. ~ AkrmOnt sweet lhop, glass top Ice cream table Ju1t like 1890'1 ltyted Ice creem tablel, tttl1 hind· eome aluminum tabi. with 5911 gl1a1 top mak.. a plc- tureequ. Nttlng. R9g. 73.95 counts saver to Ille rescue The Corning 10"ic14" counter .. V91' s><otecu your counter• from 1corchlng hot poll, p1n1 and pl1t... 1111 Your counters can't do without It. Reg. 15.99. Extra comfortable arm chair• with etrap 1u1pen1lon and 1trong aluminum framee. UM with table above Of fOf e>rtra 3411 ..-ting lndoore & out. #100. ~ ...... 95. ~ a ray of am Lightwei ght Sunbeam apray/1hot ot 1team Iron. Sell-cleanlng, long-Ille cord. #10-36. Aeg. 27 98. 8 great ..... Redwood tub with drainage hole• 11 1 · grMt plac. to houM your growing friend•. #PS-HT12. Reg. 7.99. 1988 \ 411 CLASSIFIED INDEX AMUNCEMENTS. PmONAlS& LOST & FOUND $1111 ~·~ ~· ~.II ~· )4111 ~ .... lotMAMDISE BOATS & MAttME (QUlrMENT AUTMlllE ~-· "-tr.t•• l"t ..... ". "" r•••.ua \ t:ft•t 1.-. ..... ..,. 11 ........... ... .w ........ .,,., .. -l ..... h -,_ •* Atttul.4••••a.. -""'""W•lll"'I -llOITU ,, .. ., ,.Jiil AUTOS, IMPHUO ~""°'·••I WtlO A.ti• tta;,,_ . ., ... , .... . .... """' .......... . 1114' IUO• ::: ~ "'" 1><11-. .... .... .. , .... -..... . .. _ ... J.,.:tiUfl J ........ K,.tnwnnlaht.1 Ma11t,. ll:;tHI lll-.·11 , ......... ,.,_ ... , -"'" ...,., MUii ~ 11\kl at.irrJ6J ., .... ,. •• ~' ·~ .. t"Ul ~.u V\Wii.,~ ».all .... ,, • .,u '.11.'MI Kuti"' tt\n • t k totl s.. .. 11 Sulh'tU h .1)ut• ltHHft~h \ol .. o• •..:t•n \ '"'" - •·Iii MJM 0 •IW ·~ ··" ,,,llM'T ... :;:: AUJIS, USED WiA; l..tWl.;I 11'1.P Alfl0 V•'-> II""~ V1't l\1HtllJ.;, .,. l"•ff\4111 !JlJ.t l'~•\h1ht W1..L> l1'ruk1 It•• luQ'ld 1'7to l'Ul\\IA\/tK,..1 ::!~ ~·::.:.~~h -.... '"""''"'' W• to t Uf•I •• • hfllV' ..... -· "' lJA••t-4U fl.).) ll ..... , h ~ H1J6. \t1 ,,u1, •1;\, 1i1 ........ ,.. "it#I tJl4 .... tn•1htl't lfflo,t t'111lu lf11t... Phmuuth l/ot-1 l'1H1t11111 11,,11 lhuo•lt·1hfi t .,, , \ l" ... .......... Ho•n fw S. Ha•" For S. Hoaes For S. HoelMs For Selle HottHs For Sde ........... Mollee: All real estate ad- v er li s ed in this newspaper is subject to tbe Federal Fair Houa-inl A cl ol 11168 wh!c b makes it illegal lo ad- vertise "any preference, limitation, or dis- crlmlnatlon baaed on race, color, religion, HX, or national orlgln, or an lnt.eoUoo to make any such preference, lim1tatlon, or d11 crtminatioo." Tbls newspaper will not knowlnf ly accept any advert sing for real eetate which is in viola· lion of the law. RIORS: AdYertften ....... ct.ck ...... cWty ... report ..... ,.,.. ......... n.. DAILY PILOT ...... ltiblllty far ... first lacorr•ct lasertloa ..,. Ho.MsfarSde ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ge•,... 1002 ....................... STROLi.TO A VERY SPECIAL HOME with features that are hal"Q to find today . Large , oversized lot. Immaculate landscaping front & rear, cozy workshop off 2-car garage, wood-burning fireplace & a warm, friendly feeling throughout. See this 2-bedroom & den home Now. $183,000. Call for appointment. WESLEY H. TAYLOR CO.. RIAL TORS 2lll SmtJo~ .. load NEWPORT CENnR. H.&. 644-49 I 0 REALTORS 675-5511 MEWrORT SHORES: Wei locat.d GWfl'/ from traffic, short w• to c...., .... & TENNIS, poof .tc. Great 3 lcfrwl --.. cozy flnplau, wood dedi & patio, "'Y accHs to oc.an beach. •t SI 35,000 ...._ COLE OF NEWPORT REAL TORS 25 IS E. Coaat Hwy •• Cof'OftCI cltt Ms 675-551 I MEWPC>n IEACH Channing 4 Bdrm. Co1y living room features, ~-,•ic•,•._.-•,•....-....--_.-·~--------•I wood burning fireplace ~ Owner will help finance Immaculate 3 Bdrm Only $209,900. Hurry, family room home in call 67J..M50 prestigious T\Jrtlerock. :·-: .. .. : . . . : . THE REAL ESTATERS rllME LOCATIOH SIDIMllATH Spacious two-story on quiet street shaded by huge trees. Many quali- ty features. An excellent buy at $192.500. 751·31f I Y•C•S.. n.. .... redflc From this Cameo Hi1blands beauty Priced to sell, 1338,000. Only 10% down with owners assistance. One level 3 Bdrm plua buae yard. Call now, 67>8550 THE REAL ESTATERS DW\.IX 3 bdrm, 2 bath each unit. Flr9place, built-ins. Ex· cellent reseal area. Near beacb Ir bay. 1215.000. IU-2251 eYel. associated a .J • r ~ ... u f ,, • ' r' " ·~ ~ .,,,._ h o • I ~ MOITH LAGUNA Ma1nlflcent white waier view by da)' and Udtt of Dana Point at nT1bt. Outstandln& cuatom built 4 Bdrm NGrth LafWI• home on Uw octu alde ot Ute bl1bwa1. Lu1e lot. Just 1tep1 rrom the beach. '815.~., Beautiful decorating, vaulted ceilings, atrium. covered patio Priced to sell at $197 500 , .. ; . r· "''"' urnr r1cnu#CI SlffCr rNt WESTCU~ Exceptionally sharp three bedroom home. Attractive open noor plan. Outdoor living - dining area. Free form ~$255,000. 631·7300 M.I. CE 110111 BLlllS ca. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE surER EASTILU~ COt4DO Former Model With View Of Big Canyon . Three Bedrooms Plus Convertible Den. 2112 Baths. Wet Bar . Intercom . Lovely Appointments Throughout . Community Pool. Best Value In Area. Listed Under ~.000. A "Joy Of Newport'· Listing. t4EWPORT HARIOR vtlW HOME Outstanding Montego On Fee Land. Corner Location. Secluded Yard With Spa. Beautiful Lush Landscaping. Night Light View Of Fashion Island & Big Canyon. Owner Motivated. $295,000. ® ·--... ,., ....... . 75"100 #Zeor,.• ..... ... ,, .. Cewlet' CMOICI • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• I 002 G1•1.. I 002 I OOZ G1•NI I OOZ lie•r• I 002 I 002 •...............................••.....•....•• ···········~··········· ··•··•······•·········· ...•.•....•........... ~ ----------------------- A WONDER IM ""°OOllUOGll 4 bedroom, 2 bath home located near quaint Stonecreek Park with a view of the mountains. Delightful used brick atrium w /lattice cover and malibu lights. Highly upgraded! Only $189,000. U~IVUI: ti()Ml:S REALTORS, 675-6000 2443 bat Cout H}9hway. Corona d_el Mar WI HA YI 47 OF THI llST A61Mn IN TOWH. WOOHRIDGI -COMOO Largest Warmington Plan D with 2 master suites & a Den. Lovely decor & a great upgraded kitchen. Assumable 1st T .D. & seller will assist in finding a 2nd. S158.7SO. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 Bar&ain shoppers read the little ads in Clasufied regularly And they rind what they're looking for When you need expert service or repairs, tum lo the Servlce Director)' ln Cluslfied to solve your problem. CHARISMATIC-ON WATER l111b•ra11t coate•porary 2·story .__ °" pri•ah Ille. c.on.t-~,.,ty ..... ,,...... boat .. ,. ShliMd ...... W.Jdc• tta., wood, ..... & bl..ttM ~ tlwo.gltOllt ttals 4 bed. +cWag r111. lto•H: 90 .. r••t lrltcltH, l•rg• blkCMIJ & cHclr. SI ,Z00,000 1". OWMr .......... . CORONA DEL MlR-8UILDERS! Aa ••• lot .. old C4li4 ........ locaffoa. ......... did .. prke . .,,. .. by 114 Mwl4)0kt .ct CCII far ......_ SZIS,000. NEAR NEWPORT-t:OSTA MESA Spotlns ..... -,... .. lot ... QUllT......., •llllillarllaad ccn•1at to .. ...,,... of OWMr ........ wfflt J ..... mcl z ........ 0.......,""' lit TD wt" ZO% •• .._ ..-rw-t· -..Ced to s 172,000. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC . REAL EST A TE s.,1,.. A~nt.-1• P,._,t\ M......,.._"' 2438 W Coatt Hwy ~rtB .. ch a~~REAll"Y IUSTIC SICLUSIOM FOil YOU & YOUI HOISi Tastefully decorated 3BR home w /over 4 /10 acre and complete facilities for your equestrian needs. Near all schools, shopping & transportation. Enjoy living in the beautiful Northwestern Santa Ana Foothills for $179,900. John Richard 551-8700 < F89) Irv1n.e Campus Valley Center Woodbridge v~e Cent.er 762-1414 661 8700 Oceanfront Dplx CUL-OE·SAC 4 years old. 3" 2 Br. 2 4 Bdrm. air conditioned Ba, blt·ins, 4 car garage. home. Neat and tidy. Br- Beat location. $750,000 in& a paint brush and JACOBS REALTY save! '95,000. 67M670 .RED CARPET: l~~~~~~--l 754-1202 MEW_..EVER LIVm IM JASMIHE CRIB-ft.AM I For the buyer who wants a lovely new 2 Bdrm and den home in a guarded community on a beautiful. quiet street, close to pool and tennis. The amenities are a plenty. Call now for an appointment. TERRIFIC IRVIHE 2 IDRM WITH r>.RTY SPA The sophisticated couP.les pr-ivate "Casa" in University Park. Shaded corner lot near pool and tennis. Plantation shutters. floor to ceiling home library and neutral decor. Desirable 1st TD that can be assumed at 10 11 .. %. Super buy at $190,000 with a 30 day possession if needed. Exceptional commission split for listing oriented realtor associates. Beautiful office in choice location . Have 2 openings. 759·1616 SEE AND BBJEVE The very finest buy in the Harbor area. New 1650 sq. ft. condos. 5 minutes to beaches. One half block to major shopping centers. Cement d)"ives, air conditioning, ,tnicrowave oven, trash compartor, large walk·in close.ts. Garage with opener. Pool and 2 jacuzzis. . WILSON PARK CONDOMINIUMS JIOW.W..._ C....W....CA 714/631·1011 ,.,.._ SI 36,000 LIDO ISLE HOMES Featured on Homes Tour this lovely traditional spacious. custom 3 bdrm, J. bath home, newly decorated. Priced to. sell quickly at $475 ,000. Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patios. _B~am ceilings. Great for entertaining. $420,000. PEHIMSULA POINT IEACHFROMT Panoramic view al wedge. from prime large lot 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq.' ft. featuring marine room. entry. Ii ving room. dining room, built-ins. etc. $1 ,385,000. IAYFROMT We have several fine homes with pier & slip, starting at $1.500,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J.11 Bny\1d .. Orov1· N 8 67':J 6161 2 UNITS $94,900 Super investment' Two 2 Bdrnt wliu, one with fl replace! Current in- come-S'140 mo. Financ- ing! One year home pro- t e c ti on plan 1ncld Hurry. this won't laat ! 648-7171 THE REAL ESTATERS LOVELY FAMILY HOME In excellent neighborhood. Close to the city shopping center. Near schools and transportation Huge rooms tbruout Large family room with Swedish fireplace. Beautiful stauied glass wmdows in 2 of the bathrooms Sparkling pool with cover, dog run, etc., etc. Seller highly motivated. and wiU sell VA . Come to the Open House on Sunday 7S2·1700 THE REAL ESTATERS CASA DEl RIO .............. c ••• Xlnt terms. 13% interest for 3 years. 12132 Ed· ln1er-clole lo Harbor Blvd. OPEN WEEKENDS 10-5 641-1991; 631-'361, agt. LUXURY LIVING Be ready for summer! Beautiful pool, Jacuzzi • fat BBQ comes wilh th1a 1 year new Eaatslde Cost.a Men twnhme. 3 Bdrm11, 2~ batba, shows .. CITIHOME 3 Bdm 2~ Ba. den. l year old condo, No C.M . 1740 sq ft. de- corator's delight, as- sume 1st . owe 2nd $177 .500 EASTSIDE C.M. 3 Bdrm 2 Ba. vaulteO ce1hngs, frplc, corner lot. OWC W/~ dwn. $149,500 IEACH DUPLEX 2 Br 1 Ba &t 1 Br l Ba, Fee land. walk to beach, owe at 12:Y.% int. w /30% dwn. $220,000 C .M. TRIPLEX Thrtt 2 Brdm 1 Ba units, garages, patios, good location & mcome. owe w/15 w /$50.000 dwn . $185,000. fASTSIDEVA 3 Bdrm 1 ~ Ba, family rm, alley access, 2 frplc , needs TLC-$136,000 TRADITIONAL REALTY HOMES & INVESTMENTS 63\-7370 LETS TAU Co tblioltSplh Jock H Letda. Mc)r. 675-1771 GREAT rNVESI'MENT J BR t ea. m ,900. Ar.· sumable financing & seller w /also carr y paper. Call for terms. 752-6499 Plan lll f\eal~y ASSUME LARGE > t40/oLOAM. 3 Bdrm, 2 ba home + pool. Pride ol ownership home. Take 9dvanta1e. Only $105,900. CaU ~5370aow. ALLSTATE A!ALTORS , like a model: deAiper I•------~· wall papen • window oc··· .. --rr coverinp. Take 9d•an· -_... tar•! OaJy $129,500. 2 Bdf11\1, 2 ba, \&llf\u'Q.. M&-7171 New. -=ic>yrty. THE REAL ESTATE RS IAYllllOMT a Bdrm, 1 bA, unfunl. Mint condt "50yrly. CHA ...... °"1' a Bdrm. 2 ba, unfum. '150)'fl)'. associat ed ,, ... . ·' THE 'RF'AL ESTATE RS ,.. ' I • eat arnves y Tlte .\&IOCla&ed Prell Everydrlpcounta AutboritJes in a grow in a number of communities re tryin1 lo get that message across as warm ealher approaches, bringing the prospect of lnl reas'ed water use for everyt.ttlna for swimmine ls. lawns and cooling showers The appeals echo the energy conservation cam- aigns that began in the 1970s, although the new logans refer to gallons of water instead or gallons of asoline. ONCE AGAIN, AMERICANS are being urged to se less of a precious natural resource. Once again, ere are dozens of g adget.s to help us save Water 1s much cheaper than gasoline -only itractions of a cent per gallon And the United States ~oes not have to deal with a 1ore1gn cartel llke OPEC for its water But water-management officials are still wor- • ied. They remember last summer's heat and roughl. Reservoirs are below normal "THE FIRST STEP iq cutting down on water use ·s to become aware of just how much water is re- :quired for simple household chores,'' says the Department of Interior rn a cpnservation guide. Wilham Sharp of the University or Penn f' sylvania, said a family of four Nses about 255 gallons of water a day I Leaky faucets are probably the most common 'water wasters. A seemingly minor pinhole leak 'the kind that goes "drip, drip, drip" can waste up to 170 gallons of water a day, Sharp said Replace 'worn washersorvalve seats to stop leaks. ALMOST HALF OF THE water we actuaJly use goes to flush the toilet, at the rate of four or five gallonsperflush,Sharpsaid. Tosavewater, take two or three old plastic bottles, cut off the tops, weight them Wlth stones, fill them with water and place them in the toilet tank. ''The water displaced by the I bottles will be saved,'' Sharp said, adding that you <>an cut usage by up to 11 • gallonspernush. Sharp advised agamst the traditional conserva- tion practice of putting a brick in the toilet tank. The brick can gradually disintegrate and the particles can cause damage, he said. There are specially designed water-saving toilets now required by law in new construction in some areas Sharp said most models use about 31 2 gallons of"" ater per £1 ush vs. up to five gallons for a 'COnvenllonalto1let and cost $70to $80 THE TYPICAL FAMILY uses almost as much ; water to shower and bathe as it does to flush the toilet, Sharp said Water flows from a conventional .showerhead at the rate of four to six gallons a minute Aflo" restnctor ava1lableforlessthan$l can reduce the flow to three gallons per minute A spec1aJly designed shower head. costing $8 to $10 ac-cord mg to !'>harp. can cut usage even further. Lawn watering and car washing already .restricted m some communities -can take giant _gulps of "att!r A half-inch garden hose. under f"normal pressure, pours out more than 600 gallons or water an hour A hose that is accidentally left on overnight can waste as much water as the average · fam1lyust•s 1n amonth New England , 'bills highest BOSTON <AP> New England homeowners, forced to protect themselves against their notoriously chill y winters, pay the highest annual energy bills in the nation more than twice that paid b) residents of the West a congressional study reveals ll cost Sl,325 to heat. cool and provide electricity for the average New England home in 1980. according to the report released by the Northeast-Midwest Congressional Coalition. That com pared to a $656 annual energy bi II for the Western homeowner and an $846 bill in the South MIDWEST RESIDENTS PAID THE second highest amount at Sl, 150. In the mid-Atlantic states, the average was $1 ,100. according to the coalition The coalition, a bipartisan alliance of more than 200 members of Congress from 18 Northeast and Midwest states, said the figures "show the energy gap between the regions is widening at an alarming rate, threatening any hope the Fl'ostbelt may have for economic recovery.'' The data. derived from fecieral Census Bureau and Energy Department information, was com- piled by the Northeast-Midwest Institute, an in- depPndent research center in Washington, D.C "Up until today, it hasn't been clear just how dramatic the regional differences in household energy costs really are," said Rep. James Shannon. D-Mass. "What the figures really point to is the devastating effect energy costs have on the elderly. the poor and many middle-income households. "AN ELDERLY OR •MIDDLE-INCOME household that faces a yearly eneray cost of $1 ,274 -the 1980 average in Massachuaelts -is forced to give up other basic needs just lo stay warm,'' Shannon saJd The study said the highest 1980 eneray costa ' were in New f.lampshire, where residents pa.id an averase of '1t4!i0. The lowest wer• ln Wuhington state, $501, ana California,~- The national averaie wu IMS. The report was made public at Ult first of five reaional heartngs leadlna to a national energy con- ference in Wublnfton In May. P\18LIC Ncri'ICE rtJauc NOTICE ION ..a'!, ... .,.. .... ..... ITAfUlftlT Tiit , .. ltwlftf .,.__ are Ml~ MIMY•• '"~ • T•K INOUaT1tlal, lftl l'ltC•11t1e AYtllUe, (ollO Mett, c.llttMl.t WJ1. ""4Ht( a. l'AltGO, 11 Twt.11, .... Nrt ..... (1111"'91• .... MAltta M. 1'000, U TOUIOll, HHl'Ort 9Mcf\, C.llfemle 9ll60. Tllit NI""' it ~~--~y 111-dlwtdualt (...,.....~Wife). .. , •• p .... M9rteMP....., T11i. ..._.._, •• fhW wt\11 ttw C..,1'11' Clent 04 ~aft91 c:-ty .,., • .,11,, t•t "''"" PuDli.i.d Or.neit CoaAI Oally ll'llot, Aprll t , "· n. ao, net 1nto.tt PUBLIC NOTICE P\1fl1.JC NOTICB 1 1 PtJm.IC NOTICE ,.....:.. _ _._ ..... ••• llOneaOfl_. 'ICft"*"Nll a• ... ., • ._. ........... Of'A v.aL. .._ IYATIJlllW ..... •nq*'" \'A&Jl8DAf..... ftWt ...... ,.,_ I• .... "'*" The '91'-lflil _._ eA Ml~ ~--_..., llWINU•· N .. lu le._ a1wn _...,.. 1t1 TH• M•OIA CO .. llN WH OltANO« COAi? NUlt,,INO Mct9-••Ill, •f.t, m ..... et. ........ ~ • ....._.,, hkll. CA, S-RVICH, um .._ '--· ........ "',.., ~ ...., ...... c..... .... lf'letM IMtll, Cell ... UM6. '4-'a el c.tlferllle llw _,, .. ,........ Wlttl-H. MortltL tit A .. 11 NANCY CAltOl.'1"" '-OW•. DUI O« ANIA aAVSIOa Vtl.LAOa A~~a.Kll,~.~ L"'" l.•H. Htllllllltl•ll ••ull, .... at~ .......... -•• T9'1t ----•• c41111N<IN Illy .. 111-Clllt.r~ ._., ltwy .. N..,.,.. a-ti, Cltllfet'IH div ..... , JAMU U>WAltO LOWS, nm " •100 .. "" ..... IM .., .... .,. Wllllem H. MlltTt. Lllltl l.ll'lt, Ht111ll11ttol'I ... ell, 1•1,1t.ofoll-9"t._, .... ~y, Tlllt........,.. -fl ... wltft the Ctlll.,.,.__.. 11 •It: y-11 -.it: , ... ; .._. C:-l'f Clertt of Of .... c:.uMY on Tiii• ...Vneu •• , .... IK .... , • Mel OWEl'n, ,...,II •• cir2U6C.J, A41<'11 ,, l•t ttMf'•I ~--Hull Ne · Utlt Hefley( L-S.141 wte It tor t1te _.,... .. Ml Tlllt .....,_. WM lllell Wiii\ l.tw f>'lflt llefl 01 tf19 ........... fl9r c ... 111r Cle"-Of o. ..... ~., • 1111 fee1 1n uw ain.11111 et ~ A.,11 7, 1•1. to.,uwr..,... CMtJ of .....nit1nt l"I ..... a,qlOl\ .. ofMIOI. Publl-Oranee CMll Oell'f l'llot, D•IH W• 22rtd ,,., of "'"'II, l•l Pl''"' ~UOll.,.,, 0r.,.. Ceett Oe111 li"tlol, .-..11 '· "· 22, .. t"l '""' PUBLIC NOTICE Aortt ..... U, IO, '"' ...... , lef'll NIOI'•. ~ l"ICTITIOUI •UllNISS • "'--• plot HAMS STAT•MINT .. uDll"*' --Coen O.,ly I • Tiie !<II.__ -son Is Oo..., ~· • ., .. '°· 1,.1 ~· ·-~ .. -· ~ ... PUBLIC NOTICE ----"ff••• f'lc:T'ITIOUI •llltNaU PICTITIOUS llUSINEU N-«STATIM•NT N~ITAT•MINT PUBLIC NOTICE J STAR GENE"AL CONTRA<. TOltl, 17• -tuer ·-.... &S, C.,.ta MaM. C:allfwlllatll617 Tiie 1o11owtt19 oenon 11 dol/\9 bull Tll1 lollowlnt IM''°"' are dolno ,...,... bu1lnau .. : O<.fAN s~o" ri. J)CMI~ w... TH£ MONEY MACHINE, 2001 w Ocean Front, N••POfl lie.Cl\, CA •• ,.,. • ..,.. •••• ,... Newport BNCll. t16'l Calllorl'tla '2..0 Patrl<ll Wolllam H.tllahel'I, UI ROO TAYLO". fl17 E.,,..., Co.ta 5"or C1' Me .. , CMllOt'nla tlUI nus"'"" R-. COfON dlll Mar, JAMf;S ROIERTSON, 1010 Thi• ous;nau 1, c-11<•«1bt.,,111 Woodltl'I, Hunllnoton Beach, dl•ldual. Callfornta 9- P•l H•ll-Tl\11 bu1lneu •• conducted by • Thi• 1tat-t was tiled wlll't 1.,. 11enerat partnenl>lp. Coul'lly Clerk ol o,.,,.,_ Counly on R. Taylor April I 1'111 Tlll1 1i.t-I w• liled •llh Ille ,.,..,.. Counly Cte•k ot Or.,.111 <.ounty on Publlllwd O.anot co.u Dally Piiot I Apfll 11, '"1 . PH1111 Aprll t, l•, U ,lO. '"1 1721 ~1 Publ-0.anoa <.oall Oally Piiot, PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS llUSINISS NAME STATIMINT Tl'te tollowlno panon " do1n11 ou11 n•ss ., PACIFIC GULF ENTERPRISES, 101 Ocaal'I Hiii Ort .. , Huntlneto• llHch. Ca•llornla ~ OavlCI Jtflnlng11, IOI Ck••n Hiii Orlva, Hunllnoton Beach. Calllorr111 ., .... Tn11 -!>Kt .. ·-UCleCI Oy ..,, In d l•ldu•I 0.vldJtMtnQll Tl'tll 1tat_,1 •at lllaCI with 11ta Coul'lly Clartt 01 0•.,,oe County on Ap•llU.1'91 .. , .... Publl•hecl Or-Co .. 1 Dally PllOI, Ap• I•, 23. lO. M•r I ltll 1'11.al PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS llU$1NESS NAME STAT.MINT I Th• followono ""'_,' are oolno l>u,ln•~• as. 'GAROENING BY GREEN JEANS." 111• A Camll\O Capl1trano, s.n cae..-ta (.A mn Angala M S.•auo•. ltl• A Camino Cap11lrano, s.n Clement•. CA ,,.,, Ap•il >0, May I U, 21 ltt1 lf7.._.I PU~C NOTICE ,.~T~$ IUSINIU NAMa STATIMINT Tllo tollowl"9 "''°"' era C101no bu,lntSS•J LI HOA'S Fl.VINO CREATIONS, IU·B Ullt St;"l, Huntlt19ton Be~h. Calllornl•,,._ LINDA l(AV WARREN. 114-B Ulh St•HI, Hunl11>11ton ~•.ell, <.alllorn11 ., .... TOOO T WARREN. IH-B ISlll Str .. a Hunllnoton Beech, Calll0<nla ., ... Thi• buslrwu •• C-uCled OJ ... tn Cllvlelu•I IH-& Wlla) lll'ICl.o Warren This •1•1-t ••• 111.0 wllh 1M County Clerk ol 0•""90 Counly on Ap•ll 7. 1"1 f'IS"" Put>llSIW<I 0.-Co.H O•lly Piiot, Aprn •. l•. U '10 l"l 1•70 .. 1 PUBLIC NOTICE Ptc:TITIOUS llUSINE$$ NMU STATIMINT TM foll-Ing ..... _. II 00!1'19 bull "•" .. I I) VIOEOLA, 111 RATTAN WEST Ill RATTAN FACTORY SALES. (0 VIDEO TRONICS, ts) NO'TIC:aTOC:•IDITO•I "OaE"T l!OWARO STEIN Ol'aUL• TllANIPI" IRONe ... 1790 Wl\lttler A-. IS, 11ea. 11t1•111 u .c .c.1 C..C•Mew.C•ll'°""'••21U1 Notl<• 11.,.....y ,, ..... to cradllOn •I Tiii• _,_. Is conducted by an tn Illa wllhll\ ""......,, lr.,..fa•on !NI • Cllvldual bulk lr....,er II tllovt '-> De ,,...... on R~ E SMll'lbt-r personal property herell'laltar Th" 11e-.1 wet "'"' w1111 ttw dltcrlbed Counly Ciera. of Or.,.ga County on The ,..,...., ond blltlnau ..,,,..au ol April 7, '"' Illa 1n1e.-tr .. 11 .. ors are. Rl<IWlrd 1'1ffftt L, 0•1'1-, and William F 8utlanct, Publllhed Or'-Co.st Dally Piiot, JJtH Elcter Court, Laouna Nlouaa, Aprll t, l•, U , lO. 1,.1 112741 Calllornla "'67 Tne locallon In California ot IM <Mel e.r;ecutlw ofliu or prtl'IClpel -1. neu olllca ol Illa Int.-tral\1lot0f' ........ All ou.r ~-namn and .a-Cl r eu as uuct by lho lnl•ndaCI l•anlleror wlll'tln lh,... yoafl last PHI 10 la• •• kno•n to Ill• 1ntand1CI transferee •re: none Tne ,..,.. -bu>lneu ecldreu of Iha lnlendeCI l••n1teree ••a I OA ICATHt:RN SWARTS, 22442 8ywal••. EI To,.., calllornla t)6.JQ Tnaa ttw ~-r1y pertinent llareto 11 CIHHI-11'1 119Mfal es. 1a<•e1.trlal HrVIU -•• '°'•led at 44U J•m-OOrH Ro.a, Sulle ?IO, NaWPOr1 a..<11, Calllornle. The bvslrwsa MtN UMC1 by IN .. Id ., .. ,.,.,or. at MICI IOC•tlon 11 JAM BOREE PLAZA SECRETARIAL SERVICE. Tl>at Mid bulk,,.,,.,., 111n1-to PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUI llUllNIU NAMl STATIMaNT Th• 1o11ow1no "''°" h dolno ~1 neU•I CU-STOM CONSTRUCTION, 1411 I( In Qt Ro.a, N-1 ik4Kh, CA. tti63 "Men J . cka.a, 1401 klf'llS R-. NIWPO" lllNdl. CA '264) Tn11 -nett I• <-.Clod llY ... ln CllYIOU•I R J Ct<llA Thi• ti.ti-I wa> llled w1111 ll'te C.ounly Clerk 01 Orange Co..nly on April 7. 1911 ,.,_ Pub1t11WO Oranoo c.0.11 Dally Piiot Ar><ll • ••• ll. lO. 1'111 ....... PUBLIC NOTICE oa con1umm•led •I IM office of PROFESSIONA L ESC RO W SERVICES. 1921 N"'1h Tuslln Avenue IP 0 Boi l tSlll , S•nt• Ana, C•lllornla 92101 (91111) on or atlor NOTICa 0, A~~LICATIC* May 13, 1'91 PO" c:HAlfOE Ill OWNIHHIP Thll bulll lrantlo• 11 1uOJKI to OP ALC:ONOLIC: •IYl .. AGE Catllornla UnofOrm Commercl•I C-LIC:IENSI S.<11on •10. fo wnom It May Gon<a•n Tl\e ,._.,,.,•-KS oi U.. """°" CAMELOT REU AU RAH TS, INC 11 wltll wl'tOm clalm1 mo oe lll•d 11 •PPlylno lo '"• Oeparlmenl of P R 0 F ES SI O H Al E SCRO W Alco/lollc Bew•-Control hi• ·;.1 • SE "VICES, f><nl Offlu •o• 11517, ON $ALE BEER A WINE (PUB. EAT. Sanla AN. ea111om1a '2111 -ow PL.I lo w ll •lcolloll< baveraoel •I :M:IO 1 .. 1 day 10< llllng c I a lma toy any Via ()por1o, S..lte 1. Nawpor1 lka<I\, <radllOf llWll be May 12, l"l wlll<I\ 11 CA 91WO tlla ...,.,_ clay beto,.. the '°'"''"'' Publlllwd Or-C.0011 0 .. ly Piiot, m•llon cl<ll• -"Iliad above Ap•ll lO 1,.1 1011 .. 1 O•ted ~o ISCll, 1'91 Ida l(all\ern Swa,,1 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE P'lc:TITIOUS llUSlfltlU NAMa STAT•MEllT Tiit lollowlng ""''°"' ••• dolf'l9 IHi&ln••& .. "ORCHIO CLEANEIU," 1$4* Actams A••nua. Co•I• M•••· C•lllornl1 nu.. WON YOIJ14G LEE, S4'2 Marva.w Ori••· L• P .. ma. CalllOfnl• •u. HEA VOi.iNG LEf. S..2 Man>law Drive. La Palm., C•lllornta•U. T 1111 tllnln~s II (-ll<llCI by ... In· CllvlCl"al WON YOUNG LEE Thl1 11•1.,.._I ••• lllaCI with ttw County Clark ot Or.,,90 Co..nty on Aprll I, 1'91. f'ltM11 Publlohad Or-Co.It O•lly Piiot. APdl ~ It. U, lO. 1'111 1724-tt PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS llUllNIH NAME STATIMINT Tlla lollowlno 1>9r-. II doing bull netJ ., CHIC AUTO BODY ANC> CUSTOM PAINT, 1 .. 1 ... 1 R--Ctr<la. Hut1I 1no1on Beach, C..lotomla UM7 Atl1 M F•ll•ht•n 11104 Net· Uewooo Clr<I• Hununoton B••Ch , C•l•lornla t2,... Thi\ OUS1fWU '' c.OOOut llO by •n in dlYidu•I Al:U M F•U•r'h•n f hi' swtem.n1 w•' t11eo .,,,.,,, tn Couna, Clt•k ot O•""Ot Counly on M•r<n U 1'91 ,.UIJll PUDll\MO 0.M>QO' (.0.•1 0.tlly Pilot. Ap• U , JO, M.y 1 I•, 1'191 .. 12 .. l PUBLIC NOTICE ,.ICTITIOUS llUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The rollo••nQ o•t •on' •r• 001" bu•1n•n •• REPPAC, UOll P•rcy ori ... Wotmlnller, Callfom1• 9l61l O•••CI Long FHs.n<Wn. uoo Pu .. N•woort 419. Ntwoort Be•ch C•lllorru• 92660 PUBLIC NOTICE l"ICTITIOUt llUllM•N NAMa tTAT•MaNT Tiie loll-11\Q ~'°"' ••• dol119 llvllllOISM GOLOBf"G·WHE l(Lf;lt co•- PANY. Sl40 C.....,. Otlv•, N-Ollr1 •••th, C..lllomta nwo. CH .. ISTOPHfR A. WHIELI ... 20 Oel Giorgio lloect. Anallel111, C•lllorrua'*7 GOLO&ERG ASSOCIATES, I~, e Celllotftia '"'-•llOll, Sl41 C..m_. O•lve. N••POrt Beacll, Calll«11la tlWO Tnls ............. COflclllCteCI Oy • oaner•I oartnef'lNP Ovlnootwr A. WllMlar Tiii• 1t.-I ••• filed with \tW Counly Clar-ot °'""90 County on Aprll 2', t"l Pl.,.. PuOllllWO o..,. C-1 Oatly Pllel, AOfll lO, May 7, I•, 21, l•I ltT7 .. l PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS •USINIEIS NAME STATEMINT T Ila loffowtno ...,_ K eolllQ ~ MHa' WAAL V AN DYKE PROPERTIES, LTD A Llmllad Partne,.f\lp. 11s1 0o .. Slreet, S..lt. 1110, Newport Baacll, Calllornla t~ STEPHEN CHASE, ts EHllau, Irvine Calll0fn1a tZ7U Tl't" buslnen Is con<lu<l•d by a 11ml1eo _,,,.,..,..P Swpf\HICl\a .. , Ganffel Partne• '"" >latemenl ••• 111.0 .. 11h lhe Coutta, C.•••a 01 Or.,,oa Counly on Ap"I •, 1911 STEl'HlN M. CHAStl ATTO .. NEY AT UIW 1u1 oevas-. Sulta 17t New"r1 thac.11, <:allfanoi• ·-(714) ~1111 "~ Publll/WO Oranoe <.0.11 O.ttly P1101. Apr II' I• 2l, l0. 1911 l IJO..at PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS aur.tNEU NAME STATEMaNT NtCOI• Ahx 8rutWt11 UOlt Perc y Or1w1 wenm1n1tet c..auforni•92'13 Tn• tollOWtftO perton' •r• doil\O This businrtss i\ condu<t~ Oy • buiinn' • O•M••li>artne~•P DEUTSCH 01.MS<.HEIO F •1111 A JannlnQi, lit• A Camino C•Plll••no s.ncaemante CA,,.,, VIOEOMAN, l•l VtOEOWORLO, 171 ' ' ~ VIDEO CENTER. (tl VIDEO T11i. bu11no11 11 conducted bY a SERVICE 9 RATTAN HOUSE 111 gen., al partnen.l'tlP • I l • PuOllll\ed Or-Co.11 O•lly Piiot, Ap•ll >0, 1,.1 :!0!1 .. 1 NICOi• A Brunell• PROPERTIES I, 2700 w .. t <.oall 011\ •l•len>MI .. ~, llled ...... ,,,. HIOl't••Y. Sutt• 110, 14ewport had\, STATIME14T OP AUNDONMINT Cuunly Cler• ol Or•n9" Counly <>n Calllornl• 92~ AP•tl 11 1991 30 OEVELOPMEHT. IN(., a Angel• M S.latar W t 1111 Street, B l , Cos11 M .. •. Faith A Jenni~ I Calllornt•92•V I TntS ti.te'"""I was hied wttll IN OAVIO LOYO ROBERTS. lt4K County c1ar11 01 Orange Countr °"I So F'alrv-. s.nta Alla, Callfomla April I 1'91 t'JICM f'IHfft Tllll 1N11ne11 11 COn<lu<lad Dy a Apt1I 9 1• n JO 1'111 OavlCI LOyCI ROberlt • • · • 1111 ••I Thi• •t•lemenl .... , tiled wltll lllo Counly Clerk of Or.,,oa Countr on OPUSIOP F l .. snJC.•l•lornla Co•por•llon, ?700 w .. t PIC:TITIOUS llUSINEU NAME PuOloShe<I Or.,,-,.,.,, D•llv PtlOI Coalt Hlgf\w•y. S..lte J70, Newporl --T11a toi._no .,.._. "•• ac.a.-.--• B c. ~ H 0 r I <.E OF I HT EN OE 0 INuMof-11<111'-~un•ma Apr 1J JO M.y 7 "1'111 ,,, ... , H <llR :~'°'<;:• 0 L MSC HE I 0 T"ANSFERUNOERSECTIOHS1.07l DOLPHIN TACKLE CO. ~2' AHO 1.074, CALIFORNIA llUSINEH w .. toaaa Or1w . ""'-''"· (.alolOfnla (.ORPORATl()fj, a C..lolO<nla CO<po•a ANO PROFESSIONS CODE --PUBLIC NOTICE I''""· 111•1 MAN,_., " ........ S..ll• c .,_ ••~Ina <.•lllomi• tt714 ELOISE R BOOIFORO, Lion-. Tiie Flclltlo.n BllMMU Name ••. Tl'tl\ IN$1n•U Is conCluCl•CI Oy • ti~ Nawi--I Boua.varCI, Cosi. MaM, laHed lo .OOVa ••• "'°" In Orange FICTITIOUS llUSINISS gtn.,tl 1»r1nenhlp Calllornla. Co..nlY on Jan t. lt71 NAME STATEMENT I lO OEVELOPMEHT 1HC PUBLIC NOTICE JO ANNE BE"U8E, Tral\I,.'"· RALPH BERTAINA. U• Wttteal• fh• lotlowono pe•--"dol"9 llU\I JOMPfl p Oauhcll f'HUft t•7ll Edna Plec:e, Covina, California Ori••. ""-Im, Calllornla t1*» nau •• ,..~.,..,, P 01 sr.o Oranot Co.ti O•llY Piiot l(lnd of llCal'I .. lnlandad to be Tiii\ ~ ••• <OftOU<lad by .,, f EI( TOOL CO Sii i M•O••Y I Ill\ 11.t~t w~ 11190 wltll I,,_ I PUOll•-0-MIOI CO.•I Oally P1lol ltmll•O partrwnhlp Aprll lt lttl PUBLIC NOTICE I Apr~I i:i Mar 1 u 11 lttl 1-.ti t,.n~I•"~ ~·•~;~Swine lot ln<lhldual. o ..... Hunttnoton IN.en <.•lllorn1a Counay Cl.,k ol Oranve C-n1y on ,.CTITIOUS llUSINlSS "":1 ac ,"' = ~.,,':i be Id 1 the "•ll>h E 8ar1alna tl•<t <lopfll 10 lttl NAME nATIMENT PUBLIC NOTICE bu\IMHIH».J7• •I C.ounly Clo•k of O•an90 Counly on Ori•e, Hunli~ion a.ac.11, Calllomta Pu0115/WCI o .. n91 Co.II Oa1ly Piiot, T n• lollowlno P•• 10n• ••• Oo111g Oat<rlpll• •-.i.prll 11. 1911 ,.,. , I o • com a on pa or r1111 , .. ....._, wa 11190 wltll Iha F••O L Haller U lt Midway' ,.,..., b\Ollnau .. · C.••h 10 O.Clee>Ollled In Etcrow S ,.917tt:J 92•4' Aprll lO, May" 14, 21, lttl ltt1 .. I SYSTEMS HOUSE, •Ht Ml ,.ICTITIOUSllUSINESS r}.000000.mancl~alOftMlnvantory Publl....,,0.-Co.llO•llyPllot, Hll\bu1'MUl\condU<todbyan1t> Rlploy O•I••· Cypra11, Calltornla NAME STATa-NT nol 10•11<-INwmot JOOOO April JO, Mlfy 7, u , 11. 1tt1 1061 .. 1 Cll.,Clu•IF•.O L Ha•ltr I PUBLIC NOTICE ~JO T II• 1011owl1>9 paroor>1 ••• do I no Oamancl noea lo be ...C..lllulec:I __ _ 1. ...... w ..... 04,_,, IU E. 11\11 bull~ by ... auumpu .... Gf Tiii• IYW,,,...I ••• lolad "'"" IN St•Ht. •BJOJ, COiia -... C•lllornlal ~ F o u R T H s T R E E T on u litl1>9loan iu "' u PUBLIC NOTICE '"""'' Clerk ot O•er1oe County .,. NOTtU INVITING 111os tlUI PART NE RSH• P. 100 wast Com Oamano -.100. ...o.mu1a<1 Ap•ll I 1'91 Noll cc 11 neraoy o•••n ,,,.,, Iha Ca•olynsn-Ja,..ln•.M41Mt mon •nallll Avenue Fullerton. Oy•n au••rrtPtlonot ,.tStffl Bo"'d ot Tr14tll .. ot V.. Co.11 Com R lplt r Ori••. Cypran. C•lllorn11 C.a111orn1a ~ •n exl11inQ l<MOn 1.11' U EK-NO. ,_,.NN PuOllShoCI Or.noe '""" Dally Piiot.i rnunHy c.011999 ot O••-<.ounly ~ FULLERTON SAVINGS lo LOAN I Nole e no Se<urlly NOTICE TO C"aOtTOIU <loprll '· l•.13. 30, '"' l1l:Ml Calllornla. Wiii re<al ..... 1ec:1 bid1 uP Th11 bu"nH• '' conduct..i by• ASSOC.IATION, 100 Wot Com •o•Hmenlloba1n ~.:c~u.~:1!~1~':,~~-~~ to ti 00 •m , Frlcl<ly, May as, 1,.1 at o•n.,•I i>artna•Slllp mon•••ltl't Ave1111e , Fullerton. lavor olthe !>ell., 3.000.0Q ffOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN th 1 PUBLIC NOTICIC" 111• Pun,,., .. no Oep.ertmant ot Mic! Urry Waller Ol1>9v• Cal1IO•n•• 926.ll Total s l•,17• •7 • • "" COll•O• CllSlrlCI located al 1310 "°""'' fl'toS si.ta .... nl ... , ... .., .,,,,. llw GOLOBERG WHEELER COM I mo pl.ca ......... tna co-rellon °"" Ir ....... 11 .......,, lo .. m-ot A .. nu•. Co>I• MaM, CalllMnl•. •I County Clorll Of Or.,,ga County on PAHY suo <'..Mrtpu$ O•IYe. N•wpo,, tor IM •• _, •• OI lhe bulln.ss ano ..... th• p ... ..,, •• propa.iy ducr10od NOTICE TOC: .. IEOITOIU wlllclt "-MIO Oktl Wtll ... P"blklV Ap .. 17 1'91 Buell C.tlll0<nl• ,..., llCM ...... ll<en>H II to be pa1C1 11 below opened and rNO lo• PR114T ANO 'IS*I Tl\" Ou\lneO 11 conducted l>y •!WESTERN MUTUAL ESCROW. lfOll t Tl'to ,,_ -bodlnHI -KS of O, llULK T"AN"E" BIHO ORANGE COAST COLLEGE Pu011""9<1 Oranot Co.•• O•lly PtlOl,I o•naral per1rwnl'tlp S.Outll y-Str"1 S..11• 101 Tu1lln, , .... Int......, ............ II .IOMAH (Seu. •1114117 u .c:.C.I CLASS SC:HEOULE. tttl.C Ap•ll f , I•, 1l. JO. 1'111 1 .. 911 Cl'lrlltOCll\ef A Whffl*' Calllo•no• 92tto on o• altar May II HES aOEV+oUWER, -A. BPaclll< Holle e " ne•eby QI .. n lo the All OICI\ ar• lo be In ac:corct.n<.e •II~ • Coul Hlonw•y, Newport ••<II, UedllO .. ol ELOISE R BOOIFORO, Tn11 •l•t.,.....,1 .,., "'"' •lll't lhe lffl ' Calllornla'*3 T••nsler0<, w-11U1lnfls aOOreu 11 ll't• 81«1 Form 1nstrucUOf\1 -~I PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE 01' SALi 0' A VESSEL VALUED AT MO"IE THAN Ult lololl<• I• ,,.,aoy 01...,. P•"want \0 .. ctlon1 JOO. SOI, SOI s. !O'I and S03 o• ,,.. Harbor lo N•••o-llon ~ ot llM St•t• of Calltornl• llw ...-rslllfMCI OE AHZA BAYSIDE VILLAGE wlll Mii al IM'OllC a11<tlon, •I lOO E .. t Coe\I HIOftway, HawPO<I hacll, CalllOfnl• t'JWO at t.00 • m on llW t3tll dly Of May ttt1 • .,.. 1o11ow1no Oetc•I-II'• per1y, town Rein.II Doti, MOIO< 10 CFSIOOFW, Hull Ho RE'422'4Ml'L $a lCI Mio '' 10< tlw --ot ~11•­lylno llan ol llW ..,_,.!Gned lor mOOI' lno 1u1 In tl'tl •mo .. nt of uo..oo. t099tlla• With C0.0 OI adver11•11'19 -U1>9n>asofMa. Oaled trltl 22N tMY ot A$Kll. 1 .. 1 M•naoar Put>llshed Or'-Co.II 0.tly Piiot APrll lO, 1,.1 10s.-fl PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS llUSINISS NAMSSTAT•MINT Tiie fol._"8 pet'Mrl 11 doing bull MUH. NEWPO"T MANAGEMENT SYSTE MS, Jt01 Ma<A•ll\ur BoultYarQ, SUltt 201, Newport hech, CalllOfnla t1MO Cllarlu Frenk LuUClar, lOUI EvarolaOH t..arw, Huntll'IQton Baec:ll, Celltornl• .,..- T nll buls.INll IS <onclU<lad by Ml In dl•l•U411 (.Nrl.s Fr..,_ Lur.oelar Tllll Ji.I-I wa1 lllad wllll ttw <.ounty Clark ol Oral\09 County on Ja11ua•Y :IO,'"'· FltOl2J ~.-... . .. k ....... ....... -~ ...... s..i .. _ N_. llMCll, (.e. t2'M .. , ...... _ ....... Pvbll...,, Or'-Coe.It Delly Pilot, Aprll lO, May 7, 14. J1, 1tet 206CM1 PUBLIC NOTICE NOT1C:• INYITIMO llDS Notice It IMlreb' e lven lllal llMI loard of TntSlaM of UW Ceut c:om.- munlty Coll ... Olttrlet of Ot~ C-ly, Call~. wlll re<elve ••lael blct. up to 10.Jll e.m .. f'r1aay, Mey IS, ltll at IN Purc'-lftll ~-t of teltl co•• Clltlrkl loc:.atect et 1110 All•lllt A•ll'lll•, Cesll Me ... c.11~ el tllfllCJI lltl'lt Miii .... •Ill k .-1111c1y ~ Mii reell ltr. l'U RC"•s• 01' TeN Cit) CRT TUIMINAL fYlil'IWltlTlltt.. All .,_. .,.. .. • Ill eccWlleft<e wtt11 County Cle•k ot Oranoa County on Tne par1~ ~,... llWll IM conslela •· Tllo ,...._ ano bullneu •OO•KI 01 Ul L• Raml>la. City°' S.n Cl•nMnt•, lion• •nd Sc1Klllcatlon1 wlllclt ••• ,_ J anuary10. l"l lion lor tna transl., ol '"" llU~n.,. Illa 1n1e.-1ran1te,...• are ROYE. I' t ot Or Stal ol Calllornla on llle-maylMMC-ll'llNotflce Ft•IClll •nd IM ll<itnM Of llc•nwt 1110 be paid oun Y -· • ot tl'te Pwc,,.•nQAganl ol said c.ol9-Puo11.,_,, °'-'"""Dally Piiot, •fl•r Ille 0.p••lmenl of AICOl>OllC FOSTER -LeVERNE c FOSTER, ...... bulk t•an\l•• .. •bovl lo ... dl\l•l<t Aprll JO May 7 u ll 1'111 1t7HI Baver-Control Ml a~owd IM "°'1 Lan~• A-. Garelan Grove, mad• lo JO AffNE BE RUSE, Each-·~ suornll with ~Is -· Callhlrnla .,_ Tran1laraa. WN>M ousln•t1aooreu11 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE 01' $ALI OP A YEUIL VALUED AT MO"I THAN U9 Notl<e II tw,..by Olvan PllflUal'lt to M<tlont JOO, SOI. SOl s. !O'I end 50J OI ,,.. Harbor 1o H••loallon ~Of .,.. St•I• ot C..lllornla lhe ..,_,..!Gned OE ANZA BAYSIOE VILLAGE •Ill .. 11 •l public av<llan, •I JOO EHl Co.it Hlonway, HawPOrl lleacll, CatllOfl'll• '2..0 at t· oo • m. on Illa Utt\ <»Y ol May, Itel, the IOllowlno.Clatc•I-P<0- 1>9rly, lo •II 1•71 A.Ml bo•t. Motor I 0 CFIJ11FB. Hull Ho 2SE71'4 Said Mia Is tor lhlo _....,_ ol Mii• lylno lien or Iha undartlgnad for ''°'ave t~ 1n llM .,.._, Of MS.GO, to0e111ar wllh cotl.s of .,,,,.,,ISl"9 - upenws ol Mio 01taCI thb Zlnd Ooy Of April, lttl Manaoar p'ublllhed Or-C.O.sl Dally PllOI Aprll JO, 1911 1057 .. l PUBLIC NOTICE pr:::::~.:,.-ot ..... •K•-Tiit ~y lo .,. ............ -•• l•ll • ECIM Pia<•. City ol CoYll'la, :!db~~~·~!;::':::! c..:-:; llolCI•• WESTE"N MUTUAL dHcrl-In Ot'W' .... , All"', .... Counly 01 LOI "11••• ... 51•1• 0' orderoltNC.0.SICommunltyCot .... ESCROW tfOlll Sovtll Ycw1MI Sirwet •lock In l•-· -.c...-i1a. supptlH, C•llfornlo. Olatrlcl Board 01 Truueu In an Sullo 1oi, Tullln, Calllornl• tlMO: :~:~·::· U:,~u~=1~1·.,!,"::11~,,!: Tna pr-rty 10 De trantfor,..d k amount nol 1"6 tl'tan flw parcant tJ"-l Alln Ma•llYf'I W.1tmora .. ncl a1 NEWPO"T BU"GERS detcrl-In ganaral as All llOCk Ill ol Ille Mlm bid a1 a -ant.a tllat El · A Bodlhl d T N l••Cla, ll•lu-. eciu'-l llft4 -" tM bl-will-•• 11'110 IM~ ~owAnne B.,.;.: T:::i.:: Said ,.,_ny It io<elacl et MOO A wilt ot 11\al ION·SALE 8£E" ANO C.,.trac:t 11 Iha ..,.,. 1, aw•rmd to Pub11.-0ranoa co.110ally Pilot, ~.·~~·~~~.~.way, Na•po•I W INE FOR PUBLIC PREMISES ~IM 11111••-oflallu,.. ...... , ...... A 11 lO t•I 2°'°41 "' ~n. -""""' ·-LICENSE •42 .. .UJl -.nlnHI .._ lo W<l't cont..ct -IH'OC-of llw pr • Said boAll tr.,,\l.,. Is lo IM conwrn-u COUNTRY BOY and localed at llS4 clla<k will be ,..,:,..lacl °' In Ille '"" PUBLIC NOTICE mated on or at•• Mlty to, 1'91, •I the H••POr1 Bl"4., City ot Colla MeM, ot • -.,.. lull """' ttw•aol wlll i.. otflu ot, -c•.i-may IM lllec:I will\, Coul'lly ot Oranoa, State of Calltornta. l0<l•lt•d i., Mid c.oll-O-dlllrl<I. U H t T E 0 8 U S I N E S S Tiie bulk tr.,,\lor will De conwm· No b4ddaf' f'NIY wit'*•• l'tls OICI hit -----INVESTMENTS, INC., 1112' AIOndr• mated on Ot .... llw lllh day"' May. I 1>9rloct ol torty.ftw (4') days ..... PICTITIOUSllUSIN•U 81¥d , Par•mount, CA t07Jl, tlll) lttl el 10:00 A.M 11 WESTERN IMdalaMtlortlWocianlnotMraol. NAMI: STAT•M•NT .,. 7070. (7U) U.-27SO Tiiis Oullo MUTUAL ESCROW co .. P . ATTH. Tll• a-ct .. Tr...e ... ,_,_. ttw Tiie foll-lnQ panon 11 dolr\9 bU>l· trentler la JUl>ja<l llO Sec. •tat of IN MA"ILYN WESTMORELANO, whoM P"Vll"9 ol ,..le<llnv any -all bias nou 11 Ul'lllorm Comm••<l•I Cod•·lula. a6d•a11 Is UOl1 So YorlM SI., SUit• .., 10 ... 1,,. any lruvutarll ... or In HAMILTON ANO ASSOCIATES, Tr ... 11•"-101, Tullln, Calllomi• nYO Tl>al.,,. 1tt0 Cal.tllne Str .. t, LeQUN lleacll, Tl>a last dete lo< tiling ctalm111 May 1111 d•I• of 1111no clalm1 In lM etc row IOfm•~~i.,:~~~ ":!;~': bldc:lll'IQ Calllorn1• '21Ul It, l"l ••l•"ad to ,,...•In 11 May U, 19'1. . Se<ratery Rlcherd O Hamilton. 1960 So fer H a.nowl'I lo Illa lnlanclacl Sotera1llknowntotMT•at11ferM, BoanlofTruit .. i Catal In tl Street, L•ouna Baacll, transfer"' the Int•-1ra11sleror all ""1lneu,..me1 arid aOOrHM\ uled CoHt Commut1lty CAllll9" 04, Calllornlatl.Sl ulad llte lol'-lno aeldlUonel bullnau by th• Tr-leror '°"the i>att thr"I"''' Tiii• _,_, 11 <ondU<•d by ... In-n•m•• ---wltl'tln Ille"''" YHflare SAME PuOlllfteCI Or-c.oa,1 Oally Piiot dl•ldull ....... last post. NONE O•l•d ""'Jo ~"ION, EltlBlERUBE Al>'ll >0. May 7, 1,.1 104Mt Rl<lwnl O Hammon O•lael ~I ?t, ltll ~ ,,. .. st.i-t Wal tiled with the Roy E Fos•r Tr.,,.,.,... County Clerk ol Orer190 County on uverrw C '°'le' Publl.,.., Or-Co.•1 Dally Pllot,1 Aprll u . 1911 Publl.,.., Oranot CO.II Dally Pilot, April >0, 1'111 1051 .. t Pl .... Ap.tl >O, 1,.1 ~7 .. 1 Publl\l\ed Oranoa (.OHi Dally PllOt, /lo.pr. l•, 13. >o, May 7, ,,.1 "~' PUBLIC NOTICE ,.CTITICIUS llUSINESS NAMI r.TATEMllfT Tne lol'-lnQ II"""" Is dolnll 1111•1 ntU •t THE ELECTRIC WINO, at Place"tl•, Co•t• MaH, C•lllornl t?U7. Sta.,._ L.atlv'ol> H°""'°"'ey, PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICI INVITING lllDS NOTlCI INYITINO lllDS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN llWlt NOTICE IS HEREaY GIVEN ll'tat 1aa lad IH'-Ulll fOf lurnltlllng all NalM -•I• I« lumlllf\1"9 all labor. m•1.,lah, equipment, I• bo r , lftalar I al 1, eq .,apme" t, 1ra111_.iat1an -1uch o1twr tec:llltle1 tran-1Aotlan anCI we.II ottwr lec:llllle1 • ' m • y b • r • q u I r • d f o r es may ba r aq11lr•d for llNSTALLATION 0,. THI! BAKER INSTALLATION OF tHE AOAMS STREET TRA,.FIC SIGNAL SYSTEM AVENUE T .. A,,.C SIGNAL will be rec:tlWCI by ... City"' Colt• SYSTEM wtlt 1M recal"'"' by 1M City MaM. at ltw Office ot the City Clef'lo, n ef cati. ....., et ttw oftlca ot IM City ,.air Orlw. c.i. ,,,,. .. , Calltorllla, r.ant• A,.. Avenua, Coll• Mu• Clara., T1 Fair 0,1,,., Coala MaM. Ul'ltll IM -of 11 oo a'"" May lt. Ca llloml• '26!7 ea111or.-., unlll ttw -ef 11:00 •·"'~ 1,.1, at ..,Id! time.,,.., wtll c. openect Tiii• bullfleS6 ••conducted by en'"" May It, 11 wtlkll time .,,.., wlll .. ,..otlcly end rMd aloud In IN C-11 dlYIOvat. ~ pullllcty -, ........... In Ille CllaMIMrs. Sellfad ,.,._.., .... II beW S._,... L. Hurnp!W'ey Councll Q\9mllers. S..lec:I ~11 IM lltla of Ow -'i -1tw noma ot Tiii• ~t WIM lllad wltll Ille 111•11 ~ h llll• of uw _.. and ttw IM bleldllr lllUt no ohr Cllstl,,..llftlllg County Clartt of Or.,,09 Coul'lt'I' on ,.,.,,.. of .. lllOOlr WI llO .u.r dltl· marlol. My l>ld received aflllr tlM April 7, 1"1· lfllUl•llll\O "*11L At't'/ llMI r_I...., Kllad11lect ctoslno lime for ttw recalpt PtSffH af1ar the KMdtlllll l>IOI .... II .. ,.._ ol bid• NII .. retvmect to lM blclidK Publllhed Oranoa Ceost o.lty Plloe. lur-111 ... _...., ~ II ~II unopel'tod. II •ft•ll II• Ill• IOI• Ar><ll t, '" U, JO, 1•1 l7i.41I .. .,.. _.. '"P•ntlolllty of th. M4ldw r.,..ntlbltlty of ... ~ to -tllet t9 -~ 1111 MCI It, ......... ,._ 1111 lolct It rec:al"'"' In ~r time. PUBLIC NOTICE ti-. A .. a of Pl-. "'9<1al Provl"- A ... ti~ ,.,...,t...._ eft4I alllll-aM eddil'-to Gefteral Provtsloftl le 1"9 Slencterel Sll«tflcat'-""" lie._ lel11tct et 111e olflo of tll• City r,..1 .... ,, n Fair Ortve, c.i. MeM, CalllwnlA. ..._, tPKlflUIUMt ellO "'-<GMT•t *""'*'° ruy ...... t•aMI-.. llW afflca ..... Treffle "'•'-"' -City .. c.u ...... eec11 111111 tMll .. 1111MM .,., tlM .......... lvrm. ....... ,-.... .... IH'WlllH 111 ttoe ~rect ~·• el'lll llltll e9 a<COlftjltftl ... , I ctrlltlt41 « <......,.• cM<ll ., • llld ......, .......... ~10~·- PUBLIC NOTICE NOTIU INVITING lllDS NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN that \Hied P<'Ot)OHIS IOI' lu,,,llfllnQ all labor. mal1rlel1, aqulpmef\t, lr•n-1Al!lon -sucll olMr lec:Kltlll a s lftay I>• r equ ir ed for I N STALLAT ION OF STREET LIGHTING CONDUIT ON eeA" ST"EET FROM BRISTOL STRl£T 1000 m0<e or -PERT WESTE"LY will oe rec.I...., by uw City of cosi. MUI, at ttw offl'a of the City Ca.rt. 17 '•'' Ori,,., eo.ta Mine, Calllornla, until the '*it of H :OQ a lft., Mey lt, '"'·et wftlcll llma -Y wlll lie...,... pVOll(ty""' ~ • ._In -C-11 ChembaB. 5HleCI sw~t Sllell - Uw UUt of Uw ..-11 .... h -of t!M thNH but no .,..., dleUn""'1flll\f merllt. ,,,,.., lllCI raulva41 ottw U. ldleclul941 clOelne lime for llW receipt ltf l>lllt INll .. rttumed to tM ~ 11n1pt11tll. It •llett M Illa Iota .. -*!tty .. Ille....., .. -!Ml Illa blCI 11 rwcat....., In -time. AMtof....._~ ... ~ and edCllllOlll te O-el ........ lllns .. Ille Stancllnt $tll<lfk~loM m.., .. -. l1lned et tlle olttce of Illa 'lty 11111-. 11 P'tlr Of'lwe, C•le ... I Cellforftla. "'-· aj19Clrketlon. -01111< cemract dl<-4• _., •1111 .. •••lftll'ltll et Ill• efflc• et lll• TrM ........... ServlcM """"'"" 9f t1W City ti C.ta MoM. lecll 1>141 INll M me4le M Ule ·~ """·"""' ,.., ttlrWllt N llf'9•Matcl 111 tl'tl (9111ral .-cttllM .... olld ellllt M a<Cof'l\pa1110• • ., I <MtltlM "' c_..,.t cMc.• ti • ... ..... ,., ""' ... lNll "" " .... AIMVl\1 f# M Md, .............. .. City .. C----. ... ,,........ WI ..t ............ KCA ....... .., -" ,....,., cN<1I. , .... .,, ...... . lllOM • ............. ,..11 ............. I• ..,.. "' • ....,.. fWf'll MMMd ..., ... c;11y tic.-~ ..... ,,..... -~---.,..._. .... ,,....=.,..a. •ec.a ................. ..... ,,.,,... .. ,........, .., .. °"~ ..... (My .. '*" .... ,....,.... .. ,. ........... WAllllNI. , ... c:.icncw tMfl ......., .... "" ~--........ ,,,, .. ,,. 11141•MN• "' ,,_, ~tlte'-IA ... .. , ..... .,.........,. ...... .. -•••w•o""c...-; ......... _..,....,. .. o" ~ ....... °", ........ ..... ,..... ................ .., _ _,.._., ...... c... ,......,.,,,...,""v CllY~--"ClilW"C.. .... ._. ... ~C...Ollltf ...... .. ... ..,i.:.,.. ~ Come to the next Fre. 0.lllODStratlons at the Famous Yoga Center of California 445 East 17th Street Costa Mesa (S.twH n Tuttln and Irvine SfrHtt) Phone (714) 646-8281 Fer hrtller l•fe ..... ttoa. £.me .. yo• are. Y ••'II e•J•y Y••nelf. 't'Ol' DON'T HA vt; To TRAVt~1, HAI,~ WA 't' ROUND THE WORl,D TO FfND A MASTJ:R OF MEDITATION A~D HIGHt:R AW AR EN F ... 'IS. THt:RE'S ONF. Ht:Rt: I~ ORANGt: ('Ol'NT't'. The Yoga Center offers you something particularly special. something Incomparable. You'll be taught the Yoga of meditation and higher awareness by a Irving master of yoga. There are very few m~ters in the world today Sn Srt Ramakrishna Ananda Avadhuta 1s internationally known as a master of yoga. metaphysics. and mysticism. He is one of the very few Western-born Gurus 1n the world People en1oy being in his company and studying with him because he 1s practical unpretentious. humorous, and is concerned about P9Qple Hes widely considered to be "a great teacher" wtip transmits Shaktl (enlightening consciousness), as well as marvelous conoept11 and tectrniques. Students find 1t easy to apply "Anandajl's" Life·Aealizat1on teachings In their lives -very effectively. Our Stud~nfs ha,·•· found •.. "Everything works better. I sleep well for the first ttme ever Much more emotional control (fa< me this is a big deal)!" -Kl. Hawau "I can relate to my patients at work. understand them and give them more to help them get well I am more 1n tune with my body in sports. work and at rest .. -Tim Deley, Phrslofhersp1st ·1 come to the Tuesday night class feeling down and leave feeling good. Tuesday always comes 1ust 1n time Every week I learn something new. actually. Jus1 being around Ramakrishna Ananda . makes me happy .. -Dawn Joy Merl<s, waitress "No more bleeding ulcers I can cope with the stress of the business world. There is NOTHING I've wanted or asked for that I have not received•" -Sandra Watt, owner. large business · My hfe NOW makes sense to me The old cobwebs. the dust and the clutter (w1th1n) are rapidly being cleared away thanks to yoga and associations. I've got NEW eyesf" -Streams Peterl<a. contractor "L1v1ng more consciously -instead of unconsc1ous1y1 I feel more alive! More energy and alertness Relaxed' I feel acceptance and empathy with my fellow human beings. Ramakrishna Ananda 1s a truly Great inspiration in my life because he has proven to me that one does not have to be a recluse in order to be enlightened I have always wanted to meet someone like Ramakrishna Ananda and my prayers have been answered.·' -Sharon MacGum. office manager "Almost totally free from any illness Ability to function efficiently and ima9,lnatively tn a high pressure position in the computer Industry .. -Ross Stoutenborough. appllcahOns programmmg engineer "A cessation of tension/migraine headaches I no longer fool physically exhausted from work Happy and calm during my workday and in my relationships Ramakrishna Anandap is the most inspmng teacher I have ever had or hope to have .. -Elaine Schoettlin. legal secrerarx Vl11lt oar A.,.-elal beak Mton- HOW TO Gt:t' STARTF.D? It's eHy Come to our Free Demonstration ~onday night at 7 30 P~ II y<>u en1oy yourself and like what you hear. IT'ake a $15 deposit and enroll In the Tuesday or Wednesday night class. We have some openings In each class Tuition is still under "O per month. and y<>u get two classes e11eh night that you come We as!I that you attend one night a weett for three months to give yourself and yoga a chance to get nlcely acouatnted There are yoga centers Where the cost Is $35 an hour. People really appreciate our tuition and oflefl tell us the benefits ttiey gain are priceless If you re unable to come to the night classes we have a wonderful rrom1n9 class The Free Demonstrat1on 1s 10 AM Tuesday morning, end classes 81e held every Wednesday morning. While Ramakrishna Ananda does not teach the fT'IOrn1ng classes. Sri and Prallashena have years of dedication and ability to share with those who prefer a day class 11 you wish to 11)1n us and are unable to attend our Oemonstratron. simply send in your S15 depas1t to reserve a place In the Tuesday or Wednesday night class -or Wednesday morning rt you prefer Aleo include your phone number so that we can tell vou about the special orientation nrghl l .lt'F..-t:NRl('HING Sl'RJtXTS 'Ol' wn.1, 1.t:ARN AT YOGA ('t:1'1Tt:R ENRICH YOl'R LIFE1 • How to redirect the restless mmd mto a state of clarity and creat1v1ty • The wonderful So·Ham and Chinmoy mantrams • How to d~ your Superconsc1ous Self • Unleashing your inner power and wisdom • Let your Superconsc1ous Self Improve the world around you • Determining your ow n nature and developing your personal way of meditation • How to control the three main qualities of life • Understanding and ut1llztng the law of cause and effect (karma) tor a better hie • Your aura -the wonderlul energy that surrounds you • Attuning with the universal sound • Dynamic w1 II power • How to know where you're coming from and where you re gou'g everyt1me you meditate -the signs along the way • How to transform anger. tear and anxiety into pos1t1ve sta1es of awareness • How creative v1suahzat1on can dynamically benefit every area of your ltfe • The seven levels of consciousness • MUCH MORE FEEL GREAT ••• VITALITY, WELl.,BEING You'll also learn the science of health and vitality-Hatha Yoga - which tones and trims the body; vitalizes the heart. lungs, brain. circulatory system. slows down the aging process. and enables you to discover and maintain a wonderful sense of well-being. You won't have to stand on your head or sit 1n the crosslegged lotus pose either You will go at your own rate with no strain, in a very enjoyable manner The Hatha Yoga classes are taught by Tara, Madhava and their assistants. some of the finest teachers in Califorr11a ~-___________________ __, Discover the wonderful world of special books at our Answer Bookstore. Oler forty fields -0f inqui ry : Health, Self-Help, Positive Thought, Metaphysics, Children's Books, Nutrition, and many more. Heart-warming gifts too. Also, beautiful self-help tapes by Anandaji: "How to Relax," "You Can Choose Your State of Mind," "Meditation Experiences," "A Good Night's Sleep," etc. Open 10-4 Monday through Friday, Saturday 12-5. Next door to Yoga Center. ,. . , COMETOTHENEXTFREE DEMONSTRATION AT THE FAMOUS YOGA CENTER OF CALIFORNIA! .. ' ' ~ 1 Sometimes people ask 1f yoga 1s a re11g1on No. W e have people of all faiths and walks of life pract1c1ng side by side at Yo ga Center We've taught nuns. m1n1sters. pnests. agnostics. All say they have been benefited in their sp1rtual ltfe through our teachings Yoga helps people physically. mentally and sp1ntually and particularly emphasizes the importance of every person realtz1ng his/her own ind1v1dual path Aamaknshna Ananda Internationally respecied Guru and Master of Yoga. Metaphysics and Mysticism MAOHAVA TARA SRI PRAKASHANA I t ! I f • / Any classif I cation. , ..._....,We ' .._..1hrW.' He .. tllorS. . HoeMtFwS-. H1•H'°"Sale OtMrl......... Ot1Mrl9tlldth i:;;;; .......... iooz ........ ;;;,;···ion t::;;;;;;;.···· .. ·;~;~ ;.;,;·w ...... ;;.;t;; ............ io.44 .... ;:.:;·.;;;;;. .... ;;; ;;:.:.::;:.::;· .. ;;;; s;.·j;;.............. .. ..... :~·;;;;;;·;,1r0 .............................................................................................................................................. ~.~.............. c:.......... 1071 •••••••••••••••••••• .,. ·' IAS'rSKMl"la lumte•CrJddec:orat.or GOLDEN TOIM:ff Beautiful Woodbrlae .... ;r~................ MIWPOIT ~bat a meu! IUlnl home, plan l on ireen-SIAWIMDwlPOOL Place, Bi,at'ay Model. JMllttFrMlrtM 9 Offlce bulldln..f.· paint brwbea 1bovel1 beltlmmac.13115.500 COND•UMS Deal1~e': 4Br\ 2~~a, low lntereat loan WITH OCIAMVllW 5'25.000. Huri · Wota t and rakee and 'make sa &t0-8145 Larae priva~ deeb 6 ~:O:thun~: ~Uanta~ t 2 1 9 , 9 o o. A It 1-.dlo S.. .,_ :;5~:1!81 Bl II ruod1 . OD thll bar4aln. Only paUOll. Only 3 left. Xlnt Reduced to 11•.000. Thompson, 551-8700. n n I ....... f.~·000. Woo t lut Call terms. 133 lnterest for 3 2700 S/PICHSIDI tlWDOl't V::J11ach Over 3,000 IQ.rt of ca-•rcW .. •• years. Cu.stom ~ SS. w/pool WOODBRIDGE r -elecance. Excluslvenew Property l'°O ,, @ IOOO MEYER PLACE a. ipa 4 blb to the bch Mu1t sell brand new bomee, from SSU,000 •••••••••••••••••-••• ,. DUPUX OPEN DAILY 12·5 Slln sOo . Pet~rs #2 Plan. tN 4Br, 14~~ flnancin& avail. SHO,,.._ CIMTll 1 Uractive properly, Ml·l9tl;63l-436l,aft. DuTCHHAVIM SBa,dOMtolake. a ~ CharterRJtya.IAveet 21,500 eq ft, Glendote SEA COVE aood Income, near FOua.Pt.IX ShatpSBr,2BanrBeacb OpenSat/Sua12·5 ~--ronl '98-8122 S3l·8lll New,ptlyleued.Sc~ beach and shops . BYOWNER a.Warner.'112.900. UlrHWarmsprin& ,.._... 5-taAM 1010 tncome$l9'7,000ontn~ Of PROPERTIES u20.ooo Shown by Xlnt Finandn&! ASSUMIVA $245,500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~=~1leas:Sso~: mA,t ,. 714-631-6990 appt. $310,000 Like new 4Br, 2Ba 645-9850 dys, 675·9857 BY Owner, OWC, 3 br, (213 >5·53 _9552 O'r Gllla ParadlM 675-0073, (714)345-4123 w/$62 ,000 VA loan at evee. This,5000 Sq. Ft; Home sits on Linda frplc, dbl car. ta2,500 m4>846-3:278 · c ;: Motller's Day M.r tOttt 3 +BONUS MUST SELL lb.la darl inc home in North Costa Mesa. Only 1118,000. Send a meuage to Mom ~·a the Daily Piiot's other'• Day Paae. our maaa1e will ap- ii>ear in a pretty flower ,Pox. For information and to place your O"le&aage call 642-5678 TODAY! -~!lliiiiill!~-1 • RED CARPET 754-1202 HST IUY IH ARIA Charming duplex, by owner. $239,500. Aasume $40 DOD ON $104,000 at 11~%. So. of hwy 2 Bdrm + bach Owner tin finance. 3 •< MESA VBlDE 2_1_3_14_3()._9_156 ____ _.. houses on a lot. E1V1ts1de Costa Mesa . Only 1179,000. Call 645-9161 •• $141.900 Hundreds of flower s everywhere and sun filled rooms make this 3 BR home a must to see Call now for details @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631-6990 FIXER 3br, l~ba home with room for 1nd Im.it. So. of Hwy Asking $260,000. 760·8520 Stephen Meyers, Bkr. FAMrASTIC CdMOWUXES 2 great floor pl4ns. Ex· eel locaU~ Assumable finan. Hurr; on thia! Barbara Glasa, Century 21 S~dplper. ~4950 311, 2'/JIA CONDO Almost New• Frplc, Balcony. Patio.Yard, $130.000 Owner will ftnance PP ONLY C213) 373-5704 I EDUCED SI00,000! Coda Mesa I 02 3br, 2ba, "Ha lee rest" --------..i Home $129,500. 557-3881 •••••••••••••••••••••• I OCliHRtOHT Choice corner duplex 3 'Bdrm. 3 bath up. 2 Bdrm, 2 bath down Can convert to a larger home. SELLER WILL HELP FINANCE at 13% S79S.OOO! lalMMI lay Prop. REALTORS •675-7060• OWHSl DESPBlATE Corona del Mar Duplex Huge ownen unit 4 car garage Submit all or rers now Must sell' @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631-6990 SIHM POOi.HOME Terrific financing available. Large 2 story family home with lovely pool, enclO&ed courtyard and separate master suite downatairs. All lhia for only $145,000. Call 540·1151 for more in· formation. ··.•.~HERITAGE REALTORS owe STRGHT MOTE Assume l s t TD w /2 l20.000 dwn for this darl· ing E side 2 Bd condo w /lrg bnck frplc. Ccny step down laving rm, nice patio. Joyce Waltze 631-12.66 lrittClltV Woock 'l Bdrm 2 Aa, near new, l•--------g r e e n be I l s . h e a t e d MISA YIEltDI ools. tennis courts. Sharp 3 Bdrm oo comer cuui. gas BBQ'• lot . Featuring 2 ,~~per location. Large fireplaces, new roo.11 ,; umable loan availa-copper plumblnl ano le + owner wiU carry a mucb m~ Owner will d Aaldn1 b,950 carry the finandq and lalboal.._.,IJty wUI alao sell VA and '1~ •?OO FHA. Priced at fl36,000. -CallM0-1151 LEASE OPTION Luxurious custom con do. 1700 sq. ft. 2 frplcs, 3 bdrm , 2'h baths S800 mo. $165,000. 642-4623 •$17,900AT So. Comt Pima• Believe it or not. we ha ve a spacious 2 bedroom, 2 bath home with excellent terms 159-1.501or752· 7373 REAL ESTATE VlEWCONDO Newer 2 Br 2 Ba Many upgrades Large as· sum able loan Seller will carry large 2nd TD with 20%down. 0 Bourke Realtor 54&-9950 COLUGEPARIC 41DIM New listing! Love ly street, walk to schools and shopping. Bdrm could be u sed as separate guest or mother-ln ·law area w /private entrance. Call agt. 64&-4380for appt STEAL! STEAL! STEAL! Drive by 3111 La Perle 1 Hli T AS A PIH Lane (off Tustin Ave. • e ·• HERITAGE 9VJ% Sl17,900. Isle. A private guarded Q>mmunity in 2530 S. Park Dr, Santa l.LProf111tDMh AFFORDABLE the heart of Newport Beach. Boat Ana. i.cwrro,.rty zo10 t6J.ll77 slips for (3) 55'-70' Yachts. For Sale or •••••••••••••••••••• • ~iiii:iiii:iiiiii~~~S Almost new, 1 bdrm, 1 d 2 Bd Condo nr So Cat AP';tYAU.IY iii ba upper unit. The Tra e. Plza. Adlts, ~· '87.$00. Near n 'W 4-Plu. 2 Lakes North-wood 556·1510 or/Open hse bdrl'Q 2 th each ""1t STEAL ITI. Greenhouse window in We are developers so submit land or ever Y Sund a Y 1 · 5. with fireplace, enclo•"1 the kitchen. peaceful, other Real Estate to owner Jim 64().6010 patio, double garasf'. $85,500 quiet location. A.ssuma· Thompson. M A c A R T H u 0 $115,000. Bill Gruneb'. ble loan. Community ~" Rltr,675-61'1. 2 Bdrm , l 'h bath , flrepl•ce. Close to beach and staopplog. Hurry! 645-9161 pool and tennis. $103,900. VILLAGE: 1 year new•-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ condo! Two bedroom In . OPl:N HOUSE REALTY / *ASSUME t 1/10/o 4 Bd 1 ~ ba S79,000 VA l.CNJIMO hacil I 041 ~t, $1201,000Bkw/7150'11 ~~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• rinc on y r • ......., TH•SHAKES C714J 121·1210 '21JJ 591-IJ6J 11001 J52-J7 I 0 CUSTOM HOME MEWPOIT exclusive gated com· munity. Lota of recrea" lional facilities includ Ing pool, pav1bon with fireplace, billiards and ping pong. Convenient location clo1e to all! $99 .500. TARBELL. BKR. 54().1720 ----..... 1090 ....................... COW AH HBGHTS m.ui OCEAHvtlW D~ Drastic reduction on brand new Balboa duplex. I.It owners 2oo% depreciation Great ren- tal area. 100 feet from beach Large 3 bdrm. 3 bath plus 2 bdrm. 2 bath Owtler will assist In financins. $&25,000. Ked h 1 l I 0-~ Rc.11:.v 1;·;.'. 7:{1 11) lf"'M I 044 W e a l h ere d c e d a r •• ••••••••••••••••••••• shakes, that is. Custom designed 3 bdrm, !am rm. 2 baths. Extensive use of wood glass & ceramic We. Beam ceil· ing, frplc. $165-.000 Immaculate custom home, 2 private brick pallos. spacious living rm, 3 B.r, 3 Ba. gourmet kitchen and all the goodies. Plush carpets. walking dis- tance to the beach & water. Don't miss this one for $265,000. Two rlUI vift' acres an exc usave Cowan Heights. 4500aq.ft home I~~~~~~~~~ VA TERMS On this spacious 2 Bdrm Greentree home. Needs TLC but has great poten- ha I. Priced to sell at 1119,500. Call for info. -~-HANCH ~ HEALTY w 5~)1 :woo HIGH ASSUMAILE 4Br home w/spa, xlnt cond. 1169,000. 552-694-0. *STARTER HOME Flexible financing on this 2 Bdrm Greentree fixer Owner will help with cost Call for de· taU. ~ RANCH ~ IHALTY W G~>l 2000 Hiulon Realty (714)494-0731. SUPER OPPORTUNITY! Located in the heart of charming Wood's Cove and ooly a abort walk lo the beach is this 1 bedroom house with ad· ditional guest unit. 1295.000. 497 -3331 J QUAIL PLACE PROPERTIES 752-1920 plus 2 primeJotl with ap. proved lot split. Never on market. '900.000. Sub· mlt flnandna. don osen r•·.• I tor-. 17TH AT PROSPECT TUSTIN, 731·3111 CONDO W /VIEW Townbousecoodooa bl~f Other IHI Estah l Bdrm, S20.ood' dwn will Ln Newport Beach with ••••••••••••••••••••••• move you an Assume easy wallt to ocean &t Moblt. HOMes loans $137 ,500 Rae beach. Ownership of 3 For S• I I 00 Rod&en631·12166 Agt. bdrm, 21,Az ba unit mcl. •••••••.;••••••••••••••• lge pool, jacuzzi. saunas Trailer at ~h 114 900 •LIDO ISLE• & lighted tennis courts. Terms OWCortntd~ Lovely 2Br, 3Ba home. $189,000 with 150,000 ' 48&-3816 Beautifully remodeled down. Ask for Susan 2yrs aao. $&84,000 with 640 ·3796 or Bruce PALM SPRINGS AREA xlnt financing Open 760·6060 days, 851-2205 2Br 2ba.4 yrsold Compl House: Sat Sun 1-5 119 eves & wlmds. fu.rn On 9 bole exec golf Ll·ngo Via Vella course in adlt park Owner/Agent 673-0697 •$10,000DOWH• View San Jacinto Ai.!b<An , _________ , Beaut. 3 br. 3 ba, Ir& fam 638-9300 ask.for Virginia rm. Lrg bckyrd. Open DUPLEX -M.I. Near beach, two 3Br Wl· 11.s, 2 car gar, nr par". TSL INVSTMT 642·1603 FIX &SAVE! 3 & 4 units priced to move now ! Sellers want quack escrow .J~· NEISSER ((" l1J tJ.11,'1.1 I t: 714 '641·0763 2787 Bni.tol St Costa Mesa, CA UNITS-C.M. 14 units, E-side, pool. 10~~ financing. 8 units, near new house w 7 rentals TSL Investments 642·1603 BE C IACl<IAY houseSun,2300Heather New Mobile Home, A H IUDF.A WA y 3 Bdrm. 2 bath horne ' T ..£1---Ltargm.. E cept· I 2 Bd Ln .631-0517. oceanvaew·EI Morro·--------Unft'~ x aona rm plus a·deal _ ...... _r·in·law · b b ed li "'"'""' Beach Park, sp 70. 2Br, 0 11 I!!--• _.... wat eam ce1 · ngs, q u a rte rs . c 0 m p 1. I •y---H~ 16 UNITS .._ .,_ r l p -"' rtll_.. • """"" space rent 1175 mo 20 yr • 2 story, 4 bdrm, dining rp c. ravate, near w/bath. D>,000. Glorious 4 Bdrm 4ba is SS9 900 $.3116 ISTUSSl f rm, added den w/wet everything . Only lorMcc..le,IUtr. w /pvt c!ock for your _e_._'"'-·-·-----DIPUCIATIOH a bar, steps to ~ark , Sl71,750. 541-772f yachtrightatyourfront 10X4S.tobemoved.Xlnt l6unll.Bunderconaln¥=· comm. pool & teMas. Al· LCICJIMCI v-.,. LL 1 ~~~~~~~~~~1 door. Excel Peninsula cond. New cpt.s. 96000, tiou. All units renf."1. sum able loan . Owner 497-1761 I~ Point location. $1,l!0,000 673-3826 Dix bldg, low maiii· will assist in financing. ---------•--------• I e e or $1, 295 , 000 -------tenance. OWC 2nd wltio $210,000. Fee. Agt, LagmaH..,.. 1052 llYIHIETEAIACE leasehold . Owner TRIPLE MOBILE HME payments for 18 mOs. 640-5560. ••••••••••••••••••••••• POOl.&VIEW builder Dan Bibb, lge fam rm, w/wet bar. S720,000. A Quail Place No qualifying. Very low A cozy 3 bdrm home 64Q.7MS 2br. ioa. 6 fruit trees, Properties exclusive. * *TREES down, very low pay· with formal dining rm util abed, 111uch more. 752-1920 ments. 3 Br 2~ Ba con· d 1 Hilhl UHl9UIE S36-9491 ExcepUonal2Bdrm2Ba do, O'{er 2000 sq ft. ~:bl~e.wo(~~paannd PE HCTOMDOH 0 USE •-.-------.i J QUAIL townhome fronting on $142,500. Beaut. parklike A lisU •• quiet treellned green· setting. Prln. only. Agt. ocean. great ng at CAHHRYvtLLA~I belt. End unit, lrg patio 494-4572 only S3306;.~7211 with boat dock, pool, Steps to the water 2 Br, PLACE w/bnck BBQ Aassume ---------"""'" security + lSO deg 2ba, sunken tub an low interest loan Hurry, MhNo. Vlefo I 067 ocean. Catalina It bay muter bath. Pool. pets NOflBTllS"' won't last! ••••••••••••••••••••••• view. Fee land. "50,000. are allowed. Price re-10,.. '11 l :JO r..M.I I Describes this 3 Bdrm 2 below 18th St. ) This as- bath condo in Woodside sumable loan 4 Bdrm, (gl Village, overlooking I~~~~~~~~~ l~ ba R2 lot ONLY \\bodbrldge p 0 0 1 and "ark 1137.900. CHARGE' Cen Re II Beautifully upgraded MESA VERDE tury 21 /Gold Coast 41 U carpets and flooring Exec 5 8dnn 3 Ba home Realtors S48-1168 551 ·3000 T A K E 0 V E R w/beaut. pool In pvt set· 1--------'--• 4titBernnu Pk"'"·''"'"~ . • REALTORS AFFORDAILE Smith-Heyer, Bkr. duced to lllZ.500. Owner 3 Bdrm Mission Viejo 640-5357 541-7113 an:uoua --------- single family home with !~~~~~~~~~W aterfront Condo / WATERFRONT 17 UHITS country kitchen and lov-$633,000, $400,000 fin-HOMES 9 ocean view apts. 8 ely mountain view. Only assume. Bkr coopera· REALiSTATE comm'I, undergrouod S29,8SOdowntoexhiaUng llDO'ISl.£ tion673-0Z48 631·1400 parking elevator, fron- EXISTING FINAN tinf. Lrt assumable, IHYESTOlt ' CING AND OWNER low interest loan. Tim IHTIOUILI WILL CONSJDER CAR-Rhone. 63J.l.266. ~. NO DOWN ' RYINO 2ND TD. Askin& Bach. Flat. Total Securi $95.500. For an app0int. I•--------ty Condo $108.000. 'tment to see, call s.0-1151 6 PLDJIASTSIDE 978·0423 .. 't 'ft · · '.. HERITAGE REALTORS Ito. to $325,000 Wlth $152,000 in assuma-$40,000 + SjNote ble loans ranging from $9500 dn . $935 /mo. 9~% to 11 %. $27,450 Sl2S,OOO. E.sldll, 3 Br, 201 1ros1 Income annually. _M_on_t_e_V_ista __ . 63_1·_54_7_6_~ Well kept single stor)' units with 4 1ara1es o,.. W/S-9 .. 5 •miiiiiliililililililimillilliil PLUSoff.ttreetparktna. By Owner 38r1• 2Ba, ,,. PIH ... ..-•• •• On 60'x300' lot. Mesa Verde, soud fin. ,,, --~ $ .. h Balboa .. land, eo&Y a 644-7211 139,500 3213 oa .. ota, r• Bdrm coUa1e on quid 556-7114. a 1lde of leland. with 2 ~~HCIL 111\11.1 y ~ l\S5UCIAI L5 .Bdrm f\MltltDcome uoll over 2 c•r cara1e. •Owner flnancbla avaDa· N ;ble. '75',000. Call tor ap---------- • • polntmeat. Ifs 64~5200 , . ~ Jtt, •I A PETE BARRED REALTY C:.'·• , , ' ,__,...,.I 'I,, II •• IT I ' • loans and no qualifYinc lace on Coast Hwy $124,SOO. -Casual elegance le t.he Walea •wt o.p.a Prime Laguna location. UNOl=I MARIET Towa & c-··~ caption for this beJutilul WHll loat Dodi -~-Colleae~ark Syracuse 1..aEsta1ell~l800 Spanish style home on Could be New,ort's •EXCITING• Whelan Plan features 3 Bdrm + ..,._ rt 0 t preet11ioua Lido Ille. lowest priced waterfront den. 2 Ba, large family ,_.wpo 11.ac:h I 6 Includes 4 bdrme. all home with income l.lllit Real r .... _._ kitchen. Asking lOOO's ••••••••••••••••••••••• with pvt. baths, In· loo! C all for Info. ,,....,..c:Mt ~llC'llC' under market. Call for HEIGHTS CONDO door/outdoor swimmln& Broker, 983-8lS2 1976 Klngswood 3Br, _ d t u. ~ l H pool and s pa. Eitcel ---------2Ba, llJht lot, lr& llv & "-A -c.--... e • · u et Npt gta/Cllf· financing. Offered at POOL HOME d~ rta 21 + to _,,... "!'-J aven condo w /pool " .... 9 000 a • yn rro,.rtr 1550 garage. Great aasum•· "'" • · JUST LISTED. lovely 4 qua Uy. Small pet ••••••••••••••••••••••• e-I U\N<'I! HI 1\I I Y ~i!i 1 ?000 ble financing. No quaU· * Cote Realty BR 3~ ba + den with welcome. New Mobile Home 38r, 7fr_ .. i 122 n1 1 .. Gre1 Aatle & lnves&ment wstbar +fam rm, and ·-'"R tlwallll lllTo~ 2Ba. frplc, redwood .-dellahtful kitchen over-ur•4 oyal Lancer .... xeo. deck cedar lhake 1ld· 640-5777 looking pool aodljacuul. 2Br, 28a w/famUy np, lna. 'or lake It akllng Master & guest or ln Lac HUl.t nicest 5 1tar SU,900. Terms or lrllde mother-lntah. bdrms pk. 21 yre + to qualify, 4t9-•ll R&'M~ HO 9UAUFYIHG! UHIVllSITY PAI.IC Only 129.500 down. Love-H V 1\ I T !1 I<'- ~;~rg~~~~~ ~ REDUC!D TO wet bar provide an SBJ. ele1ant aettlnl for enter-ow n e r w j 11 ca r r y t.ainina. Cozy loft/den. 2 $195.000onthis1pacioU1 Bdnn1, and ovenz 2 car mul\l·level archlteet'1 11r. $138,000. home in Npt Rcte. 2800 Tewa & C-h 1 eq ft deeiped for famUy ... .,.. 55~ 1100 Uvtnc. ta'>,000. Joyce _______ _. Waltae.Gl.ua8. R&'Mt« H ~ 'I 1 •I ii' BLUFFS BARGAIN wlth own 3 car S38.000. Also 20x80 2Br, •---------';.._ tbdrmtwnhme.Walkto car. Act. 6ff·4380; 2Ba w/fam rm +encl. I.e...._,___ 142-4441 porth. "21.tlO. .,..," 27to everythiq: pool, tennia, ---·------CLASSIC ••••••••••••••••••••••• acboola, park, ehopplns. DUPLD • WATB M°""'ttOMI Alt. 875-5830, M>-81~ Dock• lO' loaf SM.IS llnRSIDI AllHOI VllW ~~k:.a:t:'u;,.2 frJ>lcs, 2708H1~.,~7:1Q8.A !:i.t~·v~::'t! ~ C/11 ... ~ CMr ~!!!!-!!!!!~·~~ LocMed bl the Aru:m: ::~ mala 4= ~ 6'.40.1317 • t;;~ 2p':=~fut 1llie boaut rm w /loft • tuU ~. •LOW AAUA.t• aiabdl••Joa . tlllS0,000. Ba adjoin the pra1e. r -"" Perl.cl arranianeat for •MO OUAUFYIMG• tn·la••~lddl, Gift or Venaltr. LUX\U'f S 2Br atudlo. aeffnted io, Wow appr&IHd i-;...;__ _____ _ b u. ... ·~ u partial oea· miliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill '7 •-· ,,,... •JI"& vi•~· frpt~. ~.-. .... 1n1 .• .ooo ... ., PIMV 1umable loan. Owner 000. Crea •• owoer Ml I will cooakler 2nd. Call flnndn1. 7IO·UTO .. Toal B&roo 559-9'00. dys-ta.a:r eva. HA•YllW Canyon McLain •••••••••••••••••••••• , l~ba, lam rm, la• Ulatt.r bdnn w /deck, 2 patio•, fo.rmal dlol.Da . ,• .• Al)' L I ,.., .... ..._ .... Jiii •••••••••••••••••••••• al'U w/-.t baJ', 1plral .,,.__... ______ _ •talr•, frplc, 11r, Newpor& Hit• area. avall 5 /1. hOO/mo . ,;A ~ I IVIN(1 -~·~•••••••••H•••••• • I l 11111 '-''°A'" tra IC 2Br Iba coado. • ....,. ..... 11: ......., ... vi..a... JJ67 Br,1Ba,bltll9,lrplc,oea • O•sl'lw11llt'l1&8110s Patbrto~ta!.:,_,Pi::.•· __.,_ -' ,,...,.. vtew ... 75 mo. m.tsZO • Pool & llte -00111 waJ I , ~-t· ~--.:------• l Br.l~be. '5$0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1---------.--1 dy•.Ml·1'180evs • G1•0tnl1noscao•no ed, new . Aa~. ___ _.:... ___ ___,_ atatlfWlbr,Jba~fam. 2:Rlbab9 = HOllEl'ORRr eel IA.llmii..1119,....... ..w. 3122 • Jo0108tact1&Shopt CloH lO ~Sq Prk. &ea.IMS tflMn ...... ilitii• no,atrlum.pr.w.elee. !a'· .. ~. · .. 'Mlt.,....,8,.. 4 -'drdrm. '800 ..... ~~~ .._ ~-------__. 715-0529,Dl·l d -t-p~ "' r ....... -~" , .. ya • 1uap ......... • i> ••••••••• .. -•••••••• r, ae.-·-• peta weloooMI. 114-25416 ..... ~--· Br, 2 Ba duPld w l•U.O· Mr. So. c..f ,._. ....... JIU xlntloc. Yttyteue.9M>. ort?S-2911.Ait .• nofee. decll. 411 l>oinaeUa. 2 Bdrm lba, car, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ._7_5_1_· T_m_______ s 7 o o / mo. 1 yr I • e . children OK. MIS/mo. '---WltboptiDDtobOJ, bouae .... ,.,..... J26f --~-----615-0124Jaclde. Act ' t.eaatlful •ome ln br, 1 ba • new ••••••••••••••••••••••• ufla C<mdo ,39 1----------•2 ft 3 Bedroom• Upl--"" ..;..&jO .. r:t'. Ii •Pa paint lo.side •out. ocean Npt Crest coodo, 4 Br 2~ Small Bl • r, Bd 2.,... 0 • 4car1ara1e ~ .... ...,. .,.,.._ OK oo 2Br l ... _a• -/mo. ' -._ · view ya rd, pref . Ba, spilt level, dbl 2Ba,avaiW>leoow. '7~i-:...--------1 ...., · _.,.,.....,.ft.Ma • ... ·-Call llOD· rt. ( '114) 1 -.. _,. Ula '40.S. 3724 newer bkla, So. ol Hwy. pets pleaae. Wat er I A.at. &\l-OG4 tll·HU or Sat/Sun. new yw--. -+ u · 1ara1e. Leue •1mo. mo. WOO pr mo. Alli for Tratb Paid. Carport 1---.:.=...----31-9-0 (!14) Al-1111. ~JOOO i.t, tut•dep. 115'1·930! IA YCllST Darrell Puh.831·1JIS6. .._2586ot9'1S.Z9?1. Alt . ~ Bdrm d •-CASADIC>aO f Ennttve wanll leaae cHnvlew 2 br, 1 ba, 't523C.U..VS.Da·IRVM H.._.Ylew Lovely J , en• ALLUTUJTIESPAJD 1_oo_ee_. _______ r::MM: •/elltlaa to bw.J 4 or SBr 1ar .. prt yd. Adutt., no Gracious fatnlly home 2 family rm. Juil re· Bd 2 ba pta d ._..iavtc.otCdllbilb peta .... '15.MM152 ---------1 •tor Y 4 bdrm . decoratedGorteouspool Comn•re before you 2dtw~~cl&.;.,ce.~cbTs ~4.tAriet .,.-XlDt Woodbrtdce Loe ! P'wullhinl avail at DO ft spa· SlSOO. A&l .-d l · · E. Side 2 br, 1.,... ba, frplc, CON DO or pool /shp· eatra. Sl.200/mo tie. No _61_3-_14_1_3______ 'f::t\jr~•~t;::,l, ~B~~ 1----------Points area '430/mo I--------- ........... nN yd, patio, diabwuber, p1/1chool1, l&e 2br, pet.I. 2015 Port Brtatol New 2 1tory condo pen· surrounded with plush mmac. 1 Br. ocean vu, l l-842~~-8032=:_-----·IAl"91111•"'"' ..... ..- ••••••••••••••••••••••• wasber/drye.r book-up, finlabed courtyard / Cr. Call E1alDe 644-5997 tbou.ae. Ocean & mou.n· landscaptna. Adult Uv· blk from bcb. Shared SEASPRAY. 2Br, 2ba. Ydy, Jllr, 2Ba, frplci ~ 1ar. No peit.I. _,/mo. atrium. Avail Junel. or~53S7 lain views. 2 + den 101 at ILi best. Nopeta 1ara1e. laund facil frplc. Rec. " security •••••••••••••••••••••• l:.~ms~~~t ,_a_l_-65_U_._'7_5-l802_____ $62S /mo. (714)896-7478 3 Br Zba tree lined at ln Securlly 1at.e guarded Bach fu.mlshed S310 161S/mo. Ait673-1181 Nr beach. 1645. 891-6386 atorybo&M,38r,2ba. day1,(213)W.5433eves. Westcilff, nice for community. $1000. 3e.SW.Wllson,M2·1971 ostaM... 31241-art;;._ ______ _ EAWIMD .... , I 't 1207 Nr 1cbool1, children Colony 3 BR. z BA. Fam cpl/aml fam. sns. \ncl 615-9132675-tll.3. SUSCASITAS ...................... Lux new 2br. 2~ba ••••••••••••••••,•••••B•• :~1com!.;. .. ~.0• peta. rm. frpl, id loc., comm grdnr.Nopeta,64&2389 UDOISLE Furn. 1 br. apt. $325" Br. 1 Ba. Maple St. twnhme, pool/Jac/ten- VILLAGE New 1"2 bdrm luxurr adull apt.I in 14 plans from $440, 2 bdrm from $505 + pools, teonl1, waterfalla, ponds! Gu for cookin& & heating paid. From Sa.q Die10 Frwy drive North on Beach to McFadden then West on McFadden to Seawrnd Village. (714 )893-5198. Stepe to Bell, CUl.e 1 r _, mo _.......... l •-..,_ A "'/2 E I oar .. dulta no Adult. refrig, no ...,ta -•-, ••c oa•· on la&oon =~ex, utll pd, yrly 210 · poo ' uon. ....... v ~ · Ill'!.. C .... .,.,_. 3 bdrm• + coovertible up. nc · • · n • ..-'"" ~ • ...., '1954 ft harp 3Br, $6SO incl 7S9.St38 w l""W' V'F'O den 00 wide llOt w. lie peta. 2110 Newport Bl. Quiet. S37S. Sierra 962-1398eves St. 9530. l'IJ. a ed ----· -----Exclu.alve, full security, patio. Sl.200/mo. Lawson 548-4968 btwo8&SPM Memt. Co. 641-1.324 lpm.avallllay5th. wtr/1as, lock aates. TURTUROCIC beautiful 3 Br'. 3 Ba. R It 6'15-45Q -=---------2Br, lBa. new cpta, drps C..... .. W. J2JJ 1--A.:.1t_._645-_24ll-'------4Br, 2~Ba. new carpet, Private yard, wet bar & 1--e_a _y_. ___ .___ •llltcJt•leacll 1740 Spacious3BrDuplex & paint, encl patio, ••••••••••••••••••••••• PoW 1226 paint, avail. May 22nd fireplace, many other Newport Tenace, 2 BR 2 •••••••••••••••••••••• $42.5. Pool & laundry fac. separate garaae. $415 4 Br + makl'i QUAJ'Un . 9815/mo. May Lie. Ownr amenities includini Ba, end unit. Pool, park 5/up 1·2 bdrm, pool, 548-9556 mo. Avail now. 898-1190 Bea\lt. decor, nper •Clo.e to marina 3bdrm, Agt 752-0187; ~1-4400 Maida room. S14.50 mo. setting. 165(). IBt & sec. Jae. adlt, 18992 f1orida, aft 6 JOPM • -1 s l 1' .... b f le yard Call Anthony wkdys 646-•t39·,64z.1Z72 H.B.842-m4or842·3172 view, top .. PYI aaa. 711 a' rp ' ' Smoketreee 2 Br 2 Ba 642·575°7 eves & wknds. me81iBJllJ, Wale dront condo lo $2000 /mo . Koop . MOO/mo. Townhouse. d ------p--1-._ HI• R.._.EST Hunt. Ha ..... ·-w/ocean 6Sl·l21M. Ait. 49S-448e.• con o, 2 car garage, nr 644-8889. 3 Br. 2 Ba . oo ... • • s " '"""" tennis/pool/school Avl J acuui. Prestigious Spanish F.atat.e Living! APAITMEMTS vu + aa1hog, tennis, OCMllt 4000 a 8d 2 Ba, F.P., aara1e. CLASSY CONDO s 12. $625/mo. < 213 l On Golf Cne 3 bdrm 3 ba Harbor View. S1100/Mo. eeauuruJ park-like aur· Beautiful landscaped pool, Jae Ideal beach •••••••••••••••••••••• patio, avail. oow. i.t" ForLeue.DanaPolnt3 474·7892or (213)474-0820 + den & bar $11 00 Call768-066t. roundin1s. Terraced ~arden apta. Patios or llvmginuru\uelBr,den aauoaBeacbMolorlno, wt, 1195· M2·S290 !':~~~~i~;w, ~1s LGCJIH hoch 3241 64S-760Sor646-l 713 4 Br. 3 Ba. Larae Home ~rk~~ero~:a~~· c ~cvk!.r :ga·P~::\ ::· :1~%~~4 vestwknds :!y~0i.a~!~!ice;:::t Jumlne Creek, 3 BR, 2.,.. Tbompeoo M1JDt: Corp. ••••••••••••••••••••••• BLUFFS Pla.u condo 3 Westcliff. SIOOO/Mo. Call S p a c 1 o us r o o m s Adult.a, no pets. Daily. Weekly, Kitchen ba, e:ucuhve home. U3-0l4l Oceanfront rentals 1600 br, 2~ ba. No pets l800 I 768-0654. Separate dining area 2 BR. 1 Ba $470 Br 11.'J Ba, aas pd, $350 available. Low winter Sl.500 mo .__ ________ , mo. & up. AdJts only mo 76G-l.573 1---------w a I It . i n c Io 1 et s , 2 BR, 1 v. Ba $470 + $3S-O deposit Cl"J>U, rates 4tu-5294 · leeclt J240 499-3818 Super Luxury 1 story home lake kitchen & 398 W. Wilson, 631·5583 drapes, bll·ina Mc Fad· /? (J/ --D •••••••••••••••••••••• VILLA BALBOA 2 bdrm houae on Santiago Dr 4 cabinels Walk t.o Hunt den n r 8 each B I Room with k 1 t ch en . .-,,.~J"'Mt/.-~~ mmac3Br,2Ba,cul-de-EME11 ..... 1 "IAY Br.3Ba.withseparate in ... onCent.er EASTSIDE,clun2BR, ADULTS, no pets pn·v1•a-Adults onJy. •• ( L•• L]gl ..._ llw'I ba, ocean view, avail •• 1 ,.~25 .. .,_ ..ul STUE ....... aac, frplc , patio, '690 3 bdrm, 2 ba, ocean 00 abort term t850/mo. II)a&ler bdrm suite in 1 B~room-rum. $440 enc aar .._ mo + 893-4894 or646-9243 962-752<>. no Newport Ctr Dr.. mo. IW7-452S aA 3PM. view, gardener incl LJDO ISLE 2 bdrm 2 ba m o s l e I e I a n t 2 Bedroom-tum, 1510 security. 25116th Place. 1---------1--------- NB. $1250mo.lyrlse Don, LUXURY CO NDO oei&bborhood, Family, Adults,nopell. Apt. 8, no pets Call lBr,tn·levelTown.home BacltBay area 2seprms bdrm, 2~ba. frplc, wet-C O'I d w e 11 ·Banker . Living & Dining room Ut1UUes Free' 9'1i-3848 Frplc, blt·ins, pool. spa, for renl \n lge house. M 2 Br, 2 Ba, a1J newly de· bar, l bk>ck beach. No 499-1320. t850 /mo. Wallpaper & carpets 2 BR two.bowie. Llvtng tennUI, gar, nr bch No or F. SZ2S mo ea rm + oorated,lmmac.,Prlme pet.a.fJZS /mo.964-2283. -------.--· LID01SLE2bdrm,l'\'4 lbru-out. $195'h..tmo . LAQUlNTAHERMOSA pets 1475 84~8758 ; v.util642-1986 I I bl .. f ba home $2000/mo. 714 17"'9 • ...,,,4. \ lS2UParuideLn.lblk rm . Dining area . 848-9916 \ ocat on. 1 "' rom •211 r#1•"4 $450 WOODS OVE yrly. J ""' w. of Beach, Jbllt.sS. of kitchen, fplc, gas & 1----------ady & aon to shr home ocean. WiSO/mo. 7~1996 Pool, Park, nrBeach. 2br, secluded are cot· Harbor Ridge, 2 br. 2 ba Edinger. water. attached garage, Avail now 2 Br. or 3 Br w/olher lady $250/mo. Cos .. w... 1224 1 ____ 963-__ 5_19_1 ___ tage, frplc. open beam Waterfront Homes, lnc. condo, hot tub, $1900 mo. 847·5441 pool, jacuzzi, laundry Apt. Frplc, dshwshr , incl ulil; kit & laundry ••••••••••••••••••••••• d ceiling, cedar bathroom. Realton 631-1400 S48·7896eves. 1---.-__ L --17-4-1-1 fac. oa property. Adults, gar. 1 or 2 chlldren OK, prlv. Own Br & Ba. CM No lae req. Bran new lovely patio, 9625 /mo. LCMJmNI-DO peta. Avail. immed no pets. Water/trash area. 642·1828 aft 6 , ~o. lBr 2\.-\ ba, enhcl CONDO cl.&e to bcb, rec Call Trish or Bonnie LIDO Ir• E ••••••••••••••••••••••• -+ $275 security paid . $47 S & SS50 893-7"'94 Mrs Orr. p1\&0, frplc, bib\ kite ' t•nnl• ..... oate ~ w f l l -J dbl far w /opnr. $750. aarvea•11' no"'w' ...... onl.y";;~/ .. mo. daya 833-8847 or eve1 •LIMDAISLI• 3 br, 2 ba, tge patio, on aler ron ' priva e -~ 964·2566or9'13-2971 Agt. R S -....,,.,0 -497-2278 ~ .__. t .d ..... 'I w beach, MCUrity, pool. 2 i---------no fee. on ay .. ,.,.. .... , (21S)l33·1369 days .I~~~~~~~~~ r"'"'R&n• xra·WI e-.avaa .no Br. fully furn. Luxury bdrm l ba, C/p, dis· 1---------RelftllMer MetMl''s Day 3bdrm, 2ba, frplc, range, gar, yrd, avall 5/1. 11\ + sec. 9175. 642-<1135. 1: s + Mald'1 +Den+ sea thru summer. Act fast-(Zl3)831·573'eves . t 1 t , 0 n 1 y Mobile Home 642·1802 b ... hr, nu cpta/drapea, do. lbdrm. Iba, palio, ~--------•-H• 3250 +Lot.a More! 2sty, 4.500 won as · loc _,_... '""'· ft. doc .. -for ("') ""' $1100 /mo. Virginia ._o_r_9_7_s._0545 _______ ~a;:.•;:..;r•:..:&:....e..:..'..:..S460_._82_1_·_1.890_._ bll·ins, t.emus, pool, spa, Clean 4br, 2ba, areal . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... ,.. " ""' .-sauna, iec &ate. nr Nr the beach. $895. Attractive 3 Br. 2 Ba in boa ta, private auard O'Brien, •at. 673-1.323. BEAUT 2 br, oceanvlew. 1 Bdrm w/loft, 2 Ba, beach S450/mo. Dee ...., '°"' Malloy ft1tn, llll(H342. Laguna Villaae. No pets. 1ated commty. the moet BLUFFS lBr ma tam hl·fashion decor, huae. ref rig, stove. pool M20. 962.29u or ~74 Nr nu twnhae 3 BR 3 Ba 1595 mo. 497-4072. preat11lou1 11land to rm pv't IP~ si OSO 1or1eou.a lr, Sl,000 aio. za Avocado.1121·1.8t0. 1---------Pvt yard. 2carelec 1ar. 3br,2~ba,frplc.famrm,1_;,--------Newport Beach. Call · · ' Avl S·lto7·15.499-2227 THIW .. ,.....TRH Send a meua1e to Mom via the Daily Pilot's Mother'• Day Paae: 9615/mo. i.t., la.a\, Sec 1 mi to bcb, no pets ~ Micp9I 3252 Darlene (n4)82frl2.80 or 1_644 __ ·Z300_______ t 2Br. lBa. 14.25/mo. Luxury Adult units at af 7 ..... 1...,,, a .. 7 .... ,.....,. -oo/mo """'2·837"' aft ••••••••••••••••••••••• (21J),....L363 Our offic• ........ ___.. 176 CaU-.... dv. . · --.. •• _...,.. •• ..., J _. • " aae or Leaae/Optioo. • •• .':";'.~=•••••••• ..... ~~ fordable living. 1,2 & 3 Your messaae will ap- pear in a pretty flower box For information and to place your meuage call 642·5678 TODAY' Placinl • Cluslfied ad is SPiil New 2br, 2ba CONDO, opeoa 9-5 Monday thru Harbor Ridge Condo. 75&-4173 Br Well decorated as easy as d1ahng your 4bdrm. 2ba,nice liocation, ~~~~ ~;!,w·S::~~ l~F!'!rl!'!d~•~Y~· ~~~~~~ 3bdrm, ~· den7~f!?.!· .;!~[/ 2~rc3e:r~~~~t 1---H-EW--L-Y_DIC __ OR. ___ edOl~'!'t~~-s~. }~~~~~~. phone. Give us a call frplc , di1hwa1ber. days,64.5-9:119eves i: spa,teruua,MC . ...--furn . lncld hnena 1 Br. gu pd, encl gar pa;k like la.odlcaping We 'll do the r es t $700 /mo . Ul ·1947; 1--"---------$ell with EASE! 2 Bdrm Condon 640-471M d/washer, pool Adults utilul bid ------- 642-5678 .._4080. Sell idle items 642·5678 ClassifiedAda642·5678 ew · ' pc. ~---·------M2-S07J. Moel bea · g an Private room and bath in pool. jac. Nr. Hoa& Fantaatlcally furnished 1----------H.B lovely mobile home in Hosp. t850 Mo. 833-l36l town.home, with ocean Bdrm coodo. Lakeshore From $3115. 846•0619 Huntington Beach, nr Dave, days, 557-7630 T --•-rt l 1 c I E ...iA _ ... ewport Shores 3Br, 2Ba, tennis ~ pool. Nr Bch. $750. 968-9110 Family home. 2 Br 2ba, fTplc, pool, te.nnis,.pvt comm. 2 bllts to ocean. 76G-7199 MOllLIHOME Super dbl wide, 2Br. 2Ba, own yd, close to bch . $500 mo·mo . 642-6991or6'1S.. 71CM eves. W ATERFllOHT w /boat alip included 3 Bdr 2 Ba, dbl gar. rm for power boat up to about 35'. $1.1SO/mo. JACOIS REAL TY 675-6670 3210 aut. 3 br, 2 ba, frplc, all new decor. Drive by. 2317 S. Lowell. '900/mo. IBt, last + Sl..50. M-t-5069 view e .... ,.. cou , poo · adlt comp ex omp . l500 Large 2 Br 1~. Ba ocean. m"""yor:u person 1925/mo. 78().9117 rec. facil ~r So. Cst Beautiful area, 4 blocks only S230 per mo Mu.st NO LEASE REQUIRED YEAA·AOUl'ID FUl'I: Social Act1v11ies 01 reel'"• Free Sunday Brunch • 980 s •Par lies • Ptus much more GREAT RECREATION. Tenn1& • Frte Lesson~ (pro & pro snopl • 2 Healtn Clubs • Sauna• Hydromassage •Swim ming• 011v1ng Range IEAUTIFUL APART· MENTS Singles I & 2 Bedrooms • Fur n1shed & Unlurrusneo •/\dull L1v1ng •No Pets • Mooeis Open daily 910 6 Oakwood Garden Ap1rtment1 N•wport Beach/So. 1700 16th SI IDO•e• .i 16tnl (714) M2·5113 Newport Beach/No. 880 Irvine 111 l61n1 (714) MS-1104 Ph.a . $495/mo. SS&-8232 to watu. No pe ts. have work and prev or 540-0770 833-3307 rental refs. 960-5844 aft Br, 1 'h Ba Townhouse ".... 3144 6 pm· ·+--..------ Pvt patio. aar. adults no ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rm for rent on bcb, $175 pets.$465.548-7S10 rangelree Plan 4, mo . 754-1561 dys , lbd.rm + loft. Adults, no 673-2165 eves. Ella br. 2 ba. crpts, drapes. ta Poola tennis $47S patio. carport. no pets. f;o.i.zso, 542.7609. · · Hotels, Mohh 4 IOO $685. 645-9966 ·---------••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------... 111111111-hodt 3141 Balboa Inn oceanfront. Spacious 2 Br $365. Pool & •••••• •••••••••••••••• Low winter rates. Daily laundry fac. 1 Bdrm North End Walk or weekly KitcbeneUe. 548-~ to beach. lnclds utils No I l80 & up 17~40 pets 1425 ... 1.5218 2 HUG E Bedrooms an 1-=--------Yearly, Hotel Apt. Room. super location. Fully harming studio w full kitchenette It bath. Utils c arpeted, buill·ins. kitchen. avail. May 1. paid. $28()mo. + securi- around f\oor. Adults. no ms 494-0323evee ly deposit 2306 w pets S350mo. 646-4477 Oceanfront, Newport Newport Heights 2br, wport IMdt ll6t ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beacb.673-41.S4. ~u:~clsd gar . $42S PAil NEWPORT Newer 2 Br patio & COUMTIYCLUI 1ara1e. Adults, no pets UVIMG $435/mo. 64.S-SS77 Singles, 1"2 bedroom -=---------1 apt.a ," townhouses. 2br, l~ bastud.lo, adults, From 1510 644-1900 no pets $47S. ~·3627 art. 5pm. Oceanfront for Winter __ ;;.._______ Rentals. Furnished & 2 Br , 1 v. B a . fr pl c unfum. Broker. 615-4912. Townhouse unit . $500/mo. S48·1927 ; NO FEE! Apt. & Condo SEALAll MOTB. •Weekly rentals no• av all. •Mand. up. •Color TV. •Phones lo rooms. 2274 Newport Blvd. C.M. 6415l~ e LIVE IN NEWPOlT BEACH FOR S100 PtR WEEK. 645-0MO 642·1355 rentals. VUla Rent.ala. 675-4912 Broker 1---------Sci••r ..... 42'0 ~ i t s-. , SPD:W. ..... " ..-- (1.17 Per Iii '1bat'•~:~r IO.:a~ed DAl.Y Pl.OJ ..._ ______ ...,,.. __ 1·-----"----NWMI aide. bometlMp. REPAIRS m1. reuablt, aper. Call an)'tlme. 8'15-JOH &e'fta lllClltSTOHI Tile, Marble• Frplu 113 tl50 (Zll)llM-0140 ••PAIN'11NG-Oon'l .. _-4"-Uc 211 .. 111 ?r..~!::......... ' CaUUnleNYou.Care! •••••••••••••••••••••••CONSERVE: .WAtli1R 531-SlllOl (24 hrs) Prof. 1erv\ce lo aave you A u t o m • t • Y o J t Carpentry. Maaoory General lloulecleaniD& QUALITY MASONRY Uc'd quar. C:O..t Home Improvement FiAancina avallable&OlMO Cl-5> ---------1 tJme Is mcoey. Newport Sprinkler Sy1lelll · NEW PORT PAINTlNG Pacific R. E. ~93 _1_1,_1_-._w_1 ____ _ Roortni • Plwnblnc ReliabJ.Rtteren~ smmc:a DlllCTOIT OOITNOW! •• ,..'-*- Your Dally PUot S«rvtce DtACtoty Reprelimtative Drywall -Stucco. Tile Own trau. M2-05.J.O &tmore.J.B.MS-9"0 Wlndowa. Ovens, Wall Comm. /inch•./reald. Free eat. Low rates. IHI htah Slrtlcet Tiit 673--0717 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• , .. uslQID Muonry Is Coo· crele lOO'a Local Ref'.J. 1..;...--------1 Llc/Jna/Bood &C5·8Sl2 Houaec leanlna done Jlm. M0-11~ Rod . Newport Real Estate TILE INSTALLATIOt f'.ir9t Claaa mt/ext paint· aaent wlll conaider trad· Floors. Kltcheo, B•t ing, waUpapu, reflniab lot aervicet. What bave Reliable ~ra !t•m• cab\oeta,etc.979-5294 you aut lo trade? Bruce Ro1er1 Tale Phont 642-5671. ... 3' ' We Cue Carpet ci.anere Drywall Specl.lliat Stea.._ clean • uphola. Qual. 6 prod. New Ii re- W o rlr 1uar. Tru dt 1_m_od_. _,_...,. __ • _532_·~---1 t-----------1 .... Blomaren, RE/MAX 831~ RALPH'SPAINTING Realtors, 759-1221, Cuatom tile inslalla•t....1, Lsc. Int/Ext. LolW rates. 760-0297 '"""' ~~!!!!!!~~!!!!!~~~~m~o~un~t~unl~t.~~~~~1~8'...._~a.ctrkal Free eat. 964·5566 flrs, kit, baths" related Fine paintlni by RJchard RoofllHJ remodelin1. free etL • t._ NoSteam/NoSbampoo ••••••••••••••••••••••• •CCI&_,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Stain 1peciall1t, fast ELECTRICIAN-priced SI Ll · 13 ( •••••• ••••••••••••••••• Roa er Irving 97Ml60 nor. c, ans. yl"I o QUALITY ROOFING r-. ""--1--LEIGH ROBERTS dry. Free est. S»-1.5112 riabt, rree estimate on 1 _ _..;;.. _______ ............. happy N 8 customers • ....,.. ~-All ty.,.., free est S I J,_ .... A ••-larae or small Jobs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pee a"""" CCOWJuul UPHOL"DRAPES Lie. #3M621 673-0M9 8ervlce 5'&-1484 Cleanlndin Y""''•hom'". ,_ ,.,. Weetrtr. monthly or? Will ovine? The Starving _!hank you. 631°""10 V1aa, MC.w !>41·5930 ••••••••••••••••••••••• G NOW IS TifE TIME to • """ "' ftO cons ad er pets. Reh Collete Studenta Movina Ai+• TIP· TOP CARPET &i e Vicki""""_,. 7u • ...,. Co. has '""'wn. Jn.sured College Student, exp'd, liARBOR ROOFlN prune your trees. Cati ml/ex, any JOb for less! Leak Repaina/comm "The Expert.a" 201ra Alex 851-9371, 552 0231 lat qual. mat'l •labor local. Geor1eMB-~ r-Floorca-.... ,.,....,,~ •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• --~. -~ ... v ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~· .....,........, FormicaCountertopt Haulin& &Dump Jobs. same eood service Driveways, parking lot elU..-,Acomfk CuatombulJt&dnatalled, AakforRandy. Reputable College atu-tT12'4·436 License repairs, 1ealcoatin1. ••••":':'?•••••••••••••••• lateat coiora It designs. ,&4HM27 dents will trade occ pro-641·842'7 WalJ paint your home, Beat any bad 631·9193 WekHIHJ • ext. & /or mt. Free est. ••. •• •• • ••••• •• •••• •• •• SltS Asphalt. 646-4871 A ti C ilin Free eat 64&-4871 . tection for nn &i board. 1------Llc'd. cous c e gs+ --Tree/shrub trim, aarage Sum mer only Ref BC MOVING. Exper Ramon, 646-0333 aft. 6. ROOAMG I d /Co 1R .... ld ----All types , repairs. n ua. mm ..-. custom hand texturing G .... Mg & yard clean·UJl8 F'ree avail. 833-1414 pror. low rates, quick lal»ysltttllg Lie.~ 532-5549 ••••••••••••••••••••••• eat. 557-8271 carerul service 552·0410 DAVE'S PAJNTING decks Free est.tmatea Alias Mobile Mt'lal s e r v i n g sat is f I e d Call Bob 548-0769 S4S-9507 customers 9 yrs Qual.· Wlnclow ClemMJ rntegrily Reas. ms, lie. BALBOA ROOFING CO •••••••••••••••••••••h ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLEAN UPS/LAWN ---------mtdscapiRig Mat ur pe · 11 ....t/c.aete i . ds HAULING-student bas ••••••••••••••••••••••• "MOVIN-MAN" b e raon WI ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ma ntenance-Ln cp . rut ·-ba yait anytime Mon· F d . . Free eat 642-9907 large truck . Lowest WE OOJT ALL! U5 care . courteous "' Fri. ln my home, ref's. oun ationsi Relaanang · rate, prompt. 759·1976 We do it best! We do at cheap Plscall642·1l29 760-7301 Take advantage of SlOO "Let TbeSWlShine 1,, .. P "'PER H "'~1 ... G gas or rood give-away Call Sunshine Windo~ reaa 548-21674 Wall.a, HUlsde Reatora· G41tDMHG Thankyou,John. cheapest ! Russell · lion. Slabs, ~~tios, WANTIO '--'-Landscaplng.6'4-7082 A AnV' " Realtors welcome. -"• 25 yrs exp. Free est 673-6743 673-0403 Cleaning, Ud. 543.._, ahdln«J/Papew ltiCJ •••••••••••••••••••••• Fast, neat, reliable ---- $8/roll & up M.S-6490 SClftdblasffncJ USE THE C--.t Maid.) Block & Brick. Lie d Mowing, edging, raking, CMIWC___, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6'2·8387 eves/960-0539 s w e e ping F re e •••••••••••••••••••••• LANDSCAPING CABINET-CARPENTRY THOMPSON'S estimates 646 0944 or ant a REAU..Y CLEAN Rototilling, clean-ups & QUALITY PAJNTERS _W_A_L_L_P_A_P_E_R-ING-'i:o~=-:~-;~·~~~~·~~· DAIL v r1LoT Craftsman-type Work Lie, ins, reas. No job too 0 fAST SmallJobs&Repairs CONCRETECONSTR. &U-5737 HOUSE? Call Gtneham ideas. Lie 848-6541 Free eat. 645-2003 Girl. Free est. 645-5123 BARGAJN RATES Free eat 848-5684 Lie. 393383 642-8482 omm'l/Res1d f'ertllit Wide... ~:~~~:~~Janllng, ~r~!~~s~U::u1~?y BRICKWORK: Small osowy • ••••••••••••••••••••• c.,. ....... •STEVENS PAJNTING lnt/ext Free itemized est Neat, quality work 673-<1759 _ bigtamall.840-7909 RESULT .. ~:~~~!~~ ......... ~.':"!!!.~!!~....... SERVICE ••••••••••••••••••••••• DOORS & WIN DOWS Repaired or Replaced Free eat. 635-3720 Neat patches & textures Burglar• Fire•Scanners• DIRECTORY Free est. 89).1439 Safes • Physical Bar For Result •••••••••••••••••••••• -clean house. M0-0857 Jobs. Newport, Costa $31.90/WK Gardenln.1, la.ndacaping, Mesa, Irvine, Reh Hot lunch. C.M. Chris· tree trimmina &: re ExpertiseHousekeeping _6_75-_31_7_5 ______ lnter/Exter/Rehmshing 832-~. 546-4561 All Types JUmodeling &i Repalra, top quality, 17 yrs In area. Lic'd. Mr. Palombo; 962-8314 tian Presc...__I 646_5423 moval. maJor clean-up, Suppbes fumuhed .1 U -____ ,_...., ____ 1..:.:rr..::ff~es:,:l:.:. . .:.:752::_:-1349 Personalized. 641·4970 mall jobs wanted Brick cea ings/wa paper. Lie ----ners C M N B S&S Service Call ED'S PLASTERING 646-4871 I .. Cain & Sons 896-5105 oetractor H--'----and B oca. Low hourly _, • .._.. NEEDYOURHOME rale.499-12216af\.6pm. p TC'C'.'c All Types Int/Ext 642·56 78 645·8258 FREE EST S.whH)/AltetatioM Id. JU •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLEANED? 1---------A ~IAN Construction· All types HOME IMPROVl!':MENT Evelyn, 642-0728 aft.~ I All Types Muonry CUSTOM PAJNTING -----....................... .._ _______ .. Plaster Patching, inl ext. Alterations & Dressmak Have something to sell" Classified ads do 1t well. 20 yrs exp Frff est Remodeling-Odd jobs Very reas Lie, bonded Int /ext Material labor Lie. 1334589. 645-5973 28 yrs exper. 979-2265 Want Ads _:___C~l 642·5678 Bob 548·2?53, 536-9906 guar. FrHeal. 953-9810 JO yrs exp Neal work. 1 n g , ex p · d .• re as Sell things fast Wllh DaUy S45-2977 l Paull Mo-3593,646-3393 Pilot Wan_t_A_ds ___ _ ~~:'!:.~.~ .. !?.~! ... ~:_~~~ ..... !~!>_! ~!!.'!!:!~ .... !~.~~ --=-~ ... / ~~ Tnat 5035 ~:!.~.~ ...... !?!>_~ ~~:>:'.~'~ ......... !?.~~ ~~:>:'.~~ ......... ??.~~ ~~!.~~ ..... ?!.~~ M/F to shr 2 bdrm apt 1617 Westclirt. N.B. Want For store&: office apace ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost "Duke", all white COVER GIRL AEROllC across from Fashion financial inst. 7000s.f. al reasonable rates. ......... S20.000 2nd TD, 203 int. young male Samoyed SHE Island $330 /mo incl 1st. floor. AgentS41·5032. 500 to 2700 Sa Ft. Oppott.fty 5005 All due 18/mo. Secured Reward. Call Howard 953-~7~UTC~~ISA E S C 0 R T S & Ex~~~~~~w'pon utals Cal1Paul,64G-8937. ICOLLC&fTBl MESAPY~~~EbR ••••••••••••••••••••••• 20 unitll 673 -6720, 543·4~ _ ___ MODELING area 759-l'58 M ' b b ~ For Sale. Fashionable 544-0333. (Pnvate lender FOUND Saint Bernard 13r9199 ale/ em 5 r, 2 a h.se HEWPORT 1525 Mesa Verde E, C.M. boutique. Prime area, preferred ) * FOXY LADY* -nr S Cst Plaza/Frwy Elegant executive suites 54MIZJ Nwpt Sch area Send in· -molher & her puppy, OUTCALLONLY Spa, 1225 +share ulil in prestige location. quiriestobox•~. P.0 S30.000 2nd TD oo Nwpt idenlifySJS.8063 VISA Mc I Mature female compa 641 -4913 Wsth complete support Co...rdd Bo.x 1560; Costa Mesa home. 153 Interest only Found 2 poodles 1 blk & 1 * 972· 1 I JI * nion to ,52 hke fishing. services. R...tots 4475 92627. Due 24mooths 645-3101 trailering. extended Male 33 wanu fem rm mte full priv $275/mo anc I util. 770 7928 or 546· 1200 ext 34 714/851-0681 ••••••••••••••••••••••• --wht, Westport Cent trips in Mexico Write -----OHice/Store /Business parking CM, 6311454 or SPli:i~AL Ad #894. Daily Pilot. Box •DELUXEOfflCES• space, t4"2X40 Choice S-~lhwt "h:::=;"h / eve6752918 READINGS 1560.CostaMesa926Z7 ~:~~s'e r~w='~~i ~~;~:r::ska~r i:cn:~~'. 7 MfQ. <;o. t Lost & ,.-., p.,.._ab 5350 4192oa_m7J!>pomr .~~ .. ~11Bc'd15· Generous, Good Looking 2? yr old fem wants to shr •• years U\ 6usaness. ne -••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ..., ...,""""" Man to meet broad DuPont Dr. Adj .-.2S,age.nt.MIH366 ting approx . 2i% pr 5100 S Camano Real, San new sharply decorated Alrporter Hotel year Priced at only ~ flRSTLADY Clem m1ndedwoman25·40for Condo In Woodbridge 83J.3223. 9-12 hops, stores, hobby, 312 $44,950. Seller saya sub· ••••••••••••••••••••••• de mutual fun Valen line w1fem 2S+2br, lViba.i----------..,..,-aqfl .. 12'luwtlaedr." mitallotfen.l:>2·l920 L1moaerv.Allocc&iwed-Escort.Mo Is 631·0450N.B frplc, wash 'dryer dM Deluxe Swtes, AC. 210 sq.ft. w/smlt. CM dings, 2hr m1n1mum Por+yDCIKen. THE ------ Amen incl pool, tennis, ampl pkg, util pd 28S5 S48-72(9 J qU _..IL Fe m Ch a u rr e u r * 972_ 1345 * WANTED Jakes & parks Non-smkr E Cst Hwy 675"6900 _ ~ (714)999 0420 G "rHri d Adventurous woman ,000 sq ft. of space avail . MC & VtSA Accepted I en S Capt n~ lsl male please S325 mo + • ., Prime Newport Center on Harbor Blvd. near p• ... CE scnau I "S •ESCORTS• orrshorecrwsuigvessel ulll AskforJan 7S9-SS05 Ofhce spare wlspec· Warner This space ad I.A ~I Hotn•/---/M-6.1 Beeasygomg &over20 or559·0457 tacularocnv1ewforsub-Joans a well established ,lorERTIES'~ ANSWERS SWEETHE~RTS ~, • ._.... W t J R 'I"""" ..,,_ * 7 5 9-121 6 * n e amey e1 '""" F to shr 3 br dplx, close to lease 1078sq ft. 760-9204 rf'tail store It ill ex 10,... Tll l :lO P.M.I w Balboa Blvd #2.43 beach, xlnt renl Call cellent space for addi Domain· Probe •ESCORTS• * 529-1883 * Newport Beach, C A ewport Beach location, t-I ta I I ht 24 HOURS 675-9123aft.6 MacArthur at Jam· aona re 1 · ag as· Hasty Phlegm -24Hrs NowH1nng 92663 sembly, specialty shop, SOMEBODY Visa /MC 5~1927 MC VISA M 28 wants fem to shr 2 b r , 2 ba a pt, C M $260/mo &42-7611 eves. boree.1256sqft,S125ft or lnven\ory storage, EMPLOYMENT Agy, lhadtheOulastweek.I 1:~~~~~~~~~1&n..to~& per mo Utils & mam· Could be excellent dis estab'd 12 yrs. Beach was so full of perucilhn, ca 11 STACEY w 1th ,,..~ ...._ tenancemcl 851-1711 t ·b t l c JI e F 1· cl d d ,..---___ rs u ion cen e r. a ar a . urn. n u e that whenever I sn~ed. Dayhme Escort Service EXOTIC ESCOITS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nonsmoker to shr 3 br Suite orr Pacific Coast 546·3700or847·2223, eLov~ltovwekndsrhea.d. ~ IcuredSOMEBODY Aftemoonl>e\Jght •551-1946• JobsWGllhd. 7075 H Ch H ~D 529-4631 ••••••••••••••••••••••• house In Woodbridge, wy, nr art ouse ..... trlalllMltal 4500 Lost & Fomtd 5100 --------ServlngallofO.C. Exp'd cleaning lady look· l280 857-2807 aft 6pm NB 340 sq.ft $400 per •••••••••••••••••••••• Motley to Lo. 5025 ••••••••••••••••••••••• STACEY Formerly With 1-~~~~~~~~~I ing for a few good steady ------mo CallJohnS49·2117 15. Approx 2000' In-••••••••••••••••••••••• "FANTASY " 1s Now jobs . Reas . ref's Male/Female-enjoy liv dus 'l /Otrice 18101 ZltdTD~ W i t h •• TH E I have a technique that 498_9480 !fot!~ ~~~~r:~tm~~~~ to~~~~ =~~~la :~o~~~J:r4 "Q". Hunt 1100,000 to $?.50,000 lB% fOHMO ADS GIRLFRIENDS" N.B ~0e':t!~rh~:!a~:u ~:di---------- in Hunt Harbour. Rent locataon across from Ci· + polnta. Call : Bkr.. un 759·1218 fl lo Dreams, P.O. Box INTRODUCING: ne-"ot1ab!e. ~412S ty Hall Executive style MESA 963-5783 11£ fRE£ ---------5062 Glendale. Ca 91201 J .H WALKER AGENCY offices w/full services Low r ate homeowner " <NowexpandedtoO C 1 avail. From 215 sq.ft. INDUSTRIAL loara, $10,000 & up. Any P..IL AFTERNOON Sil.VA 17952-B~r Clrcle 2 Bdr m apl in Balboa $225 until June lSlh. Utll not incl 675·7914 and up No lease re· pUr"""e, short or long .,.C DELIGHTS MIND COMTaOL · ed C 1167" """" p •RK ""'-* * An exclusive live-in qu1r . a ..-.--. " term 714 /R-7532 642-5671 Inspiration and techni-p t. A C E M E N T Hot11te/Offlce,1Hoht ques for a better, richer SERVICE ~ T...t * 529-4631 * Ille. Easy, practical, Now your loved ones can DHdi 5035 Lost.: Cat, Himalayan powerful. 3,000,000 en· 1 h 1 Female 30 will share AIRPORT furnished 2bdrm apt EXECUTIVE SUITE 7 I I W. 17 .. Sf. 2nd bdrm not furnished Several offices avail In Pool. $200 includes Util full service exec. suite C.M AvailnowMS-0414 located near 0 C. Costa Mete. Calf. 642-4463 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Seal Point, Sat In Top of 24 Hrs. Now Hiring thusiaslic Graduates. remain n t e r own World area, Laa Bch. ~M~C~~~~~~V~IS~A~ Free lecture. 731·9430. home, whether the needs Patrica afler 5pm. Airport. 752-0869 . 1980 sq. ft. UnJt avail. Ma y Isl. Carpets, drapes wet bar. 036-34• sq. ft. *1.easing office hn Mon thru Fri 8-4 Sat 10-2. SattW MhJ. Co. All types ol real eatate investment.a since 1949 are for companionship, REWARD~2518aft• home maintenance or 111118111ber nursing care We can Female Rmml wanted to .... BA YFRONT, ahr Condo with 2 NWPTBCH Brothers. ~fore 2PM Office apace for lse 536-2033. 646-4419 S~IR 2-ITDs 642·2171 545-061 I _... w~ 4600 Widow has money for Female to share 3 Br. 2 Oflice to share Costa ,.... _.. 2ND T o. 's any she Lost: u i,., mo old Brindle s there an attractive, an- Pll Bull, f'. bet. Superior teill1ent, otrectlonate, " N Bl d H trim, secure lady under wpt v nr oag 48 who doean 't feel her Hosp. 831-5474 freedom •independence Found : stray dog In threatened by a 1 on 1 Newport area. potentially permanent S4S-3238. relationship with a trim, Ba apt, ocean view, Mesa. $150mo_ •••••••••••••••••••••• above Sl0,000. No credit Peninsula. 1211/mo. 1125 1 ____ 631_32(M_____ ./, no pnlty. For action i---------- 1e~urity. Avail. May lat. 900 sq. ft. modern offices, ca 11 AG T 6 7 3. 7 311 6' sincere gent7 If lbere Found. yellow Lab mb:, is please call Bill at m a l e . Au• t r a I i a n 7JG.8277 aft 6PM 6'73-296l att.5PM. MacArthur nr Harbor . ..-...--------_a_n_y_tl_m_e _____ _ Prof. F nda hse /apt SA. Bob · 546-6221, reeSBr.houaew/yard, MockeretAahMh). Shepherd, tri-color, i-------"---- w /aame. NB area 557-1978. CdM to Dana Pt. Call SlNCEIJl8J MB-31Ulwk, l213)822·8415 •---------i 760-80l5evesaft.SPM. 11t~dT0..$50K·SlM + Anita 3 MONTHS eraaillea lBr, wlk to Owner /Non Owner Bch, pool, Jae, laundry SFRa &i C-Oodoa 11 /F 2$-40 to ahr blf1 pvt 3Br fam rm comp! fW'D home nr So. Cat. Piasa, pool I jac, pride of ownerahip, may have uae of 2Br. SIT5 mo. + t,Aa utl. 5*GZS. f15..4917 WAMm Fem al• to ahr w /2 ,Ula N.8. Aot ....... Call aft IPll54G7 . lrof. Fe.en 30+ dalra um• to -.hr CdM' home. Sepera\e bdrm. liv aru, balll. Pvt eotraote, FREE RENT rac ~/mo. 642-4957 eomr;r.;~ ~:~•I asuur-Nutritional M(H()l6 67)-9043 ] I 7 S Sq. Ft Consultant aeeka live In i---------- 1 ... to W • oppty w /(preferably) Arclled Wllldows elderly folb w ttrue con- D'--t 8 _ ... ...._ cern for food health· ~ -· J mu.t be quiet. W-1819 '""" .... ,.... ····-H.._. Lec ..... 17141675-8662 -~~ •••••••••••••• 4650 Offer..,.,....,., Eucullv• olc nr AJr Port + HdJ fheeplioo ana, or Air Port. $350me>. ind J anUor, A/C, crpt Is rem ale. Old English Sheepdo1. male . Schnauzer mix, male Newport Beach Anlrnal Shelter, 6"-3856. Found : Bird of prey. please identify Kllot Williams (71.•)545-~ Found: blk " wbl M SpT· tn1er Span. mix, older. C.M. 50-LSH,&tOo.'fUS FOUND : Co llie I Shepherd Male mix. Vic. Santa Ana MS-5U7 Found: Hu1ky, male, wht/black. Flea collar. NB, near 11th St. ITM508 Loat : Lt Golden Rltrievtf', W/bnl collar, no \al, 4.125 B.l. '1 .... peUo • laundry. v~ uch•d•d • quiet. $50f/IDO + ~ utll. •HIT.vet. ,,.._0 Pound Paralteet. VldlJitJ '--otTaJbott ud &Shard. -- Want Ad Help" 00-5678 f provide people who are Mo ..... r's Day thoroughly and pro· UIU !esaionally screened. M.y I 0th For more info call Susan Send• message to Mom Walker. 996-0988 via t.-.e Daily Piiot 's Mother 's Day Page. Your mesaa1e will ap- pear Ul a pretty nower boic For information and to place your measage call ~2-5678 TODAY' Help W ..e.cl 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ACCOUMTIMG CLERIC Exp ln bank rec's General poslJnl" I<>-key by touch req. Xlnt benems. Salary com- menaurate w/ability. Nr 0.C . Airport. Call S0-9322. The Rusty Pelican, 2M2 McGaw. lrvl.ne. Accounta payable exper. 10 key. Ufhl typln1 & 1en ofc. •3224 9-5 wk dya. A.CCOUMTAMr Worlt cloae to home! Property mana1ement, conatructJoo, land de· velopment~. ol· rers ex OPJ'lY· for a q\la , exp d ac- couotant. Sed rel\lmet to: Chrla Ptlarik lT11l ·a· Mitcbell N4l1h Irvine 1'1714 AIDE -Work w /han dicapped adults Muat be strong, willing to as sist in tasks surh as to1let1ng. feeding, gen cleanup. Excell vaca- t 1 on & insurance benerits United Cerebral Palsy Allsoc Santa Ana. 546-5760 ANSWERING Serv No exp nee. Part • {Ull tJme. Man typing re4'CI 631·0140 EOE Assem biers /Electronicl lmmed opening for hnal assembly posltioh Exp with alr screwdrlver desirable Small friendly Co. nr ocean 645-3632 ask for Wes ASSEMILER FIT . some eleclncal u sembly Exp preferred Some overtime may be nee. 898-2658. ------- ASSB•LHS Loe Miasioo Viejo co ~edt Asaemblers w /2 yrs. exp. Candidates must have gd manual dexterity, gd. eyesltbt. neat an appearance It de- pendable. Wortt 1s in Ure support medical elec· tronlcs. Gd. benefits Only rea~onsl ble persona seelung perma nent emplymt. need •a> ply. Call: Mrs. Parelli, 581-3830 A.to ,mis Driver .c~r.,.... Fulltlme. Good driving record. Able to le•t-n counter work. Ap-1)' Miracle Muds. 2160 Harbor 81. Baby1ltter needed . mature woman, 2-S d•Y• week My home. 2 bO,., 2/yra & 8/mo. Easlbhdf area. 76CH179. Bankln1 TB.lEI FullTime No experience nee!. Will train. •Pa.ltlon av~'.J~ t our South Coul P .. ka office. Call: Kathy Amburlt)' 540-GI I ,,_ ....... 11\1 ti)ature CS.,,._,able peopJe with pravtou1 financial In· 1Uh1Uon experiene!9 or ctth haodHol n · pefSeace but Wf will tr'1la qualified In· dM d111ala. Public con· lett btck1round ta MlpfuL Knowled'e of lOlk•J' at)d Upt t1pto1 ll ,._~ired. We offer compeUUve 1alarles, excellent ~ and wort ID a bet UWuJ olfice P*"" apply in penoo. liW •lllAT WISTBN SA~S 450Mtwpcwi c ..... 0r. Mewport IMcll AA/F.OE/M/F Banking nu.a Experiens;e requJred IAICLA YS IAHIC Cc>11lacl Cathy Antunei E.O.E. 831·1$11 M/F/V/H Banktna llAMCH SICUTAIY Counter Help, F rr. Retail clothinl •aleC..F tr -.-IC--..-.-~--ST--1 dy1, uper ~f . .11Dt 1--~------er• f' ~'".' ben. Call LarryT70.1tTT; Newport Beach law of· Lac Hilla. fice. Pay commeoturate with abllity. 6'4-MOO. Retail Salel 1---------1------''---..----1 Fa 1 t action, 1111 b MU SINGB Beceptlon.i.t/ceaer&J of· volume retaH leather Janitor P /Full Ume Xlnt oppor. for retired or semi retired Individual. Office Cc 1bop clean up w/mlnlmum maillt Ai>' 8 m ornln11 a week, fice. P rr 4 bn pr day lo pods at.on In Lqui{a • 7AJl·9All. Excell. driv· work Into fulJ lime. Call Beach needl matu.re & ln1 rec. req'd. Apply: Peggy fol' appt. 549-1811 up aaleaperaoo for Pe ll.D yaa ver, 1660 Nicolet Instrument Tbun, Sat Ir SUn.11 )'ou Placentia Ave., C.M. Corp., ll"Y enjoy 1ellin1. 1ee Gayle CMIAIDS Full • part llrne. All areas. Uniforms fum'd. Ales 21 or over, retired welcome. Nouper. nee. ply la pe11100 at Ricmar Mothers helper after Englnemna tnc. 1U3S acbool 1 br dally. Selva Marten• Rl-ver Cir Blue Laotem$U-1873 Fountain Valley (714)141,,,_, Newport Beach Law __ _.;,..__; __ .._~--F irm need• o Cf ice Janitorial rout~. Reliable couple needed own trans/phone. HB /CM $550/mo. 511.2730 belper/meeaenter. Must have reliable car Full lime 8 :30-5:30. S4 per hr .. 20' per mile. Ask for Joyce 640.5650 Apply : Univer1a11._ .... _ .. _ .... ProtecUoo Service, 1226 JAMITOll , ___ H_U_R_SI ___ _ W. 5tb St,, SanLa Ana. lnterviewhn:9-12&1·4, We have an immed Mature 1WmaA aide t.o Mon-Fri. opening for 11 janitor, care for handicapped fuU Ume poeltioo. 9PM alert lady. Must have HARDWARE SALES to 6AM shift.. Xlnt fringe car lo accommodate col· Full time/part time. Ap· benefits package. f'or lapelble wheel cbr. 9 to 5. DreperyWw .. U• ply In persvn: Crown interview call Llz Slot· $4.50 per hr. N.B. loca· Neec& tal>ler. hemmer Hardware, 3107 E . Cout ten (71') &41-161&. Or ap-tion. 645·3953. ~:::sr.i.e~~5e:~O. Mc~'lf: _H_w.....:...y.;. .. _c.d __ M _____ ~l/d vlann!edr~oenal~~ NurslJlg 842· 1843. He a Ith Food store Ceoter 1300 Briatol St. HURSIMG RH ---salesperaoo, part or fuU North, Ste 100, Newport 7·3 30pm. Pvt 41 bed ltlCEPnOHIST Required for arow1ng, internallonal company Mlntnrum 3 years ex per . word processlna. ty~1ng Cc &ood telephone slulls Neat Cc organued and nol afra.ld of hard work. Good growth potential, benefits , salary Contact Mr Green, 644-9800 ltECEf'110HIST Leading Mortgage Com seeks experienced re ceplionist. HEAVY P'HOHES Lile typing required Bam·5pm. 955-1~ ltECEPTIOHIST at Un Bel Di on top level of V11la1e Fair Mall. 1194 S C.OUt Hwy Ob Mon-Wed or on Fri l~Spm Sales Cc delivery dri¥en- needed. Immed opell lnl• for motivated ~ pie. Can euily eainonr ' ., $1.0/hr. Call Craig arler lpm: 951·2M2. SALES I XC&.US.VI JEWB.aY 1ounQUE Full time, aome ni&hll. ca ll for appl. Ciro Jewelry. So. Coast Plaza 549 1542 Sales DRUG & COSMETIC lime. Accepting applica· Beach. EOEM/F. Conval. Hosp. lmmac CLE RK . 40 hours tions.M&-9637,548-6968 ~~~~~~~~~· with ad staffing. Santa M o u I t o n P I a z a Ana Hts. S.A. ~3061. CLBUCAL Kuster's Cleaners Authorization operators ____ 548--_4243 ___ _ LAW ARM Deluxe ofc .QC airport area , phones. type !SOwpm>. Gen. ofc. ad min duties Gd Ben Barbara 752·7~1 Fine retail store nds a F 1 t1me ex per s alesperson Oppor w I gd ben. Contact Ketarah at 768-8383 p/t1me. Graveyard posi· tions open. Work 2.S-35 hrs per wk Hrs avail Tues. tllru Sun . lOPM· SAM $4 01 to st.art Tymshare Transaction Services, Inc 2.462 Dupool Dr , lrv E O.E. M/F COUMTBNBI F /t, P /\, days, apply an person. 711 E. Balboa Pharmacy, ldr HEAYYIM'llll•tp J..,elryet.orelnSo.Coast Dreyfiu. 768-3784. M~C · Plan needs bright Nursing JEWB.aY s.u ..a I Experienl'e with cranes, person for office duties MUISIS AIDES -I cats, loaders. Vacation. S.0.9066 7 30-3:30pm & part-time Will train aa)es penon benefits, holidays Con-L A N D S C A p E 3 30·7 30pm. Country for nne mail store in c I b c 1 H CUSTODIAN ·Jmmed Fa ion Island Mall tact Neil Kerney. Hugo CONSTRUCTION pos1· ~:3061 onva osp. opening fw aper detall P eforappt 7$1-1722 Neu·Proler Co. 901 New lion Must have all· ----· ----- Blvd. oriented c"•todian 1·n Do cit St.. Terminal round exper Top pay & Office Assist RECEPTIONIST TRAJNEE Typ1ngreq NBarea 631·1500 Recept1onl!lt ·---- Sales HELr W AMTEi>! Telephone sales. No ex per nee. ExceU. co benefits Commission program It profit shar ing. Apply in person: See our ad in today's cla11lfled under "Secretary" WIUSFAIGO IAHIC 7 14-IJ0.9100 ..... F ti ............. _.. f Island. (213)831-0281. quallt1 Fashion Island an as c vn-•llllAY or benefits Please call Need energetic F (f help 1 ____ .. _ .. __ 1 retail clothing store enthusiastic girl HOMIMAICHSP/T (714) 768 4751 from for errands. xerox/mail CLIMTYPIST Full.time posl\ion w/at· lmmed rrr~ for Over ?1. M-F. 3-4 hrs 9AM·SPM duties & odd jobj. Car Energetic person with tractive s a I a r y &c Recept /Typist tn Beaut. day. Sandwich shop at LIGAL SEC"( req. E.0 .E. Call Ad sit· Our 111 girl 1s moving Fashion lsland consult mg firm needs someone fast. Phone & typing Xlnt salary + bonus Call "Bobbi" 644·0783. ~1·5184 eves. P en ny sav er , 1660 Placentia Ave .. Costa Mesa HAT IMR.ATIOH Start now-um extra income in your spare time. For appt, 848-6995. ·eeauticians & Manicurists with chen tele; be self-employed. pick your own hours First class salon 557-2234. IOOICWBµ GntwtA• Lapna ... da CPA firm. Xlnt salary com men.aurate w /abtli ty . Good beneflls, pleasant atmosphere. cOQV . location Call Susan 494-1034 IOOIUlHPER/fC Small manufacturer of Spa equip. bas key open inl with outstanding growth potential Familiarity with s afeguard pegboard syatema helpful Reaponsible for all ac counting functions thru trial balance. Work with out.aide CPA for state· menu & taxes. Should be mature. dependable, wllh a sense of humor. A re•I oppo'1.Wlity to grow alon1 with ua . Call (71')646-1664 btwn lOam· nooa.AskforLloyd IOODEIPH ACCOUHTAHT W /Minimum 5 yrs exp & bilb accuracy to supervise books for Irvine based nat'I cham of weight reduction sak>ru. Excillnl oppty call Nancy at 115$-1491 .......... Cltc'tl A/J' k.nowfedge helpful 3 to 4 days per wk. Hn 9·1 , apply at : lHO Placentia Ave . ~ala a •• Britt, aQertive people to teaeh make up, akin cart. Wlll tcai.n. &M-9952 aood typlD' 0 n...,...ed for benefits Call Ray NewportCenteroffice+ beach,H.B.536-7272 terll447,24hrs,SU-4.JOO " .. ~ 644 5070 xlnt incentive pro«rem liCWTIOHIST busy managing genera11--· -------644·2507 Hostess Some exp. req. general ptical technician needed for Sight lnslru- menls. No exp. nee . W ill train on job. Must be good w /bands. 2523 w. PCH, NB.646-3275. agency . No C:XP ·DENTAL Assistant,---------IOllURHS oflicedotiea.83H333 necessary, but ab1lit>: to chairside. Laouna Hllls 1---.. -----No b . · P /T d learn a must. Attractive of c Mo oT-· h FILECLEll w mng ay LEGAL SECRETARY salary & all company · . n ·. u rs . Hosten. lnterv iew benefi\.I. Call Linda at Pleasant wortnng conds. Large insurance agency 2-4pm, Mon-Thurs. 37 Laguqa Hiiis recent s.g.. 8161 714·770-4%15 has \mmediate openin& Fashion Island, Newport Calif Probate ex per for faat, energetic file Center. neceuary. Xlnt typing & ~~~~~~~~!!~)ental Auistant clerk Paid company StH akills req. Cetl Mn. CLEU TYPIST IDA benefit.a. Call: Unda at HOST JHOSTISS w In a 1 ow foy 1 pp t Work 111 beaulifuJ sur· Dental Assis tant 5"9·8111 Beau{ilul new 83T·l080 roundingsattheharbor. Prosthetics. X-ray lie ~~~~~~~~~! waterscaped co n 1--------- 32 40 hrs/week. Pay exper. nee. Excel. olc FOODSERV1CE dominium tract is seek· LIGALSCTaY commen.auratewithexp. hrs.-benefits Submit Ing "polished " In OC Airport area Ex Requires lood t)'PlllC resume upon Interview Restaurantworiler,over divlduals to greet pro· pr'd in bUl·i:t· & pro sklfls. bookkeeping & 840-5880 ia. will train for .. at 1 Pe ct Ive bu yers bale. Lite eeping genera I office ex P 1----------1bcer "portioD tolltrol. PosilJon requires attrac· Sal•rY commensurate Please apply Tues lhru .,.....Hygktllht Approx 1 bra. Flex. Uve appearance & ablli· w/expr. 7H/an9124 Sat Dana Pt Marina needed in preventative starllnc time, IOAM· ty lo communicate well•--....:..-------- Co . 2470l Dana Dr. oriented office. 1 day wk lPY. Mon-Thur . 8AM· wttb people. Applicanl.8 LEGALSECRETARY Dana Pt lo start. Poe.sibly more 1 P M Sun Lori • s must be available to P<>11tlon available lo one in near futUtt 495-4600 Kitchen, ';J:f17 s Hubor work weekends. Lie or who has broad· based ex· ------- Coclttall Waitress/ Waiter, hl1h volume house · Orange County Airport atta. Only de· pendable & exp need apply Call btw 2 & 5pm, Mon· Fn A&k for Carole Smith. 549-8728 ntal Hygienist ror busy office near So Coast Plaza .~ Bl . s A t71M1741 non-He individuals will perience in the areas of be considered For m corp est planning Pf'Ollt l)elll C...,._ terv1ew contact Alicia Some bus lit BeauttfuJ F /lime le P fume 979·3376 suites In Fashion lllaod. S.C~.p/ffllle NB. 35 hr work wk Hotel in ugl.ll'la Call HOST JHOSTESS Salary commensurate 494.,..36 Full & part lime availa· w/exper. 644 6512 ble. Apply in person Fullllme emplayee for 3-5PM. Jolly Roger, 400 elect)"lcal aasembly le So. CoHt Hwy, Laguna clean-up Will train. Beach. Ll9UOICL.IUS for new store near 0 C Airport. Exper nee. S3.35/hr. 6'5-9552. ---- Full-time Brollerman. day or nite. Apply in person. Moo-Fri, 3-5pm 2607 W. Pacific ~ast Hwy, N.B.646-0201. Hotel Desk Clerk-Nlght Wine knowledae pref Auditor. Experienced Good pay for good help. NCR 4200. Apply to Steve, 64().J1!15 David McNeil or Mrs. MANICURIST-Elite new Baltazar, Hot.el Laguna, aalon. exper w/clientele. 4U S . Coast Hwy xlnt Joe. 4341 Bircb St 4 9 4 · l 1 51 between across Sheraton Nwpt llam-Sprn. NB 75!·5979 ROUSFCLEAN ERS MAI.IHI To ts/hr, car. 645-5123 ELECTllCIAt4 ~~~~~~~~~!To help complete 67 ' = Yacht C.M Call Dick Houaekeeper/Compamon. Luckey~ Liveino~m --MATBW. Kouselteeper wanted. must be able to flay overnight some wkeods. HANDUHG Immed. opening for 1>arts clert, rubber hoae producta. must pus co pbyalul mcludlnll baclt X-ray. Tai11n1 applka· UQ9S. aitwb 8 It lOA.M OD· ty. Stratollu. 17871 ArJDatrong Ave .. Irv. ilOE. A Kendavls Ind., Co. Mature peraon for P tr 1-~--~----work, momlnp, n1ure control salon, Npt Bel\. MZ-J630 PAltT~TIMl Must be people oriented & ambitious, over 18 Call Richard 67>5895. IECEl'110HIST Sales & Light~· at i n Jot\n Wayne Airport for 1 person ofc. Need take ·c h a r ge person 549-2203 ltECEP110HIST Full lime Mon-Fn Must be personable & well P rt Ti eroomed, & enjoy meet· a Ille ing the public. Requires Co-•gYOlltlt good spelling & pen· C man1h1p No typing arriln Phone experience pre· Adull.8 with outstanding ferred. Full company attractive persooalltiea beDeftts. Apply Pen lo 1pend 1.5 hrs per week nysaver. 1660 Placentia counseling youth aces Ave., C.M 10 15 Evenings & -------- Weekends Available S7S ---------1 per wk Call 2 30-5 JOpm. Mon thru Fri 642·4321 ext. 343. Ask for Lori .. OrC11191Coast DahPW 330 W. day Street Cost.a Mesa. Ca, Equal Opport Employer P'ART Time Days. Ans. serv. No exp. nee. Call· 546·3333 EOE PIHSIOH AOMIH. Young, dynamic pension co.. lookinl for exper. retirement plan ad· ministrator. with strong trust acctng back· ground. Position im · mediately avail . smokers need not apply 857-1204 ------- PESTI CIDE SPRAY OPERATOR Exper w t pesl contr ol ap· plicator Uc. Top pay & benefits Please cali ('114) 768-47Sl9AM·3PM. Photo booth attendant. afternoons Phone 64().7293. •Pie .... Fr.- Picture frame !ln o p needs person ex · perienced in ell phases of picture framing. 558-1522. RICEP110HIST for prestige Lido rea I estate office Handle phones & executive level client.a. Llt.e typine skills & filing required Walt, 673·7300. RECEPT10HIST lnte rnat'I. mktg. firm needs R ecep · lionist /Typist for front desk. Handle phones. greet visitors. 45wpm re q'd Accuracy a must Non ·smkrs. onJy. Call Mrs . Coplan, 559--6901 IMS Equipment, 28C5 Barranca Rd., Irvine EOE RENT AL AGENT for Laguna's leading R. E office. Full Ume Lie req 497·~11 ask for Ruth R E. SALESPERSON for sales. exchanges, invest menUi High conun . New &c P /T ok Newport Pacific R.E, ~J683 ~esponsible person for p rr interior plant main· tenance. Exp. not necessary Own trans. 9SJ..0166 ltlSTAURAMT Sandwich Maker hrs 7AM ·3PM Mon.-Frl. 646-8383, call anytime PLAM'l'S RISTAU1lAMT Interior & exterior Need boat penon & bu• malotenaoce, full-time, help. ApPl.Y in person, 1---------1 cqm"an)' benefltil, muat Mon .·P'n. 3.5 pm, on btve aoed drMnt re· Seafood Deck, Reuben cord.~, E. Lee. 1.51 E . Pactnc PNtchdT..-Coast Hwy,, Newport C b r la ti uL g • t I y Beach. c1lilclbood 6duc. counes Reatauraot Colony or uper req'd. P/dme. Kitchen Restaurant baa Medical A11t.t.ant, GP 1,_142_·• ... 111-...------i immed. openln11 <or ofc, Capo 1kh area. PllSS PaSOM H o 1 t I ff o 1 le s 1 • .-i-eoot C11hien. Both dy • eve F\1111 q"81lfled offset. shift avail. Apply lo Mtn 3 YMl'I ex~c:e. ..___ Davidson 701, ~yobi pef90ft "' ....... m•Jpm. with 1'$~ Dltkroom a IT~ 0NCa HWJ. San plua. Fot ~knr. eaU Juan Caplstn.oo E.O.J:. 855-1111. Sales Now hiring Assistant Manager Trainees. Min 6mo exper Call for 1n- ter v1ew 642-1231 SALES Part lime. Outside , straight comm. 979·7!563 Salesperson waated .Jor altracllve women's ~oe dept. in Fastuoo lalaod. Full or part-time. Ex· perience preferl'ed 64(),7810. Salesperson for plant store. p rr & weekeads 64.5·3392 l().6pm SALESPERSON. mature P/time & same wknds. 67~2634 SALEs-aff AIL Mature salesperson wanted . Maternity store Full & pttlme 557.5734 Sales ltEMrAL COMSULTANTS Breuner 's Rent s Furniture Showroom in Westminster seeks career oriented person for entry level pog, in hom e furn ishillJS . Breuner's ls Callfonna 's largest furn. rental~. & needs qualified sales & mgmt. staff for expand 1ng mkt. Retail exp. pre. f'd Will train. $4. hr .• de· pending on exper. Full or p /time Mon·!i•t.. 9-5 :30 & Sun. 12 Noon· 5PM. Contact: Cindy Mills. 891·23118. EOE SALES TUIMlfS Eatablished Chevrolet dealership needs motivated people in· terealed In all aapecta of auto sales. Cont.act Gaey Webb (714 )494·1131 or (714) 546-9867. SICUf AIY t~rttlcne, ap prox 20 • "1~/weeli . Jean, I 1, SICafAmS R•l'l4lf upaodln1 N••P.Ort Beacb/lrvine --------irlveatm~f\rm bu lJn• TEACHERS m"4. o fM the tollowlni poa : ASSl91'ANT Exec/PentoO&lSec')'. Speetal cluses for ban· ExacuUve~retary dlcapped aduJta. 2 yra. Adminlstr&UveAnt. colle1e exper. req'd. Ex· Junlqr Acoountant cell. v aca\ion ac ln· Alt A/R.aoobeeper euraoce benefits . "~':' SICUTAIY Te~type()perat.or Wkdy1. 8:'° to cPM. 1 pldly 1rowinC land Co. ofiere uoel .• frince United Cerebral Palsy JJ._vel'Etnt eo., beoelll••advancement Auoc .• Santa Ana. •Iii::fC:, r~ b~~~ opportunlliea. Pleaae 546-5760 1 IUY fWMITUU Les 957-8133 rHponalble aecretary call P•nonoel. 7s.i-001o ---------~th ood Id)•-E.O.E. Telephone Solid oat bedr set w lk· 1---------1 ..in1sl1e waterbed • famUJea: Compl scuba $800/0BO. 642·'1'23. 1ear, fwn, baby Items, "'° I 1 .... com· ·~~~~~~~~ LAY OM ntE HACH tltlve ealary •1:: neflts Call Glnny1--------•1 ALLDAY 955· 1883. ~cretary 10 immediate openin1s .::it --Short •~cation. Wort Waterbed . gd cond Qn waterbed, tDOls, stereo, .....,. b t.v , much more 1966 slu-complete. -.-1 at Port ClaridO N.B off •·~· SECllTA.IY BRA"' trH S-9pm. oo-Fri, talltin& ~~~~~~~ p IT Cbrlst Chutth By '"'-on our telephone. Deep Tbe Sea Mon-Fri. SECRET RY voices preferred WAITRESS/WAITER offer· Ml-823t Ford/ MacAhhur Sat9-4 RATTAN FURNITURE 840-0010 '74 Thunderbird, 24', deep V. Cuddy cabin, Vanson Trlr. Bait tank & pump -Full canvas, many '46 Ford Wood le, restored, na.soo. ALSO '29 Model A Town Sedan. 4 dr. restored. Ideal CW student. UO,JOOl 675-9161 • • :-tPM. General office A $3.35 /hr 1uaraoteed, W/carforwickerbaatet Ues673-3805 more money easily I u D c b s er v 1 c e . * •SICUTAa.IES• * Sec Pres /NoShSlS,200 Word Procadl.S,600 AcctPay/Const$14,400 Pyrl/FunNartyf\5,600 Expd. Comultant Ours Lis Relnden Agy, lnc 4020 Blrch Est '64 EOE NewportJm.8190/Free · "Exec.c.-......._. . "' T ,:;;;;;f ' F\n . ~vces firm , , ~asblon Island, needs 9f>·notch exec secty · or very busy, ch1lleng· inl pos 1 Strong exper & typ/sb stills a must. ~po -smkrs please. Jot. dental/medlcal . nft.a. Call. 714·640-0123 ·• SICUTAIY ADMIMISTRA TIVE Expanding research firm needs versatile, career-minded in dividual to provide secretarial support for Admin1strat1ve Secretary Excel typ. ing, sh. & ability to or ganize & maintain files a must. Call for appt Newport Pharma ~uticals, 897 W. 16th St.. N .B. 642 7511, ext. 47 • • • • SECRET AltY 91cell oppty. for sharp ~to work in rast-paced ~wport Beach comm 'I rep\ est.ti'! ofc Ellcell typine & dactaphone skills required Challengin~ pos1t1on for right gal Call Laila 833-2900 Secretary TOP EXEC. SECRETARY MJr electrorucs co as seekine a career person who hkes a busy desk, bu skills or typing 80wpm & shrthd 90wpm. We are in need or an organized, selr· starter who enjoys detail & diversification. Non· smoker Location close to all your personal needs Mission Viejo ar,,a. Excell benefits pultaae Salary comm with exper. Only those seeking permanent employment need apply ~nd resume or letter of application lo Mrs K~le , 23891 Via ftbrtcante, Suite 603. •hsion Viejo, 92691 Wells Fargo Bank baa possible. Come by 3 L 9.30·1:30PM. Mon Fri an Immediate o~ning Ent. 1180 N. Coast Hwy, Earn S125·Sl50 wkly. for a Secretary 111 our N. Lag Bch. Wk dys at Must be neat, peraona- Toroolflce. '.Jpm . First come, r1rst ble & enereetic. 9'19-0747 Qualified can didate should have good typing skills (Mwpm) arid be able to communicate ef- ficiently. Some on the job t raining in the area or New Accounts will be provhSed. We offer an excellent salary and outstanding benefits combined with a friendly working at· mosphete For more in- formation please con· tact Mr.F9 ... 7 14-830-9800 hired. aft lOAM rorappt. WAR&fOUSE/ DELIVERY PERSON Party rental store. FT &tor PT. Apply 2025 No solicitation, national Newport Blvd, C.M. order taking Company ---in Irvine area, nl'!eds to Warehouse person FIT fill day & night shift dys, Xlnt ben. Call Bob openings Good salary, 770.1675; Lag Hills. TELEPHONE WORK bonus & benefits Call now for interview. (714 )545·3232. Window Washer Ex· per1enced, P IT, own trana. 646-9780 X-RAY TECHMICIAM Permanent position for registered X·Ray l Technician Office witb 3 Orthopedic Surgeons. 1 2drawer cbest.s, 2ft 4in bi x 21t 10 in lg Sl60 ea. Air Spring twin bed w /fitted bedspread & dust ruffle Ukenew. $160. 645·9442 TEUPHOHE SOUCITOIS Hirinl n.ow for summer Wort 3·9J>d', Mon· Fri No exp. nee No selling Call 966--0151 aft. lpm 644·8440 days . 548· 1777 ••••••••••••••••••••••• W E LLS FAR G O BA NK TNphoMS.S evea Lonl•aw Excilin1 vacation club, M.rc:hamclM Uk Ra Co h 2 Hel111m Bouquets de promotin& for resort ••••••••••••••••••••••• e new ttan uc · livered Perfect for condos, needs 3 to 6 AMh 1005 cbra, coffee tbl $600 every occasion 613-4-419 bri~ht, responsible, am· ... ~:............... Call 631·1338 b1t1ou1 people Gd. phone voice nee Guar WANTED TO IUY GENUJNE RUBIES Only S20 per stone' 640-8688 against comm. Wkly. 2454t Rockrield Blvd., paycheck 3 pit shirts El Toro. Ca. avl. Call. ~5 . .Mon 1-~r1 . l buy old guns . diamonds, Ivory, jade & collectibles Call (714) 972-492ii & uk fol' D.ue. Sofa-bed, 7'h', custom built, blk/gray pattern, gd cond, S75. 644·6.579 Power mower & edger $200. washer & dryer $12S each. 646-5848 Equal Opp Empl m /f/b 543-7957 orsu.8137 King Size Bed $100 --i TOOL.PUSHERS SECURITY GUARD I California based dril1111g Mon thru Friday. 12 t.o 8 contract.or s~ grow AM Benefits. 499-1175. ing foreman ror Hunt Antique squne grand 646-600( i Ci tllllllrot\ ... ..,..., ---------Trlr mounted Welder P ano, rca -T"· ........... King Size bed. S50 or best $400. 2 Patio drs 12Qea. 499 1177 ington Beach rigs Xlnt SECURITY GUARDS Openings for qualified 1nd1viduals. Good start- ing pay. Refundable un· a form deposits. 978-7243 &638.811H SEC'Y-DEC. salary & benefits. Send resume: PO BOX 2508 Bakersfield CA 93303 or call 1805)327·5736 ravel EXCLUSIVE Antique Hall, 270 E . 17th offer. Afttt 2:30 pm call ,,.2-l"cs aft JPM Costa Meaa. 548-Sl 11 "" ;>./ _________ , 646-5510 ---- ApplGMa 10 I 0 H c f bl •• ••••• •••••••••••••••• u g eh. C"() ~! e trf . HARBOR AREA mate 1ng o:;nus. o ice APPLIANCE SERVICE desk & chr. 2 easy chts, Webuyusedappl.tances ch.rome &. glass we sell recond, guar . artifacts. Ra~o l~~p, appliauca 549-3M7 ends, 1 set rruda JOlllt, swaas. SS2·:Bl6 I IUY Af'PUAHClS Chrome/Glass 42" eorree Les 957-8133 Thi $300 paid t600 Vik111g Ktng Si Matl/Boxsprmg $60, Dbl Maltrea.s/Box spring $10, Exf'rcts~r S2S 640·S296 Sliding closet doors <Palerm o), <8 )93 ''Hx4 2"W , {2)93"Hx36"W, good cond1t1on . $1 0 e a '62 Chris Craft 18' Runabout w/trlr S2SOO 645·2338 18' baycrwser, red & wht canopy top' Character boat paradl'! wmner' Slap avail 673 7873 613-767'1 I 4' AMF SUMFfSH Beautiful Yamaha up-$400 646-4647 right Piano lyr old, w a I n u t $ 2 7 o o 16' Hobae Cat. Good cond (714 >646·7048 Trailer. cat box . Sl750 or -----bs t ofr Sheila. c all Keyboard elec paa no. 559 9133, BenSS2 9794 Rhodes 88 key Xlnt s ound $450 'offer 25' RAClNG Kat $975 or 833-7381 Antique Upright Beaut Boats, SUps/ dark wood $275 Doc:kl 673·2641 offer 9070 646-34n5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BABY GRAND PIANO BeautiluJ tone & looks. BOAT SLIPS FOH RENT teacher sacr 963-8840 NPT SCH 25" 35' -6424644 SportfltCJ Goods 8094 •••••••••••••••••••••••WANTED: Shore moor- Scuba Eqwp, xlnt C'ond. mg or manna spa<'e for sell sep or S450 OBO all 10XJ7' catamaran eves 675-4361 497 3914 or 540.4190. ext Career opportumty with very eood growth poten· t1al for dedicated. prof. sec retary who 1s not Nwpt Bch travel agenl'Y Minimum 2y rs l'!Xp w travel agency Saber agts ONLY Contact Gaylene oo.m7 Wturlpool supreme elec· Furniture PP 846-8964 644-6579 ___ rv, Radio, 30 afraid ol hard work & ravel Agency trlc dryer for sale or trade for gas 96().6265 eve will perform responsibly Orange Ct ) sa bre & efficiently Contact equipped travel agency Mr Green,644-9800. Refrigerator, $200 ___ pos itaon for ex pe r Washer &dryer, $125ea Sec'y agent Call manager All A 1 cond 646-5848 ..... I -OF OFC 754-1555. "· · ... " llc:ycS.1 1020 Needs Jtlnt typist. top TRAVB. AGEHT ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• BDRM Set, dresser. mir ror, nite stand cabinet hutch w /drawers 2 yrs old looks brand new 646-3405 Remember Mather's Day May IOttt H lFi, Steno 8098 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beautiful Color TV, 2 }T wrnty. Free deliver) $148 646-1786 RCA XL·lOOcolor TV set, xlnl cond. $150. 559-1075 IOATSUPS For rent 646 4419 Newport Beach slip lmmed avail Call Tom~ 0222 skills non·smkr salary Exp'd comm'! agent MX RACING BIKE open. 640-29l2 needed for Cast irrow1ng for 12 yr old&: up. Webco (2 ) BDRM Corner groups , cstm covers. built·ins, $300/Ea 631-1135 eves Send a message lo Mom via thl'! Datly Pilot's Mother's Day Page Your message will ap- pear in a pretty flower 14"ColorT.V. SSO box. For Information 64~3405 Wanted 17 ' s lip for Johllson Hull Classic --646·4130 btwn 5-9pm SEC'Y/RECEPT. 0 .C. Travel Agency frame. Redline forks, Lg Thomasvtlle tbl, In Full-time Varied Apollo exp pref Cheryl good cond, $15 OBO. laidwoodw/2lvs,61ad duties. typing so+. or-1_833-__ 04_9_2___ 675·3631 derbk chra. ~/bst ofr. · · I .. ills 613-8002 eves, $48-0724 ganazat1ona a. · peo-TYPESETTER Roadmaster 40's Cruiser pie oriented. Advance-COM p U GRAPH l C w /spring fork $200 Colonial type hutch ment opportunity Irvine Chamber of Com-EQUIP, xlnl working 644·2799 $300. and to place your - message call 642 5678 loats & MarW TODAY' Eqm,..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• TNlft1po; tatloa ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cam~rs. Sale I ..... 9120 Wedding dress, sleeve r;.eHf"Clll 90 IO ••••••••••••••••••••••• le11s. eyelet, sl:r.e 9 nver ••••••. •••••••••••••• •• 7 6 VW CAMPH worn $560 548-4364 Non-profit or& needs Dynamite Westfalia OeAnn your boat, plane, car. pop-top . 4 speed. Only etc. Liberal tax deduc· 49,000 miles (441WXA > ti on advantages $5995 merce. 641-l~. ~'::~t::'i ;:e~~·~: Wld"-g Matlrlds 1025 631-3'196. SELLAVONFULLTJME •••••••••••••••••••••••Antique hand carved Frank Hamilton or1g Earnt&-SlOprhr TY)MMt/P•...., ts gal. antique white ChlneseCbest$t95. Water color, 18"x24'' Call966-0522 · Min J years eitperience semi·ilOtoSlatexenamel, 536-M39evenings. Early work from 1965 A 213/654-2341 JIM MAI.IMO 1 n both are as S75. 645-MllO beaut wtnll'!r scene, a AVON Redcrart Many SEWJNGMACHINE Quadratek Capable of c--£.. _____ 1_0_3_5 8' Sofa, Ut new, earth brilliant art invest exlras,40+SeaguJleng, OPERATOR full-charge Art Dept vn tones. Best.offer VOLICSWAGB4 18711 Beach Blvd 142-2000 Darkroom expenence a ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-6598alt 7pm $3500 <714l'J96.2:a!O gd cood. $1050. 544·0079 Sailloftexp.631-11142 plus Forinterv1ew.call Tortoise shell Siamese ~......_ 1055 Pi &n..-.. 109 P'--&n.-.. 8090 CAMPER SHELL Fils S I _ _., to '855-1137 kittens, HuotingtDn Bch ;,_..,. -ClllWH -.y--,_5 _...,.... Dod St Id t ck '48 Studebaker Lao~ Cruiser. Xlnt cond. Stl or trade. 493-4'161 · --,--- Recru&.al Vehlc:tes 9530 ••••••••••••••••••••••• GIANT INDOOR OFF ROAD SWAP MEET Saturday night May 2nd, Orange Co Fair · grounds, Costa Mesa. 24 Hour mfo 498-9177 • 9560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Special PurchoH!! Low~! . 1'80 4 lpd. and 5 spd. DatM111 Pidc Up's Tremendoas Savings!!! MakedOWll Clltd mOftlllty paywM•ts BARW ICK O~TSUN So" Juo" C opi~h-CS>O 831-3311 • Chev.MU'IO LUY 1/J-tc. Stelb with dual rears• Ide.ti for landscapers, etc:' <Ser 6056) OMLY $5998 HOWARD CM•,... Dove & Quail Sts NEWPORT BEACH llJ.0555 t97tGMC LOHGIE:D PICKUP Automatic trans.. pwr steering, stereo tape . fiberglass ihell & ONLY 20 ,000 miles• (11987 l. OHLY$5995 MIUCUMAZDA 2150 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 645-5700 '79 Chevy Luv step-side, AM /FM tape, pinstnpe. sharp. 67~LS ------- mg e o.,.,...e opera rs, ---area $50. -.1204 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• S200g4e9"7309ep-safteSPMru ~~~~~~-~~ uper1enced Lots of •--------------------.... ..,. 11111111 ... _.11111111-.f//1111111111--i work, full time ln shop. yping. P/f Tues, Wed "-I040 All In gd cond. Bit. couch, '74 Toyota PU, 20,000 ma, rblt eng ruce cond .. nu tires Camper shelJ S2500 S~ 198301T> SECUTAllES • For intervi·ew call & Thurs South Santa ._,... floral Twin beds, misc ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~7891 498-6520 Ana. S40.S850 KIESHOND Pus-. A.KC. 1---------$14,400 Cueer oppty's. w /top co Work for Oar of Production or 1( you've mrg. bkgrd., be rl11ht arm of Corp Dir or Operations. Shrthd. Irvine Pel"l!ON\el Agy 488 E. 17th, Costa Mesa SuU.e 224 642-1470 .....,.._.......__.__....~ Loee something valua ble'.' Place an ad an our Loil and Found col wnns. That's where peo· pie look when they've fOl,lnd AD item of value. ST ATIOHA.IY TYPIST Cba.p sire. H~F. Pet. & Futn .• wash. mach, '79 Store In CdM need• General omce work, no ah o,.. · .Pallv l Pt y, · Bulclt & misc. items. All experrence required 213}0t7·134S epm. ...lot. cond. Fri, Sat fr n luperson F /llme, S Sun, s.1 thru 5-3, 10626 El days Xlnt working con· ~~:1a ~=!r::·~~lrbe Golden Retriever Pt&P· Toro Ave., Foutlt. Vly ds. Especially fine clien-moving to Irvine soon. pies, 6 wits, AKC, $1'15. tele Phone 644-7'82 for S56·7572eves GIANT GARAGE SALE appt. Good benefits. Farmers ------M . t A t 11 Insurance G ro u P. AAA Home Dog Trainln& ov1ng o us ra a. STOCDIOKB 540.4100. Doesyourdoghaveaood Sml a ppl .• furn., girls E o E clothes, motottycle, etc. TUIMH . . . manners'.' We apecialUe Sat 10.S. 3531 Buckeye, College grads. Oppty. in l;;;mm-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. In happy owners • well Npt Bcb, £.bluff area. Newport Beach area for Typist.a mannered dop. 638-9285 hard work ing en -10.-DED thuslaaUc lndiv. Send re· Long & shon term sume to: P.O. Box 430, pay. No fee. Marlton, New Jersey, <80S8 Top Lba1a Apao, male, A.KC w /p a per1. Friendly. USO. 67j.'11G, 9to5. Sprtnpr Spaniel A.KC, 17 wks, female, all 1.bdta. 967 .0742 or 646-9071. Neighborhood Gara•e Sale. M.ay 2lld 6: 3rd, 8: 30un. Brus kingsile bed. bid•a·bed sofH, lamps, 1arden hose, furn.. • mlsc items. tlllr-6736. 81111 Lorraine Dr. 11.B. (MqnoUa A ~ l':, Hll< P\a tebred black lab1. Yorktown). Have sbote. 10 fieell.1 1---------Npt. Bcb. 556-8520 Fftlalea. 131-5349. Avon ~~Ueotiblea ; cos- Equal Opp !mplyr M/F •---------tume ~welry, Misc. Just moved into town ,Then &et acqllainted wit t he Cl auUled Ads . They·~ U. eplat wa to find Jlllt the 1tem1 an services you need! Qet GREEN cub for WHITE elephants with a Clulilfed Ad .Call 6'2·5f'71 hlbld ltema. Sat. • Sun. 9-3. 11• Amethyst (JI· ley), Balboa bland. Everytllln& Goes' Frl. /Sat. ~ 2t7 IJlac Lane Much Mile PUBLIC NOTICE GOING OUT OF BUSINESS FINAL SALE Most ltffd At Or I.tow Cost MIW ORGANS Thomas· Vox chord organs from $379 T h omas -Vox 2 keyboard wi th auto/r hythm from $597 Tho~as-Vox 3 keyboard deluxe from $1323 Kawai Performer $667 Kawai Deluxe church console $3363 Kawai 1981 digital console with e\'erything $3289 Kawai Deluxe spinet with tape $2734 USED ORGANS Hammond M•3 with separate Leslie $836 Baldwin 2 keyboard Fun-Machine $.544 Km>ball Swin&et $462 Gulbransen full cobsole with rhythm $969 • • '* Many more new and used to choose from ! CAMPER SHELL Fits Dodge Step.Side truck S200 49). 7309 aft SPM '76 Toyota PU, t.ool box. good tires, 59M, $3250 9 I SO 873-5990 aft. 4. Motoreydts/ Scoohn • •••• •••••••••••••••••• '79 Toyota SR-5 Sports Ya.ma, Kawa. Bultaco. Truck, 5spd, a m t rqa Dirt $300 ea otr 2430 Hol· stereo cus, steelbeltllf ly Lne N B 00-1496 radials , bucket sea* SUZUKI T250, 2 cyl 50,000 ml. warr an~tJ; Street Bike xlnt cond Blue, xlnt cood. 36, $500960-6481 ml. Call Dan ~1613 558-4822. '71 Triumph 650 TR6C. gd , cond. Call Fred alter 76 Ford F-250, g reat &pm 6Sl~. shape, tool box, S3800 OBO. Brad 588-288~ MotorH--. Sale/ 990·1149 • R ... /S ..... 9160 . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 77 Oataun PU, Xlnt cond WE CAM SELL· =-~4& tool box. $3250" YOURR.V. w.uoe ''13 Oat.sun P.U. Runs gd. M uet aell. SlaJO. RENT: 22' Jux mtr B-4095. home. Slpe 6• sell-cont. '1' El Camino. Ne'W S275 f wk. + a• ml. paJDt, w!Mela 6 Unit. 64().8$85. PSt PB/AC. Sl.000 stet'90 .... ~ ,... l)'llm. Xbrt cood. $350(>. & Acc .. 11r1ts f 400 53&-41'2 ·-~~-~~---~ 'I 1 w-..w . ,, •• _.... ... I .... A.ht, ..... '-4 ...... .,..,.,_. ........ ·~ . Orange Coesi DAIL y PILOT/Thl..ddav, Aptll 30. 1Mt ............................................ ······~· •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ;c:z ----i~ Pto~~.'!S°~~ .••. ~.~~ ....... !?~~ ~ ............ !?~? !~.~ .......... !?!~ !!?!!::!'!' ....... !??.! ~!·.~~ ........... ·-.. ~·~= ..... , ...... I~~.~!:!-............. ~~ ....... . to,..l~n, dorne•tlc• or TS GTY FM radio new YISITYOUI •1e Poncbe tns, oak •REOUCED• hid tttO •¥rOW tt2orc.n.... ""OU ••••• ff • :~.ts, ,u YOW" car la Ure•. Juat tuned. Dy OIAMGICOAST 1r-•n. I.ISO. Oay1: ;;.tt~~n~.:r·~~ w. "~io·;tr;;.-;c:· ........................................................................ .. ltST! c tan, •H ua d'T·MOl.ev "7·ml HAa...ID·&·· ~l;eve.:951-'1881. , V •, ••tom ~·le T"'' '1,1w...,I I IHOW.IOOMCOte. lf7t0Utl ':; ·wEIUY CLEAN CARS ', AND TRUCKS COMHEU CHEVROLET ·~"I I l.1rhor llh d ' '~l \ \1 ~:~ \ 546-1200 HIGHIUYER 'top dollars for Sports Cars, Bugs, Campers. 914 's, Audi's Ask forU/C MGR JIMMARJNO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Bl vd HUNTINGTON BEACH 142-2000 ----- t· TOPDOUAR PAID FOR GOOD&CLEAN USED CARS! miracle mazda 21 SO H..t.or llvd.. Cotta Mfta 64 5-5 700 · WANTED! l>ate model Toyotas and Volvos Cal l us TODAY!'! Earle Ike TOYOTA-VOLVO 1"6H.....,lh4 C••te MHe "'-64'·f l0l • H O·f01 PORSCHES ~ WANTED ~:liOw us lhe opportumt y consider the purchase trade lfl of your clean Porsche. Check with Us Today• 'l6 t t ..-..,,,...,, •n.n C,tt1cten ( 110~ ·• $J1 2J.J3 Top Dollar Paid For Your Car' JOHNSOH & SOH Lmcollt ~4erc:wy 2626 Harbor Blvd" Costa Mesa 540-5630 VW-PORSCHE-AUDI 445 E. Coast H1way al Bayside Drive Newport Beach 673-0900 ----- Premium pnces p111d for any used car (foreign or domestic> in good condition. See Us First ! .!888 llJ1bot Hhd • t'o~ta \h·su ~O 0330 •••• IMporhcl ••••••••••••••••••••••• fla t70f '°"" A '88tl2POJ\SCRE 'U VW Natchback. WUl transmhtloJ,radlo, " ' llD Y 1 U 'TST-TOP 'CUTLASllAl.~4 HIAD'-llillAITllS a yu on complete sell for l5clO or &d for power 1u.rtq, power Cbevroltt 4 door la Power bra.hi, power lloueflAM 4 DI: •••••••••••••••••••••• f'or'n>e Beat Buy Or Lease Deal In Orance County .. Come See Ua Today ' Q . • SADllEBACI BMW~ .. 28402 Mar1uente Pkwy. M 1saion Vlejo Avery Pkwy tixil (orf5 Freeway) IJ 1-2040 495-4949 Cloeed Sundays CREVIER & I ST .... OAOWAY SAMTA AMA 835·3171 Tlla UL.TIMA Tl OlllYING MACHINE •USEDBMWs• '785.JOIA <~1> '79 3201 (7560) "19 320iA S IR (7089> '80 5281A sunrl <0013J '813201A (0115) _ _E1ol_!d ~r· ~ ,..tort Andl•hervlced Pfrtl. 54&-l029 brakes alr. ~cnt 1port absolutely • btaqtJfuJ wtadowt powr1t.trt.n1 AutomaUt trw •• , Y.ODAY!U '1900/0B0.4D-Mil ' Late •79 vw Convert.Ible, wbeela'. t1tcio11>' ::·t~~\~~~~ ~~:rl~~t /!:~::f0P~r..' pwr. Hat1, AM /PN UMIVIRSITY lolh Roya 9716 white on white 7.000 at'tl C082RED> AM /Fii tttreo,' rHr :=· ~l ~··i SALESl&SERVICE ••n••••••••••••••••••• mllet . Mint cond . Wlftdow deto11er, (UIW"") Of* O\.DSMOllU 873-9174 1. mqnlft automaUe t.Nua. &Dow .,.. · HOteA *lDE.AlERINU.S.A .. 73 Super Bui. new A whlttwltaBu.rsuoclyln-OMLYSllff1"' <iMCTIUCICS JR{ IOY Maebellns, am trm PONTI C tenor. 2'1,000 mllel. Im· MllACLIMAJD4. 2850HarborBlvd. CARVIR stereo, clean , $2895. 2480Harbor8Jvd, maculatethruoutt •too. IUOH&rWrBlvd COSTA MESA -llS·RO"Cr: 98().6377 at Fair, COila Mesa 154-C790 or Aftawer Ad COSTA JiU'.SA 540.9640 ~::.J.mw!. ~ 5'~($00 •209• "2-4300· zon. 641-1700 •....n ... c11 '?I CONVERTIBLE C"9D" "H 9! .. 7 71HOMDA \....._ __ ..,~ White w/black, xlnt, 'SI Rlvlua, FM radio. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,...._ "' .. _ rr d 1 t11,.....w10UT ••••••••••••••••••• ••• Dynamite CVCC s apeed CLOSED SUNDAYS ..... st o er. 536-8597 ~ flrm. 497-2406 Y•: ,__.. • '80 COUGAR XR-7 wlth * . 8 0 p 1 NT o w i '-h hatcbbac.t. Clean, low •70 VW New Batt. Brk&. '9T-433leves. MONTICAALO t ilt . cruise, st•reo, e conomy 4 cyllncl'er miles. (134WRN> 9760 Automatic trans .. tilt power wlbdows. L ie power Slee""~". "FMd $3995 ...................... Looks & runs icreat 79 ElectraUlllted wbeel, cruise control, 183ZAT · $1950 • Jobnton Factory D;..i'v':n·• wbb JIM MAllNO LEASE 11950 days642·6553 4 door, stereo tape. pwr. steering & win· & Son Lincoln llacury . radio. Lie lHZEL-; Vo• .,SW"''--.. '71 VW 9 ..... great cond. power steertna. power dows, split &eat, AM /FM Coeta Meu S.0.56IO cu797 . Johnson " -~•-"' DIRECT• -brakea, electric win-t t •. 11 .. 187Jl Beach Blvd. • New brakes. Porsche dowa " ee.u, air condl· • ereo ape .,. ra ye ft.A-9935 Lincoln Mercury · C~la 142-2000 ma ga. beat offer· tlonin1. cruise. tilt. wheels. <1561'WT$ ). :":::?:"................. MeaaS4~5S30 ----1981 SAAi 673-9"9 (65SWRD> ONLY 3995 "11 Dodse 340 motor, '711 Blk "Wht Pinto cObd 1980 4 door Accord. TUUOs $7495 MlliCLEM4%DA trans run1, need• re-d K l Green Mint cond. $8300 '68 VW Convt Xlnt cond 2l50 Harbor Blvd buildlnt. offer, trade con unoder 60 m • 551.8695.aft4pm. Recond. & eng reblt COSTA MESA ~7884 SZZ00/08 642-1966 ------BEACH IMPORTS 547_oo_. <213>7~t. 645-5700 •. 79 DODGE 0 .... "" oruy PoMIK 9t'5 Honda Prelude '81 fully ..... , equip, silver sport model N~~~~S~U~H 76 Coftv ltlllJ 23,400 mllel, automatic ••••••••••••••••••••••• $7500673-3233 Blue. Great Cun X'lnt transmlulon, radio, TIAHS-AMSI -- -752·0900 cond. MustseU 494-lSSS $99 tape deck U c Sl9XXA Laree selection! Tale JOCJUGr 9730 010 .. _ ---9765 --5'287 _ Johnaon ~ Son your c hoice from '77 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -·74 VW convert Super to'81's ( ... -EL) ""'-· '67 Jaguar 3.8 MK llS all •••••••••••••••••••••• Beetle. $3400. Nu top ~~::~~ury ·Costa hard to fmd mod~ orig very well mam· IOTOYOTA 642 0936Sandl •66 Skylark. partly baraaln pnces. • tained Must Sacrifice Taca OVERINVOJCE Ford 9940 fl740 846·8570 '67 BaJa, new paint. new re5lored. Xlnt cond. an & 2 door 4 speed ll 's int snrf. am/fm stereo out 98,000 m1. Nu trans. ••••••••••••••••••••••• clean ! It's dynamite $l900 760-1179. brakes & minor eng. S'ALE T3 LTD Wa100. 460 en1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• (340ZEEl overhaul $595/0BO AM /PM stereo. PS, PB, *NEW 'I I MIZ * $3995 Yolvo 9772 646-94!8 air. •zs. 547-4749 a. magnon PONTIAC 240D-300D +SD JIM MARJNO ••#••1 •;•0•L••V•0••0·~:·L•EA•••• --:;; Rlv1er_a_C~~ -* '80 LTD WAGON S "'VE SSSSSS. S VOLKSWAGEN ~ "Ford Factory Dn'ven", '78 SlOi"" ~ IN ORANGE COUNTY' Automatic tram.. stereo o~ ALL ~ 18711 Beach Blvd. · 1"'111 roof rack. air condition· Alloy wheels. stereo Earlelke's 842 2000 tape, power steering. . 654Z 2480 Harbor Blvd . at Fair. Costa Meu 549 4300 "asselte. pow"r w1'n· TRANSPORTATION --_:_ SALES SERVICE power brakes. electric 210 ing, stereo.Lie. GZ· ... ... CONSULTANTS • wmdows & seats. air. s 96997 · J ohnson & Son dows, 13.600 original oyota '77 Corolla AMD•"" ... SIMG Li In M C 64.,4288G,;,..,. Lifb kSRS pd ~ l'ru1se. v inyl top nco ercury -os\a miles. eHept1onally ~-..=.r __ t ac · Ss •new OVERSEAS DELIVERY \S4GWCP > Mesa54o.5630 n ice' Pt\ICED T0 _________ 11 tires t brakes. $3200 EXPERTS u 795 310s SELL!! c899VPYl SELL1NG YOUR 857-2302. 644-0685 - Crevl«Moton MERCEDES.! L - ---EARL.EIKE Jst & Broadway 11oyota Land Cruiser '75 VOLVO REASON BUICK 909 H . Grand Santo A.na 547-91I5 :·:~ .~.~':"'; ~:~'. Tri~ ~~r ~;;::;: ... !??.~ 1 ,.~~ro;r.~::" & • .I!!!!£!S automatic Air. stereo. IMPORTS 58k Very clean . l970HarborBlvd. 1974VW 75VOLVO C471SYH> COSTA MESA FACTORY CAMPER D)nam1te 242 4 sveed $7495 631-1276 833 9300 4 speed trans . AM FM A 1 r con d 1 t 1 one d J IM ..... ""Rl"""O 1---~~~~~~·1stereotape&extran1ce ' Original ~harp car ,_,. " 1-(877MGB> t003023> VOLKSWAGEN , ·13 280C Xlnt cond"'1ust 0 ..... LY $4995 $3995 18711 Beach Blvd ~ell $7500 OBU 752 ~ "" JIM MAR.IMO 842-2000 dys . 552·~77 eves MIRACLE MAZDA VOLKSWAGEN 2150Harbor81vd 18711 Beach Blvd The Most Excitinc) '72. 220D. 4 drSedan. sun COSTA MESA Part Of Yow roof. manual trans. One 645-5700 842-2000 .MW ... _ .... __ 0 Owner. xlnt cond $7.500 ..-~~ r <213l698-4L88 dys, 11141 '74 VW SUPERIUG ORAMGECOUMTY Cadillac 9915 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77 Afftwood Leather anterior. ware wheel covers. 8 track stereo . power door locks . new tares t058TNE> IN STOCK! Invoice does not include dealer installed options. Sale ends Mo nday , 5 418\ al close of bust· ness Copy of ad must be presented at lime of purchase '60 Galaxy. Xlnt running cond Needs fender 4' radiator SlOOO or beat orrer 497 3967 6'81 FAIRMONT w1lh 8.000 mlles,6 cylinder. power steering , automatic transmission, Lie. BJG9S9 $5950 Johnson & Son Lincoln Mercury · Costa Mesa 540·5630 '68 Falcon Spt Cpe Xlnt cond. 19()() 497-5702 '79 Granada. Ut nu, Xlnt mlg. 2Dr . Must Sac at $3800 937-1747 aft 5 o'78 PONTIAC PHOENIX with rally wheels, radio, power steering, factory air. lilt wheel. cruiae control Lie . 111019 $3997 · Johnson & Son Lincoln Mercury . Costa Mesa 540..5630 SU ... IRDSI Looking for a barga1p'> Real value'> Come In and see the buys we have! We're orrenng t'he lowest prices ever on our enllr~ an vent.ory' a. magnon PONTIAC 2480 llurbor Bhd . JI Fair Co!>ta Ml'!>ll 549.4300 LeaHCCM!ldl• 552 Ol46evestwknds AM -FM cassette stereo VOLVO Mclareft BMW!! -$2200 or best offer. Largest Volvo Dealer luv Or ~e '62 190 Bluapun.ke. l'ln, nu 953-1717 m Orange Count~' $6795 NEWPORT DATSUN ~~•••••••••••!!.~~ '78 Fl R EBIRD Esprit xlnt cond loaded w /x lras, pp 549 9444 d;1ys. 552· 7013 evet. r valvl'S. etc S1800 BUYo LEASE .y Our ----Plan! r ,-,._ morns 64().7051 '74 VW VAN DlRECT 1714) 522-5333 751MW Dynamite 2002 2 door. Automatic. air. l>lereo Low miles It's !oqueaky clean (419NKQJ $4995 JIMMARIMO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach 81\•d 842-2000 ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST &' Sales Service I.easing Roy Can~r.lnc. Rolls l\oyce BMW 1540Jamboree Newport Beach 64~6444 761MW 2002 4 speed Very clE'an local car \123RKL1 $5695 JIMMARIMO VOUCSWAGEN 18711 &ach Blvd 842·2000 '77 BMW 3201, slvr. snrr. A C . stereo Dvs 646·3109. e-.ei-640·6010 '77 BMW 3201 , black, -clnt con d . Rerarro pkg. Am Fm stereo cass. air. alloys, fogs, best offer Wk du ys arter 6pm 552 0883 '78 Blue MBZ 450 SL Dark blue leather. soft top, light blue ext 39,000 miles, am/fm cassette, alloy wheels, new Pirelli radial tires. Complete service records avail I One Owner Loaded w Ix tras Car 1s like brand new $26,975 Call Gary Basel 714 642 4283 or 7141754·7788 -- Economy, space and value all in one neat package Including air conditioning and 8 track stereo <667VQB J a. magnon PONTIAC 2480 Harbor Blvd . al Fair Costa Mt•!>a !>49-4300 '79 300SD turb<>d1e!>el., 77 VW sclROCCO met gray, l>nrf. luxury int $25.500 !>46-6232dys. D ) n a m 1 t e P e a r I 759-9175eves & wk nds metallic 4 speed. Xtra -clean shows loving !,.----=-----, care < IY79681 > \I 'TllOH IZED \I ~.RC ED ES tH;' Z DE,\Ll-:11 1131 Ii 10 I 95 I illO GI 9744 •••••••••••••••••••••• 77MGI Dynamite Brit1i>h racmg green ·•a" roadster Its s queak y C'lean 1696TRH> $3895 JIMMARIMO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Blvd. 142-2000 LEASE DIRECT! $4695 JIMMARIMO VOLICSWAGEM 18711 Beach Blvd 842-2000 MARK HOWARD VOLKSWAGEN Large select1on or Volkswaf(ens with com pehl 1 \ e pncey; ~~~~ ~ 534-4100 13731 Harbor Garden Grove 78 VW SCIROCCO Dynamite Brazil Bronze beauty 4 speed. factory air. stereo Ver'j clean <69SUPTI $5695 JIMMARIMO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Blvd 842·2000 ----- 79 VW SCIROCCO Silver beauty with fac tory air & stereo. Super clean (445UBI I $6495 JIMMARIMO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Blvd. 142·2000 101 20 Garoen Grove Bl Garden Grove 530·9190 75 VOLVO Dynamite 245 4 door wagon 4 Speed with air 64,000 males. Xtra clean 10122011 $4995 JIM MARINO VOLKSWAGlH 18711 Beach Blvd 842-2000 Autos,Uwd ••••••••••••••••••••••• GftMtral 9901 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Irvine Datsun 4 4 Auto Crnlrr Ori•• 1,.,,.. 'H11 4 'ISi ·7S 7S Remember Mother's Day May IOttt ~"""'1 .~ 83i{8X) C OMTEMPl.4 TING CADILLAC? We specialue tn leases for the business ex· eculive & professional LaMJt S.lectioll Of New 1981 Cocllacs Mow lft Stock! ~AbY&~ Z<.>00 H.irbv Blvct (~1,\./11\t-<,.I 540 <)(()() '73COUPl DEVIUE Here lS luxury al an af- fordable pnce This top o r the line 4 door Cadillac an beautiful brown has full power reatures <330JNR> a. magnon PONTIAC 2480 llarhor Blvd . at Fair. Costa Mesa 549 <1300 Send a message to Mom via the Daily Pilot's Mother's Day Page •'78 EL DORADO BIAR· Your message will ap RITZ Leather 11\terior. pear in a pretty nower tilt wheel. cru1se. Lie. box. For information 478DOF $6750 . Johnson and to place your &SonLincolnMercury . message call 642-5678 Costa Mesa 540-5630 TODAY' t--- "'MC 9905 1973 SdV. xlnt cond. $1600. "" Like new leath e r , ••••••••••••••••••••••• Michehns 642-6368 '76 Gremlin, nu eng. slan----- dard, Xlnt cond Must '74 Cpe DeVllle, ps, pb, s e I I t h is week air. elec. wndws & seat, $1695 /0BO 760-9204, amlfm. padded top. 759·1121 t2,000 mi. very clean, 9910 S2850 PP,644~. 888 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 833-1300 -·------ SEE US FtRST! We have a goochelect,on of NEW & USE D Chevrolets' CON HELL CHEY•OLET 21(.'4 II .tr tM" 11 h " t ·1 IS1 .\ \1 t-:.'-' \ 54'-1200 MmtW! CL F.AN '73 MONTE CARLO Silver w l burgundy anterior. Ai r cond . AM FM cassette, power brakes. steenng. $1500 768-S837 '74 Vega Wagon. Eng nds work S400 or bst ofr 646-SOOt '76 Chevy Suburban. big eng Xlnl cond $5000 ( 213) 790-6321 '76MONZA 2+2. 4 cy l , good mileage, a l e. radio, transrerrable warranty. 557 · 3521 or 759-0060. 78 Impala Wgn, air. PS. PB. xlnl cond $2700 77UMCOLN J et blac k /black tan sedan. ~ded and only 42,000 miles. Shows Jov. lfli care i.nl1de 4' out t46&RSK) · $4ffS JIMMAIUMO VOLKSWAGEH 18711 Beach Blvd. 14Z·ZOOO • '78 TOWN SEDAN fully loaded including power windows • seats · Lux- urious! Uc. 233UKH · $5950 Johnson It Son Lincoln Mercury · Costa Mesa 54().5630 '79 Linc towncar, loaded, xlnt cond.. xlnt main t a i n e d . $9900 I 0 B 0 . 831-8031 8-5 wkdys only. ercwy 9950 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ORANGE COUNTY'S AMUT LINCOLN-MERCURY DEALERSHIP ~ ?'41"-'•• LINCOLN-MERCURY 16-18 Auto Center Dr SD Fwy·Ut Forest exit IRVINE IJ0.7000 548·6737 ----•'79 MARQUIS 4 door '75 Nova Custom 4·dr. xlnl C'ond . A rC. nu paint. good gas mi $1950 900-6481 with factory ai r . AM /FM stereo Lie 627YBO · $5650 ·John.son & Son Lincoln Mercury · Costa Mesa 540-5630 Chrysler '9.ZS - ••••••••••••••••••••••• •'78 MONARCH with o '78 CORDOBA with sun-Am I Fm stereo. power roor. AM /F M stereo. windows. factory air beautifully equipped conditlonin1. Lie Lie 205258 $4152 · 008UNQ · $C9lr1 ·John.son Johnson & Son Lincoln & Son Llncoln Mercury • Mercury · Costa Mesa Costa Mesa ~5630 54().5630 -----•'80 ZEPHYR with only Contiftfftal 9t30 11,000 miles, 4 cylinders, ••••••••••••••••••••••• bucket seats, stereo 7 6 LINCOLH License eolZEE · $4797 · MAD IV Johnaon fc Son Lincoln D y n a m i t e c o u p e . Mercury · Calta Mesa Loaded! All the toys. ,_54o._5630 _______ 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NABERS CADILL1\"C fir 1980 CADILLAC COUPE DE VILLE <604ZBJ > s12,595 1980 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD IROUGHAM t325Z8W> s 13,995 1979 CADILLAC SEDAM DE VILLE. (453WWZ > ·s9595 1979 CADILLAC ELDORADO COUN 1603400 ) s12,995 -~ 1911 CADILLAC SEVILLE <358VOYI S9895 .. 1977 CADILLAC SIVILLI <8'70SPK I sa995 ~ ... ,... 9701 •~~~~~~~- 1981 PEUGEOT TUUO. ·so-·as vw lef\ & right door. '73 lefi door. SSO Sharp (lAJH6l7) •'80 MERCURY BOB· Sl4tl .,._ CAT, 4 cylinder, 4 tpeed, I t71 CADILLAC COUrtDIVIW ••••••••••••••••••••••• Remember M1tmr's Day May IOtlt .Bend a message to Mom YI,. the Daily Pilot's Mother'• Day Paae Your mesaa•e wtJI ap- pear tn a prdty flower box. For information and to place your m .... ,e can 642-5678 TODAY! ~EASE DIRECT! IE •CH IMPORTS each West.em style whl _.. rims for Su-r Beetle 848 Dove Street r- NEW PORT 8 EACH S20ea. 548-9744 ~SJ..0900 ALL INDOO R VW-•IP.l!l'IP.lll!'P.'t~rr.IP'!ft'IMll,--7-4....-PIUGEOT---.--PORSCHE OFF ROAD SWAP MEET Saturday '80 Dataun 280'LX, auto, w /all options, sWll'OOf, custom chrome, black w Ired 1Dt.el. Priced to Mll by pvt party. W,.500. Call...._ "11 2IOZ, am/f'm, a /e, 4 Qd, tlmCIOl'ld.!•.OOO ml, must ..U lntmed 9!50. t51·1#1 dya, ~..-ev. f 711 DtlSB. Nlaht May 2, Oran1e Co. 504 sunroof sedan. 4 Falrerounds. Co1ia speed &c steno. Papen Meta. 24 hour Info. on fr e• h en i I ne . 714/498·9177 (059LFF) 1-----~~~-1 $3nS '71 vw t11°1iqrbck. Beeut. JIMMAIUMO motor. 4s ctn body. VO&MSW&,HM &7a.tm; MS-23'7l 1.1111 Beatb BJvd. 14Z.2000 JIM MARI..-Unted 11ua, ''Ford Fae· VOLICSWA... tory Car". Uc. '43YPQ · 18711 Beach Blvd. 14798 . Jobnlon • Son 142-2000 Lincoln Mercury • COila (791VAZ> s7995 ' I Mesa 54().SQO ~~!~! .......... !!~~ If 7t CADILLAC smw '15 Musta"' n, clean, 4 (711YBD> . • oo-lhe-flr, 4 cyl ~H-$11,995 l saver, new pa nl, I lllchello Uret, •1895 finn. 541-1111 aft. I . i 1979 CADILLAC I ~OUPI DI YIUI l n•WKTI . $8995 ' i I t7t CADILLAC I • • PLllTWOOO l llOU•HAM • D••&MCI I (f71WQY) -- I . o,.,_.. COut DAtL Y PtLOT/Thur.ctay, Aprll 30, 1981 Smoker move to MERIT gaining momentum as millions switch from higher tar brands. Five years ago, MERIT astonished critics flow tar smoking. Astonished them By elivering taste way out of proportion tar. And a new era in smoking began. Today, former higher tar smokers are art of an unprecedented oundswell of support for ERIT. Research~es · Smoker Surge Switching studies confirm . 90% of smokers switching MERIT are coming directly om higher tar cigarettes. Fact: Since its introduc- on, MERIT· has gained more smokers than any other low tar brand! MERIT: Tuste Success M~RIT continues to win .higher tar smokers with its unique combination of taste , ease of switch, and lon g-term satisfaction . A combination that appeals to millions of smokers who have switched · to-and stayed with-the first proven taste alter- native to higher tar smoking. ; The momentum builds: MERIT is changing the future of smoking. ' . ... OHANGECOUNlY CALIJ-ORNIA '2'> CtNTS ;;" George, Patil, 8'.ingo sing for Lennon LONDON (AP) -Tht three •arvl""'-ex-BeaUes -Georie Harrison, Paul McCartney and ft.into Starr -perform to1etber on a new retcord 1ln1le com· memoratlnl alain Beatie John Lennoo, Warner Bros. Records 1.td today. ''All Those Years Alo." to be released May IS, is the firat rec· ord featuring all three. surviv· Int Beatie. playln1 to1eUJer on the same record track since UW lfOUP lplil In 1970. A apotesman aald the 1001 WIS written by Harrtaon and ii one of tbe cuts oo bis album, "SOmewbere ln Entland," beJ.Dc released worldwide in June. 1be aJbum ls the first by Hanilon since bis "George Harri.Ion" LP nearly two years ago. ''AU Those Years Ago'' bu references to Lennon, wbo wu slain outside bl• New York apartment Dec . 8 , tbe spokesman 1aid. But be refUled to diaclote the lyrlca. On "All Those Years Alo," Harrl.aon play1 lead 1uttar and is the lead vocalist, McCartney play1 baas and he and bla wt.le, Linda, sing backup, and Starr plays drums. Slnce ill• 1roup apllt, ex· Beatles bave played for each other'• solo albuma but all three had not previou1ly recorded toaetber in the tame studio. Starr, Harrison and McCartney 1ot to1ether Monday nilbt In London for Starr'• wed· dint receptlop after the dnun· mer's ma.rrta1e to American ac· tress Barbara Bach ln London. Although 1ultan and other equlpmitnt were brou1ht Into Rais Dilbtclub for th• affair, the three did not perform. Starr bu not releued a lolo recordint in three years and bu Instead concentrated on an act- lnt career. McCartney'• 11oup, "Wings," received a aettiack Wednesday when foundln1 member and lead gultarbt Denny Laine suddenly quit after McCartney halted all public appearancea. Hla de· parture left only McCartney and hi.a wife u permanent memben. The New Standard, London'• evenln1 newspaper, reported that McCartney haJted Winll' concerts after receivlnl death threats following the 1layin1 ot Lennon . But a McCartney spokesman denied that death threats influenced hia decision. Reagan la8h~ h~1µ1 oppression , Bugs join beachgoers on coast Thousands or beachgoers try. ing to beat the heat in Newport Beach Wednesday were stymied by a swarm of ladybugs that ap· parently had the same thing In mind. City lifeguards said many of the 45.000 people counted at the beach were driven away by midday by the bugs. who showed up eq masse to take advantage of the surf and sun. "It's a great plot for a movie, don't you think?" one lifeguard commented. But the hot summer·like days at the beach are expected to end as fog and low cloudlness moves in over' the Orange County co~tline tonigbt and Friday. The National Weather Service is predicting that temperatures will cool to the mid-70 to 80- degree range as clouds roll in. The 20 mph Santa Anta winds buffeted .Orange County Wednes· day , a weather service apokesman s aid. Southern California Edison Co. officials said the winds caused no prob- lems for electric customers in the county. Near 90·deiree temperatures <See HOT, Page AZ) \ Wet sand catches reflection of female beach vi!itors cooling off Wednesday . l,.eslie Hering, 4, of Fountain Valley finds pool refreshing, while unidentified motorcyclist naps in the sun l'ennis star to sue hairdresser <:;. fBillie Jean King 'shocked' by allegations of homosexual affair Mrs. Kini'• attorney, Dennla Wa11er, said he will file ault to have Ma. Barnett evicted from the house, owned by Kn. Kini and her bµsband, Larr)'. Wauer Hid he waa an expert In delmdlna aucb "pall~" cues, which have 'prollferated In Caltfornia 1lnce Michelle Trlol1 Marvin won $104,000 from heT toaa-ttme mer, actOr Lee Marvin. after they apllt. Wauer contended Ma . Barnett'• lawaWt 1tem1 from tbe ltlnca' •~mpt to em~ tbe Jlallbu boule IO lt can be . M1 . Baraat coateni1 ten. Jtln\ prolnlNd to take care of bernlriclal Heda aiMt t•ff W acceu tO blaDt cbleu 11.-.b1 Mn. KAQs. • "On or about KQ tm ID IM Aal•I•.'' JO. IUDMt alld Mn. Kial met Ud btcU da-• I rttular bull '' UM nit ..._ "Seau11 latlmac1 betw•el BarHU aa Mn. K:blJ ~ menced app1'oxlm"ately alx months after their ftnt date." Ma. Bamett •aid abe aave up a bairdrellfna career to beeome secretary, confidante, compan· ion and took 10 that llr1. Kllll'• ener1y "could be totally directed toward play1Df tan.a.ii." M1. Barnett'• lawyer, Joel Ladin, reNsed to HY wh.tl)er: the alJe1ed homoaeaual rtla· Uonahlp toot place wbUe Mn. Kins wn Hvlnt with ber buabaod or whether 111. BU'DIU pald rent for UM a.ou.. Re Mid tbOH matter. had liOthtill to do wltb U.. 1uit. • I Wauer aald lln. Kin; wu married in 1965 and th• couple have DeYer been 1eparated. )n 1971. lln. Kina became the fl.I'll female athlete •vet tO wtD more tban ft00,000 In a:1eu-. Sbe waa the No. 1-ranktd , woman tennlt PJayer in tbe w.orJd throuo meet or the u.. ud early 1'10I Ud ••or lbared a record·t1in1 U Wimbledon tltlea. Speech on Holocaust seen as signal to Russia WASHINGTON <AP) -Presi· ficials said later the speech did dent Reagan said today the Unit· • not reflect any change in policy. ed States should not negotiate Human-rights violations have with any nation persecuting its not been a focus of the ad· people for "whatever reason" if ministration's foreign policy the country refuses to make statements. such human-rights violation a "He was reiterating a long- topic of the talks. standing U.S. policy that we op- The president placed a new pose the persecution of any peo- empbasls on human rights as he pie, a nywhere," said Larry participated in a ceremony com· Speakes, deputy White House memorating the Holocaust -press secretary. the death of six million Jews un· In denouncing the Holocaust. der Nazi oppression. Reagan declared: Reagan's speech seemed to "It's up to us to ensure we send a signal to the Soviet never live it again. Union, accused of persecuting "Theodore Roosevelt said the its Jewish citizens, that this presidency is a buJly pulpit." aspect of human rights would be Reagan recalled. "Well, I, for a factor in the administration's one, intend that this bully pulpit dealings with the Kremlin. shall be used on every occasion However, administration of· <See REAGAN, Page AZ) Boston slur irks Cleveland mayor CLEVELAND (AP> -Mayor George V. Voinovich, miffed when his counterpart in Boston said f inanciaJ woes are changing the Massachusetts city "from Camelot to Cleveland," said today he would mail Kevin H. White a talk entitled, ''Prescription for a Dying City.·· Boston's mayor made the remark Wednesday as be dis- cussed the possibility of his city's going bankrupt. The school system there has exhausted its budget, and the city faces a tremendous loss in revenues because of a law limit· ing property taxes. Voinovich heard White's comm ent on NBC's "Today" this morning. Voinovicb planned to deliver a speech tonight called "Prescription for a Dying City" at Ohio University .. The mayor also planned to send White a letter with the speech, asking him to refrain from comparing Boston with other cities in the future. Did balloon champs break air records? the books, one that the Benih"1a did not beat, she said. The race spokeswoman said the record problems are expect- ed to be resolved in several weeks. Meanwhile, Aoki and Abruuo are expected to return to Southern California Friday nl&ht to accept their 1981 race trophy at the Gordon Bennett Survivors' Banquet aboard the Queen Mary. . -BJJ PHIL SNEIDERMAN 011111 GUST WEATlll Low clouds ni1bt and mornfna. Sunny Friday af· ternooa. Cooler with Iowa toni&bt of 5' alonfu the coaat, 62 inland. 1h1 · "" Friday 70 to 71 at the beaches, 77 to 84 lnland. 111111 TllAY j Otano. Co•t DAILY PILOTllhuf'9day, Aprtl 30, 1981 Del" ............ .., OMr .,,.,_ F~TAL CRA~H Frank Conaster, 37, of Huntington Beach, died after his Volkswagen rolled off the San Diego Freeway near ~acArthur Boulevard in Irvine today. He died al Fountain Valley Community Hospital where he was taken after the accident, said a California Highway Patrol "_POkesman More loot seized in cocaine bust By STF.VE MITCHELL 01 Ille 011ty Pll"' S\.Mt Six drug dealer suspects re· matnt'd 10 custody today after officers from eight agencies raided two Laguna Beach homes Tue::.day. seizing $7 .5 million in cocaine And less than 24 hours after the arrests. state agents. armed with search warrants, seized the From Page A1 REAGAN • • "here 1t 1s appropriate to point a finger of shame at even the ugh· ness of grafltt1. and certainly whNe\er 1t takes place m the world. the act of \ 1olence or ter rori::.m . and even at the negouat- in~ table never shall 1t be forgot- ten for a moment that wherever it 1s taking place in the world. the persecution of people for whatever reason, persecution of people for their religious beliefs. that 1s a matter to be on that negotiating table or the United St ates does 'not belong " Reagan's emotional declara- tion was warmly applauded by the audience in the East Room. which included two survivors of the Auschwitz death camp. The president, still convalesc- ing from a bullet wound in the chest. appeared in good health as he walked br1skly mt.o the room and mounted the podium. s miling and shafting hands with other speakers He told the aud1ence. which m e luded members of Congress and the diplomatic corps. that 'Trrt horrified today" that some people insist the "Holocaust was invented, that it never ha~­ pened. that there weren't six million people whose lives were taken cruelly and needlessly in this era, that all of this is propaganda.·' Reagan recalled that during World War 11 he helped edit film taken by military cameramen to prepare a secret report each week for the military's general s taff. "f remember April '45. J re· member seeing the first film that came in when the war waa still-on, that our troops bad come upon the first camps and had entered those camps. "And you saw, unretouch~. "no way il ever could have been rehearsed. the face, the horrgir they saw," said Reagan. He said it was obvloua from the expressions on people from surrounding towns that theJ were not aware of what wu go- ing on ln the camps. contents of two safe deposit box es in Laguna Beach and Dana Point, discovering caches of pre- cious stones. gold, silver and a belt buckle made of 15 gold douhloons. State Bureau of Narcotics in vestigators said today they do n ot know the value of the Jewelry and precious matenal found in the two Bank of America deposit boxes. but one agent estimated the gold belt buckle alone is worth "at least S2Q,OOO." Arrested late Tuesday In Laguna Beach were J ohn Charles Gale. 33, oC El Toro . Edward Francis, 30. and Lisa Renee Bergman. 23. of 1422 Ter race Way, Laguna Beach. Samuel T. Fisher. 34, of Idaho, Gerald Lee Simms , 31, of Bellflower. and George A Van Den Brink, 26, of Newport Beach. Seized at the Terrace Way home and a "safe house" at 730 Gricrith Way in Laguna Beach were 24 pounds of 96 percent pure cocaine, with a street value of $7 .5 million; $60,000 in seed- ress marijuana ; $30,000 in hashish; two M-10 machine guns; a .357 magnum revolver; $133,600 in cash; and more than Sl milJion in jewelry, gold in- gots, silver and gold doubloons. and semi and precious stones. Wednesday's find in the two s afe deposit boxes, which authorities said belonged to Gale, is expected to raise the value of the seized jewelry con- siderably Gale was formerly a member of the Brotherhood of Eternal Love in Laguna Beach, accord- ing to police. The Laguna Beach-based or- ganization involved former LSD guru Timothy Leary and waa formed in the mid-19605. Laguna Heach police said Cale ~as convicted on drug charges in 1973 and sentenced to prison, but was released a month later by Orange County Superior Court Judge Raymond Vincent. who police said, "personally intervened before the parole board on his behalf." Police said the judge also put out a court order to Laguna Beach officers and state drug of. ficials, telling them to knock off harassment of attorneys for Brothernood Nients, and the or· ganization itself. Gale, and the other five SUS· peels in Tuesday's raid, face charges o( possession or narcotics for sale. In addition, Gale and Edward Bergman face charges of possession of a machine gun, Bail was set at $250,000 for each suspect. O"ANGe OOAIT Dally Pilat er .. .,....~ '1t41M2'-H11 .,...,..,~ ... ~ ... MAIN~ • ¥W•ll ..,II., cat.-..,CA. M.11 ..,.._, ... U•O. C•t. MeM, GA f26J6 AboUt 18 apartment d•ellen wbo normally live ln ooe ol the old eat bWJdlnas In downtown Ban- ta Ana woke up instead toc1ay ln modern motel rooms. Kidnapping • accusation assailed By DAVID KUTZMANN 0( .. o.M1 "" ..... The credibility of four women who claim a SU4pended Oramce County Sheriff's Department dep- uty kidnapped and falsely im· prisoned tbem bas been assailed by a defense lawyer who said his client was innocent. ln opening statements to an eight-woman, four-man Orange County Superior Court jury, at- torney Al Stokke said Wednes- day that deputy George Loudermilk was being accused by "two hysterical women, a prostitute and an admitted per· jurer." Loudermilk , 37 , of Costa Mesa. is charged with taking the women to isolated areas after stopping their vehicles while on duty. In the most aggravated of tbe cases, according lo prosecutors, the law enforcement officer is alleged to have threatened to rape and kill a Mission Viejo woman after taking her into the hills near Irvine. The alleged abductions oc- curred between July 28 and Oct. 21 or last year. But Stokke, in hjs remarks to the jury, said his client never forced any of the women to go with him and that their presence m his cruiser in most cases - was consentual "This was not a kidnapping situation," he said. "He didn't ~orce anyone to do anything." Stokke a lso claimed that Loudermilk made no improper sexual advances against the women, who in most cases were pulled over on suspicion of drunken driving. The defense lawyer said the 11 year oCficer was only trymg to counsel the women when be later drove them to isolated areas Describing the four women who will tes tify against bis client. Stokke said two were "hystenctll," one worked in a mas sage parlor and another ad- m 1tted to lying at a preliminary hearing about who she was out with before being stopped by Loudermilk However. at Loudermilk's Ce ntral Orange County Mun1c1pal Court preliminary hearing , the Mi ssion Viejo woman testified that tbe deputy drove her to an orchard near the Newport Freeway and told her she was "very vulnerable to be· ing raped.'· She said he later drove her to a hill area near Irvine, where she pleaded with him not to kill her. The defendant, the woman said, eventually took her back to her car in Tustin, where she had been stopped. Loudermilk is charged with four counts of kidnapping and three counts of faJse imprison· ment. He was suspended from duty pending trial and is free on his own recognizance. From Page A1 HOT ... were recorded throughout the county Wednesday. J . Sherman Denny, a Huntington Beach weather buff, said it was 91 degrees at 1:30 p.m . in that beach city. Area beaches, for the second day in a row, reported large crowds for this time of year, with water temperatures warm· ing to the mid-60s. Newport Beach lifeguards said there were no major incl· dents at tbe beach Wednesday, other than a few grumblings over having to share the sand with little orange bugs. No rescues were reported. Laguna Beach reported a crowd numbering about 7,000, with no rescues or Incidents. Huntin1ton Beach city lifeauards said 16,500 people crowded ooto the sand. They re- ported 31 rescue• because of numerous rip current• throutbout the day. However, all were ro'Utine, they said. RunUngton and Bolsa Chica state beachea reported a com· blned total of 50,000 people, and 10 completed rescues. Lilecuard departments atone the coast said surf was one to three feet. Air tem~ratures oo the beaches ranted from 79 to ee decrees. Llfeau.ird1 11ld the ~60·dt•ree water temperaturet wire unsea1onably warm fot': tbla Um• Of 1ear, A CfQwd of people braved the beat Wednesday to 1tand outside the buUdlna to see if lt would col· lapae, but lt didn't. lnatead, a wrecldnA ctrew wa1 called in to pull the bulldozer to safety and to knock down the potentially dan1erous overban1 so tbe building can be braced. Bulldozer operator Bob Reyes of Norwalk wasn't injured, but said be was shaken when the debrisfeUaroundhim. The building is part of a block of old commercial and offices build· ings to be renovated as part of the redevelopment south of the civic center Owner Steven Keiser, an Orange de~st, has approved plans to li~\he building with a new, two-st.Q(Y $2.1 million office com pl ex next.door. .... The excavating was for that new project, called Parkside Plaza. Jim Stevenson, assistant direc- tor of disaster services for the American Red Cross, said the apartment residents were given food and clothing and placed in motels Thursday night. The accommodations will be of- fered at least through Friday and perhaps the weekend, he said, while quesllons of contractor Ii ability are ans we red Tonti Dev-Co of Irvine 1s the general contractor Thi~ old br.ulding refused to collapse m Santa Ana after being accidentally nudged by a bulldozer at a pro7ect next door Yachtsman Vaughn dies Newport businessman stricken in Caribbean race Uon Vaughn, a colorful yachtsmen whose sailing achievements gained him in· ternational recognition, died Wednesday while crewing on a yacht during Antigua Race Week in the Caribbean. Vaughn, 54, was an expert foredeck man on some of the world's best-known yachts engaged m world competition The 6-fool·S, 243-pounder col- Japsed on the foredeck of the 65- foot sloop Mehitabel owned by Don Russell of Newport Beach and skippered by Burke Sawyer. Newport Beach. He had recently completed the rugged Southern Ocean Racing Circuit out of Florida in whicb he was the sail- ingmaster and foredeck man on the 72-loot yacht Windward Passage. Reports said Vaughn was engaged in a heads'! change when be collapsed. Fellow crewmen tried to revive him by artificial respiration and a doctor was called from a nearby yacht. The doctor pronounced Vaughn dead. Cause of death was not im- mediatelyknown. Vaughn was born in Santa Ana Nov. 13, 1926, the son of Frank and Louise Vaughn. His father -a figure as colorful as his son -was the firstconstable in Costa Mesa. Don Vaughn attended elemen· tary schools in Costa Mesa and was a star athlete in football and track at Harbor High School in Newport Beach. After graduating from high school he attended San· ta Ana College where he obtained an A.A. degree. He was also a star football player at San Jose Slate University where he graduated with a B.A. degree. He took post graduate work at UCLA. His prowess on the football field in high school and college r esulted in his being drafted by the Chicago Cardinals where he pJayed three years as an end During his high school and col· lege career he also served as a Newport Beach lifeguard Vaughn became hooked on yacht racing when he sailed as a crewman aboard Bill Taylor's R hodes-33 s loop M 1s tress at Balboa Yacht Club Beca use oi his size a nd strength, he was soon in demand as a foredeck man on large yacht s . He made his first Transpac Honolulu race in 1959 aboard the ramed schooner Goodwill which was dismasted en route. He later crewed aboard other largE> yachts, including Gabriel Giannini's Maria, the late Sally Ames Langmuir's Bolero, the Baldwin Baldwin's Escapade and John B. Kilroy's Kialoa II. He also served as foredeck cap- tain aboard the 12-meter yacht Columbia when it was cam- paigned by Pat Dougan in the 1964 and 1967 America 's Cup trials. In 1969 Vaughn found a "home" on Windward Passage after it was launched by the late Bob Johnson. After Johnson's death Vaughn re- mained on the crew roster with Mark and Fritz Johnson. Vaughn's love of sailing led him into the marine business. As the sole owner of Don Vaughn En· terprises in Newport Beach, he For y0ur first lady on Mother's Day. Our clever pendant in diamonds. Lucite:--and J 4 karat yellow gold will tell her she takes first place with you. $300. SL~VICK'S wa s the manufacturer's representative for a number of companies Vaughn was often quoted as s ay mg· "l was not born on a fish- ing schooner off the coast of California It all started on a 500 acre farm JUSt about two miles from the coast of Newport Beach .. · · 1 r ode h orses to school. milked cows. cut wood and performl'd all necessary farm JOb~ until my graduation from high ::.chool .. Vaughn leaves five children, Donita, 21. who lives in Oregon, Denise, 19, Los Angeles ; Mario, 17 . Dana. 15 and Devm, 12, aJJ of Laguna Beach Funeral services are pending. Windfall tax issue unclear SACRAMENTO <AP> -Oil companies could not take $70 million in state tax deductions for the federal windfaJl profits oil tax under a bill approved by the Assembly tax committee. By a 9-7 vote Wednesday, the Revenue and Taxation Commit- tee sent AB746 by Assemblyman Lawrence K apiloH. D -San Diego, to the Ways and Means Committee The issue of whether oil firms can deduct the federal windfall profits tax on their state taxes has not been resolved. l . ~-----... ...... Arw......- Peter Sweeney. 8, of Rockville Centre, N. Y ., holds a copy of his get-well letter to President Reagan, as Peter's second grade teacher, Mrs. Fishkind, beams. Parts of the letter were quoted by Reagan in his speech to Congress Tuesday night. Cnrrepairs irk senator A state senator who couldn't get his car door molding fixed so it wouldn't leak in a car wash proposed that the state certify auto repair shops Sen Robert Presley, D Riverside. said his ex- perience with the leaky door molding produced "total ex asperation" and set him to investigating the car repair question. He said he discj>vered in· competent auto repair is the No. l consumer complamt in both California and the Unit· ed States. Rtp. Clement Zablocki, Democrat, subdues en- thusiasm as he listens to President Reagan's economic address to a joint session of Congress. A flag-wavine crowd of 75,000 crossed the moat to the Imperial Palace to wish Em· peror Hirohito well on his 80lh birthday. The cutaway-clad em· peror, the world's loneeat reigning monarch, appeared four times on a buJlet-prool balcony and told the crowd, "I hope for the continued good health of aJI of you." .......... Lady Gabriela Marina Alexandra Opbella Windsor, newest member of the British royal family and 18th in line to the throne. left a London hospital four days after her birth Lady Gabriela. known to the famaly as "Ella," is the daughter of Prince Michael or Kent, first cousin to Queen Elizabeth II, and has wife, Princess Michael , the Austrian-born former Baro· ness Marie Christine von Reibnilz South Korea President Chun Doo Hwan shoots an arrow from an ancient-style bow during ceremonies marking the birthday of Korea's most famous Navy hero, Adm. Yi Sin at a shrine south of Seoul. "I feel extremely well. I am very lucky," the princess said as she left London's St. Mary 's Hos pital , Pad dangton. with ber husband a nd the couple's 2·year old son, Lord Frederick Windsor. The 16·year-old daughter of the Rev Robert Schuller, founding pastor of Crystal Cathedral in Garden Grove, and host of the telev1s1on show "Hour of Power," un· derwent surgery in Whittier to amputate her left knee Carol Schuller, one of five Schuller children, was in- jured in a motorcycle acci· dent in July 1978 in Sioux City, Iowa. Doctors at an Iowa hospital amputated the •leg below the knee shortly after the crash. However. after nearly two vears, the knee failed to re· gain the ability to Oex and doctors recom m en ded further surgery. She was reported resting comfortably and may be re· leased within a week. Winds punish Minneso_ta Western half of nation still basking in sun Cbastal iooather Nlo111-rnornlno-tlOUO.. s..n. ny Friday el..,_, COHlel -tonl9M S6 HIQll frldey 70 lo 75 Inf-._ W tonlgflt, ~rldey lllQll II to .... Wetit< .... e .......... ¥erlebl• wind• lonlgflt ancl F rlcto mornln9, buomtno ••ll•rlY 11 to 11 _not, Frldey elltr _, WfflMIY 1-11 I lo 2 IHt. l.- tlOVdlMH ~rlcley 11u1 per11r 141nny 111 etternoon. U.S. summary 0.n¥er 7t SI 0.l MolllH IO .. O.trolt St 40 Oulut.11 S6 17 HUtlOf'd 74 50 ... ,.... ., .. "-ulu 12 7t HOUllOll • n lnOll•I• U 50 .It Jeck111¥llt n '° Kens City 1' ., l. .. V.... M '5 Lltltt Roo .. '5 L"A....... t0 '5 Loulavlll• 7S SS 27 MemP'\ls a .. MIMnl 12 n MllwWU. U 40 Mpt .. St. p 62 .. .20 "'"'""'' 7t .. "•• Or"-l5 10 .21 ,._y_ 1S S1 ...... ol... .. ... Sc.aUertd •flO••" encl tl111n· dtr.lonN ,._,.. lrom IN T•us p..,".,.._ UW'llultl llllt Olllo Velley to Ht• .,.._ -1;..,lpdty -fell Oii perts Of .,. ~ r!etHU •llf ., <--· MNll'ltrtl~OCklH. """' ....... ____________________________ ;,,r;;.~:;:;;~ Okie Clly l5 6S <>me~ 71 '° Thtrt _,. t!Wlwtf'I In tntern North c;.wotlfll 9'111 ...... Ille Nt'1ll OOol•·ll1UnfttJOt• btor#r. ,..,, t ......... -.. ,....,.,. ,., MUIM•t Ml11111Mle. Ont 1M11 -lll(llllly lnJtl'°" WM-llUNy 111 ~ c-ty, M'-., #lltn ........ ,_,. blew -Oii "'"' s-. ...,,. ........... _.. detneeecl ., dHtntyed lry Ult ltrOlll WINI, wllleh <tit e .............. mll .. lallQ swetll. Hell lt4I Ill tM Ml,_...11-St. Pell! eA&, Mii ...._., CWMy, IWt 1*111 •• .,.,........,, •• -........... hell eftd wllldll Wt IO 76 flltlfl• UJi.fomia rwsctey, I,....._,.,,.,,. smeilwd t,,. re<«cl et Ille l.-A .. ltl CMc Ct-'°' Ult Cle4e ~ • .,... .... hlttlfte ... Tiit former ~-• .. Mtln l••nct ~ledllllff9. n.. NeU-IW~S«vlce l•Pf'• dl<llllQ f'-rl<My'a NtN el 75 In l.os ~. 76 a M !ft c-&.al tncl 1 ... ltnMCflete ve1i..,.. 111 lflt 10I In the mo1111t.l111, '4 lo llM In ~1,,.rn Atef'U .... to 105 1 .. sauthtr11 de-Mrta. Temperature& NI IA Pc-. ..... te . " Amerlllo AIN¥111t ......... A ttentc. Cly ••1tlln«9 .,'""',,..,...., •itm•rek lkllM •ottOll 8ro11tMvllt 8yffeto Cll.trlalft SC Cll.trlslll'#V Clley- Cflk ... ClnclMetl Clevelend Cel""*-0.l·PI W111 Orleftdo n ... fl! SS Phlledt..,.,._ IO 52 .GO 77 tO l"Meftla 100 1S 11 t1 .es PltblM'llf\ t1 4" .11 14 ,. l"tllftd, ... S6 .. •• IS Jt .o2 Ptltl>d, °"' 7t 5' M 61 .115 R-.. JO .. ., Stttl...,. n ., 14 ., SM! 0.... . " 74 53 .\t Sen,,.,. " Sol tO 1S Se•HI• 7i SI ff 40 .OI SI LOUii 7t 54 ,ti 11 11 St P•TI,.,... ... .. 1S S2 .JI SI lie INrle St JI n '' ...._ ,. • .. ._ TIHM ..... ,II n ., ·" •••"11111 .. ., M 60 '1 .CM CAUflOIOHA 6J .... , •• .,~ , ... .. .. .,,... ... 7• ........ u d ,,...,,. ... I.Mic.... w .. =•Ille .... Southem California aur/ report = fwy .. $2 ........ , .. 0-lllM Ill p......... ,, •••'-" .. ......... Clft .. Mt,..... • ...._ .. .....-..__. a 11 .... .. T,_,.... tt .. u•1e11 " " ....... .. .. ... ...,. ,. " ...... .. Al C...11119 " .. A private detecUve wbo It try. int to ciWproV'e murder cb&flel •••m.t lbe accW1ed 1layer ot a Lacuna Nlauel man ls canva1S· ln1 the area around the murder scene Mftin1 adclltional clues. Benjamin Harroll, a San Dleso mvesti1ator blred by al· • torneya defend101 st-year-old P.atrlck Foearty of Newport Beach, wbo is charged with eom mJttin8 the murder, saya he believes tbe accused man Ui in· nocent. For the past week Harroll baa been diatributin& ruera in the nei&bborhoods near Ellendale Drive in Laeuna Nlsuel, where durlng lbe evenine hours Feb. 1, Donald Frank Cook stru11led with a knife wieldin& attacker. and djed alter being stabbed re· peatedly with a long-bladed knlle. The 25-year-old Bechtel Corp. engineer was tound lying dead in the bedroom of bis home at 29742 Ellendale Drive by hi.a room· mate and co-worker, John HasJrcoglu, at 12:30 a .m . on Feb. 2. Reportedly Cook was last seen alive by his roommate at about 6 p.m . Feb. 1. SCENE OF SLAYING Murder dues SOC#l]lt Delly ........... About two weeks arter Cook's body was di.acovered, Fogarty was arrested at Irvine City Hall, where he worked as an engineer- ing technician ror the city. The fliers that Harroll has been distributing ask anyone who knows anything about the s laying to co nt act him. ffowe.ver. rakientt atone E1Jto· dale Drive and aurrol.lDd1n• •treeta have aalcl th•1 beard nothinC unuaual on the n11bt of the murder. But HarroU sayt be finda that hard to belleve, especially since a .45-caliber handgun wa1 ftred at the dead man'• bou.se on the nlabt of the murder. HarroU also said Fogarty's at· torneys have witnesses placinC him miles away from Laguna Nlauel at the time of the murder. Defense attorney Thomas St.akall of San Diego said ''there is a serious question as to w~etber Fogarty was involved at all." SzakaU made the statement after a closed preliminary hear· ing at South Orange County Municipal Court after which Fogarty was bound over to stand trial in Superior Court on first degree murder cbarees. Deputy District Attorney Paul Meyers has characterized Cook's slaying aa a revenge murder. Cook had been dating Fogarty's estranged wile, An· drea. according to Meyers. County weighs • raises Clerical salaries said 'below market levels' Even thoueh a three-year con· tract for clerical workers doesn't expire until June 1982, Orange County adm101strators have egreed to consider a new round of salary increases. The request for the new negotiations came from the Orange County Employees As· soclation, which represents the 2,700-worker clerical unit. It is the largest of any county worker group. The association. however, wanted new salary talks for five of its units. Workers in each group are receiving a S.4 per· cent salary increase this year. which association leaders say is too small. Bert Scott, county personnel director, said salary talks for the clerical unit were approved because studies indicate that clerh~al salaries only have dipped below market levels Higher ~aaes will aid recruit· ine. be sald. County supervisors have met in private executive sessions during the last few weeks and agreed to new clerical negotia· tions. an aide said. Scott said terms of a new pro- pos al sent to OCEA are not public. He said it includes pro- VCI summer classes set More than 260 classes in· eluding writing, engineering, in· ternational relations and com· puter science -will be offered thls summer at UC Irvine. Two six-week sessions are scheduled. They run from June 22 to July 29 and July 30 to Sep· tember4. For more information call 833-S493. visions for salary increases and benefit adjustments, including cash payments in lieu of vaca- tion. A typist-clerk working for the county currently can earn from $884 lo $1,040 monthly Secretanes to department heads can make up to $1,390. One or the county's offers is to take over administration of op. taonal benefits such as life, ac cidental death and dental in- surance. Those programs are run by the association for all workers. even if they aren't members. Scott said county superv1s1on would make the system more accountable because of the availability of public audits. and would relieve workers of pres· sure lo join unions Meanwhile, association of· fic1als say they're upset that only clencal workers are to get raises An association spokesman said an "excellent strategical program" has been devised to force the so-called salary reopeners for rour other worker groups the general worker unit. community services unit , s upervisory management unit and superior court clerk unit. Workers have been en· couraged to attend a May 8 rally at the Santa Ana Civic Center and to attend one of five workshops at the OCEA head- quarters Housing sales up slightly for March WASHINGTON <AP) -Sales of new single-family houses rose s lightly in March despite con- tinued high mortgage interest rates, the government has re- ported. However, an industry group said sales of previously owned houses dropped again during the month And s pokesmen for builders and sellers complained that high interest rates are mak ing recovery from the current housing slump very difficult. New houses were sold at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 511,000 during March, up 0.6 percent from February's newly revised rate of 508,000, accord- ing to the report by the depart- ments of Commerce and Hous- ing and Urban Development. T he sales rate had fallen 3.2 . percent in February. the report said. The new March rate was still about 9 percent above the level in March 1980. when last year's recession was beginning to take hold Disaster seminar slated in Anaheim A disaster preparedness seminar, sponsored by the Orange County Chamber of Commerce and designed for business ,.4Mld industry, will be held May 28, 7;30-10:30 a.m .. at the Anaheim Convention Center. For reservation information, call the OC Chamber of Com· merce at 634-2900. NOW IN THE SALE'S FINAL WEEKI t ' r ATLANTA (AP) -AuthoriUes were cracklna down on proa· ututes and petty crlmlnab ln an effort to extract in(o.rmatlao about the slayin11 of 2e YOUDI Atlanta black.a, officials Hid. Meanwhile, mi11ln1 pel'IODI lnveatl1aton canceled a search for a J.3.year-ald black youth re· ported m.Wln& late Wednesday afternoon after the youth was found asleep in the basement of bis home. Sean Collier, 13, last was seen about 4:30 p.m. on the southweet side of AUanta where he lived, but police spokesman Bill Todd said Collier was found asleep and unbanned early today. &busboy pleads ~nltofire WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP> -An illeea l alien from Guatemala who was rired from his job as a busboy at the Stouf· fer's IM has pleaded innocent to setting a Dec. 4 fire that killed 26 busineas executives at the hotel. Luis Marin, 25, was being held without bail after his arrest Wednesday at his Port Chester, N. Y .. home. He was charged . with 26 counts of arson, second- d egree murder and criminal mischief. wrnrnrrrn Paraplegic guilly of grisly ,,.,,,.,,fer DENVER (AP) -A ll·year- old paraplegic has been fowwl 1u11ty._ of first-dearee murder ln the 11aytn1 of his roommate, whose dismembered limbs were strewn around a housing project where the two men lived. Lewis Roeer Moore also was convicted Wednesday of abualn& a corpse and of concealin1 a death. He waa ac$used of cutUna up William Charles Kidd, 23, with a power 181' in December, 1979. lrderest on bonds w go up Friday W ASIDNGTON (AP> -The government will raise the in- terest it pays on most savinp bonds one pe.rceQtage ~int Fri· day in an attempt to bait the movement of savers to bet~r· paying investments, Treasury Secretary Donald T. Regan said Wednesday. Interest on Series EE bonds will be raised from the current 8 percent at maturity to 9 percent, a nd the original maturity will be shortened' from nine to eight years. BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP> - Palestln1an auerrWu In squtbem L•baoon flred rocketa Into tsrael'snortbern Galilee panhan· die today. and llraell Jett new re- connalaance fll1bta over SYriao antl-alrcrall missile batteries lD eaatem Lebanon, wttnea~ re· ported. Unofficial r~port.. ln Tel Aviv said elabt people were allabtl)l ln· Jured ln the Katyusba rocket bar· raae. The witneues ln eutern Lebanon said the bilb·fi)'int Iaraelljeta apparently were out of range of the miniles and nooe was reported fired. ISRAELI aircraft pounded Palestinian ~uerrilla position alons the Israeli-Lebanese froo. tier 6n Wednesday after the guer- rillas fll'ed at least two rocket Hlvoes 0¥ the border. PaJ•tl· nian IW1f'era claJmed one of the raldlnl jet.a wu •hut down, but llrael tald aU ltl planet returned aafely. Keanwblle, Syria wheeled Sov· let anU·alrcraft ml11llt1 lnto eaatern Lebanoo'• Bekaa Valley to beef up ltl defeD.lff •8alnst laradl Jett after they •bot down two S)TIM bellcopters near the bene1ecl Christian city of Zable. Witnesses said four launchers, each carrying three SAM·& •ur· face-to-air rnlaaUes, were posi· J,1oned about three mllea south of \he Rayak air bue, near where the Syrian helicopters were shot down Tuesday. Damascus radio said today that Libya has placed its armed forces at Syria's dlspol to cope with :PT I rraeU air 1ttact1 •t•lHt Syrian forces and Palestinian 1uerrUJu. The broadcast did not say wbtether Syria would take up tbeLlbyanoffer. DIPLOMATS in Belnal wUned that theJ)hances of war between Syria and Israel would be ln· creased if one of the Syrian mis· 1Ues brtn.P down an Iaraell Jet. But Iarael radio Hld Prime Mlniater Menachem Be1ln , and hh top aides have reaolved that "larael will not draw back from a confrontation with Syria.·' In Wub.lngt.on, ~retary of State AlexfU)der M. Hail Jr. said the Rea1an adminiltratlon has asked the Soviet aovernment to pressure ita Syrian allies Lo end the warfare i.D Lebanon. ''Tti'e Sfrlan.t have 1ot to baek down," 1&ld • U.S. olllclaJ, who decllned to be ldenWled by name. "We do not feel tliat morally we can alt tdJJ by ud watch a bJood.. bath develQS>." AMEIUCAN Ambaaaador · Samuel LeWtt convned to Be'1n the "aerloua concena Wa1b1qt.Oo haa about recent mill~ectiom in Lebanon,'' U.S.offtelall,.ld. But Iarael Radio Hid Lewb did not crlticlae Israel's dlrect military lntervention on behalf of the embattled ChrUtiana. Damucua claims it Is lighting to drive pro-Israeli Christian miUtlamenoutofZabletoprevent them from aidin1 a ponible Israeli end-run attack on Syria through the Beltaa Villey. Protesters desert Eastern· com.tnuters By Tbe Associated Prell As a protest snarled rush-hour trains in New York and Philadelphia, thousands of an- gry rail workers converged on Washington in a nationwide demonstration against proposed cutbacks in governmenl- subsidized Amtrak and Conrail systems. profit corporation, was set up by Congress in 1976 to reorganize and consolidate six branltrupt Northeast railroads. The administration also bas proposed a reduced fiscal 1982 budget for Amtrak that officials said would reduce it lo operating only in the Northeast corridor. The Senate Commerce Commit· tee approved the proposal Wed· nesday. Amtrak was set up by Congress in 1970 to take over in- ter city passenger operations from railroads that wanted to drop passenger service. A sick-out Wednesday by about 1,500 of Conrail's 5,400 employees in New York forced cancellation of 15 of 74 moming- rush trains on the .Hudson and Harlem lines and the delay of many others. All 10 Conrail trains serving 3,000 Bronx com- m uten; were dropped during the "WE CANNOT let the future evening rush. of our country be Jeopardized by South Africa vote cuts leader's hold In the Philadelphia area, a a misguided attempt to pinch ConraJI spokesman -said trains pennies from the budget at the ran normally into Reading expense of economic prosperity Terminal on Wednesday but and national security," he said were delayed at two other sta-at the largest of 31 pro-rail lions. Service returned to rallies across the nation. normalby7p.m.<EDT). "If P ·d LR · ~ res1 en eagan s pro- " WE HAD TO consolidate posals are. ca~ried out._ Amtra~ JOHANNESBURG , South Africa (AP) Election returns today continued the ruling Na· tional Party's hold on the South African Parliament, but a sharp drop in voter support gave Prime Minister P.W. Botha the worst setback the party has suffered sincecomingtopowerin 1948 Unofficial returns gave con- servative NaUonalista 104 of the 165 seats in tbe loVter house of Parliament The liberal Progressive Federal Party had won 24, six more than they had in the last Parliament; the centrist New Republic Party had 5, and32 were undecided. JoumaUsts shot in El ScdvaJor SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (A Pl Two journalists, including one 1A mer i can, w e· r e wounded as they walked down a nar· ·row street in nearby Soyapango while govern-TMuaLOW ment troops searched for leftist guerrillas. A Salvadoran in· terpreter was killed. Wounded Wednesday were Joaquin Zuniga, an Associated Press photographer; and George Thurlow, a reporter for the Dai· :1y Democrat in Woodland, , • , • ' • • • • • • i ' Calif.. who had come to El Salvador on a working vacation. The dead man was identifie.1 as Gilberto Moran, Thurlow's 27-year-old interpreter. It was not immediately clear whether the shooting came from soldiers, guerrillas or elsewhere. Zuniga was hit in the leg and Thurlow in the shoulder. Workers el.evated WARSAW, Poland (AP) The Communist Party's Central Committee named two workers to the ruling Politburo at a 20· hour session devoted mostly to demands from rank-and-file members for reforms within the party. Hot.eh struck HAMILTON, Bermuda <AP) -Three thousand hotel workers struck Bermuda's 14 biggest hotels Wednesday and left thousands of American tourists fending for themselves or look· ing for quick ways off this mid- Allantic "honeymoon isle." Crash brings suit TOKYO <AP) -The owner and crew members of a Japanese freighter sunk in an April 9 collision with a U.S. nuclear-powered submarine wiU ask the Navy for about $4 .5 million In compensation, lawyers for the claimants said today. ............. some trains and go to an hourly and ~onr.~l will be decimated, schedule," said Joe Harvey. He h~ said. Thousands o~ workers said the number of trains affect-will be . thrown out. of J<?bs, and ed and the number of workers the rail wo.rkers rellrem~~l who. called in sick were not im-system wlll be threatened. medi~tely available. A FL-CIO President Lane Kirkland, addressing a rally o( more than 15,000 rail workers in Washington, called for strong government support of the na- tion's rail system. STATION.SITIER -Mary LaPorte, 71-year-0ld mother of four Boston firefighters, sits inside tire station as unofficial "watchdog" of id.Jed equipment. More than 400 firefighters and policemen have been laid off recenUy because new state tax-cutting law has stripped municipal budgets. He objected to administratioft proposals to sell off profit· making sections of the Conrail system to private railroads and abandon lines operating at a loss. Conrail, a private, for- MOST OF THE demonstrators came t.o Washington by bus Crom the 16-state area of the Midwest and Northeast served by Conrail. However. some of the proiesters displayed signs of un· ion locals from as far away as Los Angeles. Tom Bates of Mt. Prospect, Ill., president of the Brotherhood of Railroad signalmen, said it was ironic the rail workers bad traveled by bus because rail service was inadequate. --- Irish civil war looms "H we leave it up to Reagan we won't have any trains," he said. The demonstrators massed near Union Station, a few blocks from the Capitol and then marched to the rally area on the West lawn of the Capitol. BELFAST, Northern Ireland <AP) Roman Catholics threw up street barricades in their sec- l ions of Belfast today and formed local defense commit- tees in anticipation of Protestant attacks as Bobby Sands and three other IRA hunger strikers rejected another plea from Pope John Paul II t.o call off their fast. Sands, 27, was reported slip- ping into unconsciousness fre- quently as be continued to refuse food for the 6lst day. With bis weight reduced from 155 to 90 pounds. he was on a water bed to ease the pain of bis bones press- ing through hJa flesh, and his joints were bandaged to keep them In lace. Sinn Fein, the legal political arm of the outlawed Irish Republican Army. said he was "extremely weak" and could die "al any moment." The other three huneer strikers are Frank Hughes, 27 and in the 48th day oC his fast, and Raymond McCreeth and Pal O'Hara, both 24 and in their 4lst day. Visitors to the Maze Prison said Hughes was in critical condition while the con- dition of the other two was con- sidered serious. With the mostly Roman Catholic IRA promising widespread violence if Sands died and armed Protestant groups warning they would fi1ht back. the outnumbered Catholic community prepared for war. Housewives cleared shops of bread, kerosene and canned foods . Hijacked excavators threw up street barricades in Catholic West Belfast. Plans were made to evacuate women and children to the Irish Republic, which is predominant- ly Catholic. Also on the Protestant side, 10 Presbyterian church leaders an- nounced they would Cly t.o the United States Monday for a three-week visit to argue the Protestant case lo Catholic Irish-American leaders. hlr Plot D.tlnry 118 ... ..tMCI Monday-Frktmy If YoU do noc have )QH' peper by 6.30 p.m. call before-7 pm and )'OUf copy wlU be del"*11d Saturday and Sunday II you do not ~ve your copy by 7 a.m.. «*I before 10 am and Your copy wl1I be dellvered CW.llHollT••••• Moat Orange County Ar4u 6U-4UI Northw9ttliuntlngton BHch and Wntmlnater ._Int Uiguna Niguel .,.,... GOURMET MARKET DELANEY'S BROS. SEAFOOD FRESH Northern Red Salmon MORNING FRESH.PRODUCE· LOCAL-GROWN LARGE SIZE SWEET JUICY STRAWBERRIES. 3 FulJ ~kts. $1.00 Wbole or Ball ...................... 3.18 Jb. We wlU 1ladly fllet your 1almon for no extra charge DELANEY~ NOW HAS A l.JMITED 'BVPPLY OF RESS SW01Dn8B. SO GOOD WHEN BOILED oa BAllBECUED. For )'our complele Cl\lHln1 service. from a complete sit-down dinner party to party trays delivered to your home For Information call Delaney's CATERING Oepartm~t. ask for Tom Oood IOf nl,,. ~ Ol lulcy, golden bfol#n IC4"11UCll)' ff*! CNCken, wlll'I tOUf rollt, • 11'09 COit •law, • , .. matMd ootatOH and .. Madjutn Ott"Y lllNI IWO Oft.,. pw pure1ltine. Coypon gOllCS only fOf combination Wbltel ~ ~·· Clltlotntf PtVI tll tpPllct1ble NIH tu Martin. ' ~fil~~ &hemiftn cllth nmng ~ixed ~N FRANCISCO CAP> -A Juctwe'a nilln& allowtn1 sex db· crimtnaUon in hlrin& by the all· male Bohemian Club, to which President Reaaan belon11, baa · been rejected by a state com· mi11sioo, which will bear the case it.self. The Fair Employment and Rousing Commiaslon could have adopted the Jan.· 19 decision by administrative law Judge Robert Kendall, saying the famed club could legally refuse to hire women. Firemen accused SAN DIEGO <AP> -Dis· cipllnary action ls being pre· pared against five male firefighters accused of sexually harassing female firefighters who must share the same shower and bathroom with them. Off sho re lease suits filed LOS ANGELES <AP) -A pair of lawsuits filed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. and 22 en· vironmental groups allege that U.S. Interior Secretary James Watt acted illegally when he opened an area off the CentraJ Califor!ia cout to lea.ff for oil drUUna. The suits were filed In federal dJatrict court Wednesday, cballengina Watt'• action in opentna for leue 34 of t 15 tracta in the Santa Maria Buln north of Santa Barbara. Truck flips, gi,rl killed LOS ANGELES CAP) -A trip to. the beach turned into traaedy when a traffic accident killed a 15 -year·old girl and injured several other people. A pickup truck loaded with youths Wednesday swerved to miss a large board on the Santa Monica Freeway, went out of control, hit a motorscooter and Clipped over, the Highway patrol said. Identity of the dead girl was not released pending notification of relatives. Liddy a t Be rkeley BERKELEY <AP> -G. Gordon Liddy, who went to prison for his role in the Watergate scandal, has won mixed reviews alter a speech on the Berkeley campus, once a hotbed of st'udent radicalism. 'Spruce Goose' due Long Beach dome LONG BEACH IAP> Construction has begun on a multi·million-dollar geodesic dome to house the legendary fly- ing boat. the Spruce Goo,e, at a resort complex with the Queen Mary. Wrather Corp officials an· nounced the addition Wednesday amid fireworks and gun blasts m a ceremony at the waterfront re· sort complex where both vessels will be displayed '·Port Adventure will be an important part of Southern California's entertainment culture, one of the -if not the - most important entertainment destinations for visitors," said Jack Wrather, president of the Wrather Corp., an entertain- ment.amusement conglomerate. The Beverly Hills·based cor· porat1on's principal assets in- clude the Disneyland Hotel, Inn at the Park in Anaheim and movie TV rights to "Lassie" and "The Lone Ranger." SACRAMEN'TO <AP> -A Senate commlttee haa voted to ban amokina lo t he pubUc scbool5, but an opponent pre- dicts that r~eard.tesa ol the law, · "It'll 1,0 on ln the NUlrooma." By a 6-1 vote Wecln .. day, the Senate Education Comll\lttee approved 58704 by Sen. Dan O'Keefe, R·Cupertino, sendina l\ to the Senate Finance Commit· ·tee. U would repeal a law pnsed 11everaJ years aao allow1n1 bip· scbQOls to desisnate areas whe. swdents could emote. The; bll1 would allow teachers and ad- , mlnistraton to smoke in one area i.n each school, awat from students. Davis death script. LOS ANGELES (AP> - Because of all too real factors - the death of actor Jlm Davia and a writ.era' strike -the upcomin1 plot twist.I ol the "Dallas" CSS. TV aeries are touaber to tlsu.re out than l~st year'• 1 uea1ln1 t•me about "Who Shot J.R.?'' Amone the poulbllltlea "Dallas" executlvea considered Wednesday was whether to wrlte·out the role of family patriarch Jock Ewina. played by the es.year-old Davia, wbo died of a heart attack Sunday. "0._ opt.Ion that none of us wants is the possiblllty of recast· Inc the part." producer Leonard ,Katzman said. On a burry·up schedule, Lorimar Productions planned to start filmine five 11'1-12 shows on May 1'. Should It be decided to end the Jock Ewin& role ol on buon em.erltu1, with a deatb t~t becomes part of the scenario; o major re·writina would have to be carried out in the next few weeks. THE FIUT question la: wilJ the Writers Guild of America al· low ill 1trikln1 members to work on the five ''Dallas" scripts? That possibility exist.a, said Katzman, Potlfll that he would ask the l\dld next week to re- COf\lSider its refusal earlier this week to e.xempt "Dallas" because of Davis' death. He said he thought the writers' refusal was only "conditional." He did not elaborate. The urgent need for rewriting of ''DaUu" also raised another PET, RENTAL ISSUE BACKED -Three act· resses tell a Sacramento press cooferende of their support for a slate committee·backed bill to prevent owners of low.rent, gov· ernment-subsidized housing from refusing to rent to senior citizens with pets. From left Af'W~ are actresses Margaret o· Brien, Gloria DeHaven, Martha Raye, Sen. David Roberti, author of the bill, and Mrs. Lucille Hoyne, 74, Glendale, who said she had to give up a low· rent apartment because she owns a cat. po11lblJlty: that Lorlmar WOulcj defect from the producers· ne1otiatlnt committee an4 reach a separale contract ag~ ment as an Independent. "There wu mueb speeulation about a Lortmar defeetlon. 8ut I think Lorimar is goin& to bold Cirm," Kati: man said whert reached at the Lorimar otncu at MGM Stud.loa. ll'HE MAY 14 production start is two moot.ha earlier than usual, Katzman acknowled1ed ~ because of a chance the DlrecJ tore Guild of America wtU strike when its contract expires Jun( 30. A directors' strike would virtually shut down film an<f television production. Another fictional cliffhanaer will end the "Dallas" seaso0i Friday, and viewers who worry about such things may be put through a second summer of waiting. It is something similar to 1980's "Who shot J .R. ?" s1tua· tion that remained unanswered for six months Davis died Sunday at his sub· urban Northridge home. He had been recuperating from March surgery of a perforated ulcer. A memoriaJ service was scheduled for Friday at 1 p.m. at Forest Lawn 's Church of the Recessional in Glendale, Lonmar officials said Wednes· day. A WRITERS' spokeswoman said Wednesday the guild has made "excellent" progress in separate talks with independent producers. On Tuesday . producers sweetened a three-year oCfer on bas ic minimums boosting them as much as to 31.9 percent for movies and 29.5 percent for TV The strike issues include res· iduals for home video pay TV , videocasse ttes and videodiscs Writers have said the producers' home video offer would give them "a percentage of nothing " The producers, working on an established industry formula that writers and directors onJy get one third the residual~ of ac- tors. have offered 1.5 percent At the end of their 10-week stnke- last year the actors got 4.5 per· cent of the distributors' gross for pay TV programs after they've been shown 10 times on every system in a year, and 4 5 per- cent for cassettes and discs after sale of 100.000 units combined. ~--------------- A Superb Adventure In Dining I TALIAN CUISINE •Courtesy Boot Slips • Banque/ ahd Pnvate Party •Facilities with Boy View 641·7880 llll WelC-1 fUalawsy Newport Baell, Callforma FULLY ASSUMABLE INTEREST ONLY 2nd TRUST DEEDS OWNER /NONOWNER OCCUPIED Call W1ll1am B Mitchell Cati IO<lay tor quote • No obhgatton trans nol!OnOI tunOng C714l 975-1128 ~E=~ PUBLIC SALE RAcm·s FOURTH ANNUAL GRADUATED DISCOUNT SALE ALL OVERSTOCKED AND LONG ST ANDING JEWELRY WILL IE UOUIDA TED AT SAVINGS YOU'LL NEVIi SEE AG AIM! tlJRRY! 3 MORE ·DAYS! ~ Wed. 29" -100/o off remaining items Ori Sat .. M~ -OML Y I Oc on the dollar Come in early while selection is greatest. All items to be sold first come first serve ONE DAY WAREHOUSE SALE OF OLD UNUSUAL FURNITURE & COLLECTIBLES Sat, May 2nd 9 a.m.-5 p.m. 2110 S. Grand, Santa Ana • old oak piano • cabinets • dining sets • tables • desks • iron toys • chairs • buffets • cedar chest • dressers • watches • sewing machines • old Italian loveseat • Cushman motor scooter • handmade dolls from Ireland lrilHJ Yes TNCb & Trollen & H•I Awtty "OM Day o.I(' * Mo Creclt Card• * "O•• Dtty Oaly11 Learn Cake Decora~~na CLASSES ST ART THE WEEK OF MAY 11 th Jorn our Cake decorating classes and discover your creatlv1ty1 In just six 2·hour weekly classes. you will dis- cover the marvelous Wilton method of cake decorating · CLASS SIZE IS LIMITED 1 5~e~ so REGISTER TODA'fl 1SUPPUESOTllA1 FREE CAKE DECOAAf lNG DEMONSTRATION SAT., MAY 2 12:00-4 :00 ' t Vacated sclioolS Can '1id 'distrit(t /inancd 1 In February trustees of the financially troubled Hunttnaton Beach Elementary (city) School l)iatrict decided that next y'ar the budtet would. be cut by S1 million . aod that three schools would be cloeed. The board expressed the feeJ- lng that cJoeing the scbooll, in the face of declining enrollment, would reduce operating costs and would generate revenue through leastn, the sites. But last week, a board mo- ti on to move district head- quarters to LeBard School, one of those earmarked for closure, was narrowly defeated by a 3-2 vote. It appears the board majori- ~ of Norma Vander Molen, P•uJa Hulse and David Sonksen made the right decision by stick- ing to the original intention of the school closures. By leasing LeBard, the dis- trict could collect $30,000 annual rent, the same as the other two schools which tentatively have been leased. One of the problems in leas- ing LeBard that was cited by trustees Gary Nelson and Roy How bas been findin& a lessee ac- ceptable to eurroundlng resi- dents. Applications from renters who want to use LeBard u a drug rehabilitation center or high school for troubled youth$ .have been rejected by the district ud residents alike as beln~com-patible with the neighbor . But eonsidering declining enrollment and decllninf tax sup- port for public school educatioo, it's a sound fiscal move to con- tinue trying to ftnd an acceptable lessee for LeBard. The present district head- quarters, a 54-year-old building at 14\11 Street and Palm A venue, probably ~ld use' 1ome re- modeling. However, it's doubtful that it could be leased because it· 'is located on the Dwyer School site, has limited parking and zoning for public use only. With the board's decision last weelc, it appears that the three closed schools could each generate $30,000 annually, some of which probably could be used to upgrade district headquarters. Official can't drop ro/,e Fountain Valley Coun- cilwoman Barbara Brown has taken the helm of a campaign to halt what she describes as an in· trusion of hard-core pornoeraphy in the city. She said magazines of this type have surfaced at several local liquor stores and have been placed within easy view of youngsters who come in to buy soft drinks and candy or to play video games. Ga the ring support from about 30 residents who share her concern, Mrs. Brown has con- ducted several strategy meet- in2s. She has vowed to or2anize picketing in front of local stores if their owners ref use to get rid of offensive magazines. Apparently, reports of the an- ti-porno campaign already have contributed to the removal of the offensive magazines from two stores targeted by Mrs. Brown. The courts have had a dif. ficull time defining pornography, and community standards vary widely. Few would dispute, however. that store owners should be en- couraged to keep adult materials well out of children's r each. Some stores also employ opaque panels that hide offensive magazine covers, while leaving the titles visible. Mrs. Brown's involvement in the anti-porno campaign raises some interesting questions. Although she is an elected city official and works as an aide to County Supervisor Roger Stan- ton, Mrs. Brown insists she is act· ing strictly as a concerned private citizen. She said she has been told that the city can do nothing legally to keep out the of. f ensive magazines. But Mrs. Brown cannot re- move her government hats just by pretending they're not there during her anti-pornography meetings. Her presence lends credibility to the group and ma)! add weight to ultimatums direct- ed to store owners. The councilwoman should keep in mind that even if she isn't representing the city officially in this group, her participation pre- vents it from remaining a strictly private concern. Safety effect doubtful A hazardous school crossing in Fountain Valley has posed a dilemma for the City Council. Currently, two guards help Plavan Elementary School stu- dents cross busy Warner Avenue at the unsignaled Greenleaf Street intersection near the school. The crossing is midway between two signaled · intersec- tions, and the posted speed limit is 45 miles per hour. Parents have ~omplained that cars do not slow for the stu- dents. At least one near-accident involving a youngster has been reported to police. The parents asked the city to install fiashing yellow lights to alert motorists to the Plavan crossing. The city's traffic experts, however, found no documented evidence that flaJhin& yellow light.a cause motorilts to slow. Councilman Marvin Adler also has expreaaed f ean that such ll&hta could give youncsters a false sense of security. . Another option was re· routing youngsters one-half mile to one o( the major signaled in- tersections. Parents warned that older students would make the shorter crossing al GreenJeaf - with or without guards. With no simple solutions in sight, the council opted to spend more than $15,000 for flashing yellow Ugbts and ceramic street discs as an additional means of alerting motorists. There are no guarantees that these measures will increase the safety of Greenleaf crossinas. Children can be careless in cross- ing a street; mot-0ri1ts often ig- nore caution signals. The council obviously had the children's safety as their prime concern, and it is hoped that the new traffic devices do some good at the crossing. It is probable that the Plavan parents -·and the council mem· bers -will sleep a little easier when the devices are in place. • Opinions expressed In the space abOve are those of the Oallv Piiot. Other views ex- prtued on this page •re those of tMlr authors and 1rtists. Reader comment Is lnvlt· ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mew., CA 92626. Phone C7W 642-4321. L. · M. Boyd/ Ancient uUdom Scholars at the University of Chlu10 labored 1001 to trantlate an ancient Eeyptlan measa1e written on part o( a broken cookin1 pot retrieved fro~ dlt1ln•• expected to ih• areal ln•liht• into the old cul tu.re. Finally, tbey determined 1t was a 4.l1patcb trom 1 man to b11 ion. And they eventually dedpbered it: "Do not take llbertiea with • woman whoee huiband 11 U1tenin• to your wordl." - Pld J mention baby hlppoe are bom underwater? They nurH underwater, too. Thi• comes to mind bec~UN a . c~tent a1Jc1 how much bab)' lppoa wetch at birth. About 100 poun • Personftl letters· a lost art The·re ought to be a 5-cent stamp ror personal letters. Letter writing is one of the good things about a civilii.ed society and it should be encour,aeed. It's a shame that everything rs conspiring against letter writing. Our whole postal system bas deteriorated to the point where mail is no fun at all The excite- ment we used to feel about the arrival of the mailman is gone. It costs 18 cents for a regular stamp now That's a terrible number and you don't dare buy a roll of 18-cent stamps bee a use you know 1t 's go mg to change before you get used to it and certainly before you use up a roll. I OBJECT TO the fact that it costs me more to send a letter to a fnend than 1t costs some fl y-by-night real estate operator to send me a phony brochur~ in the mail telling me l 'm the pro· visional winn er of a $10 ,000 sweepstakes I don't like strangers knocking on my door trying to sell me something, and I don 't want my mail cluttered with advertising H anyone wants to accuse me or feeling that way because l make a living from the ad· \"ert1sing found in newspaJ)f'rs and on television. go ahead and accuse me or 1l lt 1so 't true. I don't get five good, genuine personal letters a year The time is commg when the letter. written with pen and ink and sent as a personal message from one person to another, will be as much of a rarity as the gold pocket watch carried on a chain. It's a shame. There is something special abo.ut a personal letter It's better than a phone ,~~' -AND-Y-RBD-11-Y -~ call, no matter what the telephone com pany says A phone call disappears into the air as soon as the receiver is put back on the hook A good leUer can last a lifetime. SO ME OF MY most precious possessions are letters that have been written to me sometime in the past. I don't have a single memorable phone call stored in a box in my attic or base menl I've never thrown away a good letter, and ltke any real treasure, I don't even have to look at them to enJOY having them I know l have them The telephone calls come and go. They make no permanent impression on me and have no place in my memory A personal letter is a good thing because you sav things you can't say m <1 crowd and might not even say to the person face-lo face If you feel like it, a letter allows you to take yourself and your thoughls more senously than you would dbre take them 1n conversation. And you can say things without inter· ruption · t\ GOOD LETTER 1s. in many w'ays. the exact opposite of a political speech. A pohllctan addressing a crov.d has to talk so broad!} and generally about the issues 1n ordE.'r not to offend any one of the thousands of people listening. that he usually ends up saying nothing A letter can ~ spt'l·1f1c. and tf the v. nter has some bias or prejudice. he can· even reveal his trut-self by letting this show Writing a friend. you shouldn't have to be careful Abraham Lincoln's letter to his stepbrother telling him he wasn't going to loan him the SSO ht> asked for. telb you mort• about Abraham Lincoln than tht' G(•ttysburg Address does Some of our best history has t•ome that way from personal letters of famous people that scholars have dis covered You get a better idea of what someont' 1s really hke from a personal letter the~ wercn t expecting you to read than you gt•t from a carefull y con s1dered public statement they've made We sa;, rt>al th1n~s in lettc•rs Personal letters should go for a S·cent stamp Hiring by 'auction' irks job-seekers To the Editor: After a year away from work because of family 1Jlness. I am starting a job search I have good secretarial skills and an excellent employment record After studying ads. I have decided not to answer any ad that does not state salary. I am an executive secretary There are many, many ads for secretaries. However, you write carefully worded letters, enclose carefully planned res· umes, drive many miles. fill out lengthy (usually poorly planned) ap· plication forms. wait hours ln reception offices, endure inept interviewers, and finally you learn the salary is lower than what you earned 10 years ago BEFORE MY last Job, I worked tn a personnel department. On many oc casions when we received applications from obviously very well qualified ap plicants. the personnel diTector would .say, "But be (or she) would want too much money," and a mediocre or even less qualified person would be hired. MAILBOX who, of course, would actually cost the firm money. My brother is an artist and my husband is a writer. They, too have ex· perienced this tedious and disturbing proc.edure, hiring by "auction." And . they are asked to put together portfolios or Colden of previous work e1cb time. II you call in and ask the salary, you iel the same answers: "The J*Y ls· commensurate with your experience," or ''The salary I.a between $900 and 11600, depending on your qualiflca- Uoos." And you know tbat means •• "We'll hire \be cbeape1t one we can 1et.;' That usually mean. the person who ii most desperate takes the job. Allhoucb l 'm not on unemployment inaurabce, J will bQycott any firm that does not indicate salary ln the ad. Un· fortuoately, many unemployed people cannot. afford t.o do this, so UJe racket· cootin . M. GREJ!!N spread its many arms and threatens a deathly grip unless our sleeping soc1et:,- awakens to his destructive ideology ELIZABETHLAUF'ORD Suppom gun bill To the Editor. Whtie riding with my husband lo the Angels game April 21. an editorial in the Daily Pilot caught my attention. Jt was titled ''Opposition too quiet." I had no idea that Sen. Kennedy and Congressman Rodino had introduced to the Senate and HQuse a Handgun Crime Control Bill. And what s urprised me even more 1s the political clout that the National Rifle Association packs. I do understand why the NRA might feel threatened by a too strict iun control but It seems to me what th'ls bill calls for Is crime control and not so much gun control AFTER REA.DING your editonal and what the measures and proposals of the Kennedy-Rodino bill are, I wondered who in this country in their right minds, would object t.o or feel threatened by this bill? Now mind you. I said who in their right minds. because I feel it's the people out or their right mtnds that con· tribute so overwhelmingly to the statistics ol "20,000 murders. suicides and accidents involving ha ndguns yearly." I'm really e)(cited by this bill and feel an overwhelmlnc urge to get the word passed to the majority or Americans who want some sort of control and would support the Kennedy.Rodino bill if they In ract were aware that tbe bill existed. I'm going to contact my congressman and find out }ust what I can do to con· jure up support for this bill. I think its just what the doctor ordered. and I thank you for making thia information available to me. DEBORAH GERBER Dmmlocm memories To th~ Editor: For the paat 14 years 1 hHe resided In HunUn1ton Beach. I 1rew up turrounded by open tteJda. But, aa the yeara pro1re11ed those fleld1 were Ba,._1_.. ·not.-r -1-v slowly developed Into lndustriaJ areu. -,~•..,-~ ~"' Now they are 1ooe. Al l've aot.ten older TotheFAltor; I've 1rown accu.tomed to the took of Rt your April 23 article about Tom dpwntowp Huntln1ton Beach. The Hayden'• \'flit to UC Irvin• atudentl: Hit thou1ht ofi~veloptnf took a whlle to bralnwashtni att.em~tl with itudenll tlnlr 1ri l>Ut t n UC!9Pted 1 under one ..... 1-: con4ltlori, buUdln11 be constructed no acroa uua luit. paJn n1 a bJHk plctu" · more than three 1torie1 In -·•btao th t of th• future for them la 1hnply JU wq to th ··"U ...... • 11ath•r vota for ht1 run for the 1112 1 •re• wa not become too heavily Maa&e. populated. Tblt mM tiu not cban&td hll apptoec:lt flftn be bt1an h1i ultW•ted cHmb tnto Al.AO, mos-ma, .~kt creat. • power QUtta llfftcllDUJ Hu._. well YerJ hetUc l~ JProtMem Drtvln• otated ~e. tneludiq tall Wife. to 110D1 Pa~lfte CNll Hl~ay lit tbe furtMt dki Campaa,.. for ae-.lle ~~(CSD) • .lti ~ty the CHH iiDd ,..,~ W Ma ~ ,,...,.., ,..., ~lildl .. '° •. • ,... .. c1111...,,.-...... ... ,.... . , .... ....,.. .... ~ .... , ....... summertime ts c·haot1c espec1all) on the weekends Because or the traffic It would be very dtfftcult for paramedics or tht> police to reach a location that requires driving past the pier Plus, rinding a place to park along Pacific Coast Highway is even a greater task There is also the problem of burglary .. such as stolen car radios and other valuables of which my fnends and I have been personal victims Ttie increase tn people and cars would make the area much more attractive for thieves. J also believe that the high rises would stop or hinder the onshore air flow that keeps the smog flowing out of inner Huntington Beach Downtown Huntington Beach is. a beautiful place and holds many fond memories for many people like myself The thought of redeveloping causes bitterness but I've accepted tl. but please keep it a low density area If you're going to ruin downtown Huntington Beach. don't ruin 1t more than you have to JAMES M RAGUINDIN Leaming violence To the Editor I am inclined to agree with Karen Gibson <Mailbox, Apnl 9>. The youth of today live by TV! ll means nothing to them to see a head lopped orr "and roll like a baU ! " They laugh and scream like it was runny! If we don't curb violence on the screen kids will think nothing or killing each other like they do in horror movles while eating their popcorn at the same time! THE VIOLENCE a nd guns should be on the late late show , (plus naked Seit). Even the toddlers in diapers Ire bowleceed from carrying play guns on eact\ side and their cowboy hat! They grow SJP with that ''bani. bang, you're dead'' Heaven help those that don't get up after they have been hit with a real bullet! Children do not know any better, as they a)waya Uke to copy whatever tbey see! EMMA HYMAN I CliJJ nger? Star's death, writer strike has 'Dallas' cast guessing LOS ANGELES (AP) -A lingering writers strike could cause a real-life cliffhanger on "Dallas," the CBS-TV series known for its Machiavellian plots. as executives agonized over whether to kill off the late Jim Davis' Jock Ewing role. Should another act.or try to fill Davis' shoes. or should his feisty oil baron role be written out of the series with an on-screen death or with one of the Byzan· tine plot twists that "Dallas" fans have come to expect? "ONE OPl'ION that none of us wants is the possibility of recast- in1 the part," producer Leonard Katiman said Wednesday from his offices at MGM Studios where Lorimar Productlons was scheduled to begin shooting May 14 on live scripts already com· pleted for next season. A fictionaJ cliffhanger will end the "Dallas" season Friday. similar to last year's "Who Shot J .R.?" controversy, but Jock Ewing ls not involved in this episode, Katzman said Would the striking Writers Guild of America make an ex· ception and allow its members to 10 back to work on TV 's most popular show? That was a possibility, said Katzman, noting that be would aak the guild next week to re- consider it.a refusal earlier this week lo exempt "Dallas" because of Davis' death. He said be thought the writers' refuaal was only "conditional." He did not elaborate. "THERE IS ALSO the possibility that the Writers Guild is counting on -that we will not shoot at all -which is very doubtful,'' he added. Davis' death also raised another possibility : that Lorimar would defect from the producers negotiating commit· tee and reach a separate coo- tract agreement as an indepen· dent. "There was much speculation (about a Lorimar defection). ''But I think Lorimar is going to bold firm." Katzman said. DA VIS Dl£D last Sunday at his suburban Nortbridge home where be had been recuperating from surgery performed last month on a perforated ulcel'. A memorial service was to be held Friday al 1 p .m . at Forest Lawn 's Churc h of the Recessional in Glendale, Lorimar officiaJs said. The May 14 production start date was earlier than usual, Katzman acknowledged, because of the possibility that the Direct.ors Guild of America will strike when its contract ends June 30. A directors strike -unlike the writers walkout -would vlrtuaJly shut down film and television production and Lorlmar had hoped to 1et five shows completed before that time. Hot-<JiT balloona, above, provided tethered 10. minute rides for 30 minutes to staJl-<d·home• dt tM Gordon Bennett Balloon Race launching in Foun- tain Volley's Mile Square Park. Below, long tanker truclu !Upplied helium to fiU /lattened balloona to tend them alo~ 'Saturday. Vision led to flights By PIDL SNEIDEBMAN Of ... IWty ,.... • ..,. Bob WaJlace was in New Mex· ico, on business three years agQ when he caught the fever. His visit coincided with the d· nual Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta, and Wallace awoke one morning to find 3SO huge colorful globes floating out- • side his window. "I didn't know if ~as in Kansas or Oi," he reca Wallace, a Long Be h resi· dent who works as an engineer in Santa Ana, returned to New Mexico the following year on his bwn time and learned to fly. ff E OBTAIN ED his com· mercial balloon •Pilot's license and in March 1980 purchased his own craft, dubbed "Shout." Since then he's embarked on 153 hot air balloon nights, usually weekend laun c hings rrom Perris, Calif Last Sunday he placed third lo the first Fountain Valley Classic balloon race, landing in ZOdy's parking lot rather than his d eclared target, Brookhurst Community Park in Anaheim. Wallace. 34, claims he and m. navigator, Ron Whitaker of [rvine, would have landed rigM on target had it not been for ·a map error that caused them to steer toward the wrong park. .: Even though he didn't claim first prize, Wallace s ays he11 still booked on ballooning. "YOU KNOW, there's no elevator effect to it," he d · plains. ''P eople think they'll leave their stomachs on the ground, but it doesn't happen that way. "It's a very s mooth ride, a very quiet ride. You can hear every dog bark, every screen door slam ... ·· Propane gas is burned to in· flate Wallace's nylon-dacrQP balloon, which when filled gains ~he height of a seven-story build- ing. He usually flies at an altitude of 1,000 to 1,200 feet . but enjoys c rui s ing low over a neighborhood as he drifts in for . a landing. W ALI.ACE SAID the baJloon takes 20 to 30 seconds to respond to heating or venting changes. .. Ballooning is not a sport m which you can run out and be frivolous ." he explains. . :·~me people thank 1 must get high and then go up in the balloon. But I tell them you can't do that. The joy of balloon- ing is doing everything perfectly." llfor the price f!f four BELFAST. Northern Ireland (AP) Huneer atr\kes like tb• one t t has Bobby Sanda at death's door a e a lime-tested tactic of the Irish publican Army. In the course of ill Sf.year campallJl to end British rule in Ireland, 12 guerrillas have died f m fasting. The hunger strike ls a particularly lfuh form of protest -and o~ that dates to the el1hth century. In those days, Irishmen with a grievance aealnst an important n1ighbor fasted outside the offend1n1 party's door until the dispute was settled. SANDS, 27, serving a 14.year sen· tebce for weapons possession, is fast· iog in hopes it will force restoratlon of special privileges for guerrilla in· mates. }le was in his 60lh day without food Wednesday at the Maze prison near Belfast. According to Sinn Fein, the lJ.iA's political wing, he "could die at any moment.'' The Irish Republican tradition of h'Unger s trikes was started by Tbomas Ashe, a leader of the 1916 F;aster Rising ID Dublin. • Jailed by the British in the city's Mountjoy Prison, Ashe stqpped eat· iog to demand that he and" other na· tJonalist leaders be treated as prisoners of war. He died after five days as a result (jf tOrce·feeding. More than 30.000 people• followed his coffin through the streets of Dublin. THE MOST famous Irish hunger striker was Terence McSwiney, rebel lord mayor of Cork. who died in Lon· don's Br1xton prison on Oct. 25, 1920, after a 74·day fast Two other na- tlon ali sts died with him in that l\unger strike McSw1Dey, a member of lhe out· lawed JR.A, enshrined the etbol that wae to lnspire later bun•er atnken. He declared: "The contest oo our side ta .•. ooe of endurance. lt '8 not thpae who can lnntct tbe moet, but those who can suffer th moet wbo will conquer." L•ter deaths came in the af· termatb of tbe lriab civil war between the IRA, s"kln1 full in· dependence from Brltlln, and the "Free State" forces, which support· ed limited home rule. Ireland became an independent state in 1921, but the predominantly Prbtestant North remained under British con· trol. TWO lllA men, Dennis Barry and Andrew SulUvan. died in ,Mountjoy after 43 daya without food in October . 1923. In UNO, Jae~ McNeela an4 Tony d' Arey died after a 55-day fut to the republic'• Arbour mu :Prtaon. Another IRA man, Sean Mccaughey, died ill May UM6, after a 3l·day hunger a,pd thirat strike-.. the top security Portlaoise Prison, west of Dublin. The hunger strike became an Im· portant guerrilla weapon in the early 1970s after Northern Ireland's sec· tarian feuding began ln AUl\lll 1969. After a 38-day mass hunger strike by IRA men ID Loni Kesh pr)son camp near Belfast in 1972, the Dritish Conservative government gave in and granted jailed guerrillas "special category" status, allowing them to wear their own clothes, do no prison work and run their own affairs in their "cages" or compounds. The "special category" status was withdrawn in March 1976 by a Labor government. It is special category rights that Sands and his followers are demanding be restored. • A .. .......,_ Gov Edmund G Brown tours the Gregory Bate1on Building in Sacramento, whlch uses a vanety of active and panive solar technologies ~ ib energy SJ/Stem Building solar showcase Edi/ice uses active, passive technology 'SACRAMENTO !AP> -What has S)O tons of river rock , four SO·foot golden Chinese lanterns, soaks up dally sun and releases it at night and uses only one-sixth the energy of ill neighbor? It's the state's newest office build· iog. the first built since 1968. It's also a showcase of how energy can be saved through pas~ve and active $Olar design while at the same time providing attractive and comfortable offices for 1,200 people Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. will ded· icate the new Gregory Bateson Building, which spreads over 2\AJ acres three blocks from the state Capitol, on Friday as part of a day- fbng fair at the city park. HE AND state architect Barry asserman, who with former state trchitect Sym Van der Ryn designed the building, conducted a tour for re· porters Wednesday. The architect said the building la e first attempt to apply on a large, bUc scale many principles of ac- ve and passive solar desisn. State office buUdln11 constructed o decades a10, like the towen arby, use 120;000 to 150,000 BTU per square foot per year, he said. The state building code now requires commercial buildings to cut that to 55,000 BTU. The n~w building should use 20,000 BTU per square foot an· nually. he said. The building's energy system is run by a computer. THE MOST striking feature is a huee central courtyard 150 feet square and stretching from the brick floor to the skylit ceiling. The active solar aspect ia the col· lectors on the roof that will beat 75 percent of the water u.sed ln the bu ii dine. Tbe courtyard's skyllcbta can be changed in angle so that winter sun enters or summer sun does oot. The concrete frame of the buJJdine la desiened to work like a laree rock alon1 the river, Waaserman ex- plained. It is cool in tbe mornin1, gell warm during the day and ataya warm ln the evening. (Tom Mu'J)ldrw ii looking for elephant• in Sfltimldo. H,. column wtll mum Wft!- MadaJ/.) Has Excess Weight Made You Feel Uke A Prisoner .In Disguise? WEST CLIFF PLAZA """t'S 1 "C'\ ~,. Snail and Slug Control 20% Off CROW• HARDWARE WHtcllff Piasa • Harbor VMw C.nt.r CorotHI def Mer PAlll!NOl!R "Herman,'' a youn1 dach - shund, rides i D 8 i d e Motorcyclist Morrlsett 's jacket at Albu· querque, N.M., but .Morrisett says this cozy arrangement can 't go on b e c a u s e Herman's get- ting too big. NE\VS FEATURES , SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -People wbo suffer from aevere psorlasls can benefit from a tecbnique that reduc~ tbelr need for ultraviolet radiation and the risk of skin cancer from that treatment, two dermatoloJisll say. Dn. John Parrish and Kbotrow llontaz, here for the meetin1 of the Society for lavest11aUve Dermatology, said that they combined two exit Una techniques to create a faster, aa!er cure for the akin ailment psorlasia. The accomplishment, they said, may mean re- lief for the estimated 4 to 10 million Americans who suffer from the red, scallne patches of akln that characterize psoriasis. Parrish said that research showed that many people who had resisted standard treatment bad responded to the combined technique. which ln· volves drug therapy and expoeure to ultraviolet radiation the same kind of rays in sunli1ht which causes sunburn. Parrish said with the new treatment, patients need only 10 to 12 treatments, rather than the usual 25. before the psoriasis begins to clear up. GIFTS FOR MOM SHIPPED FREE! Mother's Doy 11 Moy 9! Select from a ~ide variety of gifts. packed in pretty yellow boxes just for Mom. They're filled with tempting cheeses. sausage and sweets ff icktr1 rarm~. 01 01110 FASHION WESTCl.IFF ISLAND OPY"I PLAZA Nt•por1 S.ath UAIJ \ l7th and ln1n.r "'-'" ... pon EW•th 640 6030 642 0912 SPECIAL! SUE BEE HONEY a.... .. 0r.,. e3c 12u.WI U. Contact LanM• Eyawaer Styling Aetrec:tlng p,.Kftblng Dr. Lou Elder OPTOMETRIST , 642-0720 1124 Irvine Ave. Newport Beach mnti rimm RDHSIAJOOD ... SBVICIDILI sncws FreshHotGolM FRIED 041<XEN ~ 5.99 I He-,art leect.-1020 nt., Wtttdff "'no ... TOKYO <AP> -ll'• the moat or1ani1ed nea market in the worla, and tbe money that changes b Jld• each day makes Lt the bi11eat. But it's not antiques that the Japanese are bl.lYing at Ak.ihabara (pronounced Ah-tee-ba-ba· ra). It's where they 10 to purchue their television seis and hl-fi equipment, In fact just about anything that can be electrically operated -even pJug-in mosquito killers and heated slippers. Here, 500 wholesalers and retailers, some in six-story glass emporiums, others in jerrr,-built lean-tos tucked away beneath the railroad tracks, sell an estimated 25,000 different items, from minuscule transistor componenu to rup-of· the-switch, state-of-the-art microcomputers. IN mE TRADITION of all great markets, Akihabara's merchants display their goods on the sidewalk, not under lock and key, so that prospec· tive customers can play, tinker and tune, gape in a•e. and finally haggle at 25 percent to 40 percent below normal retail prices. The first shocks for the casual visitor to this electronic festival are the crowds, the noise and the plethora of products on display. Row upon row of stereo speakers are stacked like cartons of pop- corn, and blasting out music ranging from the latest in pop to Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. Similarly, refrigerators, washing machines, rice cookers and other appliances -for some rea· son almost always in garish pink, green or ocange, share space with the amplifiers, stereo tuners and tape decks. AU of course, at prices hard to beat. Street hawkers thrust gaudily printed flyers at passersby, promising hefty discounts on brand- A customer looks over a device for taking blood prenure. COLLECTORS CORNEA Rare Cotu •Stamp• OOlO •SILVER ac.,.; R. Ph. \ • • ha JMea• Ga tr E1edrte ~ bu reported • .o.e percent earnlAt• lncreaae for tM quarter ded Mareh 31, 1l&'aalln1 .-OUUal reeovftT in earnlnet per 1bare aher two taltertn1 yeart. Tbe uUlitY'• fint-qual'Wt' net income totaled SM millloa on revenues ot '272 Dllll\:fucomoarect with '17 mllllon on revenue1 d $12$ on. a fear aco. Pet •bare euialnea l'Olle to ~ cent. lh the quarter, compared with '° cent. ln 1llO and 41 cents in )J78. Earnln11 per share, however, are still nearly 12 percent t>.low the 61 c~u in the first quarter of 1978, the last calendar year the utUJty earned more than $2 a share for the year. • • • U. Country Safari lac. of Irvine lost $'7'4,290, or 39 cenb a share, for the year ended Dec. 31, 1880, compared with a loss of $630,121, or 36 centa a share ln the previous year. Smiling 1hopkeeper 1elu hundreda of different electTomc port1 in Tokyo'1 Alrihabara diltrict. Revenues for 1980 dropped to $1.8 million from $2.3 million in l979. The 1979 revenues included $50,000 from the termination of the proposed sale of the park as well as $150,000 realized from the sale of the two concessions resulting from tbe aborted transaction. • Harry Shuster, president, said the company had concluded an agreement with a group of Orange County investors for the construction and operation of an amphitheater with a seating capacity of 10,000. name products at particular stores. Children amuse themselves speeding radio-controlled toy cars down the maze of pedestrian alleyways while parents look for household bargains. DES'PITE THE CARNIVAL atmosphere pervading this old quarter on Tokyo's east side, Aklbabara ls big business. Its annual sales volume has been estimated al about $500 million, some 20 percent of Tokyo's home appliance market. Akihabara's salesmen are better-dressed and more polite than tourists might expect street ven- dors to be. It is considered good business in Japan, where great emphasis is placed oo form and man- ners. The larger outlets set up special tax-free cor· ners for tourists, usually staffed by people with at least a smattering of English. Akihabara is a classic study in how businesses can make money while allowing fat discounts on their merchandise. · "We buy in bulk, our overheads are low and we rely on heavy sales volume because of ~r low profit margin," explains Hirosuke Watanabe, of Jshimaru, a popular chain store. CASH-ON-THE-LINE, no credit cards, is the rule That helps to increase turnover and keep prices down, dealers say. Tbe price tag figure is always negotiable, some stores even encourage bargaining, and most probably would knock off a few extra bucks rather than lose a sale. A typical discount at Aklhabara would bring the buyer a stereo cassette deck, normally listed for $305, for $235. The higher the price, the greater the discount. A 26·inch color TV set selling elsewhere in Tokyo for $1,ISS is slashed ti) $8SO at Akihabara -even less for the real btlrgainer. Akihabara's attractions have made it not only a mecca for Japanese with fistfuls of yen but also for foreign tourists. Almost every hotel and travel agency tour of Tokyo includes a visit to the area whose name translates as "field of autumn leaves," presumably from the days when it was countryside. Before World War JI, Aklhabara was a fruit and vegetable market, a remnant of which re- mains across the railroad tracks, sharing space with a doll market. . BY SOME ACCOUNTS, the area became a major black market for scarce rood and other • goods when Japan was emerging from the ashes of its World War II dereat. How it came to be an electronics center is ob· scure, bul among the first customers were American Gls during the Occupation, when the in· dustry was just getting started. The mart has been the subject of many con - sumer surveys. One weekly magazine, re- searching Japanese buying hablta, found that more than half of the appliances bought at Akihabara never get used, and 20 percent wind up on the scrap heap while stilJ in serviceable condi· lion. Appliances in seemingly good condition are commonly discarded in this consumer society. It's not uncommon for foreigners living on limited budgets in Japan to boast of having furnished their tiny apartments by checking out the trash. magazine Sbuk hincho, came up with some in- ANOTHE¥URVEY. by the popular teresting conclusi : A\ide from the regular run COURTEOUS, PROFESSIONAL, TRAINED ••• Dacrlba TAB Operators and Scrvke. CONFIDENCE Dncrtba Our Cuttomen· Feetlnga About TAB. \ TAB OPERA TORS Will ... Tate. Mes~•• Take Orden •Quote Prlca • Relay Calls• Mu• Api>oCntmcnta •Tele•·· and'""F.tetlmllc S.rvke • S..s>«t fot afJ Southern C.hfornla • Wekc-up s.tv1cc. of tourists, Akihabara's best forel1n customers are Russians, usually in town as meJDbers of vlaiting sports teams, orchestras and ballet companies. It said the most skillful baeglen are Southeast AsipJl.8 followed by the Russians, European• and Amiencans, with the Japanese at the bottom of the list. Akihabara also demonstrates how Japan has overcome its reputation for cheap and shoddy goods. Japanese appliances rarely break down. All products carry warranties, but the service in· dustry barely exists, and repairs often cost more than the price of a new item. "Here, you never get cheated. You pay a fair price and you know it'll work," says Carl Brixley of Los Angeles, a resident businessman in Japan for 14 years. He says he orten visits Akihabara just to marvel at the product displays In the United States, he says, there is always the problem of warranties and after-sales service but "in Japan that doesn't apply. Things never go wrong, do they?" WANTED DIAMONDS • GOLD Jewel• by Joaeph purchases d .. monds. gemstones. gold and silver trom pn~te lndM- duals and estates Carel\JI exam1naoon and evaluation by our experts Highest pnces paid 1().9 dally. Sat 10-6 CIOsed Sunday Phone today Mk fOf Betty Grace OI Enc Zalaskus. .. fMDm()oj Of fAlnl rOA ovt" t10 1£AM JtWtLS by JOStPH Soulh Cout Ptau. Coeta -.a • 54()..9()H CALL LINDA BLUE FORA · FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN- INTEREST ONLY! Newport E.quity 'Funds · Inc Licensed Bcoker Since 1971 \ (714) 760-6060 Final M>ning for the amphitheater was ob- tained March 24. Construction has commenced and the amphitheater is expected to open this Auguat. • • • Tbe Willard Co. in Fountain Valley, manufac- turers and develope~ or sophisticated fiber&lass reinforced products, enjoyed a prolit gain of 17 percent to a record $194,051, or 44 cents a share for 1980 compared with $166,484, or 37 centa, for 1979 based on 4'44,000 shares outstanding in both periods, according to a report by officials of the f firm. ! For 1980, sales jumped 3() percent to $3.t( million from $2.4 million the previous year. Company President Jack B Hochadel saidJ last year the firm obtained more than half its busi -. ness from government defense contracts !orf fiberglass logistics products. EXECUTIVE SUITES I I JADE MANAGEMENT I 881 Dover Of' .. Suite 14 NEWPORT BEACH 714 -631-3651 $50,000 to $500,000 INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS • lfttenrsl o.Jy pll~t • •.c-• •Co.-.cNil •..R••W..del •Weekly co-''-*- • M-tWy~• • •-•lil•to3 years • Scnlt .. ent c.J .. qrn&. l 1•n1c'' I 'U' loe• lafo,....tlon .. rvice lor vuur f111.,nnny """d' (714) 759-1515 AMEltlCAN HOMf ltlORTOAGl 230 Ne,.pnn Cenler Ori•e Design Plue Newpon Beac" Cal1forn1a 92660 THE LIGHT TOUCH r-----ct.atNG 8&l)lncl»fln ..,.,.Mll.,.._..llCClire...---- 1 n Business To Make Business Happen At Creative we have the money you need Loans from $25,000.00• for any business or investment purpose. Where you deal directly with the Lender and not a loan broker. •All loans secured by a comb1nat1on ot real and personal property • 4425 JAMBOREE ROAD• SUITE 180 • NEWPORT BEACH. CALIFORNIA 92660 1711) 7!12·7923 'I DJ JOllN ClJNNll"'F ~ ............ NEW YORK -J! a eompaa)''I nlea ll't'W 36$,$8'7 percent In five yean, -5 the aales of Cobb Resourcet did, 1& •bould make aomebody'a llat. It does. 1t leads "The loc. 100" Tbe lnc. 100 la unlike the Fortune SOO, which ls Fortune maaaiine's list of the soo larseat U.S. companies. rnc. ls a maaazJne of "smaller com- panies," and it.a lillt la baaed not on •ales but on sales arowth. That's why Cobb, a mining coqlpany based in Albuquerque, N.M .. heads the list with sales of only $11 million. In 1976, the baae year for measur- ing companies on the Inc llsl, Jts sales were $3,000. IU compound annual rate or growth since then some 678 percent doesn't mean it ran ~way from the others In secon<t J>lace, OSI Corp • a Nashville, 'reno .. company \hat transfers computer data onto microfilm or microfiche, grew 606 percent CUNNIFF a year. or 248,224 percent 1n five years OF EVEN GREATER significance than sales may be the job-producing consequences of sales. Smaller busmesses, rather than the mature giant corporations. often are the JOb creators of American society The work force of the top 500 industrials, writes Bradford Ketchum Jr .. who supervised the compilation for Inc . climbed only 12 percent, but the work force of the 100 smaller companies leaped 663 percent. This didn't surprise him, because earlier studies showed som ething similar. A House com· mittee in 1978, for instance, said that between 1969 and 1976 "small businesses accounted for what can be considered virtually all the new private sector employment 10 the country " Gettmg that message across, however, has proved difficult, and all the while the larger com- panies have been gathering ID a greater share or the gross national product Even in dealing with government. small business has had a difficult lime. what with regulations that all but eliminated them as bidders or discouraged entrepreneurial ef- fort JN MORE RECENT years. especially since last year's White House Conference. smaller busi· nesses have been on the attack We. they say. are the JOb Crl'ators, the 1mprovers of productivity. the PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ' m&)fU&Gn W'bO ..-ve to .lllftll pnee ~. tbe U>venton and lbt !bovaton. An~ WIU. tome famlnartl)t wlUI U.. na· tJon'• probtem.1 can ee tha IUCh d&lau addreU them1elv11 ~ tbe Ytl'J econoD:ilc u• tut need to be resolved. And •o. tbey aM 1alnlnC adberenta. The Inc. Ult, ·~ the eo~p&riSON derlved from lt, add documentaUori and pi:obabl)' more public aupport for amaJleT busliu111eJ. To quote Ketchum: "The 1981 Inc. 100 companlet are a aymbot--of true human achievement. "OlJIUNG A YEAB of economlc turbulence marked by sky·hiib interest rates, punishing lnfta. tion rates, aad a pseudo recovery. the en· trepreneun wbo run these 100 companies puahed their people to outperform all other business groups by every measure." Jn 1980, aay11 Inc., the nation's biggest corpora· tions "managed aaJes increases that barely kept pace with lnfiatioo, and profit! that didn't." But the Inc. list shows a sales gain of 52 percent, and ,,.. surge in after-tax profits of 50.1 percent. Rounding out the lop five on Inc. 's list are Gull Energy, a Salt Lake City oil, gas and coal de- veloper; Tandem Computers, Cupertino, and Tan- don, a Chatsworth maker ol minicomputer dilc drives. Medical product,s f inn corrects selloff re~rt The officers of Luther Medical Products Inc. of Costa Mesa have corrected a report by Stock Research Corp. that stated company officers had sold 168,000 units of the corporation. "We sold only 14.000 units, not 168,000," said Marshall F Sparks, vice president and treasurer. "We bought the stock at the public offering, and on the advice of our attorneys, sold it before we became subject to the Securities and Exchange Com mission• s insider trading rules. "The 14,000 units is a minor portion of the 22 million shares outstanding " Luther Medical Products is traded over·the- counter A unit equals 10 shares plus two warrants. Sparks said the shares were sold at l~. while the present price 1s about 2~ •. No additional units of the company 1s expected to be sold at this time by company officers, Sparks said ~~~~~~~~~~~ PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSINESS FICITITIOUS IVSINlSS NOTICE INVITING llOS NAME STATEMENT FICllTIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT Notice Is l\er•t>y ,, ... n 11\•I Ille fne 10110,..ono perwn• ••• <101nci NAME STATEMENT Tnt loilow1ng per10"' .,. ao1ng Boero ol Trustees ol tlW HunU119ton bullno•"' Tnt lollow•ng Ptr>On• ••• <loing bu11n"'es B••cl\ Union HIQI\ Sc'-4 01.Crl,1 wlll OAl(l"IE WOODWORl(S, 1JJ6,bU\lnou.. AQUA SOL, 3101 w Moore re ceive IHl•<I l>ldl lor supplylng Orch•O H•ll Pl.Ct ~nt• An• H••QnU. THE GOOO Ll~E fRAllEL, 010 Avenue. Sotnl• An•. C.el1lornl• '2104 Cerpet Cle..ilnv S.Nl<e me.tln9 or C•lllorn1a qz101 I <.•mpu• D<tve "lewpon Beach, CA Fr•nl< So<rtnlmu. ?'llJ S Rtne equelto IN ~lllcetlons on Ille In the Ro.,.rl Wry~nd. 2llb Orcl\•d Hill 1 91•60 Orl•t, S.tlld "'"" C61ilorn1• qu04 olllu ol t.akl Dlllrkl. Plue, ~nle Ane He111nt•. C•lllorn•• Rose C.raven, 44 C:•i>e Coo, lfV•nt, TIH• bu"""''" c0"'1\lcled Dy •n 1n Bids 11\ell be clurty merked t1101 'CA 911!4 <l•••dual "c•rpel Cleenlnv S.rwlce, 810 •-2." Wone •rwmoto, u 1 E ••tn ~•reel. P4 tr•<•• C.ulrner. 4715 ~Ion R....i, Frank SorrMllno eddreued to Allyn E . Rowley, Co\le Mew C•hlorn1e•ri.11 tr••n•. c:A 92115 I r"" ~1A11.,,._1 wes lllt<I ••In 11\e Purcl\uln9 Menev-r. Huntington Tru, bU\trW\\ '' conduclttd by • Thi\ bu\IM\\ is conouctltd by • County Clt"rk of Oran~ Couf\h Of\ 8eech un•on High School Dlstr~ct, gene••• ~r1ners"'P Q•ntr•I ~rtMr\nip Apnl 21 1'111 10251 Yorllt-. A....,.,., Huntl~ R-rlWty~nd Rov C•4•tn Ft .. SZI 8e•cl\, Callfomle '21M6, end recet ... d Tl\h •IAllernt<>I ,. .. 111.0 w•tl\ tl\e Pelri<•• Cu•rner et or IMfore 1 00 p.m ., Frldlly, Mey u. Count r Clerk Of Or4t1Qe CouMy °" l "" \Wle,,.,,I '"" Ill.a Wllll tnt PuDhll'teCI 0<-COHI Delly Piiot, '"'·el -.Nell tinM end pteo l>lds wlll Aprtl 14 19'1 Countr C .. r~ °' Or""90 on April I Apr 13 JIJ.Mey/ 14 l'ltl l&Sl .. 1 t>epwl>llcly--endrHd Fl-l'ltl Eecll 111c1 .,..II r.....in ~•lld 10< e PuDhstwcl Ounve Coe\! 041ly P1101 1 & A 1 i.. 1 FUU.., PUBLIC NOTICE per1oa ol o deys efler ti\• d•I• Apr I~ 7J JO Mh I 1 .. 1 llSSl l NO"' U« • • It(, spe<llled 1or Ow recelpl ol l>lds. I Olt C•-Ori ... W.te t Tl\e Boerd o1 TrUllffS 11 .. 11 lie IN PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICI OF ~AILAllLITY OF ANNUAL •l~•T N••~r1 ....... CA n.... sol• JudOI of IN qu.111y ol 9Clulpment I PuDl1\....0 O<•nQO Cu 1t Oaoly PolOl. FICTITIOU$ IV$1NIU olfer..i -rne!'W'l uw r'91\I to reject Ao,,•• •• H. JO. 19'1 .. ,, " NAMI STATEMINT eny or •II -•no lo .... v. •ny •• 1>u:~~.~o~~o .. 1ng oersons ere doing , .. ulerlly -.in PRESIDENT PROPEIHIES. 120 Allyn E R-ley, Puru..stnv Me,_, Pursuenl to Se<tlOn .,CM COi ol .,.,, t ntern•I Aeve1u;e Cod•~ notice " hereby QIYein Uwt ttw annu•I report tor PUBLIC NOTICE '"'Celena•• yter ltlO Of FICTITIOUSIUSINEU FAIRCHILD MARTINDALE FOUN NAME STATEMENT OAT ION. • private tound•t1on. ts Tnf' tO'IOW'lnQ Pt"non '' do4no t>Yst ave•l•bl• at the toundehorr • prtn< l~I neu ii\ ollke IO< 1n~llOn durtnv •"9Ul•r COUNT RY BOY , 115e Nt•PGrt bu,JMss "'°""''by.,..., c1ti19" whO '' BoultY•rd Cot.ta Mes•. C•llforn•• quells II w1lhtn 1111 deY• ell., 11\e dlll '1'1•2• of tnll pul>llUllOll Jo Anne BeruDt, 1'731 Ed,.. Piece, Tl\e 1.....-tlOn'> prln<llWI olllce II I Cov1n1. Ce111orn1e '1121 IOC.•l•d •• IOIS Gr•n•llle Ori••. n .. , llu\IM\\" cooclucl.O by •n 1n Ntwpor1 S-1\, Cehlornl• tl..O I d••tdual Tl'1• Prln<ilWI meneQef of Ille loun Jo Anne Berube dellon ll H•"Y T. M•rllnd•I•. Tnl• .... em.nl ..... fifed Wiii\ ti\• Trullee County C:lt ra of Or-County on April Liiii<~ M<How & 11, 1'11 C,..,.,., S F l(eller F1'1t16 101 Wiishire Boult.,.rd PuDllS....O Ore"91' CoeSI D•1ly Pilot, Lo. Angeles, Celllorn1• '!0011 Ap•il lO, ~v 1, 14, 21, ttel 1'112.al Pul>I"""" Or-Coe•I Deily Piiot. Aprll JO. l'ltl )01~11 PUBLJC NOTICE N$i-NOTICE 0, f>ISSOLUTION OF rAaTlllltS"I" PUBLIC NOTICE ,ICTITIOUS aU51NESS NAME STATEMENT The lollow•nv ii.rwn1 ••• doing D•niMUes J •nO M SERVICES, Hl2 Hemlllon. Huntington Beech, Celllorni•~ R1c11ero Kern McKesson, 22&l L•Ll"d• Court, Newport Beecl\, Cehlorn•• '2MO Joi\" Kurlll Mc Kenon, l21l Bu el\. C0<>nl'f of O•enoe. Sl•I• 01 LeL1nae court, Newport Beech, C•lllornte did on 11\e llSI dO OI Celllornle t1MO O.cem-. ""· Dy mutuel u••Wftl, Tl\11 11u11neu h conducted Dy • PuDllc nol•CI 11 hereby g1wen tlwll MANI L BHAVMIK, •nd RANGA. l BHAVMIK, llaf'etolore dolll9 b•lllftffl under IN tictll-firm n-end style of HOME FABRl<;S CENTER, el llJl Wnl Cliff Ori ... ('.1ty of Newp0rt diuo1.,. the u ld perlnersll•P end ltmlled pertntrsnfp terminate tnelr relelions .. panners I RIC. Mt:Kn-. lllereln ll\ll •1•1-1 ..,.~ filed wlll\ '"" S.1d """,,." in 11\e tutur• •Ill lie count Clerk of Oranoor County on c onducted"' HOME FAIRICS Aprlll4 1911 CENTER, L TO e C:.lllONll• <O'l'O•• Fl-U 11011, "'"° will pey and dh.cllerge •II Pu1>11sneo O.envie Coal! Oelly Pilot, hel>illlles -del>h ol 11\e llrm •ncl , .. Aprll lO. May 7, u . 21 1'1t1 ,..._., tel•• •II monies payel>I• to llw llrm Furll\er notl<• 11 lw,..l>y 111.,... lllel Ille uno.NIQM<I •Ill not lie ,._., •• bl•, trom 1111• deY on, for eny obllve lion Incurred Dy 11\e otl\en In 11\elr o•n n•mes °' In Ille,,....,. of 11\e llrm OAT ED AT Lot A....,les, Celllornle, tl\ls 1711\ dey ol Apr II, 1'11 Timothy S Herrlt Anomey PUOlllMO Or-Coest Delly Piiot, AP<ll JO. ,,., )011 .. 1 PUBLIC NOTICE "CTIT10U$ euSINISS MAM91TAT•11141MT TIMI loltowlnv ..,_ 11 clOlng buJI Jac.ll l(alltl SlndlH1 Tiii• ...__. •• Ill .. wllll -c ... nty Cllfll. -1 0r-. c.M't Ill ..... 1114.ltll PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUI IUSINllSS Vt• wa11er1 Htwport 81etl\, Deted -""lllt, 1'11 Callforn1e 9)1160 Pul>ll-Or-Coast 0.Uy PllOI, W•llfem 81•" Armstrong, l1 Apr JO, May I, 1''1 101Wl ~•rt»Onnr Newport 8••<"'. C•l1,orn1•91'60 Ttto~ M L1.-n, JIO ~Ire, Blll>CMI lsl•nd, C.eltforn1e t2'62 E<1w1n A M~\trve, 120 V•• Watlers. "l••oorl 8eKI\, Celllornle '1660 T '"' bui1M\S '' conductt-d b't • limll.O P4•1ntOlllp Edw•n A AMler•e T II•• •l•te,.,,..,1 wn flled wltll 11\e County Clerk ol Or4tl99 County on Aprtl ], 1911 MALCOM & DALY 41IO Me<Ar1-llvd., New'°rt IM<ll, CA tt ... 'If*' Pubtlsntd Or.onoor Coest Delly Pllol, Apr 16, U , JO. ~y I, l'ltt Ills-ti PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS IVSINEU NAMESTATEMl!NT T ne IOll-lnv penon I• 001n11 """. ""' ., STREET TOYS AUTO BODY ANO PA.INT, MO Wnl 11111 Sltfft •24, Cos le Met.a. ce111orn1e tla21 Jtfluy Allftl TlbOel> 411 COllA Mew St'"'· COllAI MeMI, Celllorn•• .,.,, Tiiis t>usonni i. <ondl><ted by .,, In dlvlduel J.iterv Allen l ~-II This .Wle"*ll ••• Wed will\ ,,_ County Clerk ol Or"'ge Counly on Aprtl U , 1911 Fl- PuDllsntd Or-Coesl Delly Piiot, Apr ... u .J0.""41yl,1911 11n•1 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NA·1Mlt DE~AaTMENT OF T•AIU~U'ATIOH NOTICE TO CCHtTaACTOlt$ S,eled IN'-ls wlll l>e received et II\• D•P'lftMllnt of Tr•nsportellon, t IJG H Slf'MI, Room ,., Se<remanto, C•lllornl• '5114. untll 2 o'clock p.m. on M•y •• ""·•I Wl\lcl\ limo ,,..., •Ill ... l>UbliCly _..., end r-In the Al· Hml>IY Room •1 wld eddres" for ton- slruc tlon on Stele nlell•o In •<· cord•nc• with ti\• speclflcellons lller•for, to -th -1•1 relerenc• h mede, es follows S-Benno Coumy, in end neer Sen Ju.., 8'ull11A1 encl HoHlster, lrom 0 1 mlle -ol Alerneo. Strff(, In S-Juen a.eutl•IA. lo IN S... Benito Alwer Br idge !Portions) COS·SBl-1,..1 llt.I)~ eal1li"11 l\igtlwey IO DI •'-I>'( 11"e<ll119 end wrfe<· Int •II~ •lllfWll contrete on ~9981• boe o .. r evgregale Wl>t>eM Incl on ulst1n9 surletlnv Tlll1 ,,_,I Aid prOjKI llel • 9081 of I perc-mlMtlly ""SIMH eft. 11..PrlM pertklpetlon Ho pr~id ,,...unv is K-led lor !Ills prol«I &Ids.,.. requlnct lor tne enllre wort! oescrl-llefeln. Plens, -ltlc.tlons, end pr_..I t.,.m, lor b!Ocllng 11\ls project cen only D• ot>teln.d et 11\t Oepertmenl of TrenJPC)rlallon, Pl-and Bid Docu- ments, Room 1', Tr-ration &ulld- lng, 1120 N Strwl, t>. 0 . Boa ,...,, S.Cremento, C.llloml• 9JI07 c.,_ tt•·44.S-l32SI, -rney bl -el the et>ev• office and et ,,,. offl<H ol lltl DI.UICI 01-len of TrenSPOrt.wtlon •I Los A""''"· ir... Fr ..,<11<0, _.ct tl\a dlllrlcl In Wfllcll u. wOf11 11 sltueted. Tiie successful Dldder tllell fwmlsll • IJ•rmenl Dond •nd • pet1otmence -cl Tiie 0-C"*lt of Tr.,~ IMreby no41tlet •II I>._,.• u..t tt wlll eltlrm•ll .. I'( Insure ltlet In eny c~ tract en-Into oursuiinl to lttl• eo- urllsemenl, mln~rlly llusl111u en• lerprls.as wlll l>e etforcled full ._. rtor1U11lty to """"" 1114• In ·-to Ullt l11wllah0f'I -wlll not • dlt• crlml,..._ eee!Mt on IM .,._. of rece, ~. or ...tlenel ori.lft lfl Clfl• tldetellon I« en •-.I· Mlftl-wege ret• *IM• 111trolect .. Pf' .. tm\'llftld ~tr.~ .. ........, ., .... for1tl .... , Ill ttie ~ .. I pr...,111en1 "' Ult -i.n., _........ ...... 1~ .. .....,.~ ... lf'lllllM ·~1 ....... I.,., Notice .. C.W.CIDn. ,.,._, -(.ofltrtet." •"4"' c ... ef ...... IMltMY ... t .. "llllM at \M .. -offlCH •I 4..Crl.,._ NIM .. ~·• ,.,..,, '"' e•1'f, "'9fllfl<•IMM. Md ,,,._..,1 .... _, .. '""' ........... ,,....., ... , .. ,,.._ .... , .. •I" .. ~ .......................... . ,~ ..................... ~ ..._ . ...._ ...... , ... ,,.... ... ,I'll ... .,"" ~ ef L.-tM tM lllfl'Hlllft9 ..... ,. ... .,_ ltrml!lff ., II" 6tete W Sll'llllef CltMlftUtl9N .. 1~. tlle c:.ntrtKW aMI Ill•~---ll ... ntt ... tMlllN__. .... ,...._ ,.,.lllMI ti lt<tt.ft ,,.,, .......... . , ... , ........ ..,.,..llflt ..... .. ..... Ill -ClNllly '" Jllll<ll , .. ---•• tit -.... llM '9M • .,.... _, OM OlrtOW II ... ~· ef fll• tlotlfl .. ._ .... .._ n-.... , .... • ,,. •• , '" '"' o, .. ,,~••• •• Tr1119"'VtlM pwMlutJM t11lltlN .0.-• l'fWel-.... ,,...., ... .... ..... ~~ .. ,.... ;-..:~..::..:;:=::: ~~ 1) -I • ITT unit appoints director Frank Captor bu been named director of enelnee.rtnc for l'M' Jabaco, Cotta Mes.a. a unit or lntemational Telephone and TeJe. araph Corp. CaroJ Garber of Garden Grove has been promoted lo assistant vice president and manager of American Savinas and Loan As· soclation's Costa Mesa branch. Sdh Leadbeater of Irvine baa been named vice presldenl-commericaJ loan officer of the Jtvine Commercial Center or Security Pacific National Bank Rita Ergas of Laguna Beach has been ap· pointed regional director or public affairs for the Southwest Retail District, Mid-California Retail District of Sears. Bruce Carter of Fountain Valley has been named president of Ashwill-Burke & Co., and Ed P. Griffen of Laguna Beach has been named ex· ecutive vice-president. Alan Margulis of Irvine has been promoted to executive vice presl· dent, operations. of Costa M esa -headquartered Master Specialties Co Richard Randall or CAltTH Newport Beach has been appomted vice pres- dent-commercaal contracts at the Douglas Aircraft Co division of McDonnell Douglas Corporation, 1n Long Beach Carl Bergstrom Jr. has been n~med manager of the Orange Branch of Home Sav-mgs OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS HEW YUM-. IAt'l ,ClrllcO NASDAQ QUOtallonl CltiSoG• \/IO•l".$1 l\lgi.st bla. Ctt1UIA •l>d lowesl oftffs t>y ClliVIB merk•J.r":" u of l:lerkJL Wed. 411 ..... Cl-Cp lnclud9~lman11.ip ColrTI• merkOO-OI comm COIGSl\ol tulon 10< -· As~t<~...s ~~ ~ ComCIH AF A Pn>I IV> 9"1 ~::::rr~I AVM Cp 4~ S ConPep s Accurey 12 12"" Cordis AOdl111W ll IJ'h Cro1 Tre s AdwRou ._ -CullrFd • Alfl8ill J9 JtYll CycllrOf'I AluAlell Joi M iit OenlyM Allclnc 41\lt 0 11> Dte0.1 1 AllynB 1~ 1~ OeytM•I Alt.. H• • 0Bffr Amert• 21Y> ~ 0.lllDA' AFurn ~ • O.tC•n AGreet IJ~ 14 OeweyEI AtntGp .. ...., ~ OleCrys AMl<rO> lO'" -DlxnCru ANellns 1411> ''"-Oocutl s AO.. .. r s U U\.o OollrGn ARe\Mt ""' It"> OoylDB s AWeldnO .. 71 Dunl<lnO Amill\Bnc ~ 14 Durlrn s A....ilte '"' 11 EsDrl-1 !"'!~o li:~ ~~ Eetnvnce An"f eep 11\lo 11 Ec.onL•t> ApldMU -21 EIPUEI :~i:.,G: ~,:'¥.Ela.re. AllGsLI 1411> 14\11 ~::!::J1 :~~~1 ~'I>~~ En•O.v a.11yP~ m• 12"-~~R~!""' Jl..,CIHE lO I~ Enlwlstl lleslcRs g 1"' h, EqutSL 8eutFr 'l2 22\lt E IOll BeplsMk 1111> 11'111 F~C BffllM .__ I,.. F al><I H Bent PU FermGp 1 1~1' 1 1 1• Fldtcor B•nllyL J9 39'1.o Ft8k$y1 8el1Lel> Sl\I) SJ FIBottn •••MQI u·~ IS'h FIEmpS 81t>OCo llV. 12 FtWnFln 81rdSon 1~ 1~ FlegBU 81rlc.llr .,.. 1~ l'llckQr Blywoor 14,.. UV. FloetPnl 80f'IMIH S'.I• ~ FleNFI• 8,...Tom • Jl+'t 1' FlurocD 1 Bucl<bM •~ 10"-For•slO Bulfels 4111> 42 f'ormlgtl Bwrnuo$ I~ I~ Fr•nkCp CNL f'ln 2"" JV. Frenk El CPT Cp SJ\4 SlYt F ... so CelWtSv l2 :13111 Fremnl , CenredH ~ J~ FullrH8 CepE119 2~ 2'Wt OeluyO C99SwC 71 21\11 GnAulm CplnAlr 2\lt 2111 GnO.wu Cer~ 1,.... 16\1) IOnRIEsl ~~~'iJ's ,~ 1~ t>owEFn Cl'WmSll u 1111olGreenM C,..rtHo 3'14 3'111 OreyAc"' CllmL.. """ M\11 Glllntll CllesUll 11 11\11 Gyroclyn Cl\INwTr 11 llYt HemlPI Cl\ullCI 4114 ~ Herdwke MUTUAL FUND Richard Koragaard of Lake Forest bas been promoted to executive vice president and chief operating officer of Eldorado Bank tn Tustin. Charles C. Bond and Victor W. SCoae have been named seruor vice presi· dents of United Cahlornla Bank Frank Baker of Foun- t a 1 n Valley has been named manager of the •o .. oAHD year for the West Coast South Region of the Handyman Super Hardware Store chain. Theodore P. Villaluz, assistant manager. Wells Fargo Bank, has been assigned to the State College office, Anaheim Terry N. Holdt has been appointed vice president, MOS operations. of Western Digital Corp , in Newport Beach Sherry A. Pozun has been named assis- tant manager-operations at Wells Fargo Bank's Laguna Niguel office Babette Doniger Mandell has Joined Bozell & Jacobs Pac1f1c as account ex- ecutive. pubhc relations d1v1s1on Joe Allen has also .)()med lhe company as manager, ac· count services Nancy J . Cassube has been named pres1~ dent of the National Council of Exchangors She is the bead of Pyramid Excbangors, an Irvine-based firm NASDAQ SUMMARY N-Tlml>f'Mn CnPetMn SthPetPI Comolel Rulelnd Gene1En "'1 S,...Cmo Oe•v<:o Re..-un Jeytu T rn11>1 ROMIG Coll>'( Pll9rlnw :~~:i lmprlk • S<lentnc AllrSy un Gemlet Gro .. Eap FtAnlll ~~=,g WllEnt N•mo 8101.,,., Cevnat>C l(evF'0.'1 ~~T.~ EacetlD Mor9Re1 Aloun r~nri:: Eml\rt wt 1n10te MerltE un Rell.oily FlnQmta Threslld An<llPI 11 Sid Bred Zone Pl O.IT .. CMHJ un LlndalHO EngSot lirpRow 9,..,., pf u" u~\. .c"t. ·~ • 1'4 1"-• , ,. '~ ~ 1 S'.-') • 1 ]II) • ft lY> • "' ]"1 • .,, lY. • \It 1\lo • 1 .. • 11' ''c. ... .... otV) ... II') ... , • 'Ill ~Yo • -1••n • JV. ,,.,., • l ti,. • I 14 IY> , .. ,., "' S'• ~ ~ "' ,,~ ~ ,.... -6'" • "' DOWNS Usl Cl\g ,,.,, -l 219 \It 1'n 1Yt ,.... "' ,.... "' ,.... , ... l .... '"' -"' ,,,, 1 611> I 10 ,..., ,.... "' ,.,., -~ S"--II. ,,,.. -'" 1111> '"' 4 .... SI,\ -~ l'lt -"' , .... -14 II -) ) .... --'"' ... IC>Y. IYt "' -"" Pct Up «>O VP JIO Up Ut Up 142 VP 22 J Up 21.7 Up 21.1 Up ,._, Up 1S 4 Up U.I VP 14 l VP 11.I Up US Up US VP U2 VP 12.2 Up l,U VP Ul Up 12.0 Up U 0 VP 11 • VP 11.6 VP 11 S VP 11 4 VP 11 4 Pct. Oii "4 Off 11.• Oii tu Off IS,O Off lS.O 011 10 Off 14..l Off 13.• Oii 1J-l Off IU Off u.o Oii u.o Ott ll.O Off 12.J Ott IU Off 1U Oii 11.1 Ott IO.t Off 10.1 Off ,. s Off '1-0 Oft t .1 Off u Off 9.J Off t.) •lvln lullocll Congf'J 41.t> NL Mull • «> 10 22 MIO AM 6 0 1 OSI N Horii 11 It NL SIFrm GI 10.U NL lullcll 1'.11 l&.2t COftfld 12.19 NL Prov s.10 S.S4 MMl<Opl ".. NL. Prima ...... 11 StFrm 81 n.u NL Celldn •. u 10.0t fq Inc 21.46 NL I Te• E• J.10 J.U '-"OHY F IJ S7 13.14 ,fa "" 1.11 NL SISlrMI ..... DI Id 2 '3 J 20 Excll J.S.M NL S1oci. )1.11 22.tS MSB Fd II.ts NL Pro Services Excll ... "3 NL Hlinc 10'11 11.S Megel 20.'5 NL Select •SI 1.tR Mui len 11 01 11 OJ MedT 11.20 NL Fedt 44..'1 NL t 0 s Munlld 6.2S NL Ve~Py 101t110I MIFF-. ,Und 90l NL lnvnl ... J710.12 :ri~~ t: lo l. FI0.1 IUI NL Inv Relft s:11 6:24 Fund 115 t ST tncom 1.3' N Sletdmen F-.: T F L7' 1'22 Owl St< l.tl NL lrtel 12 44 NL Gnolll S,. • 46 Pru 'Sii' 1>.:17 14 '1 ~m Ind l,5? "!L nl•s:: U.ot 1a:cw HjlMe ,... ML IVY F4 10.• NL N•l8d 1.Jt t07 Putnem F\lfldl; TH M111C1 ti,}ii tl•T lttrt "d It.II "·" " Yid 10.22 NL JI' Grtl! 1t.a U.'3 Mulu•I of Omehe Con• u 14 u.cn Tmpl Ot .. .,. 1.1' Dir 20.2' NL Ll MUii 1.11 NL JP lnco '-" 1.60 Am•r ... NL Int Eq U.,. 1'.1' Tmpl W lt.10 20.11 11tsllltll aa HL ~11rlln 11.t9 NL J•nus lo.2.S NL Grwll\ S.21 S.74 Georg 12tl U.11 'frns Cep 10.21 11.10 Olieftlel FUfldl: Ulem 1.U NL Jo11n Hancocll: lncom I.OJ 1.1a Grwth u.m 1J u Trns tnw 1 ... IAI ~'::f11 1~~ 1}Ji: I l~~ af:f: =t !~I\ :rn :rn M!r [.,~• 41·~ 1°N~ ~~er.::' 1UC: 'U~ l~~ :3 \~: 11~ r,I Yield 6.12 1.:w ,Fl~lllf Pnla: . 8tltft 1.32 9.IM HHUT 41.ff NL lnvut 10 °' IO." TwnC GI ll.20 NL ncom t..ot ._.. 0YN I.ft NL T .. Ila UO t .S7 Net Avie 10.7~ NL Ooln 14 05 15.3' TwnC Set IS.JO Ht "-I IOtl 1100 INll\llt ... -.. HI. K•ufmn 2J1 HL N•I Ind U'7 NL h• Ell 17.46 11.Sl USAA Gt ll.24 .. r=.",.,.. '4'.u 11:., ln<em a:. NL IC•"'Pff F...iss: N•I Securlllff VltlAI 1114 11.n 'USAA Inc t.U NL Olu Gt.II tt.2t NL Fii lnw"tors.: lncem 7.21 1.14 Belen 10.3' 11.11 Yo\'•g 14.• 11.01 'Uni A~cu 1.S3 NL wllll Ae 1 Z2 112 Incl "-u.l6 U.. Gr-11.90 IJ.01 8ond 12S UO Relnbw S 16 NL iUnll M<ll 10... NL wllfl co tM 1Ai Disco '9.21 n.1 H VICI us '·°' OlwMI s . .s s.• •w••• u• NL !United F..,., _.,,.14 911toOI Orwtl\ 10.GIO.ot """"' 7.211 1.i. Grwtll a.• 111 ltcoSec"'• Accm l.'1 t• Fd ,.,. io:u IM.em ... ,. 7.Jl Oii"' , .. ,. ll.50 Pretd '" UI •l!Ult 12.2' NL llofld ..,, s.u eM-n:. Ht. ~n "" 1.u SUnlm 1uo 21 w lncom ..,,. • u o ..... u, 11.M ~L Coft °' u.• u:;i -lkUl Otftt· S ll ,_,. &.JO TllCfl IU7 IUI Stoel( 10.IS ,.. IMO IUJ L CAft Ill< 10 •• II • J BUSINESS I STOCKS HIF Cll Insur Snee gaps covered If you're a typlcal SS-or -over U.S. cltlien, Medicare now paya only about 40 percent ot your health CaNt.btlls and the proportion is fallin1 1leadl· ly . In 1969, it was nearly 50 percent. At the same time, your medical costs bave soared at a far faster rate than for any other aae group. Since the mid·'60s, your medical costs have skyrocketed 525 percent to an estimated $2,500 a year against 395 per· cent for the general popula· lion and the outlook is your --!? SYLVIA PDRTIR ~ ~ costs will be up to $5,000 a year by 1985. ANO THESE CHILLING calculations do not reflect the rising cost of Medicare premiums. Since 1966. these expenses have jumi,>ed 220 percent, from $36 to $115.20 a year -and this is what the 65·and over must pay to qualify only for Medicare Part 8 <physician and professional services) covP.rage On top or this. the deductibles and coinsurance sn the Medicare package have escalated about 350 ~r· cent since '66. The hospital deductible alone has gone from $50 to $204. All or those are ma1or items in the medical budgets of the elder ly, a study by the Senate Special Committee on Aging has found It is because of this ever widening gap between what Medicare covers and what elderly persons must pay out of their own pockets that the .. Med1gap" health insurance policy has been developed and with st have come ripoffs and scandalously exag· gerated claims that sicken even usually cynical ob· servers AMONG THE MOST obvious "Med1 -R1poffs ' policies that pay out much less than 60 cents of each premium dollar an benefits , cancellation clauses that make the policy worthless despite steep costs paid by the ignorant buyer; provisions excluding coverage of pre-existing health conditions for more . than six months, which in most cases are Lhe equivalent of eliminating coverage altogether. With about half of all Americans 65 and over bu} ing supplementary Medigap health insur ance policies. the need for honest policies that will help the elderly meet the problem has become so urgent that the challenge finally is being met Supplementary policies that do provide some de cent coverage have been developed by the Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans. commercial earners and other private insurers AMONG THE BEST have been the Blue Cros!> and Blue Shield policies. which account for about half of all supplementary policies bought each year and which pay back an average or 90 cents for every Sl paid in prem iums STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES HEW YORK API F1n•I Dow J~l"9!' AMERICAN LEADERS UPS AND DOWNS .. _ t WltcoCll pf 2 Mollll Home !~c~tn S~lerwt ' J1~' t ~nwW!11 t HttF UOO! IO tlvftkRm pf It=""'" 2 Rael n u 1...cur1 A ,. AMf'Yl(ey IS \forriedo 111< 16 F),IMIN Cp GOLD COINS Pct Vp 47 1 Up 111 Up IU VP 10 4 Up 10.0 Up 86 Up a J Up 8 1 up ao Up '1 Up U Up 6 S Up 6.S Up 6.3 Up 6.2 VP H Pct . Off IU Off t .7 Off 1.1 Off 1.1 Off l.O Off 7.• ga 7.J 11 '·' Off ... Off 6.7 Olf ., Olt u Olt ... Off •• °" 6.S . HI W 'l'ORI( <A~I -~k•• lat9 w ...... d•y at .... c.olnt., <........, .. wlUI ,,....,.., ~kn. ·~, .,.., ........ 1~-efl ...... ............. I INyOI., t4tf.OO,offts.•. MHk • • ...... I I tttY .... Mt1M, llff u.oe . •• ..,.. •~. -.,..., °'·· .. n..., .., ...... ~e:O.·........_ lor w.o .... "' 79 STOCKS Open Hogll LO,. (IOW lO I"" :io Trn 1S VII U Sl-lnclu& T•MI VIII' IOU Cl 101137'"' S4I IOCM 32 12 61 433 H •J.I 11 •2613 <JO 79 3 IS IOS.7• 106 0 ICW U IOS I>) 0 ()1 J<IO 17 ~· 60 J8J" 317 01 311 WHAT STOCKS DID HEW YORK IAPI AP< 79 Toon M•.n<.O •tt Ot<lf,.a 11S. Vn<h•"Vfd lA• Tot.I IUuH 1923 New hlgllJ J1 ,..... lows l• WM ... 1 Mo4H Oo(l NEW YORK. CJoPI AP< 79 AO'l.n<.0 TOO•y '" ()Kiined «IS Un<h41"9f d 11• TOl•I ilWU au New hlQtlt 12 New lowt 11 METALS s, 131,.IOC 1.~.'IOt 4IOl,«lt ~· o.v "3 111'1 31S 1937 n 7A ~· ~" Q9 21• ID .. 10 Cepper 87~'1() cenlS 1 oouncl V S Onllna· llOM L•H JI cents • pouna ZlftC '3V. C..,11 • pciuncl, dellvtrltCI Tl" $6 Sll7 Met.ls W .... (On\l'Ollle ID Alwml_,. 71 cenh • pound, H Y MtrCltf'Y ~ 00 per ll••- r1111 ..... ~ 001,..,r o1, HY SILVER H•nar & HormM\, $11 G30 per lroy 011110 GOLD QUOTATIONS L•-momlnQ flalng ~1 00, wp IJ IS L• ...... : •11•,.,_,, llalr>Q MG 1S .... U 50 r 1rlt . •lie.,...., 11•1"9 U U OJ, up S. 4 rr1111ltw1· 11•1"9 .-1 00, up l1 7' zwrlcll: •••• 111.,.,_,., ll•lnQ "4IO.oo, .., u .oo. Ml3.oo .... .a. Haftll1 & Harm on only aally quote Mt2.7J, uPS.S '° U •,;t...._...: only o.<11 q-t MG IS, wp lllltel_.,.: Oftly llall1 CIUOtt l•l><"IU1*1 »01 °'· uP u.n SYMBOLS PnEBJ. BOYER I LOS ANGELES (AP) -lnveatl1atlve Joumallsm, Geraldo Rivera style, hal taken the Hip One from the Jun1lea ot Laf)I to upat with Utile Gary · "1emanL with the a11reulve "Look at Ke" Rivera le Chan.n1 more than a few hides alcm1 the way. But now Rivera ls enmeshed ln a coatroveny , tbat may threaten his career and calla into question tele.vwoo'a role as the probin1 eye. The rather curiou.s doafight -erupted between UNDER FIRE ABC NeWll and CBS' Chicago station, WBBM, over a G~rlUdo Rivera RfVera "20-20" newsmagazlne report on an alleted ,.------------------------------------------------------------- arson-for-profit rlnl ln Chicago. In the balf·bour ••30.20•,. piece, Rivera told of an alleged anon scheme involving one Charles Roberta, identified by "20·20" as one of several proliteen connected to 29 flrea, some of which were fatal. Roberta baa sued ABC for libel. WBBM's documentary team. beaded by pro· ducer Scott Craig, put together an expose-styled television report on expose·styled television report· inc, focusing, in part, on Rivera'• arson-for-profit story. The documentary, which aired la!t week, at· NEWS ANALYSIS tacked the "20-20" report on points ol accuracy and style, suggesting that Rivera & Co.'s "findings" were not valid largely because the U.S. Attorney's office had not been able to get a grand jury indict· ·ment against Roberts. But the WBBM report further called into ques· Rivera and other TV· Eyes, specifically the flashy . _ _......, te hnique dubbed "the ambush interview." Rivera "' ~n the investigative methods routinely employed w s chastened for approaching the startled Roberts o the street, cameras rolling, and giving him the third degree. It's a method designed, suggested the WBBMreport, for ··picture," not truth. ABC NEWS came down on the WBBM dqcumentary hard and fast, and understandably SQ. The news profession, print and electronic, StJems to be in the throes of a self-devouring frenzy ~ the wake of the Janet Cooke·Washington Post· f'Ulitizer Prize affair. ABC News and Geraldo R.vera were being spoken in the same breath as J~net Cooke, and ABC News didn't like it. t Indeed, the "20·20" report in question won t~evision's version or the Pulitzer, an Emmy A.ward. Anyway, ABC issued a nine·page rebuttal to WBBM's report and is planning a "20·20" rebuttal to ~ broadcast al least in the Chicago area, and pqsslbly nationwide. "We think we've been maligned," said ABC News Vice President David Burke. WBBM producer Scott Craig says he rather welcomes a ··oav1d and Goliath battle," if that's what ABC wants. But he insists that the purpose of his "Watching the Watchdog" documentary was merely to "open up a dialogue among journalists about the techniques used by television in in· vesligative reporting, their use and abuse. "IF ALL of this means we've opened up that dialogue, I'm glad ·• ABC's Burke isn't interested in dialogue right now ''Their invitation to the clouds above Mount Olympus to discuss the finer points of television journalism," says Burke.· 'is a bunch of bull. "It's easy for them to retreat now and say, 'Come, come, boys, let's talk about this in a pro· fessionaJ way ' But we took a beating on this thing on the way to the mountaintop .. ABC maintains that it will stick by its story and of(ers documentation of its allegations. WBBM points to the absence of an indictment. ABC asks. Since when is an indictment the test of a story's newsworthiness? Anyway, the "20·20"·WBBM brouhaha does bring into question. perhaps necessarily, some of the techniques employed in the TV·Eye game, both as applied by ABC to Roberts and by WBBM to ABC. Interestingly, WBBM producer Craig recently won an award for an investigative report on a Chicago day.care center. And which TV ·Eye techni· que do you suppose was conspicuously employed in that award-winning report? Yes. The "ambush interview." Bui Mings unsafe BAKERSFIELD <AP > -Ke rn County supervisors were told that 56 county·owned adobe buildings fail to meet earthquake standards and should be replaced. Art Show Truckload Unique original gift• for Mother·a Day Plant Sale ...._ ___ H_u_nt_in_o_to_n_ee_n_t_er_. Huntington Center 12 lulh v.-teti.. Call 142-6171. Put • few words to work for ou. ,, ' to stay In hotwa• 30-gallon water neater with energy 1avlng temj)erature 1hut-off 11481 yea we do MYI banana e.nana loung•. that lal Multl- potltlon Chai'" of 1trong vlnyi atrapplng over 1teel frame. 719 Adjultable. Many colora. Reg. 14.95. . feast your eyes on Ibis barbeque Propane gu bart>ecue features heavy duty construction and high-domed lld. Tank In- cluded. #9230. Reg. 393.70. 26995 a grill tor the outdoor gourmet Propane burning barbecue with tank. Easy to clean ttalnleu steel cooking gratet. Durable conttructlon. #92-40. Reg. -457.75. 29995 let H flow, let It flow, let" flow s1 .. k moaern •tyled faucet to mount on dectc or wall 8" wtltl 1wtng action faucet for added 2488 1te1dblllty. From Price Pfl1ter. #35--121. Reg. 36.95 rn A~ IWlll shop, gl-top lcecrumblble Juet Ilk• 1890'• 1tyled Ice cream tabtel, Ihle hand- aome aluminum tab .. with 5911 glN• top mak" a plc- tu~ue Nttlng. ~-73.ts SP counter aner to the rescue The Corning 10"x14'" counter Hver protect• your countera from ecorchlng hOt pota, pane and platM. 1188 Your countera can"t do wtthOut It. Reg. 15.pe. Extra comfortable arm chalra wtth map 1u1pen1lon and 1trong aluminum frame.. UM wtth table at>ow or tor extra 3411 ...Ung Indoors & out 1100. Rag. 4U6. ~ a ray of sun Lightweight Sunbeam apray/11\ot of 1team Iron Self-cleanlng, long-life cord. #10·36. Reg 27.98. 8 great lklll Redwood tub with drainage hol" 11 a gr .. t place to houM your growing fr1end1. tPS-HT12. Reg. 7.99. 1988 411 I CLASSIFIED INDEX~ Tt Pta YHr M. cat 642-5678 .SllFDISAlE U.-al , ... ::=:bla..i ·-...._~·· ,.,, ~"""'" ••w. ... w., II.CCI l ........ ~. 1"'4 °"""""'"' ... fJTw• lldl ,.. . .,., ..... , ,....,. ...... """' ............ ·-In• ..... LiltlUN lltoorll INI t.-1 ..... lhll• ICl:lll .......... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' EQUAL HOUSING • OPPORl'""NITY •Hotkr. estate ad· e ed in this newapapes-la subject to the Federal Fair Hou.a· ial Act ol 1968 which makes It Wqal to ad· vertt.e "any pmerence. llmltallon, or dis - crimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference. ll m ltallon. or dis· crimlnatioo." Thia newspaper will not knowingly accept any LM-l'•Mwl ·-r'llll ::t:='• llST -· flE ....... ·--hN """M• 111111 IOIHLS "--. ( .. ,. ... ,., .... lf!ll """'• """ IOlll IWlll lll>IM'll lllM .-... ........ -111111 Kw\11 1 ...... , .. .......... l .,.,., ....... .la V.N1'\l:r.:tr ·-'"-t"llrn 11r l 'nl U'.111 llollllt>l llftl4'•li<llv 111111 t......,1,..um•t"urn -nAl ESTATE l'Ofldonl1111w• .. l "' am T.,..NiG.1-t"urn ~ To.niluu .... lRI -An • .,,.,..,"""' , .. °""""" ........ :WU AjlMt ... M. (1)# ....... ·-0...1 .... 1 ftl -~~. ·~ """ ...... lllJll ·--""' l.nl"'n t·t'llV'tt"r\ ,.._ .. Or>.-t' 1-llJll ~· t'llrnw I nl -t•cwn,..rn•t f'r..,.,-rh ) .. "-• -t:°'*""·•At•tn" 'etc 11"" _.,lwwrd -....... l ""' "'" ..... llal~ ... ·~·" 11111 ........................ , ... "-' '~ ...... tllil llllif"f..,..,.r~r'h .tool! SM""''*'' tt .. nhl ... tlUO ·~, ..... ,.,.."\ 'ltU \ .,. ..... th·At•l' ~ IA4• ,.,.. "'i.-Ull M.,.•l,to~•'r ouu M•i. """' Trlr I'<~• LIJJJ t..w ... f""<llhw M"m Q)U Mw"'n l~rt w ....... .,., -· UlhC'<" "•"'•' -· :::~ ~,.':'ii":o .. ~ Bull•~• MC"nli1I ·~ -lftilvMnol ll•rll•I 4*' CMolloolah•h ut1 -Slw1110 ~ HoltM1 For Sale fwW. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ChMt-al I OOZ 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• \\! 1-:S I. I·: Y ~ 1\YLOR CO. Hl':J\LTOI\~ ~11 111 · l !Hli A. VERY SPECIAL HOME with features that are haf'Q lo find toda y. Large , over s i zed lot. Immaculate landscaping front & rear, cozy workshop off 2-car garage, wood-burning fireplace & a warm, friendly feeling throughout. See this 2-bedroom & den home Now. $183,000. Call for appointment. WESLEY M. TA. YLOI CO.. HAL TOIS 2 I I I San Joacpiln ... lltood NEWPORT CENTER. M.I. 644-49 I 0 ad vertising for real ~" estate which is in viola· tion of the law. ((! HllOIS:~ ...... chick ......... cWy .... ...,.. ~ roea 1111 • •.taly. n. DAILY PILOT ••-11 1911ty fw ... first h1cornct l•Hrtlo• Giiiy. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~,... 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SftOUTO REALTORS 675-5511 NEWPORT SHORES: Wei locahd away from traffic short wcA to c,....... & TIMMIS, pool .tc. Great l ldrlll IMMM. cosy fl,.plac•. wood .0 & patio, HSY acc•aa to oc•an tt.ach. Mt $135,000 IHIL COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS 2515 E. Coast Hwy .• CoroM del M4r 675-5511 "°"' W9 lllt"1W) ... 18$1M($S, IMYESl· £Ml\OYMUT & MOO,nNANCE PllPUATION ::.=~=.!. -111116 IUll• .... -. '"'''"''"'" ...... Mtfll '"'""'' \ all!) ~.,.,w .. 1 • .i lllll ~~"i':':'..!:111..i -lffl>V.•nlod )I ' I' '"~ -"-) llant"4 wau MltctllMDISE ~Tll• row' ",,.,.._ -A...,ii~ 11111• ANMOUNCOUNJS, --aJl:. .......... -POSOMAlS & lkl\da., Mal•rt•h 11111) t •WWf P 6. t.qv1 .. '1M t\{ m:Jll LOSJ & FOUND lola ~ ..... -A.~·"""*" ""' .~ ... , .. \ .... lllU t., ...... ~.,. t°Vfl'Uh~rr -Lita.I, ........ '"' l:PI \.otaa• ...,.._ 111.16) .......... nd UJt ,...,_ -· ~·· .:Wt 1--C.wd• = !0'1al l"lui.. ~· , ..... ,. ,..,,,., 'M~• 1..11 ... 1 .... k Mil) HD•HforW. HomesForW. . , ..................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 o ... , .. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• A. WOMDlll IM '#OODUIDGI! 4 bedroom, 2 bath home located near quaint Stonecreek Park with a view of the mountains. Delightful used brick atrium w /lattice cover and malibu lights. Highly upgraded ! Only $189,000. U~IVUI: fl()M~i REALTORS, 675-6000 2443 U.t Cou t Hl9hway. Corona ~I Mer WI HA YI 47 0, Tta uir A69ffl IM TOWH, RESIDENTIAL RE.Al ESTATE SERVICES WOOOlllDGE -COMDO Largest Warmington Plan D with 2 master s uites & a Den. Lovely decor & a great upgraded kitchen. Assumable 1st T .D. & seller will assist in finding a 2nd. $158.750. HIWPOltT llEACH Charmina 4 Bdrm. Cozy livlni room features; •-.•1c•..._-•,•......._--_t-·~--------1 wood burning fireplace. ..-.,_.... ~ IN NEWPORT CENTER Owner will help finance. Immaculate 3 Bdrm Only $209,900. Hurry, family room home in call 67l-8550 prestigious Turt.Jerock. Beautiful decorating. : . ~ .. •• • • t .. . . ; . :·· THE REAL ESTATERS vaulted ceilings. atrium, covered patio Pnced lo sell at sun soo PlllMI LOCA TIOH 5 IDllM l IA. TH 711-lltl C::::. '>f I ( ( 1 -f""' 1 11~1 ll '1 H l 1f c, Y•C..S.. Tiiie_, ... Fro m t h is Cameo Hi1hland1 beauty. Priced to sell, $339,000. Only 10% down with owners uadtance. One level 3 Bdrm plus bu1e yard. Call DOW,~ THE :REAL ESTATEJ<S DWUX I bdrm. z bath each unit. Fi.replace, bullt-lna. Ex- cellent natal area. Near beac.b fs bay. SZIS,000. Ma-ml e'nl. associated f • 'oJ ../•fl. ..... . ... NOQH LA•UMA lla111lflcent wblte water view bJ da7 and ' llihta of Dana Point It a lrtit. Outatandlnr tu&om built 4 Bdrm Nortb La1una home on ti-. OCUD aid• of th• hl1bwar. Lar1e lot . Ju1t 1te_p1 from the b9acfa, '815.000. ' • £!E 110111 ILlllS CD. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE SUPER EA.STILUFf CONDO Former Model With View Of Big Canyon . Three Bedrooms Plus Convertible Den, 21h Baths. Wet Bar . Intercom . Lovely Appointments Throughout. Community Pool. Best Value In Area. Listed Under $200,000. A "Joy Of Newport·' Listing. MIWPORT HA.RIOI YllW HOMI Outst anding Montego On Fee Land. Corner Location. Secluded Yard With Spa. Beautiful Lush Landscaping. Night U ght View Of Fashion Island & Big Canyon . Owner Motivated. $295,000. 759-9100 tzeo.r=•,._ ......... Celllef' CHOICI 644-9060 CHARISMATIC-ON WATER EHbera11t co•tH1ponry Z·ttory ..... Oii ,,..... • .... c:on--property ..... ,,. .... boat' tip. Shi Id ...... Mexk• ..... wood, p.. & IMwllM .-CW fhrHIJhout .... 4 bed. +ciR9g rift. llo•e; 9011r111et llltcltH, large balcOftY & dedL SI .200,000 fee. 0wMr altbtfllt-. CORONA DEL MAR--8UILDERS! AA ll·I lot a. okl C.. a.• ..... ...... ...... a.cw.d .. .,tee. °"" by 114 Marltokl 9ICI ail fw ..... SZll,000. NEAR NEWPORT--toSTA MESA 5"tlet• ...... -pool ... lot .. . qulb ._, ...................... .. .. ..,,... of OWMl'IW,'" II.-.... J Wrw...r21N61..0--~= llt TD wttllt 2°"9 H ..... ,., . ... e4 lo $172,000. WATERFRONT HOMES, tNC REAL EST AT£ $.In R~nt.ol•. P!op..ri~ 114.""9"m•>r'1 2438 W Coast Hwy Newport Beach • ,,. 74% of people buying eal estate have read classified cids in the wst week . .. II(.._) lfl• l~MOftl ... A.V ••<-AUTIS, IO = ..... ·--~-rwh,. tllll "*"'" .... ., ltlW loC'tlat.,._. • ._,.,;1 .... -.. ~._.. ... llMW •llJ ,., ........ -Nltiok.,l.Wrvlftt"h -.... {, .......... '"' e:: •rll• MTOS. USED 0111 .... 'hnl. •:.i111 -~·· I -Jillko Mfl'I . .., w;n ~. ..i ....... ,. ..... """ ........ ..... ... , ........ , -· t..:=~~': = Ir,.~~~~11l•ort• ... f."'ltf'• Vi~ A Ml -.0 -. ... :!-# "''"~ llllih• ~ CJq • -luood• "·, .. t.u •• WI) onr.11...iaurent.ll>tr .. J•.CW.f jfl ... L'..,••wru w•• ;: •r..i'° 111.-1.lll••'"' -MTMllU Jt"ftiM.';" 'llJ.: t tw\tuh1 -· -K.r.._n,. \,Hh.1 •• :i.. l,.. ' ••.. , ~ M1t.L.t_.. •l• .......... IOAJS & MAltNE u.-111 ""'" lh·nr•"'" tt.. n1 ''"" """' ..... 4~ .. 4.-1 AalMj-l.'l#.al•-. -»IA WiU """' \ot\1·th ElltPllENJ 11«•••-\ftl•lft 16.tU MUK WiU WU , ~Af1• Man II•"'--"''"' •la· \.~·· M:. "'"'""·· "-•' WI~ ......... u. ...... iw.. .,.,.., .... ••• .. .,,. .. -"9ei> Iii.... ,.,_ M • -rua~. ..... .. rv .. ,o4 .... IMIJ"•••l il!M. -. ......... : .... ,. -\I-~;., ........ , .... .1 .... lAtM•.fM ...... -...... ff -AW11ut..u1•.:: ...... """"""'" ,;» llttu•u ~ -; "'""'• M•M 11'.rlH -A""'-W111etff'd -K~hM'"'' •i• ,. .. , .... ,, ll!Oli• _, ..... , •Jiii tc'"" t--:\; )lh.,.t.n ... -.: ............. lll,c-~. ..,.,,, ~ .... ~ .... , IMthftk1lot. --!IMa .._.., .t ... I -~t,,.ru VllJ ...... ,., w,u; -·-"'""' lUJOS, IMPOITED r .. ,.,.. :Ii~ l'hmu11lt1 ...... It'""'"" .,,-., Pouh.u -· WNSPOITl TllN 1.1 ....... \tHh••.:c•11 ~j;u t huo•k•t 11u.i ..,;v llHH \uhu .._;;i W":'ll A1rc-n f1 ..... AU•IWm.·u 'f';"1u \ ....... Ho...Forw. ........ ,._.w. HcMtl•• For salt Ho.IM• For Sale ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• 1001 1002 ,. ... , .. 1002 ....... 1ooi ••••••••••••••••••••••• ···········~··········· . .~~REAi.TY RUSTIC SICLUSIOH FOR YOU & YOU ll HOltSI Tastefully decorated 3BR home w /over 4 /10 acr e and complete facilities for your equestrian needs. Near all sc hools , shoppin g & transportation. Enjoy living in the beautiful North western Santa Ana Foothills for $179,900. John Richard ~1-8700 <F89) IrriDe campus valley Center Woodbridge V~e Cent.er 762-1414 661-8700 Oceanfront Dplx CUL-OE·SAC 4 years old, 3 & 2 Br. 2 4 Bdrm, air conditioned Ba, bit-ins, 4 car garaae. home. Neat and tidy. Br· Beat location. $750,000 l.ni a paint brush and JACOBS REALTY save! ses.ooo. '75-6670 • REC CARPET: ~~~~~~-1 754-1202 MEW--fi4EVER LIVB> IH JA.SMIME CllHIC.....ft.A.H I For the buyer who wants a lovely new 2 Bdr m and den home in a guarded community on a beautiful,· quiet street , close to pool and tennis. The amenities are a plenty. Call now for an appointment. nlllUFIC llVIHE 2 IDRM WITH PARTY SPA The sophisticated COUP.les pr-ivate "Casa" in University Park. Shaded corner lot near pool and tennis. Plantation shutters, floor to ceiling home library and neutral decor. Desirable 1st TD that can be assumed at 101/4%. Super buy at $190,000 with a 30 day possession if needed. Exceptional commission spfit for listing oriented realtor associates. Beautiful office in choice location . Have 2 openings. 759-1616 SEE AND BELIEVE The very finest buy in the Harbor area. New 1650 sq. ft. condos. 5 minutes to beaches. One h alf block to major s hoppin g cen ters. Cement drives, air cond itioning, m icrowave o v e n , tra s h comp a rt or , la r ge walk-in closet.. Qarage with opener . P ool and 2 Jacuzzis. . WILSON PARK CONDOMINIUMS llOW.W.... C....W....CA .714/611-IOll ,.,.. •• ~000 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• LIDO ISLE HOMES Featured on Homes Tour this lovely traditional spacious, custom 3 bdrm. 3 bath home, newly decorated. Priced to ' sell quickly at $475,000. Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2_bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patios .. B~am ceilings. Great for entertam mg. $420,000. PENINSULA POINT IEACHFROMT Panoramic view at wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm. 3 ~alh cus~om home. 3700 sq. ft. featuring ~~e room, entry, living room, dmmg room. built-ins, etc. $1 ,385,000. IAYFROMT We have several fine homes with pier & slip. starting at $1 ,500.000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J·l 1 B11y-.1d1· Or ,..,,. N B bl'> b lbl CITIHOME 3 Bdm 2...., Ba, den. 1 2 UNITS $94 900 year old condo. No • . • , C.M , 1740 sq ft. de. Super investment. T~o ·coralor's delight, as· 2 Bdrm units, one W!lh sume lsl. owe 2nd, fi replace! Current ID· 1177 500 come S740 mo. Financ· • ing! one year home pro-EASTSIDE C.M. tection plan incld. 3 Bdrm 2 Ba, vaulle4 Hurry, this won't last! ceilings, frplc, cornet 646-7171 lol. owe w/'lJ)"/.; dwn, THE REAL ESTATE:RS LOVELY FAMILY HOME I n excellent neighborhood. Close lo the city shopping ce9ter. Ne a r s c boo Is· 41 n d transportation. Huge rooms thruout. Large family room with Swedish fireplace . Beautiful stained glass window• in 2 of the bathrooms. Sparkling pool with cover, dog run, etc., etc:. Seller highly motivated, and will sell VA. Come to the Open House on Sunday . 752-1700 THE :REAL ESTATE:RS CASA DEL RIO ..... , ... Maw Ca.dos Xlnt terms. 13% interest for 3 years. 12132 Ed· in1er-clole to Harbor Blvd. OPEN WEEKENDS 10.S 6'1-1991; 631-Ull , agt. LUXURY LIVING Be ~ady for awnmer ! Beautiful pool. jacuui 6 ... BBQ comee with tbla 1 year new Eaataide Coata lleea twohme. 3 Bdrm•. 2"' baths, show• like a model : deaiiner wall pa~ • wtndow coverinp. Take advan- ,t•1• t Only •nt.soo. ..... '1111 THE REAL ESTATE RS $149,500 IEACH DUPLEX 2 Br 1 Ba & 1 Br l Ba. Fee land, walk to beach. owe al 12~.% inl. w /30% dwn. $220,000 C.M. TRIPLEX Three 2 Brdm 1 Ba units, garages. patios, good location & Income, owe w / 15 w /SS0,000 dwn. $185,000 fASTSIDEVA 3 Bdrm l...., Ba. family rm. alley access, 2 frplc, needs TLC. Sl.36,000 LET"STA.LK Coe lr .. Splh Jack H LHdl. Mgr. 675-1771 GREAT INVFBI'llENT 3 BR 1 Ba. $12,900. A1J. sumable financing • seller w/also carr y paper. Call for terma. 752-M99 Ptanlll~ty ASSUME LUGI I 9..,-oLOA.M. 3 Bdrm1 2 ba home ~ pool. Pnde ol ownenblp home. Tab advantage~ On ly UOS,900. CalJ f79.5370 DOW. • t ALLSTATEj REALTORS I • eat arnves 8 y Tbe AnoetaMd P'ret• Ev rydrlp counts. Authorities In a arowina number of communtUe1 re trying to get that measaee across u wa rm weather approaches, brin&lna the prospect of in· ereased water use ror everylhine for swimmlna )><><>ls. lawns and cooling showers. The appeals echo the energy conservation Clim · :):>algns that beean In the 1970s, a lthough the new :slogans refer to gallons of water instead ot gallons of gasoline ONCE AGAIN, AM ERICANS are being urged to use less of a precious natural resource Once again, • there are dozens or gadgets tohelpus save water is much cheaper than gasoline -only fractions of a cent per gallon And the United States does not have to Cleal with a tore1gn cartel hkeUPEC Hor its water I But ~ater-management officials are still wor· ried They remember last summer's heat and drought Reservoirs are below normal ·'THE FIRST ST EP in cutting down on water use as to become aware of JUSt how much water is re- quired for sample household chores." says the Department of Interior an a conservation guide. Wilham Sharp of the Un1vers1ty or' Penn· sylvania. s1ud a family of four uses about 255 gallonsofwater a day Leaky fa ucets are probably the most common water wasters. A seemingly minor pinhole leak 'the kind that goes "drip, drip, drip" can waste up to 170 gallons or water a day, Sharp said. Replace worn washers or valve seats to stop leaks ALMOST HALF' OF THE water we actually use goes to flush lhe toilet. at the rate of four or five gallons per flush. Shar psaad To save waler, take two or three old plastic bottles. cut off the tops, weight them with slont.'s. fill them wit h water and place them m the toilet tank ·'The "°ater displaced by the bottles v. ill be saved.· Sharp said. addmg that you can cut usage by up lo l 1 1 gallons pedlush Sharp advised against the traditional conserva- tion practice of putting a bnck in the toilet tank The brick can gradually d1s10tegrate and the particles can cause damage. hesa1d There art' specially designed water·savmg toilets now required by law an nev. constructaon an some areas Sharp said most models use about 312 gallonsofwaterperflush vs uptofivegallonsfora t:on ventaon al toilet and cosU70 to $80 THE TYPIC'/\L F AMILY uses almost as much water to shower and bathe as 1l does to fl ush the toilet, Sharp said. Wa ter flows from a conventional , showerhead ;.1t the rate of four to six gallons a minute A flow restr1ctor available for less than $1 can reduce the flow to three gallons per minute. A sµecially designed shower head. costing SB to SlO ac-cording to!')harp can cut usage even I urther Lawn watering and car washing already restricted in some communities can take giant · gulps of v.ater A half inch garden hose. under • normal pressure. pour.!. out more than 600 gallons of v. at er an hour A hose that 1s accidentally left on m ern1ght can waste as much"' ater as the average f:.tmllv use-. ma month New England bills highest BOSTON (API New England homeowners. fo r ced to protect themselves against their notoriously chilly winters. pay the highest annual energy bills in the nation more than twice that paid by residents of the West a congressional study reveals fl cost $1,325 lo heat. cool and provide electricity for the average New Englarl'd home in 1980. according to the report released by the Northeast Madwe!it Congressional Coalition. That compared lo a $656 annual energy bill for the Western homeowner and an !846 b11l 10 the South MIDWEST RESIDENTS PAID THE second highest amount at Sl,150 In the mid-Atlantic states, the avera~e "-SS Sl.100. according to the coalillon The coalttaon a bipartisan alhance of more than 200 members of Congress from 18 Northeast und Midwest states. said the figures "show the energy gap between the regions is widening at an alar ming rate. threatening any hope the Frostbelt may have for economic recover) " The data, denved from ferleral Census Bureau and Energy Department information, was com· piled by the Northeast-Midwest Institute, an in· dependent research center in Washington. D.C. "Up until today, it hasn't been clear just how dramatic the regional differences in household e nergy costs r eally are," said Rep . J ames Shannon, D-Mass. "What the fi gures really point to is t he devastating effect energy costs have on the elderly, the poor and many middle-income households. "AN ELDERLY OR MIDDLE-INCOME household that faces a yearly enern cost of $1 ,27-4 -t he 1980 a veraae in Massachuaetts -is forced to give up other basic needa juat to atay warm," Shannon said. The study said the highest 1980 energy coat.a were in New Ham pshire, where reaidents paid aa averaee of S114SO. Tht lowest were In Wa1hlneton state, $501. ana California. $503. The national 1vera10 wu -.a. The report was made public: at tbf nrat of flve regional hearinaa leadJn1 to a national energy con· rerence ln Wu hintton In May. PltMJl l"llDllJ!ltd 0r-. C:-•• Qallr ,., .. ,. Apr II t, 1•, U. IO, 1t" lttt-t I PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUI •UllM8U MAMIE ITAT•MINT TllO foll-11'19 PffllOll IJ doln9 llllJ.I· llftS Ol OCEAN !>PORTS, UO•Vt WUI Ocea n Fronl, N•wport 8oa<ll, CA ttMl l"atrlO Wllllam Mall•llan. ISi S-9<1111 AMII. Corona Clel Mor C1' .,,,, Thlt --ll C-lltlltd by an Ill• dl•lclual PatHall .... n Tlllt ato._t wa\ lllad with the I County Clark of Oraneoe County on Aprll 1 1•1 "".., P11ollll'ltd 0raft91' Coa1t Dally Piiot, Aprll •• l•. 2l JD, 1•1 172111 PUBLIC NOTIC E '\... Pt18LIC NOTICS lllCT\TMWI Wt&•a• "°'1Cll 4W 1Aa.• f'ICTtneut ~ llltMllTA"*ln' CMJAV....a. ..,__t'rAYUletfT r~ ... ...._ --Ito..... VALUIOAY..... 'TIM ................. 11 .... ...... Ml .,....... "9tt OltAlllOe COAIT HUltllNO NM~ lit_..,.,_...,.._."' 'fMI MIOfA CO., M• WeN Hlt\'ICU.. 12'S, U-\.Mt, H\ifll• ~-. •1, •t.t• -_. M ti •1tl1N ~Ill • .....,..,, IH<1I. CA. tftt• 9Mdl.~'*6. .... H•,_, t. ,._....,._ CM1 ti .. ._, NAltCY CA•°'-Y" 1.0W&.11.111 ~ tf ~ .. llMlll ... M I Wllll-H Mwrtt. '19 A.Nit \.11111• Llltt, """''flt'"' •ucll, oa AHIA aAVll09 Yiu.Ml ••ill -~-.-......nl!Mdl,CA;'*-t CAl!lttnlil.._ all st ..... IC ..-... et •I. Tiii• ......... It ~CM llf ..... JAMU I DWAltD LOW G ltl Hw.,,. """"*19"<11, Celltenll• lllM lllMll. \.11•11 La,,. Hlll•tlfttttft 9uo at t :• .. II\. M -I.Jell•" .. Mer Wllllel!IH.Menlt c;als!lletM ' 1•1, t11f ............ "*"'~ Tllb -~ ....... wlttl 4M ' .......... Ctftltv<IM .. ., ... wit: vw " llMC! ..... ... c_,., Cleftl tf O!'Mtt ca.i.ity ... tt11tr I~ IMet. OWENS,__.,,., Cl'Jl*-1, ""'lt•,t"1 N#ICY c;. ~ .WH Ne,. 1111'1', .. , ... ,. Tiii• ..,.._. -llMIO wllll II• hid .... •• ,.., "" .....,.,_ tf NI .....,,.,_ Ora1199 C..tt O.llr l"liot c.-ty Cleflt ti Or.not C.\,tllty Oft fyl~ 1141ft «WW~---fw "'-AIH'll t, 1•· U. •· "'' """'", "''· '"' .... '" '"' "'"'""' " tAtt. , .... I ' ,, .... toge!Mr wlVI ~·"' ~IMftl • ~ltMlll Oreftlt c: .. .-Otlly l"li.t. 111"91\Mtflf ..... 1o~11 • t• ta • "'' ,~ O•llH 1111• t2ftll lllrf o1 """'"· ttti. ..., ; t ' , '-" """•" PUBLIC NOTICE ~ PtJBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUI 1u11•1u NAld ITAflMalllT l"ubll.,_. Of' ..... CoeJI Ollly Piiot, April >O 1"1 20,._.I TM IOllOWlllt ,,..._, Ii Ool1'19 bu&I· PIC1'1TIOUI aU&tNa.. ' --IMU •• NAMI tTATIMlltT u UC NOTICE l HA" OENU AL CONT RAC· Tiie tellow•nt IHt•IOflS ••• ctolno P 8 I TOAi, !Ito Wllllti.t Alleft•, U, c. ... i. .,..,,..,.n.... ,_.. .. ,c.i~ttt.11 TH•MONIEV MACHINl.toos w . •OT•G•TOc•aDJTOlll "O•IE"T EOWAR O HEIN Ba lbOa hllleyard, Newpot1 a.~n. 0" eUUC TU•Ualt e"ONElt, 17JO -lttler A-..,., IS, Callforn'* '*" llK~ •m-4111 u.c.c..1 Cotl•MeM.CMlloml•tt.V. "00 TAVLOlt. "" Eldeft, 'COiia Notl<• lllWNOytl..n .. ,,...,,,... Tfllt ............. '~'"DY.,. In Mew, C.alltornl• ~ti Ille wltllln M INCI If_ .. ,.,.. 11\al a ctlvldual JAMES ROBERTSON, 2otU bulk tr.,..,_, It aCloul '9 M ~.,, It..,.. E. Swl-- Woecllen, Huntlnt lo" Beaclt, p ersona l properly h•r •lno fler Tnl1 •'9-1 ••Ill.,. wllft IN Callfornlo n.. detc:rlbt& Co11nly Clerk ol OrMtlf C-IY .,, Tltl• lhnln ... IS COndu<lad ., •• .!~: .. ~ ~.,~ .. --.•.. °°!.~-~ Aprll 7, "'' 99"9••1 i>artnenfllp L-Da'r.-;;;: --w 111iam I'. l.."t1~~ Publllfled 0r.,. C:OO.. o.i1~'=- fllll ~':.= •M llllOCI with lt'9 UtU IEICMr Coun. L.09UM Nlf lHI. Aprll t, I•. n. JO."" 1711 .. 1 Celllor,.;e~ Co .. nty C .. rk of Oroneoe County on The tou11on In Collfornla of Ille Apr It 21. "" 111•1111 <Illa! U K"'I .... otfk• Of prlMl,..1 wtl Publl•Md Or-Coatl O•llY Pllo1 neu oH)<a of lfla lntandlHI trenal•ror April :IC, Nloy 7, U, 11, 1"1 1'74-tl l "A~";,., bull...U n.a~ and ad- - -----dreuet 111•d "' trie ll'll•n-•CI PUBLIC NOTICE ,,.,..,.,°' wn111n '"'" rear• 101 ~" PICT'ITIOUI eUSINISS NAMI STATI MENT so fe r •• known lo Ille Intende d tren.ferM erw --. P UBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUI IUSlllllEU NAMll ITATIMaNT fl'la foll-Ing _ _, Is CIOinQ -I ntu a a "ICTITIOUSI USINISS The followln9 partonl are doing NAME STATIMIHT l>ualneuea Tiie nMne onct buJ,lneu .odrttt of Ille lnlended tre nd•••• ore I DA KATHERN SWARTS, n•o lywat•r. CUSTOM COHSTllUCTtOH, 1..it Klnga Aoed. No-19o«ll. CA. t2"3 "_, J. C.Cllo, 1«11 1<1"91 Road. Newport 8Nch CA. '260.J • Tl'I• loll-11>(1 penon ll doing bu•I LINDA'S FLYING CREATIONS, neu as 112• B Ulh Slr•I, Huntington Bt.tcl'I, PACIFIC GULF ENTEAPR1$ES. Callfornla.,._., 801 OcHn Hiii Or1ve, Hunllng1onl LINOA l(AY WA~AEM, 12 ... e !Sin Buch, CalllOf'nl• 92Mt Strttl. Hunt1nvtdl'l'\ll•Kn, ca111orn1a I D .. 1a Jennln9\, to1 Oceen 11111 null 1111 Drive, Huntl"91on B .. c,., Callfornle TOOO f WARREN, 124·8 Utll I 92'4t Slr••I. Hunt•nvton S•ec". Cellfornla Tlllt bu\lnaU .. Cor><lu<led by •n In ,, ... I d1Yldua1 fl'll• bu>lrwu I\ condu<lltd by •n tn· Oa~•d Je1>n1rogs d1••011•l IMu-L Wlf•I Tnl> •latement wes f1llOCI wlll'I tfwt uncu Werren county Clert< of Oraneoe County on r11,. •t•l..,,....I .... , 11100 w111> 1,... AOrtl" 1'111 Counly Clerk ol OrenQt County on '°I .... A pro I 7 1911 Publl•"'"' Orangoe (OHi 0•11• Piiot. Apr 1•, ll, JO May 1 1 .. 1 IUI ti ,., .. ,,, P .. bll•Md Or-Coail O•llV Piiot, EI Toro, Colltomla '2630. Th•t trte pr--rty parll!WM nereto la d•1<rlbecl In -••I .. toerelerlal HfYIU -.. lout.cl •I ~5 J•m bOrH A-. Suite 2111, Newport Baa<ll, Ca lllornla. n1• l>usl,.u name used by Illa w td tranaferort al w ld lo<.allon la JAM &OREE PLAZA SECRETARIA L SERlllCE Tllla bvll..,..s Ii C-..Clltd by an In dlvldUal A J Cecka Tiii> atota..-1 .... 111ec1 wit" ,,,. Counly Cl•rk of Oronoe County on Aprll I, ttll ,.,,.,. PuDlltlWd Or-, ..... De lly Piiot. Aorll •, 1•. 2l. JO 1t11 . ...... PUBLIC NOTICE Tritt WIO bulk tronlle( la Int-to I>• <OMUmm•l•d a t llW olfl<e ol PROFESSION AL ESCROW SERI/ICES. 1'11 Nortl'I Tuttln Aven.,. IP 0 Boa !!Siii, Sen I• Afl •, Ca111ornla '2101 ('11111 on or ell•r NOTICI 0 11 Af'f'L.ICATIOM Ma113, lfll 110• CHANGI IN OWNIUflll" OTICll "ICT"*" • .,..._ ... ...... ITATbleJI\' '"',.,....... --........... ,,,... .. •tAC .. O ltAPHIGI. Ml 1llA ltre•I I tt, Hv"ll .. lOll lee~ll, Clll,.,,.. .... llleftlllll#N0'"'9f'l.•11111 ltrttl •••• """""•'•" ... ,11. c.lllWTIM ... ft.It -'-h c-...cw..., ... 1 ... 411YW!lol. ~ Mfte 0'9'1eft YlllJ at.elafNnt ... Ill ... wit.II Ille C:ov"l'f Cieri! of OrMOt Clllnty tft ~111•,1• ,.,._ li'ueH.-Or ..... Co.ot O•lly Piiot, Apr. t•,U.IO,Mt'fl, 1•1 1m .. 1 PUBUC NOTICE PICT'ITIOUI IUllHIH fllAMa ITAT8MINT The following perMNtt •r• CIOlnt l>lttlneH ... "ORCHID CLEANERS."' IS41 Ad•m• Aven110, Coua M ete , C•llfOf'nl• m» WON YOUNG LEE, S..2 Nlorvlew Ori••. L• Palma, Callfornla to.lJ HEA YOUNG L.EE. ~J Morvl•w Drive. La Palmo, Celtfornl• to.U Thi> bull..,..a I\ Condlltlltd by an In dlvldual WON YOU"<G LEE Tllll tt•l-t .... hied Wiii> ,,,. Countf Cl.,k uf Orenoe County on Aprll 7, 1111 llttt4H Pul>llw.G Or-Coa>I O•llf Ptlol, Apr11 t , 10 2l >0. 19'1 1124 11 P UBLIC NOTICE FICTI ffOUS I USINESS NAMI' STATIEMllNT l ha IOllOWll>(I per-. It CIOlt\O bu\1 ntH.S CHIC AU TO BOOV AHO CUSTOM PAINT. 1a1.91 R~ Clrc ... Hunl Ing Ion BHCll, Callfornta UMI AllJ M Ftllan••n. 1110. "<•I ••••ood Clrclt Huntington a .. ,,.,, Calllornl• 9'26-16 Tt111 t>us1rwu '' c.onc:tut fed by •n 1n 0'¥1du•t Alll M Fill•hl•n Th'i lt•teme-nt WtU fifed Wllh lht' County Clt11! 01 Orange County on M•rtn 2• 1'91 '1$t111 Publl\lltd Or""g. LO<t>I O•llY PllOI. Aor 23. JO May I 14 1981 "12 II P UBLIC NOTICE Thi\ bulk lr•n•fer I• tUbl•cl lo OP AL CO HO LIC llY l•AGI Cal1fornla Uniform Commar<l•I C-LICINl l l'ICTITIOUS •USINISS S.ctlon.io. To w hom llNlotCon<.,n NAMESTATIMIENf April• 1" U. 'lO ltll "10 .. 1 P UBLIC NOTICE fnt name and • .,.,, .. , Of 11,. peraonJ CAMELOT RESTAURANTS, •NC " l ne •0110 .. 1ng oe•M>n> .,., ao1ng w1u1 whom cl••m• may be filed Ii •Pplylng to the Department ot .,..,..., • .,., "ICTITIOUS •UllNEU "ICTITIOUS I USINEU jP Ro FE s s 1 o NA l Es c Row AlcollOll< a. .. ,_ Conlrol lor o A EPPAC 1so11 Per<y o.,.., P UBLIC NOTICE 11\t lollo.,tng IHt"O"' •r• doing fnt 1011-11>9 per..,,.." dO•"O ~l·IS.nt• AIW Collforl\la '1711 onct ,,,. Pl I to .. II alt-I< be .. r-aat l420 O•••d LO<>!I ""henc>en 1/00 Pu~ "M:ft"OUIMlll• .. .....ITAT9#1119" ' , ........................ .... N •t THI CAllYIO HORH, JUU Ce"'l•o Cl11'hlf•11e, 1•11 J••11 ~ ... ~., .. J OAN L I 1 IOWI T l . 10 MtUll'•lllor, M••ll'•fl •••'lll, ~ ........... Tiii• ~ 1, ~-.., ....... dlYllilwol. ,,_......_.ti Tiii• '""""*" -llleoell wtt11 ... c ... 111y Ctwt. ., Or .... '-""' .., AMII n, 1tl1 .... ttn l"uo11.-Or_... c .... Ootly PtloDC, Aprll >O, Me'f 1, 14, 21, 1•1 lt1NI PUBLIC NOTICE l"ICTITIOUI eu111111u NAMa ITATIMllllT f h• followlnt H •llOftt ore c1o1110 ..... , ....... , OOLOBEllO·WHEELEll COM· PANY, SIC Cernlllit Orlw , N _ _, l each, Calllomi• t1tMill CH"ISTOPHEll A WHEIL.£11. 1U De l Glor1lo Road, Anehefm, Callfornleta07 GOLotllEltG ASSOCIATES. INC , • CallfOf'nia <Of'POt•llon, s1..i c:..m- Or •••. ~ewpora BH <h, Callfornle t1MO ffll• 11<111neu 11 t onducted lly a oener•• ...,.tneNlllp Ovl"°""" A W_ .. r f l'lli •wterr'ltftt w.. 111.t •1111 Ille Co11nty Clrrk ol 0r ... eoe County .., Aorif 21 1•1 ,. .. ,.. P110ll~ 0rM>99 Co .. 1 Oallf PUOI. Aorll >O Moy 1 14, JI, 1111 lt77 .. 1 PUBLIC NOTICE PIC'TITIOUS I USINI H NAME STATIEMllU fht 1o11...,1ng .,.,..,, ,, dolnQ ...... MU., WAAL VANDYKE PllOPEATlf.S, LTD , A L1m1ttd Partntrih•P. 1111 Do .. Slr .. t, SulU lloO NewPOrt 8eo<I\, Callton11e ''* STEPHEN CHASE, H E•>llakt, lr•lnt. Callf0f'n1• 92114 Th1t bui1n1u ., conaucted b'( • 11m111d p.artner11'11p ~t•pi-.n Cl'la .. C,ener•t P•rtne,. I 1\1\ 1tatemtnl w•• llltd Wiii\ ttw Counlr Clerk of O"•nci-Counly on AD<ll • 1'91 STIEt'H~NM Cl44 5E ATTOllNEY AT I.AW I U1 o .... S1'MI, s.tlte Ill Hew,..t1 a..ca, C.111.,,.la •-17UI eu.11.i "ltM U Publlif'ltd Or-Coail O••ly Ptlol Aoril' t• U lO ltll l7JO-e1 PUBLIC NOTICE NAME STATEMENT NAME STATIMI NT SERVICES Poi! Office Bo• 11ia1,ION SALE BEER• WINE CPUB EAT Wntmom.ttr C•••lorr1oa 'Ml l>Uilneu H neu •• 'tut day ior f1l1ng cla tm1 by •ny Via ~o. S..•I• 1. Newport BN ch, Nt,. pore "' ko port B 11 GARDENING BY G~EEN Ill VIOE?LA Ill AATTANcredllorsl'lalllle-yU ""whlCltll C"91M0 Calolorn••92t60 w ••• llfCTITfOUS I USINEH JEANS. ,.,. A Camino Cap .. tr"1IO w Es f Ill RAT T AH FACT OR y ,,,. i...unn• <Ny befor~ ,,,. conwm P .. 011~ 0r.,. Cout Deily P1101. Or1v'!'<wO','··Am"•"n•Bl:,urw,.11,t,1orn)QI·· ',~:)" y fl'I• ,:,~~..!T::.~~N.~. doing sanCl•mente CA f'1•7l S"LES. U I lllOEO fRONICS. <SJ mat1onclat•11>«•fltd•Oo.. AprlllO ltlt 2011 .. 1 , ~ , • ,.. ··• AnQtla M S.ta>er lti. A Camino VIDEO MAN Ctl VIDEO WORLD. C71 O&ttd ""'ti ISU\. ltll Tl>1> 1>us1n"'' " onauctto Oy a lMl\lneua• C•oostr•no. s..n Clemanlt CA tun 111 0 E 0 c ENTER 111 v IDE 0 Idol K•llMrn Sw•rlt PUBLIC NOTICE g•ntr•• P•trlrier\lhP 0 Ev rs c H 0 l Ms c H EI 0 F•1UI A Jenn•nQl, 211• A C•m 1no SE RI/ICE, nt RI' TT AN MOUSE. 111 Pul>ll>Md Or-Co .. 1 Dally Piiot, N•<Olt A Brut1tll" PROPE Rf IES I 2700 Wot Coo1t C•Plitr•no. San (IOmtlllt CA u•n w I 1111 Stretl B l . Co>I• Moo. Apr1t l0 .... 10SJ .. 1 T '"' >UIOme<\I ..... lolto ... 1n .... H191>way. S.,,11• lTG HewpOfl BtO<I\, Tno> ouilntu " condu<led by •I Callforrn•f'l•27 STATIMINT 01" AIANOONMIENT 'Coun1y Cit,. o1 OrotnQ<-Count• on Callfor111• t'l~ gontr•lp.artnar\ltop OAVIO L.OYO ROBERTS ,._K P UBLIC NOTICE Ol"USIEO" Ap1o111 l'ltl JO OEllELOPMENT, INC .• A 1 M Sal so Ftor•t.-.. ~I• Ana California ,..1 .. 5171 C•l•torn1a corporation. 7700 Weal "1111 a •Ur UIO. ' --- -"ICTITIOUS IUSINllS NAME P111>1ov~ Or.tn-, ... ,, 0 •11• P1101 Coul Hlgllway Suite 110. Ne,.pert Fait" A Jenn11>9> Tl'lo !ooowlng .,.,_, M• abllnclo...O ~ -• B " c 11 •i..l T"" >ule,.,...nl ••• fllto Witl'I llWI fl'll> l>u\lneu " conducleo OY • N 0 TICE 0 F I NT EN 0 E 0 ,,,. uu DI Ille ltchllOVO l>u>lnou name Apr 1J lO May / ,. •WI• 1916 II uc R A•~ Of'~•• 0 l MSC H E I 0 1 Counl1 Clerk ol OranQt County onl limtledp.artnar'1\lp TRANSFERUNOIEASECTIOHS1'07) DOLPHIN TACKLE CO 51" CORPOA"TION,aC.lllO<nt•<orporo Aprll 1 ltll T r::-ld Loyd RotJet• AND 24074. U.LIFOANIA BUSINESS Wut9ate 0r1 .. Ana,.,.1m Calliornla loon 11141 Murplly A....,n...,, Suite c . "lHMt h1> • ,.,,,...., ••• '1.a w1111 UM ANO PROFESSIONS CODIE neo. ' ' PUBLIC NOTICE 1,.,nt, CollfOf'nletTll• Pul>lht....i Or""Ql' Co .. I Dally Pilot, County Cterk of OrenQt Coul\\V On ELOISE R BODIFORD, l.ken-, Tiie Ftctlllou> B11.,nau "<•,.._ re· tn,. bu .. neu h conducled by a Apnl' "· 1J. l0, 1'81 Apr II It, l'9t 21S6 Newport Boulevard, Cot~ Mew . ferrltd to obove we> filed In Oraneoe FICTITIOUS I USfNIESl Qenflr•l ... rtneoltop 1121 II FHl1tt C•lllornla County an JM • 1'11 AME STATEMENT 3D OEVEL.OPMEHT INC. PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS IUSINISS NAME STAfllMI NT Tho following perM>n> ar• do•ng C>u.Slne1\ IS I SYSTEMS MOUSE HO Ml R1ol•Y Orove. Cypreu, Callfornla to.JO Larry Wall .. Ol"9'1>. I 2" E lltn Slreet, •B203 C011• -... Callforn1e •Ull Carotyn ~ JeM1n>. ,.... Ml Ripley Drive c ,or•1s C•lltornl• -)0 Tf\t\ 0\11•M"SSi '' <C>ftdu< lad Dy • general ,..rn..nft1p Larrr W•ller Olnqu• Thi\ llatement ... 11100 •iln tne County C.ltrl< of Ofeneoe Counlf or> Aprol 7, ltll "lf*I P .. bllll'ltd Orenee Coa>I Oallv Piiot. Aprol •. 1". JJ 'fO, ltll 1 .. MI P UBLIC NOTICE Pul>lh"'"' Orat>90 Coa>I O•lly Piiot, JO ANNE BERUBE. Trantl•rH, RALPt1 BERTAINA, SU Wncgatt N I> Aiorll JO, Mor/, 1~1, 19tt ,,..., 1'731 E-Ptaca. COvlna, Colllornl•. DrlYe, Anaheim, C•llfornl• 92'0' nt:~::o"°'"'"<I """°" " do1no Du$1 I ~~.,.!;I ua.ch, PUBLIC NOTICE t<lnd of llcen>a lnlaneled to Ila Thh ~s was canctucted by.,, TEI>. TOOL CO. u 11 Midway Thi> 1i.t-t ,. .. 111..i w1tn ,,.,. trantlerred Oft-NI•-· •nd wine fOf' lndlvldual Ort•" Munl•"Qton Baec:n. Cal1forn1• Co11nly Cler• ol OrenQt Countr on l>Ul>h< p.-.ml>H lkttf\M 42 944S Raloll E Bertaina Aor1I 10 "II l"ICTITIOUSIUSINISS Tolalcomloe<atlontooe ... 1dfort ... Thi• llal-1 WM flllOCI with -., .. 'i,,.a I. "•"•• Siii M1dwu NAME STATIEflAltN T l>•111nt>>l•U6.2h •7 County Clark ot Orangoe County on ' Ortve HunllnQton !Hat h c a11forn1a T"t followlng pe,.on> are d01ng1 o .. crl.-i• A-' APrll 11, 1 .. 1 tl~ 1>u11nau •> Ca~h to be ctepotlled In Etc:row\J 000 00 ,....,,_, Tll•\ ~1ntt• '' <ondu<led by an '" F O u R T H S T A E E TIS 000 00 o.mono note 10, 1,.,. Inventory I P11bll~ Or-Coa\t Dolly Pilot. aividual F1- Pubh.i.<I 0r""l)le Coa\I o ••• , Pllo\. Aprol lO Moy 7, U, 21, '"' 1911 .. 1 PUBLIC NOTICE PA AT NE RSHI p 200 Wut Com· • nol IO uc•<llhe ... m ol JOO 00 IAorll :IO, Moy, "· 21 ftll 1«»1 .. 1 Fr.a L H•llt• mof'Hlilf't•tlh Avenu• Futlrrtonw D•m•ndnotetobe,ut"HUl"led l hu st•t•ment ,.., hJ.O ... 1n ,,,. Callfo•n•• mJ:2 I by •n euumpttonol PUBLJC NOTICE County Cltr• ol D•MIQt Countr °" NOTICE INVITING llOS FUlLERTOH SAVINGS ~ l.OAN an uillt"9 loan llS •• l• Aprll l t'itl NOite• I> ntrel>y given thtl n.e ASSOCIATION 200 Wut Com· O.mandN>tatoboWO.tlluled ' ~UUtl Boarq ol Truue ... 01 -Coa>I c.m- monweall" Avenue Fullerton, byanu"'"'l)tlonor I S.CltOWNO I-NH Pub11.-0rM>Qt (OO•t D•llyPllol m.,ntty C.Otl*fO of Ora f\9e County. C•llforn1e t2.U1 •n u tlll1'19 loon 2 2,. JJ NOTICE TOC•IEOtTO"S Aprtt 9 1•. 2J lO "" 172311 Ca lifornia will reolv. MaltG Dl<li up GOLDBERG WHEELER COM-1Nol••rdSec..,1ty OPaUut TUNSPllll to 11 00 am FruNY, Nloy IS. l9tl at PANY )140 Compuj Dro.. Mtwoort AgrH..-1 lo l>e In It.ca. n t l-4111 U.C.C.l lllt Pur< ... S•"9 ~rlment ol I.Old B .. c11 ca111orn1at2MO l•vor o1 tl'le St!I.-),000 oo NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Ill••• PUBLIC NOTICE co•le9• d•ilr1ct loc•l9" •I lllO AdMn• Thi\ bu>tnen " <ot1d<.1<1~ bl• Total 'U,17' 0 !><Ilk tr.,.,W.r "•bout to De ,,,_of Avenue ~I• 11.vw C•llfOf'nl•, •1 genara1 _.irwr•No -, Tne ptace -r• Ille c-.atton Ill• per>ona l property due robed •l'll{h 1,.,.. .. Id blOI wlll be pUOll<ty Olrl\I_.., A Wllffler lor th•,,.,,.,., Ol llW lMl\IMU •rd IN l ... ,_ . NOTICE TO C•EOITO•S opened ena ,_ for PRINT AMO lnli 1Lllomtfll wet Ill.a wlll'I llW llU<>tt or ll<emo> " to lie paid ll Tiie ,,_ -buMnHt addreu of OF I ULK TltANS"I• BIND ORANGE COAST COLLEGE County Cltrk ol OrlWIQe County on WESfEAN l;IUTUAL. ESCROW. UOll I,.,. '"'"'°"' ,,.,.,.,.,, Is .JOWAN IS.U. '111_.111 11.C C.l Cl1'SS SCMEOULE. ,,.,_,, Janwer., 10 '"' Sout" VorM StrM l, Suite 101 lvtU"• MES 80ELHOUWEA, ..x> A. Pac.UK Not.c.e '' hereby V•'W•f\ \O tf\t All bkh .,. lo bl tn eccordMK• with Fto10ll California .,_..,on Of' alter May II, Con t Mlgllwey, Newporl Beach, creclllor> of ELOISE A BODIFORD Ille Btd Form lnilr..cllonl and Concll- Pul>l11Md Or-Co .. I Daily P1IOI, "'' Collfornla ""3 Tren1fe<Of', .,l'IOW t>uwneu addr•n Ii loon> and ~lllcahon> wMch art"°"' Apfll lO, Mar I 14. fl, "" HTHI Tl'le ... rtJH "9"• INI tN c°"llcjer• Tiie names ard 11\nlntta addrHi of 11SJ L• Ramol•. City ol San Cta,,....te on Colt •nd may be M<Ul"9d In 1,.,. offl<• t•an 10< IN transler of ,,,. butlnns the lnl•nded lrenalwr .. • are ROY E County of O<-. St•t• ol CallfOf'nl• of the Purc,,..11>9 AQl"'I of wkl col'-NOTICIE Of SAl.l Of A VIESSIL P UBLIC NOTICE endtl'lthO"MOf'll<enwshtobepekl FOSTEA-L.aVERNE C FOSTER, th•I a bulk lr.n\ter I\ et>Oul lo be dlitrlcl YALUEO AT MO"E THANUtl •fltr the Department of AIColtoll< lt<t? L.ar_. A-. G ... ...,, Grove. m •de to JO AHNE 8ERUBE, E•cl'I blddtr mutt •-II wllJI hf> Nollet I> l'lere1>v Qlvcn purw.nt to NOTICE OF SALi 0 1' A YIHEL. Bever-Control l>M aporO'le<I Ille Cahlorn1a ~ freMto.-.., ·-l>u1tnH• addrH• I\ bid • <a""•'\ < ... <k. cerllflad cfM<k, secllon1 soo. 501, 101 S, 502 ana 50l of VALUl'D AT IOIO•E THAN Utt pr09Qsed 1,.,,,1., The -rty to lie tr•n••erred I• 1'1l1 Edna Pl•ce. City ol Covin•. or bidder'• bond m-,..yllDI• 10 -~;~~~~:~;,~~~~ ~~~ .. ~,~!~: ~.~~.~~.~~·~~ !~ ":,-;.•, ~~;erR ~ ~u ;~=: ~,,:C':':::r~?r:'i;-~u.:1~r~:~ ~=~;;.·,~,:· Lo• Ano.,.., s•••• 01 ';;.~~.~'.":o~~,0~'7.:':.'~~.c~~1~· tho Harbor L Nevl~ll°" CO$ of the ESCROW, 14011 South Vorl>O StrHI. 1 aturu, equ pmen ' goo w • Tiit properly 10 be lrantr•rrwo 1' amount nol IH' tl>en five percent IS,.! Mii •i public a..cllon, at lOO E•\I Coa>t Sl•tt of C•lllornla llW undortlOMO Suitt 101. Tu•lln. C•llfornla UlllO. l••Cle ol 11\el cen.lfl -•n•u ~nown det.Crtl>Od In eo-Mr•I •• "'' \lo<lo. In ol Ill• wm bid H • gueranlH 1,,.1 HIQllway, Newport 8a.tcll, C•lllO<nla DE ANZA BAYSIDE VILLAGE wlll Attn Merilyn Wulmorwla<WI •• NEWPORT BU~GEAS lrtdo, liJ<turH, !Hllllprrletll end QOOd 111• bidder wll• •n!Or Into Ille p.........., n..o •I'~. m On l!>e 13111 doly of Mii •• put>llc auction,., JOO E•ll Coa•t EIOIM R Bodllord, Tran•t.ror Said -rtv I\ lo<.otltd at tlOO A. """ of ..... ION·SAL.E 8EER ANO Contract II Ille .. ,,,. II •war-lo Mar 19tl,1Nlollowlr>QdeS<rl-pro Hlgl'lw•y, N•woort Beec:ll. Calllornla Jo~Berube,Tren>l•r .. P•clll< Cout Highway, N .. •port WINE FOR PUBLIC PREM ISES him lnltw eventotlellureto•nlerln· pe~t:i',,~~.-i:!.1 , MOlor I 0 CFseCIOl'W, •1..0 at 9 00 • m on 1"41 Ill.It clay ot P"bll•r.ed 0.-Coall Dally Piiot, Beocll, Calllornla t2Ml LICENSE ,,.2 944SSJ bullneu •nown lo •u<ll cantrect, tl'lt p(O<MO& of tht ~ull No oEN•-·•~l•L. May, 1'711, 11.., followl1>9 deKrlbed pro· Apr II )0 1911 JOSG-11 Said bulk lr..W .. Is lo De conwm· H COUNTRY BOY -IO<al9" ol 21S. <heO will be for'felttd Of' In U... COM n ~ .. -~ ' m•tecl on or after May 20. ltl1, al Ille Newoor1 Blvd . City ol C~I• -... 01 • l>Ond ""' full 111,,,' 1,_,901 will be S•ld Mlt "lor ,,,. l>U'_. 01 Mii• oertf, 10 wll PUBLIC NOTICE olllu ol, and <lal-mey be fll9dwt111. county of Of._, Stateot Calllornl• i~ien-• tow••col ........ dlatrl(t ly1n9lle<>oftMunde"ionectformoor 1972 1'MI bo••. Motor IO u N 1 TE o Bus I N ES S T lk 1 u 111 iw conwm ~ ~ ~ -vs lnQ IHI In 1,... amount 01 ~ oo. CF1312FB, Hull No UE7"4 11' 11<1 ,.,, •r w No bl-r rney withdraw I'll• bid lor 1-•tl'l•r with ·-1· ~ .~--···~ .~ Said .... " tor llW purpow of wll• 1 I INVESTMENTS, INC. 902' Alondr•, ma lecl on .... •lier,,.,.''"" day of Mev. a ptrlOd of '°"'live l•SI ~Y• alter ~ -· •"' w•~• ... ~ l'ICTITIOUS•USINllS Blvel . P.,amounl, CA t07ll, Ull !tll at 10 00 AM •I WESTERN upen ... of w ta 111n11 lien of ,,.,. und•r>lgn•d lor NAME STATl!MINT U 4 1070, flUI U• 21S4 Tiii\ bulk MIJTUAL i'.SCROW CORP . ATTN '";!;1~~ u;o.=~=· ,,,. Dated lllt> 22nd day Of AP<ll 1•1 •Ion;. '"' In ""' _, of M$.OO, TIM foll-•"9 per-11 dOlnO bolt.I tr•n>I•• la -je<I to S.c "°' ot tlW MARILYN WESTMORE LANO. WhoMlpr1vll•-~ -1~11-any -.,, ~ ~never 109•1,.,., •1111 cotls ol edY••tl>l"Q -If c I I c d B lk -·-y --SI s II ........ ·-~ •.• ...... Sam Nt9ro upenMs of wle n"' •• Un orm ommerc • o •· u •Cld••n '' 1-1 .., o.-. u • or to wal .. any lrr9fUl0rltlft 6rtn· Oalltd llth Z2nd day ol Aprll, ""· HMllllL TON ANO ll.$SOCIAT ES, TreMtt n 101 T"S11n, C.llforftie t-.o Thal t,.,. lormellllH In _,., bid or In 1,_ bldcllftQ PuOlllf'ltd Or-Cool Oaoly Piiot Som Nit ro "60 Catalina Str .. I, ~ 9e0<1t. TM IHI CUle tor f1111>9ctolm1 11 May lot ctal• o111111>9 clalms In I,_ etc: row NORMAN E WATSON A t lO 1._1 ?O~I Callforn1a '26ll "· ltll r•l•rred to ,,.,.,n I• Mey IS. ltl t So<re\or prt ' -....-r R ICl'le rd 0 Ham lllon IUO So l•r a1 known to Illa lnl•nded So far •• ll •-to,,_ rr ... 11erff, BoardofylrUSIHI PUBLIC NOTICE PuDllllwd Or-Coaat Oaflr Piiot Cata I In• Strut, Lagull• lhaclt, lr•n•ftraff Ille tnl•-lr•n.ieror ... ousi,.u-• •net addrHMI uted Coa>t Commun•tv Coll-0 1•· Aor11 >O. "" _____ 20_~_1 .. _1 Callforni.t?.SI uNd IM lellowlnO -111-1 bu>lntu by Ill• Tran1fer0f' tor ll'la ..... ll>r• lrocl FICTITIOUS eus lNIU NAME STATIMINT PUBLIC NOTICE Tiil• l>utlntta •• cot'du<•d by ... In· n ....... -addrnsot w•tl'lln -lltrM yHrs .... SAME PuOll•-Or-, ..... Dally Piiot. d1vlctuel ¥H f\ laU !W'" NONE Oalltd Api<ll 10. "" Aprll lO Moy 1 1''1 l04Wl Al<IWrd 0 H•mlllon 0 •111'<1 Apnl n. '"' JOANNE BERUBE . TM follOwlng .,..._. la doing bUll ,,.,, •s NEWPO"T MANAGEM ENT SYSTEMS . JtOI M a cArllt11r Boulevard. Sull• 201, N""POrl BM<h. Calllor111a '2t60 Cll•rlu Frank Luredar. 10211 EverQ-L.a,., MunllnQton Bea<h, Calltornlo n.- Tnl• Dulllnau I• concluclecl by an In· ctlvldual O..rlft l'r•n-l111oder l1>la \IAl\tmenl wet fllecl wllll I,_ County Clerk of Orenve County on Tl'lll •1•1-1 wM flllOCI with ,,,. A..., E l'01tor Tr.,.,Jterw NOTICI TO C"IOITO•S counlY (l•rk of o .... .,. County on uv ..... c . F01tar Publl•-Orenoe Coa•t O•lly Piiot 0 1' I UUC T•ANSPIE• jAOrll 14 1•1 Publlt_ Or.,. Coast Dally i'llo1, Aprll JO. 1•1 tOSl .. I ts.en..,.,,.,., u .c .c .1 ,,..., Aprll JO, 1t11 >047 .. t Nollu "11e...oy 91....., to t••~lltors of Pullllilled Or-Cont Dally Pllo1, ---- Ille within n.amtd tr-Itron 11\ot a ~ i4,U ,l0,Nloy7 "" tltO-ll PUBLIC NOTICE 1>ulk 1r .... t1er 11 .oou1 to be ...-on ---- P UBLIC NOTICE oer>onal prope rty h•r•lna llar PUBLIC NOTICE ----lolOTfC~ INYITINO 1101 dtltrlbecl MOTICI INVITING llDS NOTICE IS MEREBY GlllEN lhol T,.,. ... ,,... ond bullneu ....... " ol NOTICE IS HEREBY GlllEN ,,,., ..... d pr~··· for furnlahlnQ •II the ln\endedlransle,..,.a,... "ICTtT10U•1u11111a11 aoalHI pnlCIOl•ll lor furnlll\11'0 •II l a bor' <Tl•l•rl el\, •Q"lpme nt, Olen•• Of Woodl-Hiii•, inc .. ak• NAMISTATIEMaNT lellor , malerla la, •q 111p1t1ent, tren1por1a11onanct1uc11ot,,.rfac1111i.t Diano' a of Wood._ Hiiis . Clbe DI-T~• lollowing ,.,,.,., la CIOlnt b<ltl t ran_._lon 9'CI wc;h o1her latllllles • s m a y I> • r • q u I r e d f o r January 20, 1 .. 1 •nd dba Ol-'s, Utt DeSoto Drive, nen as a t m a y be r e q u Ir e d f 0 r jlNST ALU.TION OF THE BAKER WOOCllel>d Hiiia, ColHornta . THIE EL.IECTAIC WINO, 1" INSTALUl'TION OF THE ADAMS STREET TRAFFIC SIGNAL SYSTEM Ft.o12) The locellon In Calllornle Of \fie Ple<entla, Coi le M .. e , C•lllornl AV I N U E T It f. I' F 1 C SI GH A L •wlll be racel....ct by I,_ City o1 CoalAI cnt•I uacutlve ofll<e or prlnc1,..1 bVSI· 92U7. SYSTEM will lie rec:t l-II'\' Iha Cit'( Maw, al t,_ office ot ttw City Cler-, 17 ........ rlll.Mvtll ... •1c-&M ......... .... Ml<ArtW ....... 1411 .... .. .,....... 9Mdl, ea."* ,..,., ,,.. •. H.....,. Publlth9d Or.,. Coetl Delly PllOI, April JO, May 7, 14, ll, l•t t06Mll PUBl.JC NOTICE n•H ol!lc.e ol t"9 tntendltd lr...,sleror Sl•PNI' LefflrOI> H11~rey, 2 OI Cotta IMM, al \he office ot the City Fel• Drlw , Coate Mata, CAllilotflla, I>' Same Se nta An• Ave n11•. Cotta MUI Clar k, 11 Fair Drive, COJla Mew, """' tl'la 11our of 11:00 a.m., May It, All ot,,.r Dull-.,.,..... onct ad, C•lllor1tl• t»27. Callfo"'1a, 1111u11,,. '*"°of 11 :00 a.m ., 1t11, e t ""''di time tllay wlll lie ot»MCI dren•• 11ud by Ille lntenctrlt Tiii> lluslND It concluC ... by ..., 111· Moy It. ti -II umo llWY •Ill be pubflcly -,...., olouel In lflO C:-11 lranaleror Wllltln lflrw years lest POii dlYldual. ~ P11911<1y ond ...oct e'°"41 In Ille Clwlmllet'S. S..aecl pr-opoytt sllell lle•r t o I er o known lo Ill• lnlen<l•d St...., L. H\lmfflAY C-ll """*-" °SMtecl ~Is ,,,. 1111• o+ IM -" -ti• n.rne of trenslerM .... , Solllll Coosl Ptuo. Tnl• st-...nl wet 111..i with the 11\0ll ...., lfla llU• of 1,,. _.. 911111 IM tfle blddW but "° otllar dl1t111911llilll"1 Costa Meta. Cellfor11la. f'osfllo11 C•11111Y c i..11 <II 0r-.. e.e..Mr ""' ,..,,,. .,. .. blclOlf but M _, 41,1• merk•. Any bid received ofl:ff ttoe $4uart, $11trrT•lifl 0.111, Calllor11lo; Aprll 7, 1•1 l"fllltll"'9 rn.rtlt. An'( bid rKalYOd KllOclulecl tl~ng time lor tM f"keipl WHllll•l'ld Hiiis P.-.cle, W-•ntl ''"'" •IWr "" IC!lldlllff bldl .... u .. r .. of 111<1• INll ...... ..,,.., to"" bidder ltOTICS INYITUfO IMOI Hiiis, Celllornlo • P111>llllltel Or-. CM tl Oally l"llol, 1..,-la Olt .._ _..... II tholl unop•ned . 11 shall be Illa Ole N II I Tiie ,,.,,,. onCI lloldl--4clrHS "' 1'P<ll t, 16, t>. JO, ••t ,,,._., ~ 1•-.... ~lllv ~•~II-re•-·'-'11"' ~ -••~lo -t•·t • o ' llt••llY 9l11en 11111 Ille t ll• lllh n elelll tro n ,,., •• e ra -'"" ,.._~ '"" ~ _ ...... ""' ..,_.. ._ loorlll of T,,... °' lllt C...sl Cem CAl.lllOllNIA OSCO, INC., 140 Soulfl f •-tl*tlk llld lsr-l...O ln~ lll~l>C.!!'c~1«~=.''"s::r.r=.-1a1Mt "'""llY Coif ... Olslrlcl of Oro,,.. Lind o Drive, snarly HlllJ, PUBLIC NOTICE "Ti.t«s.Klot """''*"..,,*"''· •nd-llloN lo CO-lll Pn•IMonl I• =-ty, ;-'~~·· wll~='"'~~ Calltorlllo 90211. u ... -. o...• ,.,..,111Mt 11"" SUft. ,,,. Sl.....,.CI Sl'Klfk otl-may M • "" ' a.m.. y, "' ... T"-1 !tit.,,_,., ,.,-tlMftt ,.,.,..tt I• "tCTITIOUI euMNau .._,. ~ _., .... ,."" ot teln•d 01 lflt otflce ol tlto Cit" "" •1 .. l"lot'cNll"9 OeMrtl'Mlrt .. •tc•I .... "' .,._ .... , All •l!Kk '" NAMS ITAT.MllMT lM efftc. .. ""a ........ _. n llalr En9I-, n Felr Drive, CaoalAI lileM, .... <of• .-vk1 teulltd •I ,.,. ....... 111111#'n, ""'"*""' • ...Wll .. ......,.._. lfk ·-~am s A"''""'· • C•••• Mt SI , .. _..,,, ... _,_,.,. .. -.......,: Ill TIM lol-"'t --•• ~Wit-on .... c.. ..... c:.11..,,.,., •. l"IMS, C•lllwnla. ...... .. .._ .... 1""1N ot _._.. U ·-~ ~ II .......... --a••· ...-11~ - -CAlll(te<t lllOclO> etMr c_.,ect Cltellr'l*lt• may 411• _, • '""""' ---w I Wttdlanlll Htlll Pra"'a111111a, 111 •-.INTl!"~:::;JIJCeft(..,._ ffttflll-yalM .. oMfft!NlllotlMClf· u.oml'*'tl Ille fllfko .. -TrlHk ,llMICl\I ---~ •d ,_.. '°'' it..-H9ll W11M1M111 HUii tlaJ " .. UltCHAH; 0" T&N (111 UIT , .. c-_...,.. c't> ....__ ,.~ ltlua ......,,9MCll, ...... fktflflfleTrafflc i!ntl-•ef""Clt'f E11tl....,flf tMCltyflfc.1AllMM. TlllllllNA4. TY .. i'w1t1r•u ~~I _..~ ;~t;;; .. Mntt. JOHN w. WltlOHT, ata c..-rlll. of C:..to...... lo<ll -.1e1 ............... ~ Ille All t4-.,.. _, 111 -~ wltll c;;t;' ';:z.:.;: -(Or .... QNlty), N-!N'" a..cl\, CMlfontil.... l.1<11 Mil !NII .. mM9 .. ~ PreflOMI fllnn, ....... ,._, ~ N Ult 914 ,_ lftllrlleti.tlt Ind (lrllllf. CJI ,..,..... ~ """"'9 °""9; Tiii• llwllM8 II~ •Y Ill lfl !Wiii, ...... ,._, ~ N Pf"Wldetl pr..,IOM In tllt CCllllrK\ --~ lltolt on111 9--clflutltftt Wflkll •re -!40al Ill_..... OrMI .,__ft OW M6'11. 111 "" ~rt•cl ~ -tMll Inell 111•11 N •e<O<'tlll'lnltlll h • ......... ...,..llKIA'Mlllltltofflu • ,,....W.WtltM ... •<<~• ........ certlflOlll ., certlf!W ... ClllMef"t cllt<lt ...... of IN ~"-'"1 Aelft' tf ..._ ~ tlTUl C'-4 c:-ity). tM W'lll Tiii• ~ -filed wltll tM (4Mlef"t dll<JI t/11 • _,. 11111111 f9f net i.lf!d tor not , ....... 10 Ptruftf of"" 11111ttkt. "-....,._. - -"" c ... 111., Cltf'l tf 0r-.. ~ '" ._. 111111 10 ~ " 11o _, If •motMt" IN Mcl. IMlll ,.., • .,.. .. .,. I Kll ~ ,,_. alalfftlt #lttl Ill• tr~~t..;.,..°":,,.,.1•1........., .. ~II ti."''· ,.._ t11t -.._ ,_, .... '9 "" CllY f/f City If c.11 Mell. Mo "'°""' llMll ... a ,..,.,,.,,_., ctrUflM <Mc" flt ,_... ~ ..... * ......... lfllll M<-M ,_._...""'"' ~i.111 IW P UBLIC NOTICE NOTIC:I INVITING llDS NOllc..E IS HERE.BY GIVU4 tll.at Heltd pr-els tor f11rnl&lll119 all ta bor, tn•ttri•••, e qt.1lpm e ,.t , lrentportallon -Juell o1Nr fe<lllllas ••m a y b e r e qulrael f or INST "LLATION OF ST-ll£T LIGHTI NG CONDUIT O H Bl!AA STREET FROM IAISTOL STltlET tOOO mort • lea& f'IEET WESTEltL Y wlll Ila recol....., by the City of COJl• M•M, al I,_ offlc.e Of Ult City Clo,., 77 Fair Ori ... Co.ta 11.vM, Colll-la, untll ll'lt hour of It :00 a.m .• ,,..y It, 1t11, al Wlliclt time IMy wlll llt .,,. ..... pullflCly anc1 reed el-In ltw C-11 Cflomban. So-pr-91& ~11 -.or llM lllle of IN WW1< encl Ille Mtna ol the "ldetr IM 1'° ohr Clbt'"91111f\"'9 markl. My IHCI received et~ the achtd11l9d clotl,. time fof' tll9 rttot .. of bkh _., .. rttwmtcl .. tl!e ....., 11t1a1i't1ttel. It tlllfl be 111• eot• r•..-9*111Y of ........... -"'91 "'• ...... _.._ "',,...., lllM. A .. 1 .. ""-• 5"<111 1"'9~ •ncl Oelelltior. to o-.i ...,......,._to Ille Slonlller1I S.-llkttloftt....., ..... lal"ed ot llt• office ol tll• City 1,,.1-. 11 ,.,r 0r1 ... c:.. .. ..... Ct lllwNI .... -. -lllnt ..... O!lld ..,.,., COfltfec1 --tt <'tlO\I o• .. ,11aamlnt4 e t Illa ottlc• •f tlle Tr•"-'9Moft Servl<M ,,,..,..., tf -. Clly41f c:.&o tNM. l tcll l>ld .... ., ... ~ -.... ........... ..,,,,, ........ ~· ~ .... _ ...... lft IN c.eMrKI ~ •ft-lllall Ila ICUll'l,lllle41 • ., e CtfllflM W C....,..t cMc:lt tr• llW ""Ill .. "" ,... ~ '" .. .... -94#11 f/ ........ fftMt ,..,.... .. "" Clly of c.ta IMM. No,,......, aMll .. c..i.,..,... IMftll 4K~.., ,,, ....,.1 --~ 9 -lie CW_,.. el_.. tf'flto ef; C:ltr ft.111111 ..... Or .... ~ OellY f'l:t ~ ..._ '"°""*' ... 1W MIU _,., WWllW'& <M<'-<•"' .....,.., ------------------------~~ "•Clllt~y c:.llf9t ~~~~:4:~ ~ll lO,Mrtf, 14,11, tttl 1'1M cllllllw'1d!Kl,c•or.....-1.,.,.., ._,, Ohttln ...,. •• Trlftt ... Ill 01'1 Miii ... QI...,,... _, -·"...... • H• ...... " <•I•,._ ""*' Ct I Ho ll4d INll .. ~ ""'"' II -11 ~· ''-"-u.1111' _...... llMcl. NollldlMlt•~=lt II "' .. tit I ...... ~ !\Al .., tllt City ttl c.M-... _., I• ~ Ill I((.,..."""""' .............. ..,.......,.,, ........... PUBUC NOTICE ~,.. ,_.., ""' NKtf'll cs•1 .,., 11, "'' PUBUC NOTICE ,. lft4ldt "'• .__ fWlft ....,...,.. IW • ,..,. 111 • "'-* fWlll '""""""' ,., Of tM -W 11 •....,.... tl\ll a. • u. C:llr ti c-e _. ... I•"'* Ill lllt Cit\'« ea.Ce MtM.,... It M.-Ill ..... , wlll WltH f!M . .,_ .,....... Tlllt hlll lrafltfef II Slt91K.}_1! -~ "'"'IN ,,wt-.e ti -<M~ •VI"'°,,..,, ... Df 111e llCTIT10WS~lll8M Cllltrae1 It ... lllM IJ 1w..-. II Ctllteflll• Uft"9rl'll Ql'l\~lllf .._ nAT ... ~OflAIANDORMIWT ~'-"t111111nla. ,.,.,,.... ....... ~ 'ICT1TI..-S •Ult.... .. ..... ftATIMlft 111111. ltt tM .-Of ttil-.. ..._ 1fto Sf~=-, ........ ..,._ ol 1,_ °"UM W IKll '6ellf _.. "9 ~ lflO I llKll .,....., tftloltt .. \le.._. &1141 •AMllSTAtllMIUfY TIM,.........._..,_ I• ... ..,.._ te Mii ...,_._ 1M ~.... -~ •tCTITIOUl•UtUe8NMAMI el .. ~•~f'M..,-.W. .-1 .. ,,....ilfldf•r..,+M-.~ • , ... ._ ........ ,.._ t. ..... Ml-.... ... \ ~-_... ._ ~ « litl -'--... ltlt .,..,,. clot~ ... ":!.!':.. ..: T .............. ,.,_ i.. •• .. •• TM (ltyQwlcll Of N (ftf .. C.U I Tl• City C'.Nlcll Of ... 01T flf ~ .... ... C U I T 0 M 0 I I I 0 N, ti o lllN, a. fllll M1111 ....... wlll ._ =~A'. ..,., ' tM ldttf U. ·~----j .... ,_...... .. rllM te ,.,led eity II r...-... .. rltM ta ,.,_, "*Y MAHUAJ. ,A .. l(AflOH .. !!!! lAND•&.ASTINO, MtU la11t1 "• tllrftlM• .... CllNllllllllrlct. ~ .. ;--,"-1.:~=.... IYl••••&N LIMIYIO "'°"...._ all...._ c111..,10 or1.-. HU11t1,..... -..ceell •9110 ~ c:.11...,... ,.......,_,,.....,.""*"' Tllt._--.:,,,,11.:.....cllllll&""e.,' ,.AUN•1t1Hlf', mt'"'" o.... no~.,...~.-,,_. ftQaW-•ar111w• M*I '-..,..,.. w1t11 UN,_,.ftMll. tM.IA. t ...,_fl..,..... 1•...,. 1ftef _, ,... ltNlll,C-...._,C.........,... 1119.,.........., _.... U7' •lf'91 ~ .... tf IK'*-171t t. 1"9 It~ Ai.~, Sitt CAlleMI ..._.._.....,..,_,_,YI............................. ;i::~.::~~~·:· Tiii "'""-..... .._.. f'I-llllClw.t .... .C "'9 C•HfWfla. '--... ~l111lft, ef 11'1 (ll0-1• UW =-HIMllfllll!' ....,_, CltllfWllll =-... C ... ._Clllf9rftle .. r:...e.:-.=.':':'.: 11tt1tt ;,.. OllHll'!l'teOtll dlll: =? -:.-::. '::'.;;' r.~:. Ce*, -&=i·==== •=":,'::ti:::.:: nil .._.II....._.. .. 1r1 lit-T1I ........... ~ .. _.,. lft. tr•....,..,, IV., .... ., .., =-~ ,... PtlMll -.. ..._ .. fl• ..... Ctr ...... -111• -"" .. ,c.IW ......... ~ f~Ww111......... T...'.:t:.t..'....."T.IA~ 1_ fUot.UlOVMllYt(,•.!..,_...,_ , ....... llflll Cllf~ .-..i ..... Otr; ..... lllllrllth .._.A.U-* --~~ LIMTIGM -""""" .._...,_ ~Diii .... ~-....... ,......,_.___. ....... t!Wllfltw- ')'lllt ........ _..,..., ..... ,,.. ........ ,.. ... • :::-..-~ .....,.,..,. ... =··" ..... a... .. ..... a... .ClllMj ·""" • or.. C1M11Y • C-W Cltft Of Or-c-tY 111 ...... r.-.. ,.......,, fill ................... -fl.,_, --P. ,_., ... ,.~ ..,.t,1411 a..~ ~ ~ =~t10r.,..ca.1r _,..,..,. CIWa.41• .. ...._ o.Arwi,..,.. ....,,... c:weOM:' -...=1~r.:...Olfty,... -..... Tanr':" ... -.Dlllty ....... ~oi:-Olttf ............ °&::*"O:-,.., ' ~ _,,,..,,,.,.~~ f '-"·~-... ..... ~---c-:--= .............. ~ .. -."111i ........... ~ .. .., ~ •. ttietl ......, """" • ~ ... .... ,......, .... ........,.._, . Tiit (.lty ~II ti ... Cftr .CC.-Moll r...-tflttftllt'9NIKt...., WllllM9. , Ttla~tMI~-­... .,..,....,,. • .._ 1'1t It Ult l11ct1i\lwt, of tlle C..IHM111• 1.&• c:ae. ... ..........,.., .......... ..... ........... .. Qty .. c;.-.,. .... ~ ... """.. Cl" (ltttl .. "" .... ow: ........ .... fllMM ................... .... <Mlllti-m ........ CMI. ..................... y °"°"""" .. Cll'rtlC... ... .............. c.... ... _.., ''"" I I ~UfilUa . \ . Bohemian clllh ruling nixed I SAN FRANCISCO (AP> ..!... A jwt,e's rulin& allowin1 sex di.a· criminaUon in hiring by the all· male Bohemian Club, to which President Reaean belon1a. has been rejected by a state com· mission, which will hear the case itself. The Fair Employment and Housing Commission could have ade>pted the Jan. 19 decision by administrative law judge Robert Kendall, saying the famed club could legally r efuse to hire women. Firemen <recWled SAN DIEGO (AP> Dis- ciplinary action is being pre- pared against five male firefighters accused of sexually harassing female firefighters who mus t s hare the sa me s hower and bathroom with them. Of/ shore lease suits filed LOS ANGELES <AP> A pair of lawsuits flied by Gov Edmund Brown Jr and 22 en vironmental groups allege that U.S. Interior Secretary James Watt acted illegally when he opened an area off the Central Callfor!la coaat to lease tor oil drilling. The sulta were filed in federal district court Wednesday, challenging Watt's action in opening for lease 34 of us tracts in the Santa Maria Basin north of Santa Barbara. Truck flips, girl killed LOS ANGELES <AP> -A trip to the beach turned into tragedy when a traffic accident killed a 15-year-old girl and injured several other people. A pickup truck loaded with youths Wednesday :;werved to miss a large board on the Santa Monica FTeeway. went out of control, hit a motorscooter and flipped over , the Highway patrol said. Identity of the dead girl was not released pending notification of relatives. Liddy at Berkeley BERKELEY <AP> -G . Gordon Liddy. who went to prison for hi s role in the Watergate scandal, has won mixed reviews after a speech on the Berkeley campus, once a hotbed of student radicalis m. 'Spruce Goose' due Long Beach dome LONG BEAC H (AP ! Construction has begun on a multi-million-dollar geodesic dome to house the legendary fl y ing· boat. the Spruce Goose, at a resort complex with the Queen Mary. Wrather Corp offidals an· nounced the addition Wednesday amid fireworks and gun blasts in a ceremony at the waterfront re· sort complex where both vessels will be displayed. .. Port Ad venture wtll be an impo rtant part of Southern California 's entertainment culture. one of the if not the most important entertainment destinations for visitors," said Jack Wrather, president of the Wrather Corp., an entertain- ment-amusement conglorperate The Beverly Hills-bas~d cor- poration's principal assets in- clude the Disneyland Hotel, Inn at the Park in Anaheim and movie·TV rights to "Lassie" and "The Lone Ranger." r O,ange Coast DAILY PILOTfThuraday, April SO, 1981 Panelvora · smoke ban in scliools 'J)allas' twists toµgll 1 Davis death script coonge a/ f ected by writers' strike SACRAMENTO CAP> -A Senate committee haa voted to ban 1mokln9' ln the public schools, but an opponent pre- dicts that re1ercUes1 of the law, "it'll 10 on in the bathrooms." By a 6-1 vote Wednesday, the Senate Education Committee approved SB7CM by Sen. Dan O'Keefe, R·Cupertino, aendlng It to the Senate Finance Commit· tee. It would repeal a law passed several years ago allowing high schools to deslanate areas where students could smoke. The bill would allow teachers and ad· ministrators to smoke in one area in each school, away from students. LOS ANGtL.ES (AP) - Because of all too real facton - the death of actor Jim Davis and a writers' strike -the upcomins plot twtata of the "Dallu" CBS- TV aeries are tou1ber to fi,ure out than last year's 1uessln1 came about .. Who Shot J .R. ?" Among the poulbllltiea "Dallas" executives conalder4=d Wednesday waa wbedter tb write-out the role of famlly patriarch Jock Ewine. played by the 65-year-old Davis, who died of a heart attack Sunday. •'One option that none of us wants ls the possibility of recast- ing the part," producer Leonard Katzman said. On a hurry-up schedule, Lorimar Productions planned to start filming five 1981-82 shows on May 14. Should it be decided to end the Jock Ewing t'ble ol oil baron emeritus, with a death that becomes part of the scenario, a major l'e-wrlUn,-would have to be carried out ln the nex~ few weeks. THE PIRST question is: will the Writers Guild of America al- low lta striking members to work on the five ''Dallas" scrlpta? Thal possibility exists, said Katzman, noting that he would ask the guild next week to re- consider its refusal earlier this week to exempt "Dalla s" because of Davis' death. He said he thought the writers' refusai waa only "conditional." He did not elaborate. The urgent need for rewnting of "Dallas" also raised another PET, RENTAL ISSUE BACKED -Three act- resses tell a Sacramento press conference of their support for a state committee-backed bill to prevent owners of low-rent, gov- ernment-subsidized housing from refusing to rent to senior citizens with pets. From left .... 1 ...... are actresses Margaret O'Brien, Gloria DeHaven, Martha Raye, Sen. David Roberti, author of the bill, and Mrs. Lucille Hoyne, 74, Glendale, who said she had to give up a low- rent apartment because she owns a cal. po11lblUty· that Lorimer wOuld defect fro m th• producers' ne10UaUn1 commUtee end reach a separate contract auee\ ment aa an independent. -I "There waa much apecuJatJon about a Lorimar defection. But I think Lorimar is going to bold firm ," Katzman said when reached at the Lorimar offlcee at MGM Studios. THE MAY H production at.art is two months earlier than usual, K atiman acknowledged. because of a chance the Direc.t tors Guild or America will atrikei when its contract expires June 30. A directors' strike would virtually shut down rum and television production. Another fi ctional cliffbangel\ will end the ''Dallas" season Friday. and viewers who worry about such things may be put through a second s ummer of waiting It is something similar to 1980's "Who shot J.R ?'' situa; tlon that remained unanswered for six months. Davis d1ed Sunday at his sub· urban Northridge home. He had been recuperating from March surgery of a perforated ulcer. A memorial service was scheduled for Friday at 1 p.m. at Forest Lawn 's C hur c h o f th e Reces sion a l in Glendale , Lorimar officials said Wednes· day A WRITERS' spokeswoman said Wednesday the guild has made "excellent" progress in separate talks with independent produt'ers On Tues day , producers sweetened a three·year offer on basic minimums boosting them as mut'h as lo 31 9 percent for movies and 29 5 percent for TV The strike issues include res· 1duals for home video pay TV , videocassette s a n <1 videodiscs Writers have said the producers' home video offer would give them "a percent~ of nothing." The producers. working on an established industry formula that writers and directors only get one third the residuals of ac· tors, have offered 1.5 percent. Al the end of their to.week strike last year the at'tors got 4 5 per· cent of the distributors' gross for pay TV programs after they've. been shown 10 times on every system in a year. and 4 5 per- cent for cassettes and discs afll'r sale of 100.000 units combined. ~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ _.,A Superb Adventure In Dining ~&@///~ ITALIAN CUISI NE • Courtesy Boat Slips • Banquet and Pnvate Party • Fac1lit1es with Bay View 642· 7811() J ill W•t Co~t Htgliway Newport Baell, CalllonaU ...... national funcllng FULLY ASSUMABLE INTEREST ONLY 2ncl TRUST DEEDS OWNER/NONOWNER OCCUPIED Call William B. Mitchell Call today tor quote • No obhga11on trans nollonol l\Jnd1ng (7J4) 975-1128 ~~~:~=:~~:~ PUBLIC SALE RAcm·s FOURTH AMMUAl. GRADUATED DISCOUNT SAl.E ALL OVERSTOCKED AND LOHGST AHDIHG JEWELRY WILL IE Ll9UIDARD AT SAVIHGS YOU'LL NEVER SEE AG AIM! HURRY! 3 MORE DAYS! lecJINdftCJ Wed. 29tlt -800/o off remaining items On Sat., May 2nd -ONLY I Oc on the dollar Come in early while selection is greatest. All items to be sold first oome first serve ONE DAY WAREHOUSE SALE OF OLD UNUSUAL FURNITURE & COLLECTIBLES Sat., May 2nd 9 a.m.-5 p.m. 2110 S. Grand, Santa Ana • old oak piano • cabinets • dining se ts • tables • desks • iron toys • chairs • buffets • cedar chest • dressers • watches • sewing machines • old Italian loveseat • Cushman motor scooter • handmade dolls from Ireland lrillc) YOlrTl"Kb & Trallen & H•I Awar 110.. Day o..,.-* Mo Cntelft C•rcl• • 0 0•• DllY O•ly .. Learn Cake Decorat~na CLASSES START THE WEEK OF MAY 11th Join our Cake decoratrng classes and discover your creativity! In just si>< 2 -hour weekly classes. you will dis- cover the marvelous Wilton method of cake decorating CLASS SIZE IS LIMITED 1 5~e~ so REGISTER TODA YI 15UPPllESE•TRA1 FREE CAKE DECORATING DEMONSTRATION SAT., MAY 2 12:00-4:00 FREE HOT MITT OFFER A WILTON SIGNATURE OVEN MITT IS YOURS WH~ YOU PURCHASE SELECT· ED WILTON PANS OR DECORATING SET -WHILE HOT MITT SUPPLY LASTS lOS ANGELES LA MIRADA 12131e2Me31 1~131944•98'1 CEf\RITOS 12131924·0133 OAA0£Pil GAOVE lt14UJ~I 3920 <t • . f , ~uth Laguna annex f UJOtth investigation , The plus.es and mlnUMS are by a Board ol Supervlson that la I , not all ln but, on the surface. a remote in diatance and, they aay, proposal to annex. a portion of concern about the future of the South Laguna into the City· of small seaalde community. ! La1uoa Beach appears to be a Specifically. they aay they good ldea. would prefer to see La•uoa A sroup of South Laaunans Beach council members render approached the City Council tut deciaiona on such llaun u pro- week and asked that a feasibility posed high-rise condominiums study be done to weigh the replaci.ne 266 mobile homes at posalbillty of brincine part ol Treasure Island. that unincorporaUd community And they say county ofneial.I into Lquna Beach. turn a deaf ear to fears ol traffic Specifically. the group want. congestion should projects in all of South Laguna from Hobo Canyon and other South Laguna's southern border to Lafuna locations be approved. Aliso Creek brought into the city. Laguna Beach's strict or- That would includ~ the Treasure dinances on height limits, and the Island trailer park, Blue Lagoon, council's concern about conges- Lagunita and Hobo Canyon. tion, storm runoff, and eaviron- City officials are preparing a mental issues are favored by the •·quickie" study on the revenues South Laguna group. Laguna Beach can expect to de-Council members will hear rive from such an aMexation, plus the additional costs for the results of a preliminary re- police aad fire protection ud port by City Mana••r Kea Frank other services that would have to when the panel meetJ May 5. be provided the new Lagunans. And if thin1s look favorable It appears th e So uth for such a move, the city will Lagunans have the most to 1ain probably broach the subject from such an annexation. before Local Acency Formation They complain of being ruled Commission members May 13. D oubtful investment The Laguna Beach City Council majority has voted to spend $6,000 and perhaps as much as $15,000 to aolve a noise problem at the city'a new community center Senior Citizen Club mem- bers, who were to use the downstairs of the newly renovat· ed $218,000 center, have refused to move in because of lhe thump- ing sound of dancing feet coming from daylong dance classes over- head. The city shelled out ~ for an acOUl!lticaJ review of the prob· lem <the designer picked up half that tab) and City Mana1er Ken Frank related the results lut week. he su1ges~ the co\8'\ril ap- prove doing some tnsulation work bet ween floors for a bout 16.000. but immediately followed that recommendation with a state· ment that the work "probably won't do an appreciable amount of good." He said an additional $9,000 for carpeting downstairs. some wall panels, and solid-core doors, should do the trick. But Mayor Wayne Bagttn, who cast the lone "no" vote. 1ay1 the city can solve the noise catastrophe without "throwing more money at the problem." He said city officials should reschedule activities in the two- story community center. so there won't be dance classes upstairs the same time seniors are play- ing bridge downstairs. That's simple, and it doesn't cost a wad of taxpayers· money There mlght be a pnM>iem finding a wood floor for the dance classes, but La1una Beach has a recreation room at City Hall, and there are other locali<>M ln town (the Women's Club and the Boys' Club come to mind) where the successful private dance classes mi«hl take place. The city stands to k>se s.1.000 a year rent from the dance operators, but when you con.sider spending SU.000 to acror11modate the group, it's a s mall price to pay. Suit settlement ~/come An out-of ·court settlement between the county and San Juan Capistrano has headed off a cost- ly legal battle over development along a three-mile stretch of ridgeline north of the city. San Juan city officials con· tended that the 2,800-unit Colinas de Capistrano project called for too much grading of scenic hillsides, and sued the county after the project was approved by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. · However, the settlement pro- vides that no development will occur on billtidee facing the city and a controversial arterial highway will be relocated to minimize grading. Jn addition, the settlement provides that measures will be taken to hide structures within other areas of the development. Extensive landscaping will be planted and appropriate building • materials will be used to ll:eep the development in harmony with the community. The settlement al!'Jo will al- low San Juan to be conBulted on future development matters within the area, which is located on county land, but fans *ft.hin the city's sphere of influence. The county supervlaon and San Juan official8 should be con· gratulated on workin1 out a Ml· tJement out of court that is accep- table to both parties. A protracted le&al fi1ht over development in the area could only lead to rancor amonc public officials and costly le1al fees to the taxpaying public. The developers, Campeau Corp. and Shea Homes, can now proceed to build badly needed housing with the knowled,e that the development will be aceepted in the community. Opinions expressed in the spece above are thow of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex· pressed on this s>aQfl are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invlt· ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Sox 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 9262•. Phone (71•> 6'2-4321 . L. M. Boyd/Ancient uUdom Scholars al the University of Chicago labored long to translate an ancient Ecyptlan messa1e written on parl of a broken cookiDI pot retrieved from di11lng1 expected lo atve 1reat ln1i1hta into the oJd •culture. P1nally. they determlnetl it was a dilpatcb from a man lo bla son. And thty eventually dedphered it: "Do not take llberti" wlth a worq.-n whoM husband is UateN•I ~ your wordl." ORAHOe COAST Dally Piiat Q. Was there a real-life Popeye? A. No, but the cartoon's creator Ellie Crisler Secar said he 1ot the notion f« the charactel' from a town pertoftalil)' named Rocky "e1el In Cheater. Ill. 1 Q Whatlf'OfC)rt108 of t.be people ln this. worl beve no co•tact wltb television, radio, tel••honerw or newaptpen? A. Seven out of 10. Personal letters a lost art There ought to be a 5-cent stamp for personal letters. Letter writing is one of the good things about a civilized society 11nd it should be encouraged. H's a shame that everythmg is conspiring against letter wnting. Our whole postal system has deteriorated to the point where mail is no fun at all. The excite ment we used to feel about the arrival of the mailman is gone It costs 18 cents for a regular stamp now. That's a terrible number and you don't dare bu} a roll of 18-cent stamps because you know it's going to change before you get used to 1t and certainly ~fore you use up a roll I OBJECT TO the fact that 1t costs me mor e to send a letter to a fnend than 1t costs som e fly·b} -night real estate ope rator to send me a phony bro(•hure tn the mall telling me I'm the pro v 1s1on al winner of a $10,000 s" eepstakes . l don t like strangers knocking on my door trymg to sell me something. and I don't want my matl c luttered with advert1smg If anyone wants lo accuse me of feeling that way because J make a hving from the ad vert1smg found in newspapers and on telev1s1on. go ahead and accuse me of 1t It isn't true I don 't get fi\'e good, genuine , personal letters a year The lime 1s coming when the letter. written with pen and ink and sent as a personal message from one person to another, will be as much of a rarity as the gold pocket watch carried on a <'hain. It's a shame There is something spe<'1al about a personal letter It's better than a phone ,~,, -AND-Y-ROO-Nf-Y -st call. no matter ~hat the telephone com· pany says A phone call disappears into the a ir as soon as the receiver 1s put back on the hook A good letter can last a lifetime SO ME OF MY most precious possessions are letters that have been written lo me sometime m the past. I don't havl· a single memorable phone call stored in a box in m y attic or base- mc•nt I've never thrown away a good letter, and ltke any real treasure. I don 't even have to look at them to enjoy having them I know t have them. The te lephone calls com e and go. They make no permanent impression on m e and have no place in my memory. A pe-rsonal letter is a good thing because you say thin~s you can 't say in a crowd and might not even say to the person faCe·tO race. tr you reel like it, a letter allows you lo take yourself and your thoughts more seriously than you would dare take them in conversation And you can say things without inter· ruption · A GOOD LETTER 1s. tn many ways. the exact oppos1tt' or a poltttcal s peech. A po1Jt1c1an addressing a crowd has to talk so broadly and generally about the issues m order not to offend any one of the thousands or peopll' listening. that he usual!} ends up sjlying nothing A le tter can bt> spec1f1c and 1f the wnter has some bias or prejudice. he l'an even reveal his true self b) letting this show Wntmg a friend. you shouldn"t have to be careful Abraham Lincoln's letter to . his stepbrother tellmg him he "asn'l go mg to loan ht m the $50 he asked for. tells you m ore about Abraham Lmcoln than the Gettysburg Address does Some of our best history has come that way from personal letters of famous people that scholars have dis· covered You get a better idea of what someone is rt'all} ltki.> from a J)t!rsonal lt>tter they wc·ren't expectmg you to read than you get from a carefully con s1dered public statement they've made We say rt•a l thing!> m letters Personal lettt.•rs should ~o for a 5-cent stamp Hiring by 'auction' irks job-seekers To the Editor · Arter a year away from work because or family illness. I am starting a Job, search I have good secretarial skills and an excellent employment record. After studymg ads, I have decided not to answer any ad that does not slate salary. I 1m an executive secretary There are many. many ads for secretaries However. you write ca refully worded letters. endose carefully planned res· umes, drive many miles. fill out lengthy <usually poorly planned) ap- plication forms, wait hours in reception offices. endure inept interviewers. and finally you learn the salary is lower than what you earned 10 years ago BEFORE MV last JOb , I worked m a personnel department. On many oc· casions when we received applications from obviously very well qualified ap plicant.s , the penonnel director would say. "But he (or she > would want too murh money," and a mediocre or even less qualified person would be hired, MAILBOX who, of course, would actuaJly cost the firm money. c . My brother is an artist 'and "9y husband is a writer. They, too, have ex- perienced this tedious and disturbing procedure. hiring by "auction." And they are asked to put together portfolios or folders of previous work each time. If you call in and ask the salary, you iet the same answers: "The pay is commensurate with your experience.'' or "The salary js between SIOO and $1600, dependin1 on your qualifica- tions." And you know that means. "We'll hire the cheapest one we can 1et." Th.at. usually means the person who is most desperate takes the Job. Althoulh J'm not on unemployment insurance, I will boycott any firm that does not indicate salary in the ad. Un· tortunately, many unemployed people cannot afford' to do this, 10 the racket continues. M.GREEN Boyda. J10U'fJI" play / Totb&Ultor: • Re your April 23 article abcXJt Tom H aydeo'a vi.ail to UC Irvine ltudehta: Hi• I bralnwuhlnt attempts with atudeni, IMOll lhil ltata palntln1 I blt1lc plctun of the future for them is simply his ~ay to gather votes for his run for the 1982 Sen at~ This man has. not changed his approach since he began his calculated climb into power. Quite efficiently he has used well placed people, including his wire, to rurthe r the Campaign for Economic Democracy CCEO l In reality the cause and effect is his personal power play which is to un· dermine this country through iu youth. The octopus Hayden has created has s pread its many a rms and threatens a deathly gnp unless our sleeping society aw a kens to his destructive ideology. ELJZABETHLAUFORO To the Editor· J ean Watt, PresidentofSPON, makes a statement that the extension of Universi· ty Drive would be disaster to the Upper Newport Bay Whal in the world is she talking about? Evidently she has not taken the Lime to look at the present con· d1tlon of the Back Bay. What used to be a lovely blue water bay has deteriorated to an ugly mud slough. After five years of abuse. procrastina- tion and total Jack of maintenance by the Fish and Game Department and other government agencies. it has already reached the disaster stage and is going from bad to worse with the passing of each year . Also, it would cer- tainly appear that the Friends of the Bay have abandoned what was at one time. a very valuable environmental as- set MARY EMILY BARTON Supporta gun biU To the Editor. While riding with my hmband to the Angels game April 21, an edltoi:tal in the OaHy Pilot caught my attention. It was titled "Opposition too quiet." I had no Idea that Sen. KeMedy and Congressman Rodlno had introduced lo the Senate and House a Handgun Crime Control Bill. And what aurprised me even more la the political clout that the National rune Association pacu. l do understand why the NRA ml&ht feel threatened by a too strict cun control but tt seems to,me what Ulla bill calla for 11 crime corttrol aod not so much 1un control. AJITEa at~DING your editorial and what tho meuurea and proposals of the • Ltittn from ~· or• wkorM. Thi rt11"1 to ~ &eat.fa lo Hi fpocf or •Umll'lall• Ubel ta ffurWd. IAfUr• oJ JOO worda « WI wW be gjHlt 11l."flemtee. AU ""'" ...... ,.. ~·-~ addrnt bill ftmnn MOiW bit drNWld °" ,.. 9""' •I nlfldl'ftl ,..,_ ft oppor..u. PMCr, 1AU llOI be.,..,.. .... 1.AtWr• #Nlf &ii re~ lo ~. NortN Md ,,.,._, fttunber of ,,., c:•rtlNilor ...... bi ,..,.,. 'tor Pm~,.,~ • Ke nnedy Rochno bill a re. I wonde red who tn this c·ountry m their nght minds. ~ould ob1cct to or feel threatened by this bill? Now mind }OU. I said who in their nght mmds. because I feel it's the people out of their nght minds that con· tributf' so overwhelming ly to the statistics of .. 20,000 murders. suicides a nd acc tdf.'n t s invo lvi ng handguns yea rly .. I'm really excited by this bill and reel an overwhelminl( urge lo get the word passed to the majority of Americans who want some sort or control and would support the Kennedy Rodino bill 1f they in fact we re awar e that the bill existed 1 · m going to contact my con~ressman and find out jUSl what I can do to con- jure up s upport for this bill I think its JUSl what the doctor Ordered, and ( thank you for making this tnformation available to me DEBORAH GERBER Leaming vio~nce To the Editor I am inclined lo agree with Karen Gibson <Mailbox, Apnl 9> The youth of today 1.J ve by TV! It means nothing to them to see a he ad lopped off "and roll like a ball!" They laugh and scream hke it was funny! If we don't curb violence on the screen kids will think nothing of killihg each other like they do in horror movies while eating their popcorn at the same time! THE VIOLENCE and guns should be on the late late show, (plus naked sex). Even the toddlers in diapers are ·bowlegged from car rying play guns on each side and their cowboy hat! They grow up with that ''bang, bang, you'.re dead!" Heaven help those that don't gel up after they have been hit with a real bullet! Children do not know any better, as they alwaya like to copy whatever they see! EMMA HYMAN ......... _...... ... ~ ............ . ~ ........................... ... ,...,. ............ o.11, ....... I. Mardi an testifies he 'lost control' Dana Point restaurateur Robert Mardian Jr., convicted of reckless driving in a 1977 acci- dent that left a teen-age .boy wltb crippling injuries, testified in a $2.5 million civil trial Wednes· day he never saw the youth before losing control of his sports car. Mardian, owner of several restaurants in Southern California and Hawaii, said he lost control of his Ferrari automobile on eastbound Del Obispo Street near Doheny State Park near Dana Point when be believed another vehicle was about to tum left in front of him. The restaurateur, who served four months in Orange County Jail on h.ls criminal conviction, said he slammed on hia brakes when he saw the other car "nudge" into his lane and went into a spin "as if I were on ice." His sports car spun into a curb and struck 13-year-0ld Michael Dawe:i of Capistrano Beach, who had been walk ing on the sidewalk toward the park carry- ing a fishin& POle. The youth, now 17, suffered •tsabliq injuri• that teft hi• in a coma for six weeks. He still has speech impairment, poor memory, movement problems and psychological damage, lawyers say. His family, which moved to Santa Cruz after the accident, is demanding $1.5 million in damages against Mardian for the boy's loss of earning ability and for medical expenses and another $1 million in punitive damages. During Mardian's criminal proceedings, evidence was pre· sented to indicate the then 31· year -old busin essman was drinking before the Sunday af- ternoon accident. A drunken drivine charge was filed against the restaurant owner, but it was dismissed by an Orange County Superior Court judge who ruled insuffi. cienl evidence existed to support it. DA tells TOwn Hall: get tough on crime Orange County District At· torney Cecil Hicks had these tough words about crime and punishment during a Town Hall of California meeting in Costa Mesa Wednesday: ••A penalty for any offense must be swift and sure." -"I'm aicJc to death or the whole subject of rehabilitation (of those incarcerated). The purpose of any penalty is punbb· ment. -"How about a mandatory five years (in prison) for use ol a fUD On the c:ommiuion of a crime), and a requirement that tbe persoo serve all five years." -Of the $375,000 being spent by the federal government to u - 111 t in the resettlement of bomoaeKual Cuban refu1ees, Hlck1 told the Wednesday noon au41ence at South Coast Plua Hotel: "It's our money -youn Hot-air balloon&, above, prC1V'i.tkd tethered, 10. minute rides at 30 feet to !tay~-homea at the Gordon Bennett Balloon Race Launching in l''oun- tain Valley's Mi~ Square Park. Below, Long tanker truck! supplied helium to fill flattened ball.oona to send them aloft Saturday. Vision led to • flights By PIDL SNEIDERMAN Of ... o.11• ,.... , .... Bob Wallace was in New Mex~ lco on business \hree yvra a~o when he caught the fevef. , His visit coincided with the an- nual Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta, and Wallac" awoke one morning to find~ huge colorful globes floating out- side his window. · "I didn't know if I was in Kansas or Oz," he recalls. , Wallace. a Long Beach resi- dent who works as an enginee~ in Santa Ana, returned to New Mexico the following year on h.ls own time and learned to fly HE OBTAINED his com· mercial balloon pilot's· license and in March 1980 purchased his own craft, dubbed "Shout." Since then he's embarked on 153 hot air balloon flights, usually weekend launchings from Perris, Calif Last Sunday he placed third in the first Fountain Valley Classic balloon race. landing in Zody's parking lot rather than his declared target, Brookhurst Community Park in Anaheim. Wallace. 34. claims he and his navigator, Ron Whitaker of Irvine, would have landed right on target had it not been for a map error that caused them to steer toward the wrong park. Even though he didn't claim rirst prize, Wallace says he's still hooked on ballooning. "YOU KNOW , there 's no elevator effect to 1t,.. he ex- plains "People think they'll leave their stomachs on the ground, but 1t doesn't happen that way. "It's a very smooth ride, a very quiet ride. You can hear every dog bark, every screen door slam ... " Propane gas is burned to in- flate Wallace's ny lon-dacron balloon, which when filled gains lbe height of a seven-story build· ing. He usually fli es at an altitude of 1,000 lo 1,200 feet, but enjoys cr ui si n g l ow over a neighborhood as he drifts in for a landing. WALLACE SAID the balloon takes 20 to 30 seconds to respond lo heating or venting changes. "Ballooning is not a sport iii which you can run out and be frivolous." he explains . "Some people think I must get 'high' and then go up in the balloon. But I tell them you can't do that. The joy of balloon· ing is doing everything perfectly.'' CSF cancels speech by Klansman BELFAST, Northern lreJand (AP) Huneer 1Lrtke1 like th~ one at bu Bobby Sapdl at death'• door e a Ume-tested "tactic of J.be Irish epubllcan Army. ln the courH of Ile -year campaign to end Brit.l.lh rule Ireland, 12 1UerrUlas have died om fasting. The huneer strike 11 a particularly Irish form of protest -and one that dates to the eighth century. In those days, Irishmen "ith a ievance against an important ighbor fasted outside the offendin1 arty's door until the dispute was ct tied. lawed IRA, enshrined the et.boa that WH to in.spire later hun1er et.titers. He declared: "The contest on our aide ls . . • one ot ellldurance. It ta not ttiote w~ can iJlflkt the moet, but lbote who can tufter the mOlt •hO II C01¥1uer." Later deaths came in the af· termatb ot tbe lrlab clvtl war be\ween the IRA, 1eettn1 full in- dependence from Britain, and the ''Free State" forces, which eupport· ed limited home rule. Ireland becauie an independent 1tate in 1921, but the predominantly Protestant North remained under British' con- trol. SANDS, 27, serving a 14-year sen· ~nce for weapons possession, is fast· TWO IRA men, Dennis Barry and ipg in hopes \t will force restoration Andrew SUllivan, dled In Mountjoy Of special privileges for guerrilla in· after 43 da)'s without food ln October n:iates. 1923. He wq in his 60th day without food In l!MO. Jack McNeela and Tony Wednesday at the Maze prison near d'Arcy died after a ~ay fut in the Jtelfast. According to Sinn Fein, the republic's Arbout Hill P1i,$en. 11tA ·s political wing, he "could die at A not be r JR A man , Se an• any moment " Mccaughey, died tn May 1946, after a The Irish Republican tradition of 31-day hunger and thirst etrike in the hunger strikes was started by top security Portlaoise Prison, west Thomas Ashe, a leader of the 1916 of Dublin. Easter Rising in Dublin. The bun1er strilce became an im· Jailed by the British in the city's portant guerrilla weapon in the early Mountjoy Prison, Ashe stopped eat· 1970s alter Northern Ireland's see- ing to demand that he and other na-tarian feuding began in Aueust 1969. tio nalis t leaders be treated as After a 38-day mass hunger strike prisoner!> of war He died after five by IRA men in Lone Kesh prison days as a result of force feeding. camp near Belfast in 1972, the British More than 30.000 people followed his Conservative government eave in coffin through the streets of Dublin and granted jailed gutrrillas "special category" status, allowing THE MOST famous Irish hunger them to wear their own clothes, do no striker was Terence McSwiney, rebel prison work and run their own affairs lord mayor of Cork , who died in Lon-in their "cages" or compounds. don ·s Brixton prison on Oct 25, 1920, The ''special category" status was after a 74-day fast. Two other na-withdrawn in March 1976 by a Labor lJona lists died with him in that government. It is special category hunger strike rights that Sands and his followers M·cs winey. a member of the out-are demanding be restored. ~~~~~~-..:..~~~~~~~---'- ,,. .. ..,........ (Wov. Edmund G ~roum tours the Gregory Bateson Building in Sacramento, 1Vhich uses a vanety of active and paarive solar technologies as its energy 1ystem Building solar showcase Edifice uses active, passive technology SACRAMENTO <AP> -What has WO tons of nver rock, four SO-foot golden Chinese lanterns. soaks up daily sun and releases it at night and uses only one·sixth the energy or its neighbor? It's the state's newest office build- ing, the ftrst built since 1968. It's also ll showcase of how energy can be saved through passive and active aolar design while at the same time providing attractive and comfortable omces for 1,200 people Gov Edmund Brown Jr will ded- icate the new Gregory Bateson Building, which spreads over 2'1'l acres three blocks from the state Capitol, on Friday as part or a day- long fair at the city park. • HE AND state architect Barry Wasserman, who with former state architect Sym Van der Ryn designed the building, conducted a tour for re- porters Wednesday. The architect said the building la the first attempt to apply on a laree, public scale many principles of ac- tive and passive solar desien. State office buildings constructed twq decades ago, like the .towen nearby, use 120,000 to 150,000 BTU per square foot per year, be said. The state building code now requires commercial buildings to cut that to 55,000 BTU. The new building should use 20,000 BTU per square foot an· nually, he said. The building's energy system is run by a computer. THE MOST striking feature is a huge central courtyard 150 feet square and stretching from the brick floor to the skylit ceiling. The active solar aspect ii the col- lectors on the roof that will )leat 75 percent of the water used in the building. The courtyard'• skyllgbte can be changed in angle so that winter sun enters or summer sun does not. The concrete frame of the building is designed to work like a large rock along the river, Wa11erman ex- plained. Il is cool in the mornln1, gets warm during the day and stays warm in the evening. (Tom Murphifte ta looldng for elephantt m Sflwrodo. Hu column wiU rnum Wed· MldaJI.) Has Excess W~ght Made You Fee.A91..........._ . Uke A Prisoner In Disguise? WEST CLIFF PLAZA 1~1·s \1\ Snail and Slug C.Ontrol 20% Off CROW• HARDWARE W.stcliff Pfaza • Hart»or VI.--Center Corona d .. Mar PASSENGER -"Herman," ,a young dach- shund , rides i n s i d e MotorcycJlat Morrisett•a jacket at Albu· querque, N.M., but Morrisett says this cozy arr ancement can•t 10 on b e c a u s e Herman's get· Ung too big. SAN FRANClSCO f AP> -P~lt who au.ff er from severe psoriull can bftieflt from a t~bnlque that reduces their need for uJtravtolet radJatJoo and the ruk of akin cancer from that lreatmeot, two dermatologista say. Drs. John Parrish and Kholrow Montaz, be,.. for the meeting of the Society for IDTeatltatlv• Dermatology, said that they combined two e:d•linl techniques to create a futer, eater cure for tbe skin ailment psoriasis. The accomplishment, they said, may mean re· lief for the estimated 4 to 10 million Americans who suffer from the red, scallne patches of akin that characterize psoriasis. Parrish said that research showed that many people who had resisted standard treatment had responded to the combined technique, which in· volves drug therapy and exposure to ultraviolet radiation the same kind of rays in sunlight which causes sunburn. Parrish said with the new treatment, patienta need only 10 to 12 treatmenu. rather than tht usual 25, before the psoriasis begins to clear up. j\ ~:~!;;·~~b~::g Daily Pilat GIFTS FOR MOM SHIPPED FREE! Mott.er• 1 Day It May 9! Select from a wide •anety of gifts, packed in pretty yellow boxes just for Mo m . They're filled wrth tempting c heeses. sausage and sweets. Hickor1 rarm~. Of OllfO FASHION WESTCLlf'lo" ISLA!':D ,.,.._, PL \ZA .._.,•port &uh llAtl \ l :1h al\d lrV1nt' "r-.piorT Kt>arh 640·6030 M2 0972 SPECIAL! SUE BEE HONEY ci..., ., 0r ... ,. 8 3 ~ Ua.W U. I DRUG STORES --...--A lB:lfaU Pl0<e To Shop! Cont•ct LenM1 EyewHr Styling RetrllCtlng PrHcttblng 7 DAYS A WEEK Dr. Lou Elder OPTOMETRIST 642-0720 1124 Irvine Ave. Newport Beach NUH SIAPOOO AHD saYICIDIU SPICWS Fresh Hot Chlcl1n FRIED OtlCKEN .:.= ·5.99 MewtJorf IHci.-1 OZO lrriM. W"tclff "- ,, • ' The wise investment of money can be a complex decision. But it doesn't have to be. The simplest path is often the most profitable. As well as the safest. While some other people are trying to decide what involved finan- cial step to take next, you can simply be making money. Risk free . Newport Balboa Savings offers a full range of financial services, with each account federally insured to $100,000. Smart. And safe. Stop by our nearby office and talk to your friends at Newport Balboa Savings. Discover what the bulls and the bears are missing. Write yourself a profit check. Why pay for a checking account when your checking account can pay you? Our new Profit Check service actually pays you 5 ~ % interest on the balance in your checking account. Very interesting! ~NEWPORT -BALBOA ·savings • Westcliff Plaza, 1100 Itvine Aveque, Newport Beach, CA 92663 (71:4) 645-6505 9 -5 Monday thru ~ursdaX· 9 -6 Fridal'• .9-1 Saturday. .. ,. Newport 9eac City CQuld1 memberl, WM Ht up • •.• war che9t lat year to ffiirt n · panalcm ~ Jolut Wayne Airport, eqretMJed aurpriM tb1a week at bow mueb tJtelr lawyers are chal'lina them. Two law ft.nm, hired by the d· ty to joUltly ftle a law1ult to block powth at tbe cO\llltJ airport, tubmtttd blUa Ulla week that total mor• tban M0,000. ~-"l'tn appalled," 1.W to.i. ellman Don Strauo, nottq ta. bill cdvered • 21Hlay '*14 Strauss aald he alao was UJIHl because the lawyers did no&•· tail work U.., bad ._. to ...,. the lllOHJ, .,.,_. f~ Q.e llwluit. ' -I • • Accordllli .. e H & New lleaee ftnn Of • ffuabes and kelly ew ... lb• city $17 ,841 for tbe •erted betweea Mardi 11 and !t. 11le Los Anceles ftrm '11 Bea....,, Hufat.edhr eed ttemWe Wed tbe city ~.410 for the same period. Will at tllll ~ ''Wb.M U. me WOnied,'' _... CouacUmaa StraU11, "la that tbta btu la for cmly JO daya ~ those aren't .n wor~ina days." .• * * NBfighls ·' newusea of aU,,ort As Clfl'...Ui. Rnq!IOl't Be.cb el~ ........ ban aa:reed ua- =~)o.,.,,... paw, .. al· lli'lt .OrOll!ll 1e use .Joba w.,.. ........ CWlft:J ~ -.•ve been r.Viewlna M•eral 1ua1ested airtlne aecesa plaas. all de· Iii.Md to opee the airport to new carriers. Eleanor. a nine-year-old Stellar Sea Lion, jumps to freedom aft.er &even years at Marine World-Africa USA. More bills from the flrat are expected at the ead of this ·month. The two flrms filed a lawauit last month a1aimt the CO&aty, askin1 the court& to invalid.ate the recently adopted 111aater plan for John Wayne Air-,.rt. In a ldt.er HM ttlh week Lo county supervisors, Newport of. rtclals claim the atcen plans wlll eventually permit an in· crease in daily departures at the airport. Tile letter also states that lhe acceu plans betni studied wo\t~ ~coerce'' alrllaea lnto purch•mg the new DC9-Super 80, btned as the quietest jet on the market. rvine OKs 500-room Jiotel plan The Irvine City Council has approved a zoning request for a $)()-room hotel and commercial denter the Irvine Company is oroposing for the southeast cor· net of Main Street and Jam· boree Boulevard in the city. The City Council was assured by the Irvine Company that the oroject wouJd provide $665,600 in yearly tax revenue for the city. This calculation was based on •e~ tax from hotel rooms cost-ing $70 per night on the average. 1 The approval Tuesday night ~omes one month after the City Cduncil approved a zone change fot a SOO·room hotel the Koll Company plans to build on the ~orner of Michelson and Von Karman avenues -about one- quarlN mile west of the Irvine Company project. ' ln addition to the hotel, the 'rvine Company is proposing rMtaurants, banks. retail stores, ;ervice-oriented businesses and offices for the site According to Irvine Company plans, site grad.in& for the hotel 11nd commercial center will t>egin late this summer with con- ~tr u clion starting next year. rertions of the project are ex- pected to be ready for occupan- cy in 1984. ' Jt is to be built on a 48-acre ~He bounded by Jamboree 1Boulevard, Main Street, the San Diego Freeway and the San Diego Creek Channel. aseman elected by Niguel unit Attorney Paul Haseman has een elected to serve a second fte-year term as president of the a~una Niguel Community As· oc1ation. Othe'rs elected were Ed Kin· Jid, vice president , Tom Moody, ice president in charge of plan- fhg: Carol Stonecypher, vice resident in charge of publicity: ohanne Gibson, secretary. and ick Hartung, treasurer. YANTORN Boys Club director wins Bronze award Lou Yantom. executive direc tor of the Boys Club of the Harbor Area. has been named Orange County's first recipient of the Boys Club Bronze Keystone award. Yantom, who has served with the club more than 30 years, was honored tn recent ceremonies. He began his career In 1949 as an assistant executive director of the club's chapter in Long Beach and was named Harbor Area executive director in 1965. Since 1965. Yantorn has been instrumental in setting up new Newport Beach and Costa Mesa Boys Club branches and cur- rently is spearheading a fund- raising effort to build an Irvine branch. "I can't think of anything else l 'd have done with my life that would have giv~ me more hap· pine.as." Yantom commented following the award presenta· ti on o.11, ,. .... s...,,..,... FIRST TO GET AWARD Lou Yantorn Bill would locate hidden regulations SACRAMENTO (AP) -As· sem blyman Leo McCarthy thinks perhaps 30,000 pages or wolfish state government r e- gulations might be out there masquerading as innocent sheepish buUetirts or guidelines. His bill to make sure those "government regulations called· something other than reeuia· tions" don't escape tbe watchful eye of lhe state's new regulaUoo reviewer, was approved by an Assembly committee. It was one of at least six bills passed by the Assembly Gov- ernmental Organization Com- mittee pertaining to the Office of Admin.istrative Law. The Legislature, through a 1979 McCarthy bill, created the OAL to review the estimated 30,000 pages of regulations pro· mulgated by state government agencies. The OAL began last' summer checking new regulations to see Victim's test shows traces of gunpowder if they're clear. necessary and backed by law. This year, the OAL begins overseeing a two- year review by all the agencies of existing regulations. The state agencies are re- quired to subnit all regulations to the OAL for review. But McCarthy, D-San Fran- cisco, said some agencies might be sidestepping that require- ment by calling their regulations 1uidelioes, criteria, bulletins, manuals, instructions, orders or standards. "We don't know what their number is, but it's probably equal in number to lhe 30,000 pages of existing regulations," McCarthy said. The other bills would: -End the requirement lhat ·notice of proposed regulation be published in a newspaper; AB1014 by McCarthy. -Require the eovernor to give the Le&ialature rea~ if be or she overrulea a d~ision cl th e OAL; A Bl 715 by As - semblyman Stan Statham, R· Chico. -Ask the OAL for a plan for a review of state re1ulation1 every ftve or 10 years; ABlD by Aasem.,lyman Robert Naylor, R·Meo.lo Park. -Require state aaendes to estimate the cost or aavinp to any private penom who would be affected by proposed re,W.· lions; ABJJ30 by A.aHmbtnnu Deruds ~J. R·Lona Buch. -~ 1D41"1dull '*·appefl directly to the OA.IJ for ftVI~ of reaulatlona; A.Btnt ti7 Bro..m. '-Tbe l'Otes on McCarth1'1 blJlj were"° and 10-0. on SUUaam'• 10·0, on N~r·1 t-0, and oe Brow.n'• M and e.a. All l(>.IO tM W1y1 iDd .lfeau'COmmtttee. Security set on footbridge Security wtll be increased on an Irvine footbrtdee that baa been the site of a rape, an at- tempted rape, an indecent ex- posure and three assaults · Both flnm are still WHler con- tra ct to tbe city and are to represent Newport in the legal action. Newport City Attorney HUlh Coffin said the New Mexico firm has asked to meet with countil members thia week to dUcuss the upcoming cue. He said be will ask the firm to explain ill Officials in Newport claim the Super M> may not be as quiet as advertised and "does not live up to certification statistics or manufacturer's claims." Newport leaders suggest that flith\ ~ be made on the basis of actual perfol'1bance at Job• Wayne. Extiept for a demonstration at lflkl county airport la.t summer, llae Super 81> has not been The Irvine City Council de- cided unanimously Tuesday to allocate $20,000 to pay for im- proved lighting, a crossing guard and increased police patrols oo lhe Yale Avenue foot- bridge over the Santa Fe Railroad tracks. Camp eignUpl' eet Camp si1nup day rer the Orange Coast YMCA 's lM sum- mer camps will be held S.t- urday frorn 8 a.Ill. to 1 p.m., • the YMCA ia Newport ...,.. More information it availliilile a 642-9990. ~·led al (he airport. I The letter to county l 1upervl90n concludes by point-l illl D'Ut that Newport has , alr.,ad)r filed • lrtnuit askin1 I tl\at tJae airport's Maater P!a.a I .. bwalidlltM. : Additionally, the council de· cided to allocate $20,000 to pay for design worlt on a proposal to turn the footbridge into a full roadway overpass. COLONY SATINT FLAT LATEX ' - WALL PAINT REG. $14.99 -SAVE $6.00 A nch nat f1nish that's scrub-brush tough High t'ashlon beauty in 100's of great colors Goes on easy. dries In minutes Tools wash in water. PANELING MAGIC CONTACT CEMENT Mutt .. pUl'pOH contact c.ment lh•t dries In jult 3C>mlnut ... Quart size. ·STEP STOOL PINT RAIN DANCE LIQUID WAX Dupont' a new ~r wu JI guarani~ to ouU•I • v.,, th• .. ading de.aet apttli9d PolY seMMlt· type wax 49G REG. S6.69 181/2" KETTLE IAllEQUE ~ •11.00.., ..... compect ~ciook­ er. PorcetM'I ........_ Black. MG. 164.tt PLASTIC SUPEll CAN Futt 5-yNr wenanty. CoverS...,•r lld Pf•vente lid loes dM to hendllng . Loe>on metal '*'dies. 75' SARDEN o/8" HOSE TM •ft•ft, -* ftea· .. J\OM ......... S..flot tMlnt ~th. lotW bfM• c1111111'"9e. ~2399 FllST AID PLUMllllG IT ' I . . I j ) . l SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A juqe'a rullna allowin1 sex dla- crirolnation ln hiring by the all· male Bohemian Club, to which President Reaean belongs, haa been rejected by a 1tate com· miaslon, which will hear the case it.self. The Fair Employment and Housing Commission could have adopted the Jan. 19 decision by administrative law judge Robert Kendall, saying the famed club c ould legally refuse to hire women. Firemen accused S AN DIE GO <AP ) -Dis· ciplinary action is being pre- pare d agai n s t five m a l e firefighters accused of sexually harassing female firefighters who must s hare the same s ho wer a nd bathroom wit h them . Off sho re lease suits f ile d LOS ANGELES <APl A pair of lawsuits filed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. and 22 en- vironmental groups allege that U.S. Interior Secretary J ames Wa tt acted allegally when he opened an area off the Central - . Calltor!ia coast to lease for oil drilling. The suits were filed in federal district court Wednesd ay. challenging Watt's action lo openln1 for lease 34 of 115 tracts in the Santa Maria Basin north of Santa Barbara. Truck f l ip s, girl k i lled LOS ANGELES <AP> -A trip to the beach turned into tra1edy when a 'traffic accident killed a 15-year-old g irl and injured several other people. A pickup truck loaded with youths Wednesday swerved to miss a large board on the Santa Monica Free\\'ay. went out of control, hit a motorscooter and flipped over, the Highway patrol s aid . Identity of the dead girl w as not r eleased p e nding notification or relati ves. Liddy at B e rkeley BERKELEY <AP > -G Gordon Liddy. who went to prison for his r o le in t he Wat er gate scandal, has won mixed reviews after a speech on the Berkeley campus. once a hotbed of student radicalism . 'Spruce Goose' due Long Beach dome LONG BEAC H <A P > important par t or Southe rn Construction has begun on a California 's en te r tainment multi-m illion-dollar geodesic culture, one of the if not the dome to house the legendary fly. most important enter tainment ing boat, the Spruce Goose, at a destinations for visitors." said r esort com plex with the Queen J ack Wrather, president of the Mary. Wrather Corp . a n entertain· Wrather Corp officials an· ment-amusement conglomerate nounced the addit ion Wednesday The Beverly Hills-based cor· amid fireworks and gun blasts in poration 's principal assets m· a ceremony at the waterfront re· elude the Disneyland Hotel, Inn sort complex where both vessels a t the Park m Anaheim and will be displayed . movie-TV rights to "Lassie" and "Port Adventure will be an "The Lone Ranger ." -------- Oranpe Coast DAIL V. P1LOT/Thursday, Aprll 30, 1981 H/F AS.~· . . ~anel ot,es smoke ban inscOOoL. 'DallaS' twists toqgk ] Davis death script. change affected by w1iters' st ri ke · SACRAMENTO (AP> -A Senate com mtttee bas. voled to ban smokinC In t h e public schools, but an opponent pre- dicts that reaardleu of the law. "it'll 10 on In the bathrooms." By a 6-1 vote Wednesd ay, the Senate Education Committee approved SB704 by Sen. Dan O'Keefe, R-Cupertino, aendln& It to the Senate Finance Commit· tee. It would repeal a law passed s~veral years ago allowing hi1h s<!hoola to designate areas where stud~nts could smoke. The bill would allow teachers and ad· ministrators to smoke in one area in each school, away from students. LOS ANGELES CAP) - Because of all too real fact.on - t he d eath of actor Jim Davia and a writers' strike -the upcomln1 plot twists ol tbe "Dalla•" CBS- TV aeries are tou1her to fipre out than lut year's 1uenlna" 1ame about "Who Shot J .R. ?" Amon a the p osalblllUes "Dallas" executives considered Wed nesday was whether to write-out the role of family patriarch Jock EwinJ, played by the SS.year-old Davis, who died of a heart attack Sunday. ''One option that none of us wants is the possibility of recaat· Ing the part.'' producer Leonard Katzman said. On a hurry-up schedule, Lorimar Productions planned to start filmin1 five 1981-82 shows on May 14. Should it be decided to end the Jock Ewing role of oll baron emerltut, with a death that becomes part of lhe 1cenario, a major re-wriUn1 would have to be carried out in the next few weeks. T H E FlllST quesUon is: will the Writen Guild of America al· low lts atrikine members to work on the five "Dallas" scripts? That possibility exists, said Kataman, noting that he would ask the guild next week to re- consider its refusal earlier this w eek to exempt "Dallas" because of Davis' death. He said he thought the writers• refusal was only "conditional." He did not elaborate. The urgent need for rewriting of "Dallas" also raised another PET, RENTAL ISSUE BACKED -Three act· resses tell a Sacramento press conference of their support for a state committee-backed bill to prevent owners of low-rent, gov· ernment-subsidized housing from refusing to rent to senior citizens with pets. From left ........... a r e actresses Ma rgar et O'Brien , Glor ia DeHaven, Martha Raye, Sen. David Roberti, author of the bill , and Mrs. Lucille Hoyne, 74, Glendale, who said she had to give up a low· rent apartme nt because she owns a cat. poa•ibillt.y: that Lorlmar would defect from the producert' negotiatln1 committee a n4 reach a aeparate contract •ereet meot u an Independent. • ''There wu much speculation about a Lorlmar defection. But I th.ink Lorimar is 1otn.e to hold firm ," Katzman said when reached at the Lorimar offlcett at MGM Studios. " THE MA V t• production st.art is two months earlier than usual, Kat~man acknowled1ed because of a chance the Direc· tors Guild of America will strike' when its contract expires June 30. A directors' strike would' virtua lly shut down film and television production. Another fictional cliffhanger w i 11 end the "Dallas" season' Friday, and viewers who worry' a bout such things may be put through a second summer or wailing. lt as something similar to 1980's "Who shot J.R ?" situa· lion that re mained unanswered for six months. Davis died Sunday at his sub· urban Northridge home He had been recuperating from Marci\ s urgery or a perforated ulcer. A memorial service was scheduled fo r Friday at 1 p.m. al Forest La wn 's C hu rc h o f t he Recessio n al in Gle nd a le, Lorimar officials said Wednes- day A WRITERS' spokeswoman said Wednesday the guild has m iJde "excell ent" progress in separate talks with independent producers O n Tuesday, producers sweetened a three-year oHer on basic minimums boosting the m as much as to 31.9 percent for movies and 29.5 percent fo r TV The strike issues mclude res· iduals fo r home video pay TV. videocassettes and videodiscs Writers have said the producers' home video offer would gave them "a percentage of nothing ·· The producers, workmg or:i an est ablished industry formula that writers and directors only get one·lh1rd the residuals of ac· tors , have offered l 5 percent At the end of their 10·\\-eek stnke last year the actors got 4 5 per· cent of the dastri bu tors· gross for pay TV programs after they've been shown lO times on every· system in a year, and 4.5 per· cent for cassettes and discs after sale of 100.000 units combined. -------------------------------- A Superb Adventure In Dining PUBLIC SALE ONE DAY WAREHOUSE SALE OF OLD ITALIAN CUIS I NE •Courtesy Boal Slips • Banquet and Private Party • Faci/1t1es with Bay View 642-7880 J ill Wet Cout fll&laway Newpon Baell, Calllorwia FULLY ASSUMABLE INTEREST ONLY 2ntl TRUST DEEDS OWNER/NONOWNER OCCUPIED Call Wiiham B Mitchell Call toelay lor quole • No obl19a11on (714) 975-1128 tram nottonol rurdng trans notionol lundlng Irons nohonol funOng Irons nollc>rlO funding RAcm·s FOURTH ANNUAL GRADUATED DISCOUNT SALE ALL OVERSTOCK&> AND LONGSTANDING JEWELRY WIU. IE Ll9UIDAnD AT SAVINGS YOU'U. NEVER SEE AGAIN! HURRY! 3 MORE DAYS! hglnnlng W-4 29th -100/o off remaining items On Sat .. May 2ftd -OML Y I Oc on the dollar Come in early while selection is greatest. All items to be sold first come first serve UNUSUAL FURNITURE & COLLECTIBLES Sat., May 2nd 9 a.m .-5 p.m. 2110 S. Grand, Santa Ana • old oak piano • cabinets • dining se ts • tables • desks • iron · toys • chairs • buffets • cedar chest • dressers • watches • sewing machines • old Italian loveseat • Cu shman motor scooter • handmade dolls from Ire land lriftcJ Yow Tl"tld&I & Trailers & H•I Away "OH Day 0...,.. * No Credit Carda * "OH Day O•IJ" Learn Cake Decora~~na CLASSES ST ART THE WEEK OF MAY 11th Join our Cake d~corating classes and discover your creativity• In just six 2·hour weekly classes. you will dis· co•er the marvelous Wiiton method of cake decorating CLASS SIZE IS LIMITED 1 s~E~ so REGISTER TODAY I t!JUPl'UESE~TRAi FREE CAKE DECORATING DEMONSTRATION , SAT., MAY 2 12:00·4 :00 ~ FREE HOT MITT OF~ER I What .... lntne pal~ to~-.a.tblltbe•....,.tt ~ fo ~ lrvlM Jlayor A.rt AtltnClft.Y ~ useult wttlt a -..Y weain c .. ar1es earlier U1l1 mon ? hat 41ete1Uoft and otbera ccJ\lld ba\te beea 1n1....-by a re&M>rt ~ by lrviM City Manaaer 1Vllliam WooUett Ir. at the '*luelt ef the Ctty Coucil. untemmetety. Oraa1e Ceun· t.y Diltriet Attomey C.ol Rcb bas !MD ftt to neellllDeM that this Unpol1bt ~ be kefl out of the pubMc domain. And tt ap- pears that Irvine city oftlcials will bonol' his reco(llmendaUon. The "'°rt provUles •how· by-bOGr ~Y of police ac- tions in the-cMe tavolvilc lni.ae Mayor Antlaeny, wbo stan4ll ac- cused of beatina his wife ...S in· fl\ctina a au~rflcial 1u1uhot wouod qn •r scalf. Anthcllly ::J.eidly uawlted his wife on Th 1. Apftl I , but wasn't officially arre1ted on IU8· picion of usault with a deadly weapon unW Satvrday, April 11. Irvine City Mana1er Woollett bn already produced a three· page commea4ation of Chief Peart's actions. However, con- •J>icuOUI b1 •u ableftce WM ~· objeeti•• chroMJ .. y on wklch the 1u•jeetive baektl•• wa1 baHd. Dtat:rict Attorney Hieb HYI that rel ... • ol tM ctm.olol'Y would viol at• a uldeliae1 e.ta bli8bed by h1a ontce te pro- tect the proeecutioo'1 e..e. Hicks' recommendatioa came as a surpriff to lrviH Ctty Attomey ftoter Grable who 1pent houra ~enai.q Ute ciaronok>ty for public comumption at the re- quest ol the eouecil. But Hlekl says that the public etiouldll't even be allowed to see the con- densed versklift. T'tkJee who have been privy to the report 1ay it contains in- formation that laas already been made public in oDe way or another. They also HY that the report in t0me iutaaea 1bow1 Uaat Chief Peart was acttn1 properly in not Immediately try. 1ng to arre9t Anthony. Howev e r , until that chr<>n<»ogy is made public, naa· 1ing questions will remain re- garding the conduct ot Peart and other city otncial1 involved in the Anthony case. Stopgap solution Tbe lrvi.oe City Ceuncil has decided to allocate $20,aoo to beef up security on the Yale Avenue footbridge and $20.GOO for deatrn work on a project that would tun the pedestrian brid1e into a full roadway overcrosslng of the San- ta Fe railroad tracks. The bridge has been the site of a rape, an attempted rape and three asaaulu lince it was built in 1976. Police say this i1n 't a star- tling amount of trlme for what is almost a five-year per•nd . However, ritizens livtn1 aea.r Ute bridge ate undentan4ably con- cerne4 f~ Ult 1afety ot thoH who use t&e bridle -hlchadai Mm· dr~s of scheolchildren and j01- gers each day. The ultimate soluti• to the crime problema on tbe brid1e la to tum the structure into a well- lit roadway overpass. Additionally, s~h an over- pass could provkte a valuable ac- cess for emergency verudea try· ing to set into the 1urr0W1dinl neighborhood, uvin1 precious minutes of the time it now takes these vehicleti to i et into the area. The money allocated by the City Council to increase security on the footbrid1e will 10 to im- proved lightina. additional police patrols and eros1ing cuarde. We hope Oat the lithting will ~•t of permanent fixture• Uaat would remain in place even lf ti.e foot - brid1e Ls turned into a roadway There ii nua. doubt u. over- pass is needed and the city should move quickly to fill the need. Money spellt on sloJ>l•P 1tturity meuves on the foot- bridge -while valhl at Ulla Ume -represent a continum, invest- ment of city dollan o.a a brid1e that appears lo be doomed. Fireu:orka ban correct Irvine Unified School Oi&trict trustee• have decided that fire~& ......,..., M told on schooic~~ Tht d«lai&n IMt weet came several ltlenthl aft« the t.rutee• decided ta ban ttri•at.e p&rUet from ~lial ueed can on the parking ldt of Uilivenity llilh Schodl. At the time, the trustees ttie-. cidtd .., Mtla• tte sale CJf UMd can alt.et retl•Ma c.raplaa.M fbl1 tie .. ••• kc:ollMC an e1e891'f ~ "'*•s wtle ,_. pie S>at1*1 fhail' can there end put "hr laJt" 1i1ns en lhe Wln ....... . "'* ag ~ rm. tr8dtttenal-1y lilowl N•«h te lait Mk! in the city. Now the consensus of the school truttees is that fireworks • could prove danaero• tG stu- dents who milht buy them. lrvi11e Hhool TrHtee Lee Siicoli said that the d~ to ba• the 1ale of fireworks throughout tlae 1chool district was in kee,ina with reeent trustee deci1ien1 to prohibit private compatlies from sellina merchandise an camP\18411. Perhaps if the scttool tn.tees pia to cont.inee on the path of be1uuna the sale of cornrnttdal products on school 1roW1tlt, they should develop a coherent pellcy ift this reeard inatead of tackling the matter on an ila.e-b,-lasM basis. On tbe fece ol It, Mwever, we tend to air~ U.at a acttool cam- l"JS is aa i.Mppropriate place to sell fireworks. Opinions •ICP'"ff!ed in the sp«e •bow ere thow •f tfWI 0.ily ~ilet. Other wlews ... pressed on t"I• Pete tr• tt.oee f1f t"91r 941t"9ts 9"" artists. "e9*r comment 11 lftwlt· ed. Address The O•lly PilOt, P.O. lk>• 1S60, Cost• Mesa, CA 9206. ~MM (714) 642-4321. L. · M. Boyd/~* .a.dona Scholars at the University or Chicaeo labored loa1 to translate an ancient 1r4YPtian me•a~Wlitld on part or • b~• coolllnuot retrievat. rtotn ... •r lo 1lve arid ltttl••o lwte th eN culture. nt•1, U., tetel'1mllle4 tl waa a -.-u11 fr"1 a 1110 eo hi• son. Am ~J eVMtt•llr cled~ It: "Do not take llbertles wttlt a woman~ ltutbHd l1 U1t.enltt1 to your werd1." -.~ ..... ., nn .. -=-•re t .......... ~.tefllla "°· fl•'• ..... t :.''llb temmeretal ...-ll 1Wfhf y_. tUt•. n. 11.._ry footftWll 19' M 4lid Hactl,y W'Ut IM intended. to write until he'4 made enou1h money so he didn't have lo write myinore. Theft'1 10t tit be a poet tfl tM U.I . leuet Senltt. Am told it• ~e aames t~ a-aN eed Nanc)' ftea1an. rea,ectivelr, are "R•whhle" and "aaln-.,_." Or were, at •Y rale, ua· UI this intelll1enu 'op•e4 up elaewbere in "'8t. Q. WhatfrOfOl'lton ot tM ..-tn tlat1 worl lllan " e9Maet wtth t•••vl1lon, udlo, tel••'°-"" er Hw1,.,.rs? A. Seven out of 10. Personal letters a lost art There ought to be. a 5·cent stamp ror personal letters. Letter writing la one of the good thlnes about a civilized society and it should be encouraged It's a sh ame that everything is conspiring against letter writing. Our whole postal system has detenorated to the point where mail 1s no fun at all. The excite ment we used to reel about the arnval of the mailman is gone It costs 18 cents ror a re&ular stamp now That ·s a terrible number and you don 't.dare buy a roll of 18-cent stamps because you know it's going to change before you get used to it and certainly before you use up a roll I OBJECT TO the fact that 1t costs me more to send a letter to a friend than 1t costs some fl y-by-night real estate operator to send me a phony brochure 1n the mail telling me I'm the pro· v1sio n al \\inner of a S l0 ,000 s wet:pstakes I don't like strangers knocking on my door trying to sell me som ething. and I don't want my mall cluttered with adHrtts mg. If anyone wants to accuse me of feeling that way because I make a living from the ad· vert1smg found in newspapers and on television. go ahead and accuse me or it It isn't true I don't get five good . gen uine . personal letters a year The time 1s commg when the letter. written with pen and ink and sent as a personal )l'.lessage from one person to another. will be as m uch of a rarity as the gold pocket watch carried on a chain It's a shame There is something special about a personal letter It's better than a phone -AND-Y -111-Nl-Y -~ call. no matter what the telephone com pany says A phone call disappears mto the air as soon as the receiver 1s put back on the hook A good letter can last a lifetime S OME OF MY most precious possessions are letters that ha ve been written to me sometime in the past I don't have a single memorable phone call stored m a box in my attic or base ment I've never thrown away a good letter. and like any real treasure. I don't even have to look at them to enjoy having them. I know I have them The telephone calls come and go They make no permanent impression on me and have no place in my memory A personal letter is a good thing he<'ause you sav thmgs you can·t say m a crowd and might not even say to the person face to-face If you feel like it. a letter allows you to take yourself and your thoughts more sen ously than you would dare lake them in conversation And you tan Sa) things without mter ruptton · A GOOD LETTE R 1s. m many ways. the exact opposit<.' or a poht1cal speech A poht1c1an addressing a crowd has to talk so broC1dly and general!) about the issues in order not to offend an) one of the thousands of people ltstemng. that he usual!) ends up sa) mg nothing. A letter can bl' spec1f1 c. and if the writer has some bias or prejudice. he can even reveal his true self b~ lettmg this s how Writing a friend. you shouldn't have to be careful AbrahC1m Lincoln's letter to . his stepbrother telling him he wasn't ~01n~ to loan him the $50 he asked for, tells vou more about Abraham Lincoln than thr Gettysburg Address does Soml' of our best history has come that way from personal letters of famous l)l'Ople t hat St'holars have dis· covered You get a better idea of what soml•1me 1s really li ke from a personal lettt-r they weren't ex peeling you to read than you get from a carefully con sidered pubht' statement they've made We ~ay rt'a l things in lt'llers Personal letter~ should go for a 5·cent s tamp Hiring by 'auction' irks job-seekers To the Editor: Arter a year away from work because of family illness. I am starting a job search I have good secretanal skills and an excellent employment record After studying ads. I have decided not to answer any ad that does not state ulary. I am an executive secretary. There are many, rllany ads for secretanes. However, you write carefully worded letters. enclose carefully planned res· um es. drive many miles. rill out lengthy (usually poorly planned) ap- plication fo rms. wait hours in reception orrices. endure ine pt intervie wers. and finally you team the salary is lower than what you earned 10 years ago BEFORE MY last job, I worked in a personnel department. On many oc casions when we received applications from obviously very well qualified ap· plicants, t he personnel director would say. "But he <or she ) would want too much money," and a mediocre or even less qualified person would be hired. MAILBOX ·who, or course, would actually cost the rinn money. My brother is an artist and my husband is a writer. They, too, have ex· perlenced this tedious and dlaturbin& procedure, hirhJI by "auction." And they are asked to put toeelher portfolios or folders of previous work each lime. If you call in and ask the salary, you 1et the same answers: "The pay 11 commensurate with your experience," or "The salary is between ~ and SHOO, depending on your quallrica· tiona." And you know that means, "We'll h.ire the cbeape1t Ol\e we can 1et." That usually meant tbe penon who LI mo1t dnperate takes the job. Allbou«h I'm not on unemployment insurance, I will boycott any firm that doe• not indicate aalary in the ad. Un· fortunately, many unemployed people cannot afford lo do this, so the racket conUnues. M.GREEN P"""-:'•- the Southwest Quadrant of Woodbridge and three other small sandwich lunches CERTAINLY, The lrvin.e Company did not invite me to lunch for my clever con- versation or witty personality. They wanted to talk about their pending ap- plications before the city Does the Daily Pi lot think this is som e how un derhanded? It is my responsibility as a planning commissioner to be accessible for discussions with anyone who will be arfected by city actions, and I will con- t inue to be so This is the only way to un· derstand all sides or an issue. Ratherthan discouraging discussions between city of- ficials and applicants. t he Daily Pilot s hould encourage all citizens affected by city actions to contact their repre· sentatives di re ct ly. .. LYNDONT CALERDINE Memberorthe Irvine Planning Commission SupporU 6'111 bill To the Editor · Whtie riding with my husband to the Angels game April 21, an editorial 1n the Daily Pilot caught my attention. It was titled "Opposition too quiet .. I had no idea that Sen. Kennedy and Congressman Rodino had introduced lo the Senate and House a Handgun Crime Control Bill. And what surprised me even more is the political clout that the National Rifle Association packs. J do understand why the NRA mi&ht feel threatened by a too strict gun control but it seems to me what this bill calls for is crime control and not so much gun control. AFTER READING your editorial and what the measures and proposals of the Kennedy-Rodino bill are, I wondered who in thls country in their right minds. would object to or feel threatened by thl1 bUI? Now mind you, I said who in their right minds, becauee I feel it's the people out of their ri1ht minds that con- l rl bute so overwhelmln1ly to the 1tatl1Ucs of "20,000 murders, suicides and acc idents involvlnt handguns yearly." I 'm really excited by thi1 blll and feel an overwhelm1n1 ur1e loJet tbe word paa1ed to the majority Americana who want some son of control and would 1upport t.b Kennffy-Rodino blll If th•Y In fact were a\ure that t.be bUI existed. l 'lb tom. to contae?t my conaressmao and ftnd out JUSl what I can do to con· JUrt' up s upport for this bill I think its Just \\hat th(' doctor ordered. and I thank you for making this information a vailable to ml' DEBORAH GERBER Implication unfair To the Editor · I am protesting the editonal of April 16 which casts aspersions on the integri- ty of Irvine Planning Commissioners Mary Elle n Hadley a nd Lyndon Calerctine in the wake of routine yearly conn1ct-or-interest statements disclos- ing $45 and $35 respectively in meal tickets from the lrtine Company Though these amounts are well below the $250 annual legal li mit, and most elected and appointed officials "break bread" with those seeking their atten· lion. 1t was 1mplted that these two particular and1v1duals are thereby less accessible and responsive to the public· at-large ANYONE WHO has observed the Planning Commission meetings. as I do frequently to testify as a citizen on bike trail planning matters. would conclude that these people are extremely hard· working and devoted to the public in· terest. Active in many other civic organlza· lions, Mrs Hadley has served on the commission less than a year, while Commissioner Calerdine has devoted about fi ve years to public service on the Irv ine Transportation Commission .. Planning Commission. a nd numerous committees. Having served a concur- rent term with him on the Transporta· lion Commission. I can attest to the thoroughness of this individual in sttk· ing information and his intense dedlca· lion lo raimeas to au parties. Yes, certalnly. an ordinary cititen witb a personal plea mtUt realize it ls i m partant lo underscore certain points contained within that mountain or paperwork ornclall receive and tbat these lwo people, your neighbon, are only a phone call away. J UANITA MOE Why mu1t our tHH b• 1pen\ on preachlrl of 1lo0en (poUUca1 practl· Uoner1) on local campu1e1? Their rhetoric ta tull ot aUttenni 1eoeraUU • nev•r po1ltht problem-1olvla1 thou1bta. " -~~~-......... ,...,. .... ... .a-.;;-=-·-..... ---···· .......... . ........ ...Detl....... '• Mesa cops continue truancy arrests, A Costa Mesa police crackdown on truancy throughout the city moved into its fourth day today after off. icers arnsted 32 students Wed• nesday. None of the "status offense" arrests Wednesday were made at Orange Coast College, though, said Sgt. Bill Bechtel who beads up a speciaJ 10-member Schools and Community Against Truan· Cf team formed to support reg- ular patrolmen in the concen- trated truancy sweep. The arrest of more than 30 Costa Mesa High School stu· dents Tuesday at the college campus, acrosa Fairview Road from the high school, raised the ire of several parents. School officials noted that crossing to the snack bar at the colleee for lunch bas been a Costa Mesa High tradition for years and the students going there to eat should not have been arrested. Robert Packer, Mesa High principal, said the Police Department unilaterally decided to make truancy arrests at the college. sit. Bechtel said be takes responsibility for the arrests at OCC but wishes high school of· ficiala with whom police met prior to this week's crackdown would have out Ii ned the somewhat vague lunchtime pollcy. Bechtel said the policy never waa brought up by high school officials in the "four or five" meetings held to plan this week's sweep. In those meetings, he said, high school officials noled that any student found off the high school ground.a without a valid pass dQfing schbol bQUn lbou1d be considered truant. "Maybe there was a miscom- munication between us and the high school," Bechtel said. "And we're sorry about that, but it shouldn't hamper the program and it won't." While officers stayed away from the college campus Wed- nesday, they continued to haunt the game arcades and conve· nience markets where students congregate to play electronic game machines. "We ran into more kids known to us for prior criminal activity," Bechtel ob- served. The police, t.rorking with Newport-Mesa Unified School District authorities, planned their SCAT operation in an at· tempt to curtail bureeonina daylight burglary activity blamed on youngsters who are skippine school. Three days of anti-truancy ac- tivity has resulted in 160 arres .. , police report, and the sweep will continue indefinitely. Sgt. Bechtel said of the more than 30 Mesa High student. ar- rested at the college Tuesday, ei&bt were caught between 9:30 and 10:30 a.m., about an hour before the high school lunch period. -He said the anti-truancy ac- tivity, once begun, continued on into the lunch hour: DA tells Town Hall: get tough on crime "bandy solutions" to crttne pro- blems, Hicks d.laeuued 1everal areu in which be said lmprove- menta could be made. Hicks said proce11ln1 of criminal cases in the court.a must be speede4 and limits placed on the nwnbet of pre- trial motioal that a c~al de- fendant may pursue. Cltiftl a cue ln wblcb mon tbaQ aoe year was spent on a PH·triaJ motloD, IUcb 1Ud tM defeme •tt.orne1 tried to mai. an lUue where DOM US.t.d. Hot-<JJT balJoons, above, provided tethered, 10- minute rids• at 30 feet to ltay-Ot-home1 at the GOTdon Bennett Balloon Race launching In Jo'oun- tain Valley'• Mile Sqvare Park. Below, long tanker tnu:b mpplied helium to fill flattened balloons to iend them aloft Saturday. Vision led to 1 • flights ~ By PIDL SNEIDERMAN Of .. o.tiy ...... Stlfl ( Bob Wallace was in New Meir lco on business three years ap when he caught the fever. -If' His visit coincided with the llll• nual Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta. and Wallace awoke one morning lo find 3$0 huge colorful globes floating out.- side his window. 1 "I didn't know if I was in Kansas or Oz," he recalls . Wallace, a Long Beach resi- dent who works as an engineer in Santa Ana, returned to New Mexico the following year on his own time and learned lo fly 1 ~I HE OBTAINED his com- mercial balloon pilot's lice~ and in March 1980 purchased bis own craft, dubbed "Shout." Since then he's efl\barked on 1S3 hot air balloon flights, usuaJly weekend launchings from Perris, Calif. Last Sunday he placed third Ip the first Fountain Valley Classic balloon race. landing in Zody's parking lot rather than hls declared target, Brookbur•t Community Park in Anaheim. Wallace. 34, claims he and 11'5 navigator, Ron Whitaker of Irvine, would have landed right on tareet had it not been for a map error that caused them to steer toward the wrong park. Even though be didn't claim first prize, Wallace says he'• still hooked on ballooning. "YOU KNOW, there's no elevator effect to it," he ex- plains. "People think they'll leave their stomachs on the ground, but it doesn't happen that way "It's a very smooth ride, a very quiet ride. You can hear every dog bark, every screen door slam ... ·· Propane gas is burned lb in- fl ate Wallace's nylon-dacron balloon, which when filled gains the height or a seven-story build- ing. ' He usually flies at an altitude or 1,000 to 1,200 feet, but enjoys cruising low over a neighborhood as he drifts in for a landing. W ALI.ACE SAID the balloon takes 20 to 30 seconds to respond lo heating or venting changes. "Ballooning is not a sport m which you can run out and be frivolous." he explains. "Some people think I must gtf 'high· and then go up in ~ balloon. But I tell them yc:/b can't do that. The joy of balloon-• ing i s doin g eve r ything perfectly." I I $1 million ~ ' school bonds purchased l I ' BELFAST, Northern Ireland <AP). Hunter atrlket Uk• th• one at bu Bobby Sanda at death'• door e a time-tested tactic of tbe Irl1b epubUcan Army. In the coune of ill year campaJ1n to ertd British rule Ireland, 12 1uerrillaa have died m futin1. The hunaer strike ls a particularly lsh form or protest -and one that tes to the el1hth century. In those days, Irishmen wit~ a levance against an Important ighbor fasted outside the offend.ins rty's door untll the dispute was tettled. SANDS, 'Z7, serving a 14-year sen- nce for weapons possession, is fast- g in hopes It will force restoration of special privileges for guerrilla in- ates. He was in h.is 60t.h day without food Wednesday at the Maze prison near 8 etrast. According to Sinn Fein, the !JlA's pdtitical wing, he "could die at any moment." The Irish Republican tradition of hunger strikes was started by 1homas Ashe, a leader of the 1916 Easter Rising in Dublin. Jailed by lhe British in the city's ¥ounljoy Prison, Ashe slopped eat- (pg to demand that he and other na- t;o n al is t leaders be treated as prisoners of war. He died after five Hays as a result of force-feeding. tf ore than 30,000 people followed his coffin through the streets of Dublin. THE MOST famous Irish hunger striker was Terence McSwiney. rebel lord mayor of Cork. who died in Lon· don's Brixton prison on Oct. 25. 1920, after a 74 day fast Two other na- tion a li sts died with him in that hun ger strike McSwiney. a member of the out· lawed IRA, en.shrined the ethOe that wH to inspire later huncer ltriten. He declaffd: "Th• contelt on our aide 11 • . • one of eDdurante. Jt 11 not thoae who can >alllct lh• mQilt, bUt thOlt who can 1uff er tbi molt who will c:'Oftq"1"." Later death• ume ln tbe •f· termat~ of the lrl1b clvll war between the lRA, aeeldfll full ln· depeadence from Britain, "1d th~ "Free State" forces, whleh 1upport• ed limited home rule. Ireland became an tnctepende,nt atate in 1921, but the predominantly Protestant North remained under British con- trol. TWO DIA men, Denali Bany and Andrew Sull.lvan, died In Mountjoy arter 43 days without food. In October 1923. lo UNO, Jack HcNeela and ~ony d' Arey died after a SS-day fut in'the republic's Arbour Iii.II Prlaoo Another IRA man, Sean Mccaughey, died in MaJ 1948, after a 31 ·day hunser and thirst strike tn the top security Port.laolse Prison, west of Dublin. The hunger strike became an im- portant guerrilla weapon ln the early 1970s after Northern Ireland's sec· tarian feuding began in August 1969. After a 38-day mass hunger strike by IRA men in Long Kesh prison camp near Belfast in 1972, the British Conser vative government gave in and granted jailed guerrillas "special category" status, allowing them to wear their own clothes, do no prison work and run their own affairs in their "cages" or compounds. The "special category" status was withdrawn in March 1976 by a Labor government. It is special category rights that Sands and hJ s followers are demanding be restored. Ar..,.._ ~ov. Edmund C BrOt/Jn tours the Gregory Bateson Building in Sacramento 'it>hich uses a vanety of active and pa1sive solar technologtes as its energy tystem. Building solar showcase Edifice uses active, passive technology SACRAMENTO IA P I Whal has 600 tons of river rock, four 50-foot e olden Chinese lanterns, soaks up ~a1ly sun.and releases 1t al rught and uses only one sixth the energy of its neighbor? It's lhe state's niwest office build- ing, the first buHt since 1968. It's also a showcase of how energy can be •i;aved through passive and active solar design while at the same time 'providing attractive and comfortable Jomces for 1.200/eople. ' Gov. Edmun Brown Jr. will ded· :icate the new Gregory Bateson •Building, which s prelldS over 2'h 'acres three blocks from the state Capitol, on Friday as part of a day- long rair at the city park. HE AND state architect Barry M'asserman. who with former state rchitect Sym Van der Ryn designed 'the building, conducted a tour for re- ~rters Wednesday. The architect said the buildins ls 1the first attempt to apply on a larse publ\c scale many principles of ac'. tive ~d passive solar deaipi. State office bulldinsa comtrueted two decades ago, like the towers nearby, use 120,000 to 150,000 BTU per square foot per year, he sald. The state building code now requires commercial buildings to cut that to 55,000 BTU. The new building should use 20,000 BTU per square foot an- nually, he said. The building's energy sys~em la run by a computer. THE MOST striking featare is a huge central courtyard 150 feet square and stretching from the brick floor to the skylit ceiling. The active solar aspect Is the col- lectors on the roof that will beat 75 percent of the water used In the building. The .courtyard's skyllgbtl can be changed in angle so that wln«u' 1un enters or summer sun does not. The concrete frame of the buildJnc Is designed to work like a Jars• rock alons the river, Wa11erm•o ex· plained. It ls cool in the mornina, gets warm during the day and 1tay1 warm in the evenins. (Tom Mvrphbt.e ll ~ for '~ m SUvnado. Hu column wfU rdum Wfd. MldaJI.) • Has Excess Weight Made You fee~l---­ Uke A Prison~ In Dl~ise? WEST CLIFF PLAZA ~1'4) 1 1'\ ~,. Snail and Slug C.ontrol 20% Off CROW• HARDWARE WHtcliff Pima • ~ VJ.w Center CoroH def Mer 'A81!NOER - "Herman," a youn1 dach -shund, rides i n 1 i d e Motorcyclist Mo rrisett's jacket at Albu- querque, N.M., but Morrisett 1ay1 this cozy arr angem en t can't 10 on b e c a u a e Herman's get- ting too big. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -People wbo 1Qffer from severe psoriul1 can benefit from a teeb.niqu~ that reducet their need for ultraviolet rad!atloft and•tbe risk of 1kin cancer from that treatmeot, two dermatotoosts HY. Ora. John Parrish and Kholrow Montas, bere for the meetins of the Society for 1Dvnt11aUve Dermatolo1Y. aaJd that they combined two exlltin• techniques to create a ra1ter, safer cure for the skin aJlment psoriasis. The accomplishment, they said, may mean re- lief for the estimated 4 to 10 million Americana who suffer from the red, 1calin1 patches of 1kin that characterize psoriasis. Parrish said that research showed that many people who had resisted standard treatment bad responded to the combined technique, wbJd in- volves drug therapy and exposure to ultraviolet radiation the same kind of rays ln aunUgbt which causes sunburn. Parrish said with the new treatment, patiedtl need only 10 to 12 treatments, rather than the usual 25, before the psoriasis begins to clear up. i\ ~\~!!:;"~~::g Daily Pilat GIFTS FOR MOM SHIPPED FREE! Mother's Day is May 9! Select from a wide variety of gifts. packed in pretty yellow boxes 1ust for Mom They're filled with tempting cheeses. sausage and sweets. ff icktr1 rarfil$. fll lJlllO FASHION WESTC'LIFF ISLAND OPt.N l'l.AZA "l'wpon IW•rh l>Alf \ lllh •nd h"tnt 1'f'•s;.oM tif-1111 t1 640 6030 1112 0972 SPECIAL! SU£ BE£ HONEY a.... .. 0r.,. e3c 12 ez.JAa Lt. Cont'ct Len .. 1 EyewHr Styling Refracting Preecrtblng ~ort leoci.-1020 '""-Wfttdff f'lne Dr. Lou Elder OPTOMETRIST 642-0720 1124 Irvine Ave. Newport Beach Fresh Hot Golden FRIED OllCXEN .=:. 5.99 ~UfilU~ · · BOhemian club ruling nixed SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A judse's ruling allowtn1 sex dla- ... ~-itnination in hirin1 by the all· male Bohemian Club, to which President Reagan belongs, baa been rejected by a state com· mission, which will hear the case itself. The Fair Employment and Housing Commission could have adopted the Jan. 19 decision by administrative law judge Robert Kendall, saying the ramed club could legally re ruse to hire women Firemen accused S AN DIEGO CAP> Dis- ciplinary action is being pre- pare d against five m ale firefighters accused or sexually harassing female firefighters who must share the same shower and bathroom with them. Off shore lease suits filed LOS ANGELES <AP ) A pair of lawsuits filed by Gov Edmund Brown Jr and 22 en- vi ronmental groups allege that U.S . Interior Secretary James Watt acted 1llegally when he opened an area off the Central Callfor!ia coast to lease for oil drilling. The suits were filed in federal district court Wednesday, challenging Watt's action in opening for lease 34 or 115 tract.a in the Santa Maria Basin north of Santa Barbara. Truck flips, gi.rl killed LOS ANGELES CAP> -A trip to the beach turned into tragedy when a traffic accident killed a 15 -year-old girl and injured several other people. A pickup truck loaded with youths Wednesday swerved lo miss a large board on the Santa Monica Freeway, went out of control, hit a motorscooter and flipped over, the Highway patrol said. Identity of the dead girl was not r e leased pending notification of relatives. Liddy at Be rke ley BERKELEY <A P) G Gordon Li<h!y . who went to prison for bis role in the Watergate scandal, has won mixed reviews after a speech on the Berkeley campus. once a hotbed of student radicalism - 'Spruce Goose' due Long Beach dome LONG BEA C H !AP > Construction has begun on a multi-million-dollar geodesic dome to house the legendary fly. ing boat, the Spruce Goose. at a resort complex with the Queen Mary. Wrather Corp o(ficials an nounced the addition Wednesday amid fireworks and gun blasts in a ceremony at the waterfront re· sort complex where both vessels will be displayed "Port Adventure will be an important part of Southern California's entertainment culture. one of the -1f not the most important entertainment destinations for visitors." said Jack Wrather. president of the Wrather Corp., an entertain· ment-amusement conglomerate. The Beverly Hills·based cor poration's principal assets in- clude the Disneyland Hotel, Inn at the Park in Anaheim and movie-TV rights to "Lassie" and "The Lone Ranger." Oiange Cout DAfl~ PtLOT/Thuraday, Aprll 30, 981 H/F 'Dallas' twists tough 1 Bavis death script change affected by writers' strike SACRAMENTO <AP> -A Senate committee has voted to ban 1mokln1 ln tbe public schools, but an opponent pre- dict.a that re1ard.l~s of the law, "lt'U 10 on ln the bathrooms." By a 6-1 vote Wednesday, the Senate Education Committee approved SB704 by Sen. Dan O'Keefe R-Cupertlno, sending tt to the Senate Finance Commit· tee. It would repeal a law passed several yeara ago allowing high schools to designate areas where students could smoke. The bill would allow teachers and ad- m lnlatrators to smoke lo one area in each school, away from students. LOS ANGELES <AP) - Because of all too real factors - the death of actor Jlm Davls and a writers' strike -the upcomin1 plot twists of the "Dallu" CBS- TV series are tou1her lo flpre out than last year's 1ue11ln1 1ame about "Who Shot J .R.?" Amon1 the pouibt.litlea "Dallas" executives considered Wednesday was whether to wrlte·oul the role of (amlly patriarch Jock Ewln1, played by the M-year-old Davis, who died of a heart attack Sunday. "One option that none of ua wants is the possibility of recaat- in1 the part," producer Leonard Katzman said. On a hurry-up schedule. Lorimar Productions planned lo s tart filming five 1981·82 shows on May 14. Should il be decided to end the Jock Ewin1 role of oll baron emeritus, with • death that becomes part of the scenario, a major re-wrltini would have to be carried out in the next few weeks. THE FlBST question ia: will the Writers Guild of America al- low its striking members to work on the five "Dallas" scripts? That possibility exists, said Katzman, noting that he would ask the guild next week to re- consider its refusal earUer th.is week to exempt ·'Dallas·· because or Davis' death. He said he thought the writers· refusal was only "conditional." He did not elaborate. The urgent need for rewntmg of "Dallas" also raised another PET, RENTAL ISSUE BACKED -Three act- resses tell a Sacramento press conference of their support for a state committee-backed bill lo prevent owners of low-rent, gov- ernment-subsidized housing from refusing to rent to senior citizens with pets. From left ,.,.,...,..... are actresses Margaret O'Brien, Gloria DeHaven, Martha Raye, Sen. David Roberti. author of the bill. and Mrs Lucille Hoyne, 74 , Glendale, who said she had to give up a low- rent apartment because she owns a cat. ----------- posalbiUt):'. that Loriftlar would defect from the producers' ne1otlatin1 committee and reach a separate contract a1reej tnent u an independent. ·'There wu mucb a peculation about a Lorimar derectlon. But I think Lorimar la eoin& to hold rt rm." Katzman said when reached at the Lortmar offices at MGM Studios. THE MAY 14 production start is two months earlier than usual. Katzman acknowledged ., because of a chance the Direc- tors Guild of America will s trike when its contract expires June 30. A directors' strike would virtually shut down film and television production. Another fictional cliffhanger will end the "Dallas" season. Friday. and viewers who worry about such things may be put through a second summer of waiting It 1s something similar to 1980's "Who shot J .R .?" situa- tion that remained unanswered for six months. Davis died Sunday at his sub- urban Northridge home. He had been recUJ>erating from March surgery o( a perforated ulcer. A memorial service was scheduled for Friday at 1 p.m . at Forest Lawn 's Churc h of the Recessional in G lenda l e, Lorimar officials said Wednes- day A WRITERS' spokes woman said Wednesday the guild has made "excellent" progress in separate talks with independent producers On Tuesday , prod u cers sweetened a three year offer on basic minimums boosting them as much as to 31 9 percent for movies and 29 5 percent for TV The stnke issues include res· 1duals for home video pay TV . videocassettes an<J v1deod1scs Writers have said the producers' home video offer would gave them "a percentage of nothing " The producers. working on an established industry formula that writers and directors only get one third the residuals of ac· tors. have offered l 5 percent. At the end of their 10 week strike last year the actors got 4 5 per· cent of the distributors· gross for pay TV programs after they've been shown 10 times on every system in a year, and 4.5 per- cent for cassettes and discs after sale of 100.000 units combined. -•A Superb Adventure PUBLIC SALE ONE DAY WAREHOUSE SALE OF OLD In Dining ITALIAN CUISINE •Courtesy Boot Slips • Banquet and Private Porty • Foc1ht1es with Boy View 642-7880 31J1 W•I Coul HJ1laway Newport Beacla, CalHonaU FULLY ASSUMABLE INTEREST ONLY 2ncl TRUST DEEDS OWNER/NONOWNER OCCUPIED Call Wilham B Mitchell Call aoday lor quote • No obllgai.on Irons nollOnOI funding (714) 975-1128 ~~~!~=:~~ RAcm·s FOURTH ANNUAL GRADUATED DISCOUNT SALE ALL OVERSTOCKED AND LOM<iSTAMDIM<i JEWELRY WILL IE LIQUIDATED AT SAVIM<iS YOU'LL NEVER SEE A<i AIM! KJRRY! 3 MORE DAYS! lecJinnlfMJ Wed. 29th -10% off remaining items On Sat .. May 2nd -OHl Y I Oc on the dollar Come in early while selection is greatest. All items to be sold first come first serve UNUSUAL FURNITURE & COLLECTIBLES Sat., May 2nd 9 a.m.·5 p.m. 2110 S. Grand, Santa Ana • old oak piano • cabinets • dining sets • tables • desks • iron toys • chairs • buffets • cedar chest • dressers • watches • sewing machines • old Italian loveseat • Cushma[l motor scooter • handmade dolls from Ireland lrillt YowTnld&s & Trailers & H•d Away "Owe D91 Olli(' * Mo Credit C•rd1 * "O•e D91 O•ly11 Learn Cake Decora~~na CLASSES ST ART THE WEEK OF MAY 11 th Join our Cake decorating classes and discover your creativity' In 1usl six 2-hour weekly classes. you will dis- cover the marvelous Wilton method of cake decorating. CLASS SIZE IS LIMITED 1 5~e~ so REGISTER TODAY' t&LIPPl•ESEllAlll FREE CAKE DECORATING DEMONSTRATION SAT., MAY 2 12:00-4:00 FREE HOT MITT OFFER A WILTON SIGNATURE OVEN MITT\..IS YOURS WHa:N YOU PURCHASE SELECT· ED WllTON PANS OR DECORATING SET .-WHILE HOT MITT SUPPL V LASTS LOS ANGELES (213)827·1831 ~· c Police truancy ~p netted some innocenbl A truancy sweep by Costa Mesa police burdened by increas· lng daytime burglary and van· dalism caused by class-cutting students rmed more than • few hackles th16 ~. Most parents whoee offspring have been netted playing elec· tronic games in convenience mallkets instead of belna in school have been more than cooperative, police say. But parents whose Costa Mesa High School students were detained Tuesday in a sweep o! the Orange Coast College campus are irate. Traditionally, Mesa High stu- d en ts have crossed Fairview Road to e at hmch at the college sna~ bar. Principal Robert Packer said the lunch treks are sanctioned by his administration. Police unilaterally made the lun.chtime truancy arrests at Orange Coast College, he added. Officers ecmteod UwJ wen never told of the •Ptdal tout College lunch aancttc>n and ~ informed by school olflelall that anyone without an a&athorbed pass otf the campua at ..,um. was subject to truaney actioa. Complaints, the1 HY, bave been refi,ltered by some roUece staff members recardinc marl· juana and drug activity amonc The hi&h schoolen who crou to the college. And, officers contMd, the college ls used u a "back door" escape from the bi&b school cam- pus as well. The lunch hour c0Ue1e sweep probably went too far, and tclk>ol of!ici~ report studenu cauabt up in the campus area arr•Ls wlll be exonerated. The move on truancy as a crime prevention measure should be lauded. Next time the rules should be more preci1e. Caltrans eyes Ali It's too.. bad welder turned- artist AH Roushan hadn't heard of the Caltrans Transportation Art Program when he began rais· an g his controversial metal sculptures in south Costa Mesa Caltrans 0Hic1als are in - terested m taking a closer look at the three red towers Roushan erected on his propert} in de- fiance of city claims that the works require city permits Roushan might have avoided hours of hassling with city agen- cies and cost ly cou rt ap- pearances resulting from raising the works entitled Waterfall , But- terfly a nd Volcano on his in- dustrial property at 1550 Superior Ave. Caltrans officials admit, though, that artists encouraged to apply their skills toward dress- ing up drab corners of freeway rights-Of -way also must apply for gtate permits. But, they contend, Cahrans makes every eHort to aasure artists that the procesa will be as short and painless H poBslble. Painful as Rouahu'a battle with the City of Coeta Me.a has been, he says he's not looking for a n easy way out. It's the princi pie, he contends, and he's not in· terested in an easy platform for his artistic statements He says he figures be hu a right in the United States to ex- press his thoughti artistically on his own property . He may be right. And he tnay go to jail for conte mpt of a court order prohibiting e rection of his third work. At least he has the courace of his convictions Second spot just fine It's tough to lose t.M cloee ones. espectaJly w~n the score ls 19712 to 1961,1,., That's cloae In a ny body'1 l~dlff- Such was th e pll1bt of Orange Coast Coll~ge·s speech team last week when tii.e tally c ame in on the wee kl ong National Speech Tournament for co mmunit y co ll eges i n Sacramento. A lesser team might have been thrilled with the results that saw the Pirates so close to the winning College of DuPage in Gle n Ellyn, IlJ But Orange Coast's talkers are accustomed to the best. Their s peech tea ms took sweepstakes honors two years in a row after garnering another near -miss second place in Sacramento four years ago. • This year, Ule Ptratet took more than a half·do1*1 gold tnedals, a hanfful of sitven a.ad Mveral bront.et1. But especially 11'.Uflta•l was the number of 1pe~iel awards captured by the couten. Coach Michael Leich eamed the national "Coat'h of the Vear" title; Marty Cronin was Mmed "Speaker of the To.ma?Mnt," Da ve Riek won the Bell -Scroggins Award in Lincoln-Doug!~ debate and the Reader's Theater tearR took the co veted Hurrer·Goldm1n Reader's Theater Award. The team narrowly miss~ its third national title, indeed. but there is little tarnish on Its glitterina image. CongratuJaUons . .. Opinions expressed 1n the space above are tho5e •f th• D••I'( 1'1lot. Ottl•r vltws U · pressed on this page are thoSf' of their authors af\d Mtists . •eader cornrMf\t •~ 1nv1t ed. Address T~ Datl'( Ptlot, P 0 . Box 1560, Cotte Mew, CA '26.2•. ~t\OM (71") 642-4321 L. M. Boyd/ Ancient uUdom Scholars al the Un1 H rslty of Chicago labored long to translate> an ancient Egyptian message written on part o f a broken cooking pot retrieved from d11J1~infls expectt'<f to give great insights into the old culture Finally, they determined it was a disp atrh fro m a man to his son And they eventually deciphe-red it : .. Do not take libe rties with a woman whose husband is listening to your wof'ds " Did I mention baby hippos are born underwater? They nurae underwater, too. This com es to mind because a client asks how much b1by hi~ weigh et birth. About lOO polM& ·Ire land must be som e sort of Heaven If you're a writer lhef'e. you don't pa)' income t1xes, and you don't need a Utense to fish for trout Good th.Ing 1 hen's egg doesn't cook It 107 degrees F. That's a hen's bedy tempef'8ture Q. Wu lhere a real-life Popeye? A. No, but the cartoon'• crea&or Ellie Critter Seaar sald he 1ot the noUon for the cbaract.er from • town 0,_ANGI£ COAST Daily Pilat personali ty namPd Rocky P'l~f'I in Chester. Ill. Q Don't a lot of men commit s uicide tn the woods durina h.antlng season? A Can only r eport that a third of the gunshot wounds In the woods dur- ing hunting season an sell-anfflcted, mostly unintentionally, no doubt Q. Which of the pro footbaJI player• "as had the m06t knee surferies? A Credit Mr. t:.J Holub, the Oklahoma cattlemen, with thlt dis· tinctlon. Dur1fti his a mateur and pro- fessional career. h .. WtQt ~r the kH~ knife 12 .timet. • Am asked If Wllllam Slluftpeere continued to write up to his death. No, he'd quit his ~ommertlel werk several yean earlier. 11M literary footnotes ta)' h• ~ •tt«'1 what Mi Intended, to write Ulllll M '• m• enoo•h rftOIWJ H he dhla't lane t.o write any~ Q. Whatjroportion of tM people Ln tt.it worl ttaw no contact wt" ttlevlslon, radio, tele1ll09ee or newspaper!'?. A. Senn out of to. -·~ ... Person al letters a lost art T here ought to be a 5-cent stamp for personal letters. Letter writing is one of the good things about a civilized society and it should be en couraged. It's a sha m e that everything is conspiring against letter writing. Our whole postal system has deteriorated to the point where mail 1s no fun at a ll The excite ment we used to reel about the a rrival or the mailma n is gone It costs 18 cents ror a regular stamp now That's a terrible numbef' and you don 'l dare buy a roll or 18·cent stamps because you kno"' tt s going to change before you get used to it and certainly before you use up a roll I OBJECT TO the fact that 1t costs me more to send a letter to a friend than 1t costs somt• fly-by night real estate operator to send me a phon} brochure in the mail telling m e f'm the pro v1sion a l "'inner or a St 0.000 sweepstakes I don't like strange rs knocking on my door trymg to sell me something, and I don't want my mall clutte red with advertising If anyone wants to accuse me or feeling that way because I make a living from the ad· vert1smg found in newspapers and on telev1s1on, ~o ahead and accuse me of it lttsn'ttrue I don't get • rive good . genuine, nersonal letters a ~ear The lime IS commg when the letter. written with pen and ink and sent as a personal message from one person to another, will be as much of a rarity as the gold pocket watct\;-'Cahied on a chain. It's a shame There 1s something special about a personal letlef' ft 's better than a phone . ,~,, -••• -,-n -111-1 -(I call. no matter "'ha t the telephone com pan} says A phone call disappears into the air as soon as the receiver 1s put back on the hook A good letter can last a lifetime SOME Of-' MV most precious possessions are le tters that have been written to mE' sometime in the past I don't have a single memorable phone call stored in a box in my attic or base mcnt I've m.•ver thrown away a good letter. and ltke a ny real treasure. I don 't even have lo look at them to en3oy having them I know I have them The tt.'lephone calls com e and go. They make no permanent impr ession on me and have no place in my memory A personal letter 1s a good thin because you sav thin.li(s you can't say 1 a c rowd :.ind m ight not even say to the person fa(·e-to-face. If you feel hke it, a letter allows you to take yourself and your thoughts mort' serious ly than you would dare take them in con versation And you can sa) things without mter· ruption · A GOOD LETTER 1s, in many ways, the exact opposite of a poltttc"I speech A poht1c1an addressing a cro*d has to talk so broadl} and generally about the issues in ordN not to orrend an' one of the thousands of people listening. that he u:.ually l•nds up saying nothing A letter c.·.in be spec1f1 l' and 1f tht' "'nter has some bias or pre3ud1ce, he can even re\'eal ht:. trut' self b' letting this show Writing a friend. you shouldn 't ha\e to be careful Abrc:tham Lincoln 's letter to his stepbrother telling hi m he wasn't going to loan him the $50 he asked fo r. tells you more about Abraham Lincoln than the Gettysburg Address does Some of our best h1s torv has t•ome that way from personal letters of famous JX'Ople that s<·holars have d1s - coverl'd You get a better idea of what someon(;' ts reall,> hke from a personal letter they "'eren't expecting you to read than you get from a carefull~· con- s1 de r€'d public statement they've made e Sa\ real things in letters ersonal letters should go for a 5-cent s -mp Hiring by 'a uction' irks ... j o b-seekers To the Editor · After a year away rrom work because of family illness. I am starting a JOb search I have good secretarial skills and an excellent employment record After studying ads, f have decided not to answer any ad that d~ not state salary f am an execut ive secret ary There are many, many ads for secretaries However, you write c11refully worded letters, enclose caf'efully planned res umes, drive many miles, fill out lenethy (usually poorly planned) ;,ip plica tion forms, wait houn in reception offices. endure inept interviewers, a nd finally you learn the salary is lower then what you earned 10 years ago BEFOllE MY last job. 1 worked m a personnel depa rtment. On many oc casions when we received applications from obv1owily very well quahfied ap· plicants. th~ personnel di~ctor would say , "But ~ Cor she> would want too much money.·' and a mediocre or even less qualified person would be hired. MAILBOX who, of course, would actually cost the nrm money. My brother is an artist and my husband is a writer. They, too, have ex perienced this tedious and disturbing procedure. hirina by "auction." And they are asked to put together portfolios or folders of previous work each lime. If you call in and ask the salary, you iet the same answers: "The pay is com men.Sllrale with your experience," or ·'The salary is between $100 ind •1eoo. dependin1 on your qualHica- tlons." And you know tbat means, "We'll hire the cheapest one we can 1et." That usually meana the person who ia most desperate takes the job. Altbouch I'm not on unemployme'lt lnsututce, I wiU boycott &Jly firm th't does not indicate salary in the ad. Un- fortunately, rnany unemployed people cannot afford to do this, so the racket eontinuea. M. GREEN spread its many arms and thf'eatens a deathly grip unless our sleeping soc1et) aw a kens to his destructive ideology ELIZABETH LAU FORD Suppom gun bill To the Editor· w~ riding with my husba~ to the An gels game April 21, an editorial in the Datly Pilot caught my attention It Weis titled "Opposition too quiet " I had no idea that Sen. Kennedy and Congressm an Rodino had introduced to the Senate and House a Handgun Crime Control Bill. And what iurprised me even more is the political clout that the National Rifle Association packs. I do understand why the NRA might feel threatened by a too strict gun control but 1t seemg to me what this bill calls for 1s crime control and not so much gun control AFT[R READING your editonal and what the measur~ and proposals of the Kennedy Rodino bill are. f wondered who tn this country in lheif' right minds. would object to or reel threatened b) this bill? Now mind you. I said who in t heir nghl minds. because I feel it's the people out of their nght minds that con· tribute so overwh elmingly to the statistics of "20,000 murders. suicides and accidents involving handguns yearly." I'm really excited by this bill a nd feel an overwhelming urge to get the word passed to the majority of Americans who want som e sort of control and would s upport the Kennedy-Rodino bill if they in fact were aware that the bill existed '-..I'm gomg to contact m y congressman and find out. jwit what I can do to con· jure up support for this bill. J thinJt its Just what the doctor ordered. and f thank you for making this information available to me. DEBORAH GERBER .._, abandoned1 time. a Vl'r} valuable environmental as -;et MARY E MI LY BARTON Praise /or help To the Editor We write this as a letter of praise and thanks to the Costa Mesa Paramedics, the Coslli Mesa Police Department and Seals Ambulance personnel On F'nday. April 17 , my husband and I were the 1n1ured persons when a car ran a red liJ(ht at Harbor and Wilson. Within what seemed like seconds after the at·c1dent, the pciramedics wP.re there as were the police and very short- ly after. Seals Ambulance We we re treated promptly. effi cient- ly. courteously a nd with great care and kindness We had to be taken to the hospital for emergency room treatment so '>'ere unabl<' to express ouf" thanks in person and wish to take this opportunity to do so MR AND MRS JEROME OLSEN Le~ vio/,ence To t he Editor I am inclined to agree with Karen Gibson (Mailbox, April 91 The youth of today live by TV! It means nothing to them to see a head lopped off "and ro ll like a ball!" They laugh and scream like it was funny! If we don't curb viole nce on the screen kids will think nothing of killing each other like they do in horror movies while eating their popcorn at the same time' THE VIOLENCE and guns should be on the late late show, (plus naked sex). Even the toddlers in diapers are bowleued from carryine play guns on each side and their cowboy hat! They grow up with that "Mn1. bang, you're dead!" Heaven help those that don't get up after they have been hit with a real bullet! Children do not know any better. as they alw•ye like to copy whatever they see! EMMA HYMAN • ' / The wise investment of money c:an be a complex decision. But it doesn't have to be. The simplest path is often the most profitable. As well as the safest. vVhile some other people are trying to decide what involved finan- cial step to take next, you can simply 'be making money. Risk free. Newport Balboa Savings offers a full range of financial services, with each account federally insured to $100,000. Smart. And safe. · Stop by our nearby office and talk to your friends at Newport Balboa Savings. Discover what the bulls and the bears are missing. Write yourself a profit check. Why pay for a checking account when your checking account can pay you? Our new Profit Check service actually pays you 5 Y4 3 interest on the balance in your checking account. Very interesting! ~NEWPORT BALBOA Savings Westcliff Plaza, 1100 Irvine Avenue ~Newpon Beach, CA 92663 (714) 645-6505 9-5 Mond ay thru Thu rSday, 9-6 Friday, 9-1 Saturday. .. . - ' r- t TACTICAL ALERT? -Although this group of cadets seem ld be rushing for a tactical police alert, do not be Defir .._ ~ 'Y LM I'•,_ alarmed. It's jus t Golden West College's Police Academy members on their way to lunch. esa lawyer ·ven 3 years n probation ' Costa Mesa a ttorn ey J ay WHlie Henderson. 38. has been plQced on three years probation by a federal court Judge on t lfarges he perjured hi mself before a federal grand JUry in 1--0>5 Angeles. }le nderson . acquitted last ptonth of takmg part in an al· l~ged scheme to defraud a N(.g erian government bank of more than $21 million. was found guilty of perjury befor e the grand jury investigating the case in Los Angeles last year. )ames Riddet, Henderson's Santa Ana la wyer. said the Costa Mesan could have been fined under the law up lo $10.000 a~d sentenced up to five years in prison. · The state Bar Association has s us pe nded He nde rson fro m practicing law. beginning May 15, Riddel said Riddel said Henderson. whose orlices are at 666 W Baker St .. p la ns to petit ion t he stat e .Supreme Court for a stay of the sus pension --- YANTORN Boys Club director wins Bronze award Lou Yantom . executive d1rec tor of the Boys Club of t he Harbor Area. has been named Orange County's first rec1p1ent of the Boys Club Bronze Keystone award Yantorn, who has served with the club more th an 30 years, was honored in recent ceremomes He began his career in 1949 as an assistant executive director of the club's chapter in Long Beach and was named Harbor Area executive director m 1965 Since 1965. Yantorn has been instrumental in setting up new Newport Beach and Costa Mesa Boys Club branches and cur renlly is spearheading a fund· raising effort to build an Irvine branch ·'I can't thmk of anything else I'd have done with my life that would have given me more hap· piness " Yantorn commented following the award presenla· ti on Dellr f'll.C S\a" - FIRST TO GET AWA RD Lou Yantom Villa, vi.stas top tour Mediterranean elegance perches on Laguna hilltop BY JOHN NEEDHAM OltN O.lly f'tletSu" A feat ured stop on this Sunday's Laguna Beach Charm House Tour sponsored by Village Laguna will be a walk through a Florentine- style villa. perched on a hilltop. The former beach house was remodeled nearly 20 years ago by Beverly Hills a rt collec- tor Proctor Stafford to resemble a palatial residence he lived in during the 1940s in Italy. VILLA SIENA IS NOW owned by Michael Smith and J ohn Thompson. I Thom pson is a vocal coach and music I teacher at Marina High School in Huntington I Beach. Smith is the personal manager of such • celebrities aa Diahann Carroll, Kaye Ballard. As the first home in Arch Beach Heights to be included in the annual tour , the 3.500-square· foot house provides a magnifi cent view of the Laguna coastline. as well as Catalina and Palos Verdes on a clear day. THE FRONT DOOR OPENS onto a spacious terra cotta -colored courtyard with the tile-bottomed pool palnted with a fie rce looking Chinese dragon. Around the pool are a life-size sculpture or two Greco-Roman wrestlers and severa l large terra cotta p~ters imported from Italy con· taining thick-leafed tropical plants. An antique copper dragon head adorns the balcony above the courtyard and serves as a fo untain and wate r source to rm the pool. Blooming daisies and other flowers abound. Less parking allowed at Mesa gym T he boys from Zuver's gym have fl exed a little muscle before the Costa Mesa Pla nning Commission and have received much of what they wanted Commissioners voted 3 1 ttus we'ek, with Commissioner CC. C lar ke absent, to a llow a variance for reduced public parking at a new gym site at 117-121E.18th St Nearly 30 iron pumpers were in attendance as Robert Zuver argued for gym approval on 18th Street, where less than half the parking required by city law is available for patrons' use e current Zu ver's Gym facility wi ll be partly displaced within the next few years by the city's widening of East 19th Street Newport Beaeb Ctty CouneiJ •U~ • tM ftnn to apJIJn tu members, who tet up a GIQ,eGO 1111n at1Mtti . war chat l•t rt..YJ•:llM ... •~raw " 1&1• pan1loo of Nb ~ .At ' ~ttla t~ expreaed sUilttM tblt w ~ 4 .W how mud '6eJt ln~ri '•*;'' •t ~ :!;.. .. , cbarctnc tM9fl. · • I Two law ftrms, hired by tJW9 d · * * * I ty to jolnUy flle a law1uit t. i bloek 1rowtb at tbe oouoty NB ti• hlJJ I airport, tubmitted b111• thl• •llY. I week that total more than a.e . 1 • $40,000 . • 'I'm appalled," Hid Coun-... ~w •• •es cilman Don Straua1, noUq the • ~ ...., bill covered a a>-day period. f l Strauss aaid be .UO waa upeet 0 aupo• rt , because the lawyen dhl not de-!' tail work they bad done to earn the money. beyond filing the As expected, Newport Beach , law1uil. e lected leaders have agreed un-: Accordin1 to city record.a, the animously to oppose plans for al· : New Mexico firm of Luebben. lowine new airlines to use John • Hughes and Kelly cbar1ed the Wayne Airport city $17 ,163 for the period County supervisors have been : between March 11 and 31. The reviewing seve ral suggested ! Los An&eles firm of Beardlley, airline aceess plans, all de· I Hufstedler and Kemble lllilled signed to open the airport to new : the city $24,410 for the same carriers ' period. In a letter sent this week to ! More bills from the first are f county supervisors, Newport of. l expected at the end 0 this fi cials claim the access plan5 ,· montll. The (~o firms filed a lawsuit will eventually permit an in· last month against t.M county, crea~ in daily departures at Ute j asking the courts to lnvali41ate airport. I the recently adopted master The letter also states that the plan for John Wa)'ne Airport. a c cess pl ens bein1 studied wo•dd "coerce" airlines ·into Both firm• are still under con· purclll&Mni the new DC9-Super tract to •he city and are to 90, bHled as the q\lietest jet on 1 • represent Newport in the legal the market. action. Newport City Attorney Hugh Officials in Newport claim the ' Coffin said the New Mexico firm Super IO may not be as quiet as : has asked to mee t with council advertised and "does not live up : members this week to discuss to certific ation statistics or · the upcoming case He said he manufacturer's claims " · Run benefit set in Newport A 5-and 10-kilometer run to benefit the Harbor Area Boys Club and juvenile Assessment a nd Treatment Services Center will be held Saturday in Newport Beach. Billed as the ''Spring Tune Up Run," the 7:45 a .m . event is be- i ng s p o n so red b y Ford Aer ospace & CommunicatHle& Corp., Aeronutronic divlaion: Newport Beach. Entry fee for the race, Lo begin at the Jamt.oree Rolld etJo trance of the Ford facWty, ts SlO More tben 180 prises, indud· rng a vacation trip , will be a warded. For information, call Sam J ohnson at 759-6535 or John 9Wr • t 966-0550. Newport leaders suggest that flight allocations be made on the . basis of actual performance at John Wayne Except for a demonstration at the county airport last summer,. the Super 80 has not been ; operated at the airport. Th e l ette r t o cou nt y supervisors concludes by point· ing ou t th at Newpo r t h as already riled a lawsuit asking that .the airport's Master Plan be invaJidated Newport claime if the master plan ts set aside, the aic'line ac· eess pt•n wouJd bave to be d•m~ CelDp sl@nafM •et Camp sllhut> day for the OrM'lllB Coul YMCA's 1911 sum-mer campe will be held Sat- ut'day froM a •· 11'1. to l p.m .• ·at the YMCA in N~ Reaeb. Men ~.Uon ii available at tMt-9> I John Davidson and Julie Harris. J ") The home's interior is filled with antiques and othe r collectibles gathered by Smith and Thompson, who do a great deal of business travellng. Pet dog and crocheted afghan add to the comes• of 1IPlfat1I bedftJOfft of MecMihw uUla decorated in brou.ft.and rwt toM•. Wtndowe a~ louvered and toalHft clotd • reor ..., •-lvflt. iJ 8 I) FOB WARMTH ON CHILLY evenings the upstairs bedroom has a cast iron 18th century French Cirepl,ace. In summer the room ls cooled by a 1930s style ceilinjC fan. On Thompson's grand piano in the living room are several porcelain Uardro figurines from Spain. La Lique crystal lines the coffee ta· .ble. The downstairs bathroom, which opens onto the pool deck, has a sunken J apanese tub. The walls of the upstairs bathroom are covered with Italian marble imported by the home'• former owner . vmace La1una is • non-profit, environmen· tally oriented aroup which 1bowcaaea ex· emplary homes each year \Q rabe money for ita various projecta in thJ ~lty. SIX HOMES WILL BE lnchJded 1n Ult noon to 5 p.m. tour and repreaept ,JOanl' types of architecture. Antkluee from the 16th, 11th. and 18th centuries fill the room• of Bobbie and IMck M1nldn'1 house on Myrtle St.Net. ~ffiIT~ BOhemian eluh ... Fuling n ixed SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A judge's ruling allowln1 aex dil· crimination inJUring by the all· male Bohemian Club, to which President Reagan belon1s. bu been rejected by a state com- mission, which wlll hear the case itself. The Fair Employment and Housing Commi.ssioo could have adopted the Jan. 19 de~ision by administrative law judge Robert Kendall, saying the famed club could legally refuse to hire women Firemen accused SAN DIEGO <AP) --Dis- ciplinary action is being pre- pared against five male firefighters accused of sexually harassing female firefighters who must s hare the same shower and bathroom with them. Off shore lease suits filed LOS ANGELES <APl A pair of lawsuits fil ed by Gov Edmund Brown Jr and 22 en vironmental groups allege that U.S. lntenor Secretary James Watt acted illegally when he opened an area off the Central Callforlia coast to leau for on drillin1. The suits were filed in federal district court Wednesday, cballe~ing Watt'• action ln openin1 for leue 34 of us tracta in the Santa Marla Basin north of Santa Barbara Truck flips, gi,rl kil·led LOS ANGELES <AP> -A trip to the beach turned into tragedy when a traffic accident killed a 15-year-old girl and injy.red several other peoQle. A pickup truck loaded with youths Wednesday swerved to miss a large board on the Santa Monica Freeway. went out of control. rut a motorscooter and flipped over, the Highway patrol said Identity of the dead girl was not released pending notification of relatives. Liddy at Berkeley BERKELEY CAP> G. Gordon Liddy. who went to prison for his role 1n the Watergate scandal. has won mixed reviews after a speech on the Berkeley campus. once a hotbed of student radicalism 'Spruce Goose' d u e Long B each dµme LONG BEACH <AP > Construction has begun on a multi-million-dollar geodesic dome lo house the legendary fly . mg boat, the Spruce Goose, at a resort complex with the Queen Mary. important part of Southern Cal1forn1a 's entertainment culture. one or the if not the most important entertainment destinations for visitors," said Jack Wrather, president of the Wrather Corp . an entertain· SACRnENTO <AP> -A S.nate committee ha• voled to ban smoktnc In the public schools, bdt an opponent pre. dicta that re11rdless of the law, "it'll 10 on ln the bathrooms." By a 6-1 vote Wednesday, the Senate Education Committee approved 58704 by Sen. Dan O'Keefe, R·Cupertlno, aendlq It to the Senate Finance Commit· tee. It would repeal a law passed several yean ago allowina high 1chools to designate area1 where students could smoke. The bill would allow teachers and ad· mlnlstrators to smoke in one area in each school, away from students. 'Dallas' twistsj tollgh I Davis death script. change affected by writers' strike LOS ANGELES <AP> - Because of all too real f acton - the death of astor Jtm Davia and a writen' 1trike -the upcomina plot twi1ta of the ''Dallaa" CBS- TV aeries are tougher to figure out than laat year'• 1uesaln1 1ame about "Who Shot J .R. ?" Among the poasibllitlea "Dallas" executives considered Wednesday was whetber to write·out the role of famlly patriarch Jock Ewing, played by the 65-year-old Davis, who died of a heart attack Sunday. ·'One option that none of ua wants ls the possibillty of recast· log the part," producer Leonard Katzman said. On a hurry·up schedule, Lorimar Productions planned to stact filming five 1981·82 shows on May 14. Should it be decided to end the Jock Ewing role ot oil baroa emeritus, with a death that becomes part ol the 1cenarlo, a major re·writln1 would have to be carried out in the next few weeks. THE FIRST question ii. wiU the Wrtten Guild of America al- low it1 strikin8 members to work on the five "Dallas" scripts? That possibility exists, said Katzman, noting that be would ask the luild next week to re- consider its refusal earliq this week to exempt "Dallas" because of Davis' death. He said he thought the writers' refusal was only "conditional." He did not elaborate. The urgent need for rewriting of ·•Dallas" also raised another po11lbllity: that Lorlmar would defect from the producen' ne1otiatin1 'Committee ancl reach a separate contract •&reef men1 as an independent. "There was much speculaUon about a Lorimar defection. But J think Lorimar ~ going to bol<l fl rm," Katzman aaid wheq reached at the Lorimar offices at MGM Studios. THE MAV 14 production start is two months earlier than usual, Katzman acknowled1ed, because of a chance the Direc- tors Guild of America will strike when tts contract expires June 30 . A directors' strike would virtually s hut down film and television production. Another fictional cliffhanger will end the "Dallas" season Friday. and viewers who worry about such things may be put through a second summer of waiting It is something similar to 1980's "Who shot J . R.?" situa• lion that remained U{lanswered for six months. Davis died Sunday at hts sub- urban Northridge home. He had been recuperating from March surgery of a perforated ulcer A. memonal service was scheduled for Friday at l p. m . at Forest Lawn 's Churc h of the Recessional in Glendale, Lonmar officials said Wednes- day A WRITERS' spokeswoman said Wednesday the guild has made "excellent" progress in separate talks with independeni producers. On Tuesday , producers sweetened a three-year offer on basic minimums boosting , lhem•as much as to 31 9 percent for movies and 29.5 percent for TV. The strike issues include res- iduals for home video pay TV. videocassettes and videodiscs. Writers have said the producers' home video offer would give them "a percentage of nothing ·· • The producers, working on an established mdus try formula that writers and directors only get one third the residuals of ac- tors. have offered l 5 percent Al the end of their 10-week stnke Wralher Corp offi cials an· nounced the addition Wednesday amid fireworks and gun blasts in a ceremony at the waterfront re sort complex where both vessels will be displayed menl amusement conglomerate. PET, RENTAL ISSUE BACKED Three act· APW~ are actresses Margaret O 'Brien. Gloria DeHaven, Martha Raye, Sen. David Roberti, author of the bill. and Mrs . Lucille Hoyne. 74, Glendale, who said she had to give up a low rent apartment because s he owns a cat. last yrar the actors got 4 5 per· cent of the distributors' gross for pay TV programs after they've been shown 10 times on every system in a year. and 4 5 per- The Beverly Hills-based cor-resses tell a Sacramento press conference of poration's principal assets in· their support for a state committee-backed elude the Disneyland Hotel, Inn bill to prevent owners of low·rent, •ov-at the Park in Anaheim and & "Port Adventure will be an movie TV rights to "Lassie" and ernment-subsidized housing from refusing to "The Lone Ranger." rent to senior citizens with pets. From left -~A Superb Adventure In Dining ITALIAN CUISINE •Courtesy Boat Slips • Banquet and Private Party • Fa c1li t1es with Boy View 642-7880 JIJI w.1cou1 Hta.hway Newport Buck, CaJlfoniW FULLY ASSUMABLE INTEREST ONLY 2ncl TRUST DEEDS OWNER/NONOWNER OCCUPIED Call William B. Mitchell Call today tor quote • No obhgat1on (714) 975-1128 ·---------------- PUBLIC SALE RAcm·s FOURTH ANNUAL GRADUATED DISCOUNT SALE ALL OVERSTOCKED AND LONGSTANDING JEWELRY WILL IE LIQUIDATED AT SAVINGS YOUU. NEVIR SEE AGAIN! t«.JRRY! 3 MORE DAYS! lecJhWftCJ WM. 29 .. -10% off remaining items On Sat., May 2nd -OHL Y I Oc on the dollar Come in early while selection is greatest. All items to be sold first oome first serve cent for cassettes and discs after sale of 100.000 units combined. ---- ONE DAY WAREHOUSE SALE OF OLD UNUSUAL FURNITURE & COLLECTIBLES Sat., May 2nd 9 a.m.·5 p.m. 21 10 S. Grand, Santa Ana • old oak piano • cabinets • dining sets • tables • desks • iron toys • chai rs • buffets • cedar chest • dressers • watches • sewing machines • old Italian loveseat • Cushman motor scooter • handmade dolls from Ireland lrillcJ Yow Tf"llCU & Trollen & H•I Aw•y "OM D91 ()Ill(' * Mo Credit C•rdt * "O•• D91 O•fy" Learn Cake Decora~~n11 • CLASSES START THE WEEK OF MAY 11th Join our Cake decorating classes and discover your creat1v11y1 In 1ust six 2-hour weekly classes. you will dis· cover the marvelous Wilton method of cake decorating. CLASS SIZE IS LIMITED 1 5~e~ so REGISTER TODAY' 1:,UPPLIESEtfR~1 FREE CAKE DECORATING DEMONSTRATION SAT., MAY 2 12 :00-4:bo FREE HOT MITT OFFER A WILTON StGNATURE OVEN MITT IS YOURS WHEN YOU PURCHASE SELECT· eo WILTON PANS OR DECORATING SET -WHILE HOT MITT SUPPLY LASTS Search~ art .fruuU may be misdirected Art eetbulla1t1 ln Newport Beacll have latebed onto a new plan for 1enerat1ne money to pay for art exhibits and other cultural activities. ' The scheme, known u the "Cambrtdtre Plan," calla for 1 percent of all money 1pent on city capital improvement proJ· ects to be set ulde in a 1pecial art fund. The city arta commiuion and other advocates of the plan claim that such a aetup would have yielded more than $50,000 last year. It' easy to sympathize with the en. They have an uph1 e every year in their attem~t• to woo dollars from city government. But the "Cambridge Plan" has some drawba c ks. The primary one ls that setting aside 1 percent of the money d1Neted to capital improvement projecta is simply a fancy way ol nk.ln1 the city to tact an extra 1 percent on to tbo&e improvement proJ· ects. Why not just uk the city for a fiat amount? Since Newport is not a poor community, a better approach for the art groups magbt be to seek out private donations. A good example of this can be found with the Friends of the Newport Theater. Tbey are hop- ing to build a S2 million theater all with private donatlona. ' It would be nice if cities bad the money to f Wld a full spec. trum of art and cultural events. But in most town1, money i.J tight and, as unfortunate as it may be funding art exhibits and com'. missioning sculptures falls low on the totem pole. Protection backfired A Newport Beach woman is asking the city to buy her a new front door She claims the police kicked it down one night Patricia Mc Kenna, the woman asking for the new door, says the pohce thought a burglar was in her house. She was out of town at the time The police say Mrs McKenna's neighbor called them beCall$e a lieht nicked on in the empty house. When the police arrived, the light suddenly went out. Assuming a crook was lurking inside, a police SWAT team was called. The place was s urrounded . The SWAT tea m tried to coax tile "prowler" out of the house with a bullhorn. When nothing happened, they charged. They found an automatic timer hooked up to a living room lamp inside. Good intentions or not, sht claims the police cost her S500 in a new door and locks. On one hand. you really can't fault the police They were just doing their job But a door's a door and it's probably unfair that Mrs McKenna has to buy a new one After all, she put in the timing device hoping to avoid problems and look what happened. In fairness, the city should buy her a new door, even if it is an expensive model. Second spot just fine n 's tough lo lose the cl05e ones, especially when the score is 197 1;, to UMP•. That's close in anybody's league Such was the plight or Orange ·Coast College's speech team last week when the tally ca me in on the weeklong National Speech Tournament for co mmunit y co lleges in Sacramento. A lesser team might have been thrilled with the results that saw the Pirates so close to the winning Coll ege of DuPage in Glen Ellyn, Ill. But Orange Coast's talkers are accustomed lo the best. Their speech teams took sweepstakes honors two years in a row after garnering another near·miss second place in Sacramento four years ago • This year. the Pirates took more than a half-doae n gold medals, a handful of silvers and several bronzes . But especially sientricant was the number of special awards captured by the coasters. Coach Michael Leigh earned the national "Coach of the Year" title ; Marty Cronin was named "Speaker of the Tournament," Dave Ri ek won the Bell -Scro1gins Award 1n Lincoln-Douglas debate and the Reader's Theater team took the coveted Hufre r ·Goldman Reader's Th.eater Award. The team narrowly missed its third national title, indeed. but t here is little tarnish on its glittering image. Congratulations Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views ex pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is 1n111t ed. Address The Dail',-Piiot, P 0 Box 1560, Costa Mesa CA 92626. Phone (7141 642·4371 • L. M. Boyd/Ancienl u:Udom Scholars al the Un1ver11ty o r Chica10 labored long lo translate an ancient Egyptian message written on part of a broken cooking pot retrieved from diggin~s t'Xpected to give great insights into the old culture Finally. they determined it was a dispatch from a man to his son. And they eventually deciphered it· .. Do not take liberties with a woman whose husband i!I listening to your words:· Did l mention baby hlppoe are born underwater? They nurse underwater. too. Th11 cornea to mind because a client asks how much baby hippos weigh at birth About 100 pounds. Ireland must be some tOf'l of Heaven If you're a writer there, you \ Elzie Crisler Segar aaid he 1ot the notion for the character from a town per sonality named Rocky Fle1el In Chester , Ill. Q . Don't a lot or men commit suicide in the woods during hunting season? A Can only report that a third of the gunshot wounds in the woods dur· ing hunting season are setr-innlcted, mostly unintentionally. no doubt Q. Which of the pro football players has had the most knee suraenes? A. Credit Mr E J . Holub. the Oklahoma cattleman, with that di•· Unction. During his amateur and pro- fesslonaJ career. he went under the knee knife 12 times. don't pay Income tues, and you T ere's got to be a poet In the U.S. don·t need a license to fish for trout Seer t Service. Am told Its code Am uked ll William Shall•peare nam for Ronald and Nancy Reaaan. continued to write up to his death. No. reape lively, are ··Rawhide'· and he'd quit his commercial work "Rain w." Or were, at •ny rate. un- several years earlier The literary tll t Is lntelll1ence popped up .lool~exactly what he else ere In print. Intended, tO wrUI Uiinl he'dl'n-e~-- enou1h money eo he dldn't have to Q. What/roportion of the people ln write an1rnor•. thta worl have no contact with televlalon, radlo. telephones or Q. Wu there a real·llfe Po,eye! 1Mw1plpen? A. No, but the cartoon'• creator A. Seven out or 10. ORANGE COAST D1ilyPilit t ......... .......,.., .............. ~ .. c.... ......... , (tiff~• ... . 1 .c.ua C.\n.a -_.. ---' ____ __....,.,.._ ---. Personal letters a lost art There ought lo be a 5·cent stamp for personal lette rs Letter writing is one of the good things about a civilized society and it should be encouraged. It's a sha!fle that everything is conspiring against lettet writing. Our whole postal !.ystcm has deteriorated to the point where mall lS no fun at all The excite ment we used to feel about the arnval of the mailman 1s gone It costs 18 eents for a regular stamp now That's a terrible number and you don •t dare bu) a roll of 18·cent stamps because you know it·s going to change before you get used to it and certainly before you use up a ro ll I OBJECT TO the fact thitt 1l costs me mo re tu send a letter to a rnend than 1l t•osts somt.• fl ~ b}-n1ght real estate operator tu send me a phony brochure 1n the mall telling me 1·m the pro vas1onal wann e r o f a $1 0 ,000 s weepstakes I don •t lak e strange rs knocking on my door trying to sell me something, and r don't want my mail cluttered wath advertising. If anyone w ;.ints to al·cuse me of feeling that way bctause l make a laving from the ad H·rt1sing found in ncy,spapers and on telcv1s1on go ahead and accuse me of 1t It isn't true I don't get fi n• good . genuine . personal letters a vear The l1mt.• IS coming when the letter. written with pen and ink and sent as a personal message from one person to another. will be as muc h of a rarity as the gold pocket watch carried on a chain It's a shame There 1s something special about a personal letter It 's better than a phone -Al-DY-RD-DN-EY--·4t eall, no matter what the telephone com· pany says A phone call disappears into the air as soon as the receiver is put back on the hook. A good letter can last a hfellme SOME Ot" MY m ost prec ious possessions are letters that have been written to me sometime in the past. I don't have a single memorable phone call stored 1n a box in my attic or base ment. I've never thrown away a good lelter, and like any real treasure, I don •t even have to look at them to e nJOY having them I know I have them. The telephone calls come and go They make no-permanent impression on me and have no place in my memory A personal letter is a good thing because you say things you can·t say in a crowd and might not t•vcn say to the person fa ce to.face>. If you feel like it, a lette r allows you to takt.· yourself and your thoughts more s t•nously than you ~ould dare takl' them 1n conversation And you can say things without inter- ruption · A GOOD LETTER as. in many v.ays, the exac·t opposite of a pohllcal speech. A poht1C1Cln addressing a cro" d has to talk so broadl) and generally about the issues in ord£•r not tu offend an"> one of the thousands of people hsten1~g. that he us ual I) ends up sa~ ing nothing A letter can be s pt.·l·1f1t a nd 1f the "'riler has some bias or preJud1ce. he can even re\'eal his true self by letting this show. Writing a friend, you shouldn•t have to be careful Abraham l.intoln s letter to hi s s tepbroth'r telling him he wasn·t going to loan him tht• $50 he l!sked for. tells you mor(' about Abraham Lincoln th:Jn tht.• Gt.•tlysburg Address docs Some of our b<"st has torv has come that way from personal letters of famous 1wopl<' that scholars have dis· covered You get a b(•tler adca of what someone is n•ally hk1.• from a personal letter thl'Y wt.•ren 'l t'Xpec·tmg you to read than you get from a carefully con . s1dered public slatt'ment thev·ve made We say n •al things tn ktters · Pl•rsonal lt'tll•rs s hould go for a 5 cent sta mp Hiring by 'auction' irks job-seekers To tht· Editor. After a year away from work because o( family Illness. I am st arting a JOb s1:arch I have good secretarial skills and an excellent employment record After studying ads, I have decided not to answer any ad that does not state salary I am an executive secretary There a re many, many ads for secretaries. How£'ver, you wnte carefully worded letters. enclose carefull y planned res umes, drive many miles, fill out lengthy <usually poorly planned I ap plication forms, wait hours in reception offices. endure inept interviewers. and ranally you learn the salary is lower than what you earned 10 years ago BEFORE MY last JOb. I worked in a personnel department On many oc casions when we received applications from obviously very well qualllied ap· plicants, the personnel director would say ... But he (or she l would want too much money," and a mediocre or even less qualified person would be hired, MAILBOX who, of course. would actually cost the firm money My brother is an artist and my husband is a writer. They, too;-,.ave ex· perienced this tedious and disturblna procedure, hiring by "auction." And . they are asked to put together portlolios or folders of previous work each time. If you call in and ask the salary, you get the same answers: "The pay ts commensurate with your experience " or "the salary is between $9()() a~ $1600, depending on your quallfica· tions." And you )cnow that means. "We'U hire the ch«iapeat one we can get.·· That usually meana the person who Is most desperate take• the job. Althouah I'm not on unemployment inturance. I wilJ boycott Hy Orm that does not indicate salary in the ad. Un· fortunately, many unemployed people ~annot afford to do this, so the r.-cket continues. M.GREEN Hay.den power play TolheEdlt.oT: Re your April 2a article about Tom Ha..Yden'1 villt to UC lrvlnettudenu: Hit brl\nwuhln1 ettempta with 1tudenta acrott WI atate palntln1 a bleak plctuN or the ruture foMhem la ahnply h1t way to t•tber votet for bla htn for the tta &teat.. Thl•JM.Dbunotcban•ecihlf •pproacti •ltlH Iii belM h1I cak"1ated cUmb Into power .. ~ ilflcl•fb .b• hu UMd well pla~.-PIOPI•. lncludlil• bit wtte, to fu.ttJMt tM Camp_,p for &tOttomlc O.mottK1 <CEJ>>. Jn reality UJe HUH Ud lfffft ts bla person.al :powtr play wbldl lJ to un· deniUll LIU Co\IDtQ ~ 1t1 yoUtb. TMI odOlltii .H.a7dft Ml creatH/baa I \ s pread ats many arms and threatens a deathly gnp unless our sleeping societ} awakens to his destructive ideology ELIZABETH LAUF'ORD SupportA gun bill To the Editor While riding with my husband to the Angels game April 21. an editorial m the Dally Pilot caught m y attention. It was tatted "Opposit10n loo quiet." I had no idea that Sen. Kennedy and Congressm a n Rodino had introduced to the Senate and House a Handgun Crime Control Bill. And what surprised me even more as the political clout that the National Rifle Association packs. I do ·understand why the NRA might reel threatened by a too strict gun control but 1t seems to me what this bill calls for is erime control and not so much gun control AFTER READING your ed1tonal and what the meas ures and proposals of the Kennedy·Rodano bill are, I wondered who an this country in their right minds. would object to or feel threatened by this bill? Now mind you, I said who in their right minds, because I reel it·s the people out of their right minds that con· tribute so overwhelmingly to the statistics or "20,000 murders, suicides and aecldents involving handguns yearly " I'm really excited by this bill and reel an overwhelming urge to get the word passed to the majority of Americans who want some sort of control and would support. the Kennedy-Rodino bill if they In fact were aware that the bill existed. I'm eoing to contact my congressman and find out Just what J can do to con· jure up s\U)port for this bill. t think Its just what the doctor ordered. and I thank you for making lhls information available to me. DEBORAH GERBER other government agrnc1es 1t has ulready rc<.1<'ht"<I the disaster stage and 1s going from bad to worse ~1th the passing of each y1:a r Also. 11 would cer- tainly appear that the Friends of the Hay have abandoned what was at one time. a very valuable enHronmental as- set MAHY EMILY BARTON Tm/ f ic sidestepped To the Editor: I attended a public meeting last night where representatives of the Irvine Company presented their side of the proposed add e d dC'v e lopment or Newport Ce nter cGeneral Plan Amendment 80·31 The Irvine Company people gave no straight answers to many concerned questions from the aud ience To me at was a ver y unconvincing presentation ONE OF THE wors t of their proposals 1s the second element of the traffic phase which they call .. The transportation management plan." It is a nebulous collection of tired ideas which have never worked anywhere else s uch as staggered work hours. car-pooling, van pools. etc -all of which tells me they do indeed expect to generate a great deal of added traffic to our already overburdened streets. All of the Irvine men sidestepped the traffic issue. It appears they just will not see the logic of solving our traffic problems first (with their company's money if they want to donate it l and after that is done let us see what more development we can handle. If our City Council buys th.is propolal, we are badly in need or new faces In City.Hall. In today's issue of the Dally Pilot there appears almost a full page ad sugar-coating the Irvine Compan}''s plans for expanalon of Newport Certter. We bouseholdera can't spend that kind of mone)' poinlina out the problems thJ1 proposal would create. Their ad 1pealt1 or expand1na buildlna apace by a mere 20 percent. Wtty don't they teU us how many people and how many can that expanalon wtll create? . W. L. THOMPSON I :fl. :fi ; i .. '.1~ •. ~1 """'"' 1 t:fi i ~ IH Aia~,,,Aij =~:r II if :~1 ! ~ . s"' AIM111 t 41 Aleen I t 11)5 ="~ " ~ AIHf, .. , Al~P I OI 7 1J A ptl.16 2 A Inf I .cl 10 llJ min pf J » In pl 2 ft 20 A 9Pw l.tt S MO AllenGp I II n Al~ 2 • .cl 71 .. All nt '2 t 41 Al Pd .20 . 21 Al lt 1.70 6 11 "'l'ICll , 10 -~~ •. Mb~• ~ Al<# t UO 6 •" """Jue .. , " ~· 2 • .0 '11ti Anwc• 1.22 7 1• Atfwc plUO . 2 AMH•H i.10 Sa.t """'8r 1 t 21 t'7 M\Arr 2147 AAlr wt JH Mir pl 2.11 I 1J A .. 1., ,st> " f7 Alnld.t 6 20 6 ti A ... CI pf 2 7S 11 t1 I .0 I dJS M .16 t 22 1te1 .41 1 as AnlC•I' 2 '° 10 11111 ™ n pf 2 IO • J Ir,. • IOt I 21 ~·n : :~·m A Pw 2 2t I 1'11 :;i~r. J ~I* "°"4:P 2 S m AGI 1kt 2 CMe 7t o\GftC v I IOe 4 Al'Mrlll.. n t 10 AHolll I 12 I Jt AHorne I ID II 16«1 A""9 10I U Jll AMI M II lllS ._,, ., AHeti. J 44 I 211 =I• I021 1' I IO I al«I Id 2.10 I 12 ASttrll Joi 11 111t AmSlr .IO I .. '-$fr pf S.Sl 1 ATT S«I IZW ATT pf ' ATT pf l.M ATT pt J.7• AWelr I 06 AWel pl 1.43 AWel pl I U :::,:,: :.:J • AmHO .0 I Ametll IU Amfec 1.4' ' ,uAl'ln 1.20 It Ampco I 60 4 Amnp t An11i.r I .0 J "'""'pf ... Amtt.d 1 .. I Al\el09 1 U AIK'-I a. I le,. I 20 6 "-lie .. • Allfleu n I OI t Anhlltr 2• 14 Anthl'y 44 I Ajl«ll I 14 22 4P<llP 1o111 le ApPw pf7 40 A#IMIJ Aruta I 21 Arcot pf 1 Arut pf 2 16 4rcll0 I 1' ArlfP$ 2 11 v. •• , .... 1 ... ... .,. '· "" l S2 • JCM t ' OS 'JD ' I • , I • • 7 ' .... .,,. :i. • 11 )I • 2,1,. )4 JS )1 ,,~. , ~. '. '. '• . '. ., 16 • '• 12i' • ,,,., . 11·~. ... • " 40 IS , l'O I 1 I t0 l .. ... ,., "' .,. .. ., ... . .. i. .,, v. . ., ''• w, ,,. ..._ '" ... . .. ... '" I. ; .. ... '• . " ... '· '• '• '• " u1,_ "• 27~ ... 21 ,,.,, .. ' . 1) , .. • SI 1, 1 ,.,., '• SI ... • '°"' I 10'. ~ .... " JP.,• t '• ... ... .,, ... CLOSING 997. 74 Insurance ' gaps covered If you're a typical 65-or-over US c1t1zen, Medicare now pays only about 40 percent or your health care balls a nd the proportion 1s falling stead1 ly. In 1969, it was nearly SO percent At the same time, your medical costs have soared at a far raster rate tt>an for any other age group Since the mid '60s, your medical costs ha\'e skyrocketed 525 percent to an e s timated $2.500 a year against 395 per cent for the general popula· lion and the outlook is your -~ SYlVIA PORTIR ~ , costs will be up to $5,000 a year by 1985 ANO THESE CHILLING calculattons do not reflect the rising cost or Medicare premiums Since 1966. these expenses have Jumped 220 per('ent, from $36 to SJ 15 20 a year and this 1s what the 65-and over must pay to quah(> only for Medicare Part 8 1 physician and proress1onal serv1cei> 1 covPra~e On top of this. the dedu('t1bles and coinsura nce 1n the Medicare pac kage have escalated about 350 per· l"ent since '66 The hospital dt.>ducllble alom• has gont! from $50 to S204 All of those are maJor stems 1n the medical budgeL-; or the elderly, a stud) by the Senate Special Com mitlee on Aging has found It 1s bel·ause of this ever "tdenmg gap bet ween whai Medicare covers and what elderly persons must pay out of their own pockets that the .. M ed1gap · · health ins urance policy has been developed and with it ha\'e come ripoffs and scandalously exag gerated claims that i,icken ev€.'n us ually <'Yntcal ob servers AMONG THE MOST obvious "Medi-Ripoffs ·" policies that pay out much less than 60 <"ents of each premium dollar in benefits. t•ancellation clauses that make the policy worthless despite steep costs paid by the ignorant buyer. prov1s1ons €.'xcluding coverage of pre -ex1stmg health cond1t1ons for more than six month!>, which tn mos t cast?s are the equival ent of eliminating coverage altogelh<'r With about half of all Americans 65 and over buy 1ng supplem e ntar~ Med1gap he alth ins urance policies. the need for honest pohctes that "111 help the elderly meet the problem has be<'om<' so urgent that the challenge finally 1s being met Supplementary poltc1es that <io provide some de cent coverage have been dcveloP<·d b> the Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans, commerr tal ca rriers itnd other private insurers STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT I e••(O Int SldOlllnd EHi l(OCIO StdOllC•I , Sol'>y Corp Ea a on 18M -II LTV Corp Row•n Arn8CICll Wern L•mb Holld•V Inn G«n Motor\ FeoNat Mtg '" l>OO S60.SOO 111,700 .,._,oo '"· 100 411.000 •S0,100 UO.:IOO '22 tOO 471900 ... .00 Jn . .oo JtU OO n1.100 114000 JI"' • ... Sl"1 ~ .. ,.,,. '' • •t.\.. • 1• .. 10'.. .. '. ... , .. '• ,. ... 6i2'• t I I ,. . '"' 1~ •''• 12 •• l• 71 • • "' 54 ... 101• UPS AND DOWNS Name I Unlver CP 1 Zapei. Cp l CoHllCP pfA • Fllmwy 50pf S llarnl1 Co 6 Pur .. lnCI 1 R-M> IL TV Cp pl1 • Oel\ River 10 WelllO<o II Conel R-12 A911FnSvc IJ SouU!Roy n 1' SlaeQOCP u vei.roE11r I• GIObatMer 11 flllmWe)1 Heme l IUl11t 1.3'Pf J L.e~IStreu• ) IU lntA f GnOate 11 t ,._It 2~ t l'mWelr a 1 WOlver '~:.t,~r 10 Fat'J'a Miii 11 Welt.Jim Pf 12 e.41 flleli* IJ 't' We1tfl'11 ue.::· .. ~y t6 l'IHI\ t ,, "ll'IC u~ i..e~, .ci;i, u:"11 1 2•~ + 21'< Up 10 1 J4 • l Up ' I pi, + l'I Up 9 5 lt\lo + l~ Up I 9 ~ + 1~ Up I' 1~ + I'• Up I I UV. 1~ Up 10 22\IJ 1'111 Up 1 I ~ + 1ltt Up 7 S :121'1 + 214 Up 7 4 K\IJ + 1'4 VP 11 1*1N + tlWo Up •·· 4Yt + 't. Up 6 S J2t'o + 2 Up 6 S .. ,_.. + Jltt ·Up 6 4 ~'\ • V. Up 62 Lot! C~ l'c I ~ = ?: ;Off :i.i ·~ ."" a JO'h JYt • s )tVt -2\1) ••• I~ I •O 2 Vt Ofl H ,i.,_ _ ~ i u. mi.--s , ... -Vt '° t\11 -.... .. a.14 -11' •• ,.__ ,... . .. AMERICAN LEADERS NEW YC>f'I\ CAPI Se~ nOQI\ pr1oe ""° rWf cf'W9 of the ...,, moet a<:t1Ye Amet>CM'I Slot• ~ • ....,_, Uaict•ng nat.on•H• •I ""'°'• rrwn tntt 8nknot .u?, 100 • • '• R•no•rOll 12~.JOO 131 • , ,, New Prot 1Y1 S.00 101 1 .... Oorcn\tC.o 144,000 ·~· 1 • '"' ~:~~Tr~"O ::~·~ )~~ ' ·~ GullC•" g 111 • .00 10~ • '• CPl•mp Ho IS,900 ,.., '• ~,~Y.rou :lJ~ ~~~ . !: METALS c-., ... '° ,.,, ... """""· u s .S.\ll- hon1 L•..i •onli•-'"" lilt< '3'• ,.,, ... _.nc1 ....... ,.., Tl• .. Sll 7 Mottai• WMk <Gm-Ill lb 4 1IH'l'll-It c ... I\ • _,.,., H Y Mer<otrt .-10 00 per "•"' ,.1•11-~ 00 troy 01 N V SILVER GOLD QUOTATIONS L...-.. rnorntno 1111no .-1.00, up iJ l!i. L-: altH,_ ll1lne SC.IS,.._ '5.SO. l'arlt: alw,_ llxlne UU oa. \IP M . .U. l'reHtwt ll•lno MH oo. up $1.7'. l11rlcll: late ett.,,_n 1111"11 .-0.00, up ... 00. '413.00 nkecl. Ha11•y a Her..ia1t only Clelly q11et• tAtUS,uPUSO .,,...._..., Oflly dally q-Mfl2.75, llP u .so. lllt4flleN: Oftty delly quote l•bf'lc•tell •so2 °'· uPU.72 SYMBOLS 1PETEal.BOYEa LOS ANGELES CAP> ~JnvelllCatlve i®rnalllm, Geraldo Rivera atyle, liu tu~ the H.lP OiiefromtbeJunl)esofLaostoaapatwtthllttleGary toJeman1. with the a11re11ive "LOolt at Me'' Rivera le cbannrmore tllan a few bide• aJooc tbe way. • But now River• ls enruaihecf ln a co.o\l'Overay that may threaten hi• career and calla in~ quesU9n televillon's role aa the probln1 eye. The rather curloua dodlaht 'erUpted Mtween A8C News and CBS' Chica10 station, WBBM, over a IU\.era "20-20" newamagaz.lne report on an alle1ed araon·for·profit rinl ln Chica10. ln the half ·hour ••20.20•" piece, Rivera told of an alle1ed arson acbeme lnvolvlng one Charles Roberts, identified by •·20--20 .. as one of several profiteers connected t.o 29 tires, eome of which were fatal. Roberts bas su.ed ABC for libel. WBBM's documentary team, beaded by pro- ducer Scott Crai1. put to1ether an expose--styled television report on expose-styled television report· ing, focu.sln1, in part, on Rivera's a.r"SOA.:.fDr·prolit story. The documentary, which aired last week, at- llr\all' ANALYSIS tacked the "20-20" report ntn~ on points of accuracy and style, suggesting that Rivera & Co. 's ''findings'' were....oot valid largely because the U.S. Attorney's otfice had not been able to 1et a grand jury indict- ·ment against Roberts. RESIGNED Janet CO<Jb NEW YOBJ< <AP)-A 3'olnebrblab llealtb wanalal i1a't ccm1ptcuou1 enoulb on R.J. e~olda Toba~ Co. billboard "vertlarilenta, a jury bu • found .. ~;, U.S. Attomey John S. )lartln Jr. said t.turt jurors found the comp&ll)' violated a 1m ordiOr to lnclude a "clear and con1plcuoa1" health warnlna to Ill blllboard advertlllnC· Martin said alx jurol"I reached their verd!ct after taklna a bul tour ·with U.S. District Judie John Can· nella to tel a view of six billboards in lhnbattan tbat advertised R.J . ReynGlda' dlardte bta.Ddl. Th Jury dUair.ed with the de- fente ArlWDeJlt that Z·lnCb·blO let· tertn1 ~ Jar1e enoulb for UM tut· 1eon teneral'• warntn1 on the billboards. The Judte bu not decided wbe*Mr to Impose peoaltlei aaaln1t. R.I. Reynolcb. The other ftve mljor tobacco com· panlea aettled stmllar caaea prior to trial by aireeinl t.o enlar1e the warn- in1 ln billboard advertialn1, llartln aaid. But the WBBM report further-called into ques- n the investigative methods r®llnely employed ' ~~!J,.~~'*';JJ~~~F:~~~~~ Rivera and other TV· Eyes, specifically the flashy hnique dubbed ''the ambush interview." Rivera s chastened for approaching the startled Roberts 1_ least your eyes -)on this barbeque o the street, cameras rolling, and giving him the third degree. It's a method designed, suggested the WBBM report, for "picture." nottruth. ABC NEWS came down on the WBBM dckumentary hard and fast, and understandably . The news profession, print and electronic, • ms to be in the throes of a sell-devouring frenzy i the wake of the Janet Cooke-Washington Poat· I' litizer Prize affair ABC News and Geraldo vera were being spoken in the same breath as J net Cooke, and ABC News didn't like it. Indeed, the "20-20" report in question won t~levision's version of the Pulitzer. an Emmy Award. Anyway, ABC issued a nine-page rebuttal to \YBBM 's report and is planning a "20-20" rebuttal to be broadcast at least in the Chicago area, and possibly nationwide. 1 "We think we've been maligned.'' said ABC News Vice President David Burke. 1 WBBM producer Scott Craig says be rather welcomes a "David and Goliath battle," if that's what ABC wants. But he insists that the purpose of tlis "Watching the Watchdog" documentary was merely to ·•open up a dialogue among journalists about the techniques used by television in in- vestigative reporting, their use and abuse. "IF ALL of this means we've opened up that dialogue, I'm glad " ABC's Burke isn't interested in dialogue right now. "Their invitation to the clouds above Mount Olympus to discuss the finer points of television journalism,·' says Burke. '·is a bunch of bull. "It's easy for them to retreat now and say. 'Come, come, boys, let's talk about this in a pro- fessional way.' But we took a beating on this thing on thew ay lo the mountaintop · · ABC maintains that it will stick by its story and offers documentation of its allegations. WBBM points to the absence of an indictment. ABC asks, Since when is an indictment the test of a story's newsworthiness? Anyway, the "20·20"-WBBM brouhaha does bring into question. perhaps necessarily, some of the techniques employed in the TV-Eye game, both as applied by ABC to Roberts and by WBBM to ABC. Interestingly, WBBM producer Craig recently won an award for an investigative reporc on a Chicago day-care center. And which TV· Eye techni· que do you suppose was conspicuously employed in that award-winning report? Yes. The .. ambush interview." Buildings W1Saf e BAKERSFIELD IAP , -Ke rn County supervisors were told that 56 county-owned adobe buildings rail to meet earthquake standards and should be replaced Art Show Truckload UnlQue original glfta for Mother's Day Plont We 1------H_u_nt_1n_g_to_n_c_e_nt_e--1r Huntington Center 12 1u1h met ... , .. ,; ... 2sa _ C•fl 642-5178. Put • few word• lo work for ou. l4IWPOU HARBOR CRUISE • IUMDAY lmlMCN AT TMI CAll•Y 114 '11-7W to stay In llOt water 30-gallon water heeler with energy 11Ylng temperature 1hut-ott 114111 yes we do have bananas Ban•na loungN, that lat Mufti· poaltlon · cl'lalael of atrong vlnyl 1tr•pplng over 1teel frame. 711 AdJultable. Many color1. Reg. 14.95. frropane gu b1r~e fHturM heavy duty conatrucilon and high-domed lld. Tenk In- cluded. #9230. Reg. 393. 70. 26995 a grtll for the o~tdoor gourmet Propane burning barbecue with tank. Euy to clean at.alnleu atHI cooking grates. Durable construction. #9240. Reg. 457.75. 29995 let H flow, let It now, let H now counter 11ver to Ille rescue The Corning 10"xU" Sleek modern 1tyled faucet to counter Hv.Jr protect• your mount on deck or wall. 8" with count91'1 from 1corchlng awing action fauc•t for added 24'' tiot pot1, pt1n1 and plate•. tte1dblllty. From Price Pfl1ter. Your countere can't do "35·121. Reg. 36.95. Without It. R9g. 15.99. 1111 FA Aument sweet shop, 11111 top Ice cream table Ju1t Ilk• 1890'1 ltyled le. cr .. m t.bl... thl1 hand- Extra comfortable arm ch.ira with ltrap 1u1pen11on and 11rong aluminum framee. UM wlttl some aluminum hlble with 59111 gla11 top make1 a pic-turesque ~ng. Reg. 73.05 table abovt or for txtra 34111 ... ting Indoor• & out. 1100. R9g. 4-4.15. ~ a ray of 11111 Lightweight Sunbeam 1pray/ahot of 1team Iron. 19'' Sall-cleanlng. long-Ille cord. #10-36 Reg. 27 98 a great aides Redwood tub with drainage hol" 11 a grNt place to houM your growing trtend1. tPS·HT12. R9g. 7.99. 411