HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-03-18 - Orange Coast PilotSURVIVES STORM -A lone sailboat with its sails down and
under auxiliary power makes its way safely back into New-
port Harbor during the height of the stonn Wednesday. High
Cleanup crews busy
-.
-a s storm heads east
By J ERRY HERTENSTEIN
Of the Oeffr Piiot l taft
The tail end of an Alaskan-
originated storm that has pelted
the Orange Coast with two non-
stop days of rain and wind is
expected to move eastward early
Friday.
City and county cleanup crews
OTHER COVERAGE-Bl
were kept busy today cleaning
f
up from mud and rock slides in
hilly sections of Prange County
and from a wind storm in Costa
\ Mesa.
The forecast calls for scattered.·
, showers and thundershowers to-
• night and Friday morning with
the chances of rain decreasing to
30 percent tonight and 10 per-
cent Friday morning, according
to a spokeswoman f or th e
• National Weather Service.
Skies are expected to be partly
cloudy Friday and the weekend
forecast is for sunshine and tem-
peratures near 70 degrees in
Orange Coast cities.
Emergency crews patched
holes in roofs and windows of the
2000 block of Pacific Avenue
after what some described as a
mini-tornado swept through·
the block Tuesday. At least five
homes were damaged when the
wind blew down trees. ·
Cleanup was also under way at
Adams School in the Mesa Verde
section of Costa Mesa where
wind blew out glass and window
frames. downed one tree and
damaged others.
Flooding was reported in the
Wilson Street and Canyon Ave-
nue area of Costa Mesa this
morninll.
(See RAIN, Page A2)
Heated words mark
state Senate meet
SACRAMENTO (AP) -'A
critic of the Legislature who im-
plied ·that the members are a
bunch of crooks got paid back
with a threat to get his head
knocked off.
It happened Wednesday at a
hearing of the Senate Rules
Committee on a proposal to
clamp a lid on the Legislature's
internal budget.
The critic was Ralph Morrell, a
retired Navy warrant officer
from Dixon who irritated legi-
slators last year by campaigning
against "ghost voting" and vote
switching in the Assembly.
Morrell was testifying for
1 I SCA43 by Sen. Ollie Speraw, R-
Long Beach, to limit the annual
j increases in the budget from
which the Legislature pays .its
bills.
He complained that the mem-
bers had used state funds for
such items as gold rings, potato
salad, watches and television sets.
To that, committee member
Ray Johnson, R-Chico, raised his
voice and said, "You're saying
that we're all a bunch of crooks."
Morrell replied, "That's the
way it lookS."
To which Johnson, standing
and glaring, said: "If I was 20
yea.rs younger I would come over
there and knock our head off."
The measure would link the
~ budget to the cost of living, and
require itemization and auditing.
A committee analysis said that
would cut the proposal for the
next fiscal year from $99.2 mil-
lion to $82.7 million.
It died without a motion from
(See CRITIC, Page A!)
WORLD
Saudi Arabia fears growing Soviet influence in
neighboring North Yemen, and is sending millions 1in
aid as a counter. Pae A3.
NATION
R eagan 's business support· slips ....
President Reagan once enjoyed near-universal
support from business executives; but projected bud-
get deficits hav~ .caused many to question Reagano-
mics. Page 03. · r 1
Dali,t Fargo chronicled
Names In the news: A mW>eum featuring sunea-.
list palntinsa by artist Salvador Dall la featured on
Page B4 and singer Donna Fargo tellt how she a>J*
with MS on Page ClO.
--
1111111111 llllY-PIPEI
I >HAN< ,f ( (>U N I'( C AL If OR NIA 25 CENTS
O.ity Piiot Photot by RlctlllKI Koehi.t
winds and pounding rain off the Orange Coast made boating
hazardous as small-craft warnigs were issued from Point
Conception to the Mexican border.
UMBRELLA FOR TWO -An unidentified couple share·an
umbrella as they h uddle during ~ northward walk along
Fairview Road near Adams Avenue in Costa Mesa Wednes-
day._
Three people hurt
in Irvine· crash
Three persons were injured
this morning in a head-on colli-
sion on Irvine Center Drive
across from the entrance to Lion
Coun~ Safari.
That s the same stretch of road
on which there have been four
fatalities in three separate acci-
dents during the past seven
months.
STATE
Today's accident victims where
taken to Saddleback Community
Hospital, Laguna Hills. A report
on their condition wasn't imme-
diately available.
The accident created a traffic
jam back to Lake Forest Drive,
according to lrvine police.
S tate school da y shorter
A .study says the length of the California school
day is shorter than the national average, and some
legislators blame teachers' unions and fund cuts. Page
· A5.
Big-band leader rem inisces
Hank DeCoito of Modesto was a band leader In
the swing er!_..~d ~members it all. Page A 7. ,
COUNTY
Coast panel blasts drill plans
The state Coastal Commission has gone on recor~
agains~ propoeala to lease ·172 <lftshore tracts -11 off
Orange County -for oil drilling. Page Bl.
Newport Beach
home yields
• cocaine
More than $1 million worth of
nearly pure cocaine and $36,000
in cash has been seized from a
Spyglass Hill home in Newport
Beacp following the arrest of two
alleged drug ped~lers, narcotic
detectives report.
Officers said they recovered 10
pounds of cocaine from the 11
Monterey Circle home shortly
after arresting George Richard
Burgio, 30, and Dennis Larry
Ash, 35, on drug charges.
Police report Burgio, who they
said is on parole on a previous
drug conviction, lives at the
Spyglass Hill home and Ash is a
res id-en t of Mammoth Lakes.
Both are being held on $500,000
bail.
Two Huntington Beach wo-
men -Charyl Lynn Beatty, 25,
and Michele Dianne Higgins, 24
-also were arrested on drug
haul
charges when officers searched
the house. Both are being held in
lieu of $15,000 bail.
The drug bust reportedly star-
ted on a routine note when
Newport officer Doug Parmen-
tier spotted two men parked in
front of a Jamboree business.
Parmentier reported that the
men sped off in their car when
he approached them. He said he
chased their car, finally bringing
it to a stop in front of the New-
port police station. -'
Officers said they discovered
small quantities of heroin and
marijuana in the car and that one
of the men -Ash -was car-
rying a pistol and a large
switchblade knife.
Police said Newport narcotic
officers and federal Drug Enfor-
cement Administration agents
are still investigating the drug
seizure. ·
Large condo-OK'd
by council in Mesa
The iargest condominium pro-
ject ever planned in the city has
been approved by the Costa Mesa
City Council.
Developer C. Robert Langslet
plans to build the 1,155-unit
condominium development on 28
a cres of land owned by C.J .
Segerstrom and Sons and the
Coast Community College Di-
strict. ,f>
Plans for the complex near the
corner of Adams Avenue and
Harbor Boulevard call for 41
units per acre, with the size of
the condominiums ranging from
427 square feet to 1,520 square
feet for a two-bedroom unit.
The project was the first ap-
proved under the city's new Ur-
ban ResidentiaJ zoning designa-
tion, .which allows 30 to 50 units
per acre.
The project was approved
Monday by a vote of 4-1, with
Councilman Ed McFarland ob-
jecting to the density of the pro-
posed complex.
"The size is scary, to say the
least," McFarland said. "It's ba-
sically an unknown density as far
as this city's concerned and I'm
just not convi."'lced that this is the
place for this particular wning."
Critics of three and four-story
complex contended that it could
spark similar projects in the city.
Former Mayor Bob Wilson
warned that allowing such den-
sities would create traffic and
service problems that the city
won't-be able to cope with.
"I'm saying one thing very
definitel y . You are over-
building and you won't be able to
handle it," Wilson said.
But the majority of council
members and others supporting
the project contended it will
work and that it will help pro-
vide much-needed affordable
housing in the city.
''The only way to supply hou-
sing today is to raise the density,"
Councilman Hall said.
Hall and others said that the
project oould be the first step into
the housing market ·for many
young people and couples.
(See CONDOS, Page AZ)
Laguna moratorium
on time shares set
By STE VE MITCHELL
Of 1M Delly Piiot It.fl
Laguna Beach City Council
members have imposed a four-
nonth moratotium on time-share
conversions in ordet for the city
to study the impact of such pro-
jec•s on Laguna Beach.
The action came as a result of
several time-share projects ap-
proved by the council in recent
years, and the indication that
more hotel and motel operators
might be considering such a
change.
Operators of time-share facili-
ties "sell" time in a unit to
buyers, who purchase a grant
deed enabling them to spend a
certain amount of time -usually
one to two weeks per year -in a
time-share project.
.
INDEX
Mayor Sally Bellerue two
weeks ago raised questions as to
whether such conversions adver-
sely affect the city.
She said the city should hold
off on future conversion appro-
vals until the economic effects
are studied. and until the city tan
ascertain its ability to provide
visitor-serving faciliites on a
short-time basis for the town's
thousands of tourists.
"We really don't know where
we're going with time-share,"
the mayor said. ~Questions such as whether the
city can legally charge tim~share
operators a transient tax -or
bed tax -must be considered,
she said.
(See SHARE, Page A!)
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SPORTS
'\. .
China team oil coast
T he People's Republic of China national gym-
nastics team will atay in Cotta Mesa while preparing
for a competition against a U.S. tam.~ Cl. • • .. • ... t •
,.
1
SHARE MOR~TORIUM. • •
And a proUfera\lon of such
convendona rnlabt c:lrudcally re-
duce the numl>er of hotel and
motel rooms avallable to over·
night and weekend vtaiton.
Councilman Nell Fitzpatrick
echoed· the mayor'• ooncema.
"W t.'.re not op pose.cl to
t.lme-1haret," he Mid, pointing to
the Laguna Shores project aa an
example of a conversion which
seems to be working well in La-
guna Beach.
The counc:U recently approved
a conversion proposal by opera-
tors of the San Maarten Hotel,
and the Inn at Laguna la cur-
rently seeking tlme-ahare status.
"We need answers to
questions," Fitzpatrick said, sug-
gesting the city should find out
about who is to maintain such
pr~ts.·
Councilman Kelly Boyd said
there may be a need for such a
study, but added, "If this is just a
process to slow down develop-
ment, then I'm opposed."
Several out-of-town speakers
' with lnte~1t1 In future Ume-
1hare projlctl arauecl the u.nlta
do not deplete room.a for ahort·
time vtaiton.
They aald vacant time-share
un.lt.a are rented out on a regular
basia.
An~ tb~y aald the. project.a
enable people who otherwlae ·
could not afford to live near the·
beach, to own a piece of beach
property.
"lt'a the only chance some
people ever have to own land in
the area," uid one Loe Angeles
businessman.
He said hotel and motel rooms
-especially near the ocean -
now go for $100 a night, as op-
poeed to time-share units which
work out "in the low $30 range
per night."
But the council said it wanted
four months to study the impact
of such conversions before it will
approve any other projects.
They suggested operators of
the Inn at Laguna continue to
work their plans through the city
while the freeze is under way.
CRITIC CRITICIZED. • •
any of the five committee mem-
bers -two Republicans and
three Democrats -for a vote.
Morrell later apolo_gized to
Johnson and denied that he had
called him a crook.
In his testimony, Morrell said
Assemblywoman Carol liallett,
R-Atascadero, spent $38 for po-
tato salad, that Senate President
Pro Tern David Roberti, D-Los
Angeles, bought $1,900 worth. of
televisions, and that senators
purchased $570 gold rings.
Asked about the watch~~t
Morrell produced a copy of a oiu
to an Assembly aide for a $84
watch that Roberti said was ap-
parently a souvenir.
Sen . Barry Keene , D -
Mendocino, angrily demanded
that Morrell provide documenta-
tion for the rings, but he said
he'd left it at home. He said he
read about the rings in a L_os
Angeles area newspaper, the
Daily News.
The News reported in May
that the Senate purchased some
souvenir items, including $570
rings, to save a six-to 10-week
delay when senators or their
constituents wanted to buy sou-
venirs of the Capitol.
Jerry Zanelli, Rules Commit-
tee executive officer, said the
televisions are apparently those
-with recorders ....-purchased
for "members who want to play
different TV tapes for different
realOOS."
Morrell's campaign against
"ghost voting," the pushing of
absent members' voting buttons
by colleagues, and vote swit-
ching, by which members could
later change their ''ayes" to
"nays" on .the printe d record
without disturbing the outcome,
resulted in the Assembly's aboli-.
shing them.
CONDOS APPROVED. • •
The plan approved by the
council, calls for the project to be
built in two phases, with the se-
cond half built only if the first 581 sell.
RAIN ...
The weather was believed
responsible for several power
outages that left 21,000 Orange
County customers of Southern
California Edison Co. without
power at various times during
the night.
The price of the units will
rartlie from $61,050 for the
427-square-foot studio unit to'
$152,000 for the two-bedroom
units.
A ughtning strike knocked out
a transformer at Barranca Park-
way and Sand Canyon Road in
Irvine at 6 a.m. today and cut
power for 30 minutes to 1,300
customers in University Park, a
spokesman for the utility said.
New airport
plan'·
goes tQ· :judge
ace es •
..
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL °' ... ~ ......... For the aecond time in 1even
....-,.notttM;-e U.S. District Court
-judge will take center atage in
the lllUe of Crance County gov-
ernment'• attempt to develop an acceaa plan to regulate commer·
clal alrlines' use of John Wayne
Airport.
Admitting they h'-ve been
"agonizing'' over the complex ~ sue, county superviaon sent
Judge Terry Hatter a new pro-
posal Wednesday that would
allocate the 14,928 commercial jet
depaures permitted annually
among carriers now eerving the
airport and carriers on the out-
side wanttng1n.
• DMty Nit,..." •k'-" ........
RECOVERED -Charlene Wardrup of Newport Beach
examines her stolen silver, recovered by Newport police as
part of a $1 million seizure.
Judge Hatter became the cen-
tral figure in the lasue last Sep-
t~mber when, at the urging of
the U .S. Department of Justice
and Pacific Southwest Airlines,
he overturned the county's pre-
viously approved acces.. plan. State court post
for Judge Trotter
Orange·C!>unty Superior Court
Judge John K. Trotter Jr., once
believed to be a leading candi-
date for 'a position on the Cali-
fornia Supreme Court, has been
appointed to a seat on a state
appeals court.
Trotter's elevation to the 4th
DI.strict Court of Appeal by Gov_.
Edmund G . Brown Jr. comes
only three years after the gover-
nor first appointed the Santa
Ana resident to the Superior
Court bench in Orange County.
"I'm thrilled and rm hQDored,"
Trotter said Wednesday after-
noon, after receiving word from
the governor's office on his se-
lection.
The 4th District Court of Ap-
peal's jurisdiction covers legal
matten emal'l8ting from Orange,
San Bernardino, Riverside and
Saldana stabbing
suspect charged
BEVERLY HILLS (AP) -A
Scotti11h drifter charged with
stabbing actress Theresa Saldana
and trying to kill her had docu-
mented his affection fot her in
"pages and pages" of tiny, very
neat handwriting, authorities
say.
San Diego counties. The court
meets primarily in San Bernar-
dino. Trotter said he would con-
tinue to live in Orange County.
The former president of the
Orange County Bar Association
replaces former appeals court
justice Stephen K . Tamura, who
resigned in January. Tamura was
a former county counsel in'
Orange County.
Trotter said he would probably
serve out his 12 -year appeals
court term in Santa Ana if a
branch court is ultimately esta-
blished in Orange County.
The Legislature created four
appellate judgeships in Santa
Ana last yea r . However, a
Northern California judge de-
clared that enabling legislation
for the new judgeships was 'un-
constitutional, thus blocking
creation of the new appeals
court.
The state is attempting to re-
verse that ruling.
Trotter, an attorney in private
practice in ~anta Ana tor 14
years, was mentioned as a possi-
ble candidate for appointment to
the state Supreme Court early
last year.
For his new post, he must still
face confirmation hearings be-
fore the Commission on Judicial
Performance. He also must rec-
eive voter confirmation in the
November general election.
Attqrneys for the two parties
claimed the plan was unfairly
beneficial to AirCa1 and Republic
Airlines, the two gianta in the
Orange County market, and
conirary to tenets of the Airline
Deregulation Act of 1978.
AirCa1 has been authorized to
(ly an average of 23.5 flights per
day from Orange County; Repu-
blic, 11.5 flights and Frontier
Airlines, Pacific Southwest Air-
lines and Western Airlines, two
Hights each.
Under the plan approved by
supervisors following a brief pu-
blic hearing, the five carriers will
be forced to give up their existing
guaranteed allocations over a
two-year period. Guaranteed al-
locations would drop 10 percent
every three months.
If the plan is approved by
Hatter, AirCal's guaranteed allo-
cation on June 1 would drop to
an averagf! of 21.1 flights per
day; Republic's to 10.3, and allo-
cations for Frontier . PSA and
Western to 1.8.
The four departures thus gen-
e rated would be placed in a
"pool" for allocation to carriers
not now serving Orange County
on the condition they introduce
new and quieter jets, or use air-
craft making no more noise than
such jets.
For example, if two outside
carriers, Carrier A and Carrier B
wanted flights from Orange
County they would receive two
daily departures each.
In the event no outside carriers
express interest in expanding
operations to Orange County. the
four flights would be returned to
Ute five incumbenta on an equal
bull.
They, too, would be requited
to agree t.o fly only leu nolly
aircraft -a atlpulatlon that
would have advene effects on
We.tern Airlines, which II not in
the proce11 of converttna ill fleet
to the only quJeter jet now on the
market, the McDonnell-Doualu
DC-9 Super 80. The four ot'her
<:anien either have Super SO. in
their fleets or soon will obtain I
them.
F.ach ensuing quarter, the in-
cumbent carriers would be forced
to give up IMidltional incrementa
of their flight allocatlona. By
mid-1984 all 41 departwea would
be competitively allocated.
County officials have no way
of predicting w))ether the plan,
designed to both permit entry of
new carriers and reduce overall
noise,.will receive Hatter's ap-
proval.
They were pleased to learn,
however, that, with a few minor
exceptions, the plan II not dra-
wing opposition from the Federal
Aviation Admin1atration.
The plan was previewed by
the FAA in Washington D.C.
during a meeting between agen-
cy administrator J . Lynn Helms
and Bruce Nestande, county •
supervisors chairman.
During the public hearing,
Robert Clifford, AirCal presi-
dent, said supervisors' action
could adversely impact other
airport litigation now pending in
a federal appeals court. And
Clifford reminded supervisors,
"Any action you take, takes away
from us.''
Dennis O'Dell, representing
PSA. said the plan "still does not
comply with legal mandates."
PSA is seeking to fly eight
flights per day from Orange
County, six more than it now is
authorized.
A representative of another
new carrier, America West, also
clair:ned the new plan remains
overly beneficial to AirCal and
Republic. America West wants to
start service between Orange
County and Phoenix. Both Air-
Cal and Republic now serve that
route. ·
Guns stolen
LIVERMORE (AP ) -
Thieves have made off with a
cache or 23 rifles, shotguns and#
revolvers from an underground
fallout shelter built 20 years ago
by nucleat weapons scienli$ at
Lawrence Livermore
Laboratory.
Showers ilecr'easing Pirate TV decoders seized
Police raid nets multi-million haul in Anaheim
CotiAtal
Inland valley• will haye _h_l9h1
wound 55 1od8)'. ,_. eo FMay.
LOWS lo Iha 40a.
Snow anding In mountain• by anemoon. Snow laYll io..1nQ to 2,500 ..... Hlgtl8 today and Ffidly
In ""' 30I. loWI Ill Iha 20e. Partly doudy tonight arid Friday Local anow 91\owata anding In
"'11th probablllty of 1howau d•-northern cleaana, with partly clOlr
creulng to 30 percent tonight and dy 1klH afternoon and fl'rlday.
10 parcant Friday. Hight In 40a. with WMterty wtnct.
CoHtal high 80 Friday, over· 20-30 mph. Lowa In 301. High•.
night~ 44. Wat• 57.. "Friday In 501. Southern dHarl lnlend hlgf1 85 Fflday, ov.mlght high• 55 to 85 today, In tha 801
low 52. Friday. Lowa lo 40a. EIMWh«a, amall cratl a<tvllOf)' Tlluodenh0wat1 wlll ~ taparing
. .. C\ dr Cl
In aflact from Point Conception 10 oft toelay In Northam and Central
Iha Maiclcan border. Loul guaty Calif~nla, with • ,_ llngarlng In
wind• mOl11y aouth 10 1001h-I San Joaquin V•ll•Y and Sierra.
25 to 35 knot• In equallt. S-4 to Partly cloudy today, moetly lair 8 feet and choppy. Wlnda tonight tonight and Friday. A Httla warmer
with po11lbl• thundarehowere. In moet NCI.Iona by Friday. Snow ~ ------I•-•
Partly CIOudy tonight. level ,_ 1,500 leat.
V.S. summary Temperatures Tahoe Valley
ni.tmal
Torrence Snow moved llCION Iha or .. t CALWOflMA
Baaln and tha Rockl•• on Wad-ApPe v~ naad•Y and 1now waa acauerad Bekerefleld
trom northern Nevada to Mont-Baratow
Rapid City, S.D., CMl>ar, Wyo., BaalJmont
and 8roadua, Mont .. ell raportad 91g Baar
two-Inch anowtall1. Bllhop
That atonn allo proeluoad enow Blytha
In tha mountalna north ol Loe An-Cetallna galft In Southern Calltornla and Eureka
drenc:hed io-elevation• ol Iha FtWnO
reglorl with elmoat 2 lrlCllM of '*'· L.anc:aet• Uoht anow 11ngerec1 In tha nor-Lono 8Mch thern Plaine, whlla a cold front Lo. Angalea
apreadlng acro11 tha Northaaat Mlll)'lv!Oe
a110 produced llght 1now over Monr!Ma
'moat ol Haw Englend. Montebello
Thundaralonn• davalo~ over • Montarty
tha TenneMM Valley. I M1 ~ Tornadoea touched down In ,....._
HV•r•I commun111 .. ol a .. tarn ~ 8-ifl
KanM*'(. caualng llml1ad d4lmlge. Oaklend
Water continued rlalno at Fort Ont.no
Wa)ne, Ind., .,._. extended railn Palm ~
and melting -haa dftvwl "".. ,_ ~ ,._.. out of their bar*a. F1oodlrlg RlvWllda
In Ind'-. Ohio and aouthem Ml-Aed 1111ff
chlgan elnc• th• -akend hH , Aadwood City
CMIM<I lour death• and dam.ga s.cr-ito
Hllmatad at 134 mllllon. Warm ~
waathar and partly cloudy aklH aw. 9arnlrdlno
oovwad Iha Soutfl. ' Seit Gabrial
Tamparatur• wound Iha NdlOn I Seit Diego at midday WadnHd•Y ranged
1
Seit Fnindlco
from a low ol 2 t at Butta, Mont .. lO Seit ,,,_
ahlghol89at •OWlie..._ T-. ~Me
For toelay, anow WM for.ceat 8aMa ..,_8 frOftl Iha Great Belln to tha nor· s.nw ()ur
lh«n AOdllH and Into IN llOr• Senta tMf1a
tharn Plain•. R•Jn wu foreca•t I Seltta ~
through Iha South-•t 4MMr\a, Stockton the central RocklM. Iha central·~-••
..
Yume ... 37
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82 58
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40 37
82 5,
57 411
58 43 57 47
68 ... 53 '42
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54 48
82 52 50 42
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54 37
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53 43
52 40
54 47 58 48 eo 55 53 43 53 4,
58 ... 51 47
51 41 14 43
90 41
40
Albuqua
Aaha'<llla
Atlanta
At1an10 Cty
Baltlmor•
Blrmlnghm
Blamarck
BolN
Boaton • Buffalo
Charltta NC
Cl\arlatn WV
~ Cincinnati ~
Columbua
o.1-f't Wlh
Danvar
Dae Molnw
o.troll e Paao
Falrbenll1
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Halen• Honolulu
HOUiton
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NATION
38 22 New Or1Mn1
67 53 New York
80 48 Oki• Clty
73 48 Oman• Phlllldphla Phoenix
68 3 1 Pllt1burgh
76 41 Piiand, Me
72 ~ P11and, Ora 48 35 Rapid City
58 3S Reno
75 6f Rl<:hmond
34 3:? Salt Lake
50 2f Seattle
41 3f St Louis 1~ lj SI P-Tampe
811 801 ~~Extended
~ ;~ ~orecast 48 41J '
37 72
38 35
78 411
41 33
45 3e
71 52
48 38
46 34
63 35
48 32 44 28
82 42
SS 35
54 3i 55 .....
81 81
83 85 seturoay through Monday. Fair
80 29 and _,,_ OYaf !ha weekend but
40 3e braaiy In th• mounteln1. Cloud1 41 34 lnct .... 119 Monday. High tampar-
77 37 ~UrH In Iha COHl•I and valley 37 18 ... In IOw 80I to low 70a. Hlghl
3e 34 n th• mountain• 45 to 55. o.,,.,.
33 24 .nlgtlt Iowa 43 to 55 In tha ooutal 82 71 end ,,_,..,. ., .. , and 18 to 30 In eo 70..rha mountllna. 53 41
17 51 s 1a 41' nwg
eo ••·· " 85 85 Tiie Air Quality Management
N 60 Ola1ri01 Pr.dicta good air quality
11 84 lof ~In Iha 8ou1h Co.at -
" 78 bMln ltlrOUOh 'ii' . .41 2tt.. ~ AQMD aaa n9d PolluUon
31 30 <otlfldwd lndllll (P I) raunot Of 42
82 • e5ttor IA raglona.
Plalna, over the Gr•t lAll• Ind m'!!..-------------------moat ol tha~
Aided by private investigaton,
Anaheim police raided three
fi"1'ls allegedly involved in the
multimillion-dollar sale of pirate
pay-TV decoders Wednesday.
Police Lt. Larry Hutcheson
said officers seized 325 decoders
and components for hundreds
more during the raids at a small
electronics manufacturing firm,
an electronics supply wholesaler
and a large e lectronics retail
store.
One man, Kenneth Adair Ma-
thews, was arrested at the Ana-
heim manufacturing firm, Sol-
tronics Inc., and charged with il-
. legal sale of a TV decoder and
possession of fireanns.
Carl Seluer, president of Pro-
Action Security of Los Angeles,
which was hired by ON-TV to
track down illegal decoders, said
the devices were capable of un-
scrambling the ~ansmissions of
any pay-TV sel"Vlce.
ON-'tV Vice President Richard
Whitman has described the de-
coders as "a pirate problem of
immense ~tude.'
A total of -150 of the SIH8.lled
"black boxes" were confiscated at
Soltronics, Hutcheeon said.
Meantime. officers raided Or-
vacs. a large retail electronics
parts store in FUllerton, and aei-
_zed 175 assembled decoders that
were selling for $170 each.
At International Wholesalers,
an electronics supply firm in
Anaheim, officers confiscated
microwave equipment that offi-
cials said could be used t.o ille-
gally receive the Z channel, the
theatrical film service of Theta
Cable.
Introducing the Rolex Oysterquartz.
Because every minute counts.
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I .
----:-. . •
·Saudis see ·~. Yemen :drift t Owards Soviets
I ' • • •
SANA. North Y-.n (AP) -perceived threata, the Saudll they Jack llttle In the way of wm under oontnet to tbit Smadl Saudi bcxder, On J'eb. 18 North 'oomumer aooda 8CI"<* the border
Sad Arabia fl pumpm, mUJjona . have pumped at leut a half bil-equlpment, experte-here .. id. aovwammt. . Yernmf'a state.nm teleYWon de-from Saudi Arabia.
of dollan lnto Nonh Yemen. the lion do)lan into fiercely tribal The U.S . Cobgiela recently ap., North Yemen allo U. an "'1· voted U mi-nutea of Its Arabic "The Saudla could certainly
leut develoa>ed nation on the and capltalllt North Yemen In Pl'ODl'lated $11 m1Won ln mWtary . mated 800 Soviet T·GD tank.I, and En'-llah newacaata to the atop thi1 1mu1gUng if th~y
Arabian Penlnaula, 1n hopee of 'the put year, llCOOl'dlna to foret-~ti prtmarlly foe tra1n1ng of about 75 Soviet Ml0-21 Jet hospital a operun,, ahowtna do-wanted to. It'• a kind of lndirect
haltlna what it aees aa a drift ID diplomata in Sana wl.o ctid not penonntl. fl&bten and SU-22 bomben. zena of berobed vl1ltlng S-audl 1ub1ldy ," one of the Western
toward the 8oYtet Ui1lon want to be named. With a pro-But the Americana, who aome 11The Saudi money for U.S. lilanftaries without ever identl-diplomata uJ.d. ''The Saudi.a want
Offlda1 IOUftlel in Rlyedh. the jected '700 m1llioft deficit ln itl forelp d1Plomat1 here u.ld have anm pve both Saudi ArabU and • fylna them or mentioning Saudi the state to be strong enough to
:Saudi capital, bav:i.:g:ued curTellt $1.9 billion budaet. North ~ tOd clOllely ldentlti~ in the United States a bad name Arabia'• role in the hospital. stay non-leftist, and at the same
deep ooocsn over t Ali Yemen depends Cll\ more than ~ A group o t Yemen t men , time they don't want lt to be too
Abdullah Saleh'• vialt to Ma.cow foreip aid donon to _stay aQoat. gestured derlaively u they wat.-strong."
lalt October, hia Soviet....upplled North Yemen, about•the 117.e of "The Saudis could certainly stop. ched the newacaat at. coffee The northern tribal federa-
weeponry, hia lnabWty to cruah a North Dakota with a population ahop in Saad.ah. One remarked; tions can field about 30,000 men
oommunt.t-led guerrilla war 75 of about 6.2 million, lllCb oil and thl.S smuggling lif they wanted tO ,, "The Saudis are nothing but -u many u President Saleh's , miles from hla capital and bll virtually all other natural res-· • money." army. They are armed.with
renewal of unitication talb with ources. The Sovlela, on the other Sovtet-deaig_ned Kalashnikov
hia nelah bor, Marxist-ruled At the request of the Saud.ii in Yemeni eyes wlth the often-here.'' cla.lmed one Waatem dip-band are not viewed ln the same automatl~ rifiea; shoulder-fired
South Yemen, a major Soviet 1979, Prealdent Jimmy Carter resented Saudla, are trying to lomat. "Saudi aid here doee not way,' aince their aid ia strictly SAM-7 around-to-air mlasilea,
client in the Middle East. rushed about $400 million worth -keep a low profile. con1l1t of making them (the military and it ii not 10 evident u and anti-aircraft guna mounted ~Soviet UnJon already has of tanks, warplanes and artillery · Only six U .S . officers are in North Yemenla) more lndepen-to &~North Yemeni pride. on pickup trucks .
naval and air bases in South to North Yemen after its two-North ~~l4rulll...a..mUitacy ~bu& ra~-moN ~ntaaticwwwcesh1 Sma11add Ihe toreifri diplomata in sana
Yemen, at-the entrance tet the week bor der-war wittrStfutH: cooperation agreement in con-beCawte they can't aflonf to keep Sau i Arabia provides about said there as no indication the
Red Sea .• ~ Yemen. Saudi Arabia paid tile trast to more than 600 Soviet up these projects without more $300 million a yeer ln·direct aid northern tribes -long finanoed
Since it aha.res a 350-mile de-bill and the United States at.res-adviaen. A few other Amerjcana Saudi aid ln the future." to North Yemen -and funnebt by the Saudis but opposed to the
Jert border with Saudi Arabia on aed at the time that the shipment come and go on temporary trai-The Saudis are often l'e9ented an equal amount to the northern Sana government -have forged
the eouthwestem comer fbr the was made to pleaae its major oil ning programs, while the built of by the prideful North Yemenis tribes who have 1ucce11fully an alliance with the anti
penlnaula, a hostile, well-armed supplier. · training and maintenance for the becau.e of t.hia. retlated government encroach-government guerrillas in the
liforth Yemen could poee a major The injection of U.S. anna into U.S. M-60 tanka and F-5 fight.er An example ta the new Saudi-ment on their mountain• and south who belong to the South
threat to the oil-rich kingdom North Yemen's mostly Soviet-jets ia carried out by Nationallat funded Peace Hospital in the deterta where the chief occupa-Yemeni-backed National Demo-
and thus to U.S . interests. supplied araenal brought Saleh's Chinese from Taiwan and Pakis-northern city of Saadah near the lion is smuggling trucks and 1 cratic Front or NDF.
In an effort to counter these anned forces to the point where
State universities
boost standa-rds
By Tlae Alaoclated Presa
Financial pressures are
prompting • growing number of
state universities to stiffen ad-
milliona standards to hold down
enrollment.
At the same time, legiona of
bright applicants who in betler
economic times would have cho-
. sen prestigious but expensive
private achools are applying to
public colleges.
Becauae of the squeeze, many
financially presaed state univer-
sities con tend they are forced to
raise admi11ions standards as
well aa tuition. Some are de-
manding more high achoo! math,
foreign la ng uages and other
"basics" from ap licants. Others
·are setting hig~er minimum
grade-point standards for admis-
sion.
/\• a high school senior in
Golden Valley, Minn., Avram
Paradiae had good enough grades
and college entrance examinatioQ
9COres to be admitted to Brandeis
University, a vecy selective pri-
vate university ln Massacl1baetts.
Instead, he choee a public un-
iversity in his own state. A year
at Brandeis would have cost
$10,446. The University of Min-
ne90ta, where be ii now a fresh.
man, costs less than half: $4,860.
Average total annual costs at
four-year public uniyel"llities roee
14 percent this school year to
$3,873, and are expected to rile
even more rapidly ln September.
But they are 1Ull a barpln com-
pared with private colleges
whJch average $6,885 and often
ooet mucb more.
A IOOD-to-be-publi.abed study
found that in eight W.eatern
states, financially pr~ public
colleges were tightening admis-
sion• standards to curb enroll-
menta and booet the quality of
their entering freshmen.
Even at state universities
where admi11ions standards
aren't being raiaed intentionally,
the quality of entering freshmen
is drifting upward as highly ta-
lented high school seniors are
finding state schools a bargain
compared with $10,000-a-year
priva~ colieges.
The survey wu conducted by
the Western Intentate Commis-
sion for Higher Education.
TEST FUGBT -The new Army attack helicopter Apache
makes a test flight from the Pentagon in Washington with
A'~lo
Deputy Secretary of Defense Frank Carlucci aboard. T h t>
prototype is anned with 1.aser-guided anti-tank missiles.
..
REVIEW IN SINAI -American paratroopers
of the 82nd Airbome's battalion are reviewed
by their co.Dmander, Lt. Col William Garrison
of Fort Worth, Texas, left, and Lt. Gen. Fre-
derik Bull-Hansen of Norway, the commander
of the Multi-National Force and Oblfervera
(MFO). The battalion arrived Wednesday to
the Sinai Peninsula to begin peacekeeping
duties between Israel and F.gypt.
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
Thomas P. Haley
,._ -C-E1<ec .. 11.-.0lltee1
Robert N. Weed ...........
Thomes A. Morphine
ldW
L Kay Schultz _..._
• .,,, ciw.aor °' ~111ont
Mi<fhaet P, Harvey.
~°'-Kenneth N. Goddard Jr.
~Dlfector
Chartes H. Loos ......... ( .......
Cla11"i.d advet111l09 71 4Jl42·5e71
All ottMr department• M2~321
MAIN OFF1C£
DO Wm hy SI., C.W Nine. <lA. ~II NOrets: IOll U.O. C•t.e )!l'M• C4. ft6»
C9"rl9M 1'12 Orenge CNwt l"Ulllltltlftl ~. No....,. non.a. llhmretleftl, _....,..., m11t1nr _.
ltfft!Ml'Mfttl lllfeln "In lie l'--..C• .....,.
s,..clel rierm1..-Ofc.rtrltM-.
'roxic shock case
jury d eliberates
DENVER (AP) -A federal
jury deliberated foe a leClOnd day
Widneeday without reacblni a
verdkt in a $25 millJon lawsuit
filed by a teen-aaer who aay1
P r octer & Gamble Co.'• Rely
tamJ>Rn cauaed. her to contract
1mdC ihock syndrome.
A declllon in the lawsuit filed
by l~T;:-otd Deletba Dawn Lam of Littleton, Colo., w. apectld to lnflmnce men
than fOO 1lmllar 1uit1 agatnat
P&O IU1l aw.itlnc trial.
We're Listening.•.•·
Whal do )'otl Uke •~ tbe Dally PUot1 What don't you like? Call the ruamAr belo and, your m ... a1e will be recorded;
transcribed and dellver to the appropriate editor. .
The same 24·hour anawerin1 aervice may.,,be used to record let·
tera to the editor on any topic. Mailbox tontrlbuton muat lnclu4e
lhelr name and telephone number ror vertlicaUoft. No clrculaUon
calla, please.
Tell WI what'J on your rnind.
New von Bulow evidence told
Lawyer says socialite's wife m ay have injected insulin
PROVIDENCE, R.I . (AP) -
''Compelling evidence'' baa come
to light that Martha "Sunny"
von Bulow may have given her-
self the shot of insulin that
plunged, her lnto a hopea coma.
Claus von Bulow's lawyer said.
Meanw hile, the judf.e who
presided at von Bulow a nine-
week trial rejected a req\M!9t to
set a.aide the guilty verdicts re-
turned Tuesday on two counts of
attempted murder.
Von Bulow'• lawyer, Herald P .
Fahringer, said Wednesday, "A
person came forward who was
very cloee to Mrs. von Bulow and
has indicated that she knew and
bad some compelling evidence
that she'd been injecting heraelf
with insulin .••
r' .. .· •' -..
Fahringer, who argued during
the trial that Mrs. von Bulow
was responsible for her two
comas, the second of which is
lasting, did not elaborate on the
evidence or identify Jhe aou.rce of
the lnfonnation in an interview
on ABC-TV's "Good Morning
Alnerica.''
He said defense lawyers will
put the lnfonnation in an affida-
vit "ln our motion to set the
verdict aside." However, John F . Sheehan,
von Bulow's other lawyer, spea-
king after Judge Thomas H .
Needham rejected a defenae re-
quest ~~dgment of acquittal on W . y; said he was una-
ware of the new information.
A jury deliberated ;J6 hours .
over six days before deciding von
Bulow, 55, tried to kill his -Mfe
with insulin during Christma!>
visits to their Newport estate m
1979 and 1980.
Juror Winifred Shaw called
the decision "a heart-rending, a
heart-wringing thing," and told
the New York Post that the last
holdout -whom sbt! declined to
identify -broke into tea.rs when
agreeing to the guilty verdict.
"We gave Mr. von Bulow the
benefit of every doubt we could
think of, but there was nothing,"
the Post quoted her as saying
"We w e re very open -minded
But it still hurt to do what we
did, not because we believed in
his innocence, but because it w~
a hard thing to do."
~ C09lt DAILY. l'tLOT /TIMnday, Mlldt 11, 1~
U>0MJS (AP) -The tenten-
.._ of a Yubll Count)'~
ooevicted of llleaally lverUna
f\IDlll to hll church baa been de-
la,.cl after hla la~yer _claimed
the Judae WU preJU«Vced,"
When Wllliam Hetu Sr., putor
ol the Olivehum Goepel Amem-
bl:y Church, appeared fdr aent-
~ by Justice Court Judge
Robert You~, hla lawyer chat-..,_. Youngs imparda.Uty.
Young denied he waa prejudi-~. but aaid he would ask the
•te ,Judlcial Council to appoint
<U outalde judge to decide whe-
ther he should be disqualified.
and then declartns bu\kruptcy.
The cue wu held up ln fed·
era1 bankruptcy court. which or-
dered Youna not to sentence
Heits until the bankruptcy wu
eettled. l!arUer UU. ~eek. federal
bankruptcy Judge Loren Dahl
lifted the otder and aald Y ounc
could proceed with the aenten-
~t ~ hearing before Dahl,
Heitz'• lawyer contended that Young, who la aieeklng el~ to
a new Municl.pal Court which
will replace hla Juatlce Court,
waa politically motivated in tee--
king to aentence Heitz. •
Youna countered that the
lawyer wu on a committee fqr
the election of one of his oppo-
netltl.
Maimed ·
• • VlCl1m
t~ appeal.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -An
18·year'-<>ld woman, whoee fore·
anns were hacked off by a rapllt
who picked her up while she ~aa
'hitchhiking through Northem
California, lan't eligible for com-
penaation througn California's
crime victims Indemnity fund,
her attorney said.
Attorney Mark F.dwards said
h e will appeal the decision
against his client, Mary Vincent
of Las Vegas.
Beitz was coqvicte<I nearly a
ye9r aao by a jury of miademea-
nor charges of diverting an air-
pbne, boat, aeveral automobiles
. and 101De $20,000 cash from his
neon sign business JO the church,
That exchange was the basis
for the claim that Young was
prejudiced.
~EW HONOR? -Congress
is considering a bill that
would rename the Veterans
hospital in Sepulveda after
comedian Bob Hope. It would
be called the Bob Hope VA
Medical Cent.er.
Ms, Vincent was a 15-year'-Old
runaway hitchhiking from San
Francisco tn 1978 when a mer-
chant seaman who gave her ta
rlde attacked her in Stanislaua
County, chqpped off her fore-
wrth an ax and left her for
dead under a bridge.
.·
6-MONTH Af:COUNT
Elfectiv~ through Mar. 22.
ANNUAL
.RAT£
ANNUALIZED
YlElO
Minimum $10,000. Earns above rate for
26-wk. term. Yield assumes all funds
are reinvested at same rate, though rate
may change. Compounding of interest
not permitted. R~te announced weekJy.
'
30-MONfH ACCOUNT
Effective through Mar. 1.9.
ANNUAL
RArE
ANNUAL
YIELD
Minimum $1,000. Earns above ~te for 30-
month term. Interest compounded daily.
Rat! announced every two weeks.
By Federal law, Certificate withdrawals
1 are subject to substantial penalty.
The fund's Board of Control
~ed that she wasn't eligible for
up to $10,000 compensation for
lost wages because she has no
history of employment.
For the same reason, the board
denied her claim for up to $3,000
for job rehabilitatlqn, Edwards
said. Furthermore, she cannot
receive up to $1 0,000 for medical
expenses because private insu-
rance paid for her treatment and
artificial arms she wears.
Edwar<fs suggested the board
"felt bad" about its ruling but
members "are probably hoping
that we'll take it to the state
Court of Appeal -which we
intend to do."
An appeal might force revision
of the VictimS of Violent Crimes Act which establishea the fund,
he added.
Ms. Vincent, who retumed to
her parents' Las Vegas home
following the incident and still
lives there, graduated from high
school last June. She said she
plans to attend art school and has
taken up bQwling.
Savinp insured to $100,000.
He r attacker, 51-year-old
Lawrence Singleton. was convic-
ted in San Diego Superior Court
and sentenced in 1979 to 14 years
and four months in prison.
..
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4
DEAR PAT DUNN: l'Ve lleard 1"1 a 'ood Jdea to aae a crecllt eanl for aato meclaanlc bllb. Wlay Doea Wt off er
some khad of protection ID cue a bad Job was d•e!
L.G., Hudqtoa Beacll
According to federal law, if you have a pl'Qblem with
gooda or servioee P,W'Chued with your credit card, you have
the same legal rilbta ~ the credit card iasuer aa you
have against the auto mechanic. !n other words, becauae
you have the right to withhold paymentlfrom the auto
mechanic for sloppy or incorrect repairs you also have the·
right .to refuse tQ pay the credit-card company for the
disputed repair charge. . .
In order to uae this right, ~ must first try to work
things out with the mechanic. , ~ the card issuer
owns or operates the repair shop, the[Shop must be in your
homes~ 100 miles of yourcurtent adC!feiS an
the C06t of repairs must be more. than $50. You can hold on
to your money until the disput.e is settled or resolved in
co~. .
The credit-card company can't make you pay jnt.erest
or other penalty charges on the amount you are withhol-
ding until that time. "
Be sure to inform the mechanic and the credit-card
company why you are taking this action, stat.e details ofthe
transaction and send this notice· by certified mail with a
return receipt requested.
·Tax credits I or child cJ~e
DEAR PAT DUNN: Is tbere a deduction for people
wbo bave to pay someone to care for tbeir cbll~ren wbile
tbe parents are working?
K.T., Costa Mesa
The Int.ernal Revenue Service says there is no deduc-
·tion, but there is a credit. The Child Care Credit for 19Bl is .
the same as it was for 1980. The current credit is 20 percent
of the amount that you pay for someone to care fo,r your
child while yqu work.
Starting in 1982; the credit is increased for low-income
families and there is also a new provision 'hat applies to
parents whose child:.car~ expenses are paid by employers.
To claim the credit, Form 2441, Credit for Child and De-
pendent Care Expenses, should be completed and attached
to your tax return.
•
"Got a problem? Then write to Pat Dunn. Pat will
cut red tape, getting the answers and action you • l need to solve inequities in government and business.
Mail your questions to Pa.t-Dunn, At Your Service,
•
Orange Coast Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa
Meta, CA 92626. As many letters as possible will be
answered, but phoned Inquiries or letters not including the rea-
der's lull name, address and business hours' phone number can-
not be considered. This column appears daily except Sundays.''
FLY
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Buena Park, Ca 90621
-l I
'
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'
...
. ..
.. uw ... , ....
PARADE RIDE -Chicago Mayor Jane M. Byrne waves
to crowd at St. Patrick's Day parade from atop a horse-
drawn wagon which she shared with her husband Jay
McMullen. The Dalmatian went along for the ride.
Liz Taylor to be grandmother again
Ellubet~ Taylor will be-
come a grandmother for the
third time at the end of the
year, she announced.
The 50-year-old Miss Tay-
lor said throu~h her press
agents, Chem Sam Associates,
Pat 'Nixon got a great big
TV for her 70th birthday.
The wife of former presi-
dent Richard Nixon celebra-
ted her birthday at a private
party in Berwyn, Pa. at the
home of her son-in-law and
daughter.
A spokesman at the home
of David and Julie Eisenho-
wer said that, along with the
The Portland Ma i ne
International Jetport has
been renamed for former
Secretary or State Edmund
Mulde, but an intended nice
gesture almost didn't survive
a protest.
'"We tried to do something
nice, but it backfired," City
Councilor Linda Abromson
. -
....
that her daughter Maria
Barton telephoned h er in
London to share the news.
Miss Burton, a model,
married Steve Caraon, a
28-year-old talent agent, in
February 1981 .
traditional cake, there was a
special present from the
whole family waiting at the
Nixons' home at Saddle Ri-
ver, N.J.
While the Nixons were in
this suburb about 30 miles
west of Philadelphia, a large-
screen television was installed
at their home, said the spo-
kesman.
said. ''It was very important
that this be handled with the
djgnity that he (Muskie)
deserves. I truly regret that
didn't happen."
The idea to rename the
airport for Muskie was the
brainchild of former
Portland mayor and city
councilor, Harold Loring.
'
' '
. ' ..
M•mMra of tb• Oeor~ HDU.Rulll~-..
bitwUd.red When thef llW a
blU on their calendar «\titled,
UOmneuaci,,...~
AWotor JUdee. Sal.."
Tn•y aeked Oe.ra• T. ••er· former bead of the -1ta Game and J'l1h Com· ,....., to explain.
With ton1ue In cheek,
Ba1by aald the rlde1 ln the
Okefenokee Swamp In . IOUtheMt ~ Would COit
10 centa, but would be free
11 to tho1e w h o made lt" tb.rouah the fint trip. s.,tty,
lb aScie to~~ Spea'ker Tom M.r•llJ, aald
the rldea would be for
"Re bllcam only." ~en order wu re1tored,
the committee memben were
told that the title of the bU1
had been milprlnted. It
1hould have referred to
"allilator hides."
Flrat lady Na11cy Rea1u
· exctran1ed gifts and giggle1
with Elater Seal child Mary
Sacco, kicking off a fund-
raialng drive d~ to fill
the gap created by President
Reagan's cuts io aid to the
handicapped.
1t IroniCally, 8-year-old Mary
will be among the victims of
administration budget cuts,
Easter Seal officials say.
The first-grader, who at-
tends a special education
program at the Glover Ele-
mentary School in Milton,
Mass., gave Mrs. Reagan a
stained glass picture made by
handicapped children at the
school. The first lady gave
Mary a basket of tlowen, a
pink bunny and a jar of jelly
beans.
When President Rea1an
welcomed President Mo~a
med Siad Barre of Somalia to
the White House, he held to
policy of refusing to aruiwer
reporters' question• while
posing for pictures with a
visiting foreign leader.
But when he was told that
the day was the birthday of
Sam Donaldson, an ABC
News White House corre-
spondent, he couldn't resist a
comment.
Was Donaldson"30 years
old, he asked.
No, 38, came the reply,
shaving 10 years from the
reporter's true age.
Reagan pauaed briefly and
told Donaldson: "Next year,
you'll be a man."
...
OrM91 C0Mt DAILY PILOT /Thurld~. MarOh 1& 108a -"'"--~-----
Blame leve/e~ at:.lfllcher~' unions, fund cuts ii '
SACRAMl:NT.0;.iCAP). • ~ra aald Konnyu had 1up-outalde CaUfornJa avetapd 49
1ludy .. Y• CalUandl:tlilllliti &ax-cuttlnl lnltlative1, ~ mtnutea o>Ol1' lnltructlon per day')J
1pend 1 ... time 1Jl Wial' tllaD • ..Wl WM lal money for~ tban thOM lQ CalJfornla ln the Wlb
8'udentl ellewheN, ~..... , • flnt three gr~des, and 31 more ~~
bllcan le1la1ator Mfl.Jlie Republican M~ Ber1eeon mlnutea ln the other nine gradea . .bciul
cherl' ummw are to bllllll& t;•wport Beach aa1d acla,ool Konnyu said the 1tudy alao r.rta.l ~ Erlll9t ~ 1 can't be le~gtbened tut>-ahowed that by the lime an •ve-t ~
R..s.ratop. arfUed in~-U.Uy without more money. raae 1tudent elsewhere reaches (VI
f~ ~of a~~ at But William Leonard, R-San the Thanksgiving vacation in dJ >o lenlt.hen1nl the CalifClnda am Bernardino, aaid the Democrats 11th grade, he or ahe has spent 89 ) '(ld
day to the national .,......... are to blame for putting welfare much time in echool aa an ave-ti?o•
Konnyu said the California ahead of achoola. . r~ge Californian who haa ti-!ldo8
Teachen A.9:>dation ''barllUned Leo°"11 1uggested that Kon-ruahed 12th grade. ~
down the length of Calllomla nyu alm his measure at 1tate "We are d en ying California >'I
•cbool day1 way below the Superintendent Wllaoh Rlle1 achoo! children 1 ~ yea.rs' worth fw.>
national averap." • lnlteed of local achoola. Konnyu of education," he said. ~-
But teachers' repreteptativee a,reed, and asked for another Anton said the study repre-JO oa
Mid a lhori.ge ot echool funds ii heartna later. sen ts only a sample, and more "19dl
t.o blame. The 1tudy, of 322 school dl-•information is needed. >H
Konnyu'1 ACR8? h~t oppoai· 1tricta ~tionwide, wu conducted But Konnyu said the figures US'(
tion from both partle. In the by Tod Anton, superintendent of show the results of CTA efforta , i.on
Assembly educational reform Lincoln Unified School District in collective bargaining to reduce ICl&lq
subcommittee. I.rt Stockton. class days while not cutting tea-tw.
Democrat Gary Hart of Santa • It found that school districts chers' ~· oosa
Our furniture edacular -
ends March 30
A most u11trad1tio11al collection
of traditional furn iture
fro m. NCHOLS ~ STOt£.
Save
20%
during
t his
SAL E
2215 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA• 646~0275
Robinsons ··
THE DESIGNER:
STUART WEITZMAN.
AND THE NEWS?
TWEEDED SNAKE.
. . ~
It 1sn 't enOUQh that he creatfd a graceful
silhoµette and ttnn fe.,rnin1ne enough to suit day
or evening. He did it ln<tWffded celery, black or
beige whiPSll&k~1or absolute lu•\lrt I The qpen
toe pump. )Udt °"8 froni our 9ktJnctve designer
\,...Collection of ntw Cll&Siel to be9\.ltlful as to be ~lled art, 112'. ~son's Dellgner Shoes, 158,
Newport Onlj To Qfdef. 'Call tOll·free
1-IOO-MM501
..,,
• 1
-I
,
..
MSW YORK (AP) -Man and man men and •WOGW\--.. ~ to admit that &bey .... limply
not ~ lntllwtllMI tn Mx. two .. tbiradlta -~· '!'bit dwaplnt. who pw tn1el'Ylewl aunn. the
annual mM!tnc at the Ainertcan AllodaUon o£8ex
llducatan. CoUn..ion and TherapMU. Mkl they do
not think that thil dUdntenllt .. a IJOWinl problem.
It .... rather that more people an WtWna to
edmlt lt now, .aid Shirley Zumnan. pnlktent of
the MIOdadon and a pnctidng eex therapist ln New
York. }.. _ A ~ why p!Ople are more wi1llnc to admit
their lack of lnte19t, she aald, OQUld be tKat ''the
macho Unale 11 not belna ctven u much reverence
.. ln the pMt, and tnucn of that tmaae 11 one of
always belna intereeted ln 1ex. 1'
ML Z._,-n and Ralph l'Al'Je., a .. ycboJn8jli
and lex therapist from-Scottldale. ~. aald thaLln
recent yean liientiata have bealale C91'~ t,bat
dlalntereat la perhaJ>8 the m09t contmon aexual
probleal 1n men and W'Omen ln the UQlt!d Stata
At a ~ oonftirence, four eexual t.Mnpm
from around the country aa1d that their role baa
been ~trued by the public, which amociatee
eex thera with sexual pei-m.isl(ve1'l9".
" ytewpoint bu been aUy Ctiato~,"
said • Reeearch and F.ducation at SyracUae University ln
Syracuae, N.Y. l· "We're being presented as a group without
values," Gordon said. but the truth is "we're pre-
occupied with the morAl dimension."
.
EPUBLIC
I '
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•
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We serve over 170 cities, coast to coast and border to
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...
from Burbank
HOUSTON (Hobby)
MINNEAPOLIS/ST. PAUL
TUCSO~
TWIN FALLS
,.
From Los Angeles lntematlonal
EUGENE Nonstop
SPOKANE Nonstop
TUCSON Nonstop
PALM SPRINGS Nonstop
From Ontario, Callfomla
ea1er to do hard phyitcal
work, he not.cl, but the arand· .,.. ot cne man involved lD the
projlet lut year became enlhu·
Md about lt.
"Once they &et the hana of It,
... 'the benefit, make a little
money ..• then they get Jn~ .• •• w~ laid. 'J'he !dee to 1e& N8idenw arow
ve1etablea on vacant Iota came
from bullnimman Bob Saltzman
and Den Johna, local Ownber of
Commerce aecretary •
''They called on me to put ln
my expertt.e becaute they had
watched my garden arow,"
Waahlnai<>n .,id. "I ended up
~ the coordinator."
Wilhtncton. 64, aa1d he advt..
'IV bikinia t@bo<!_
'1 'l9 One-Woy
'278 Round-Trip
'49 One-Woy
'222 Round-Trip
'128 One-Woy
'282 Round-Trip
•49 One-Woy
'95 Round-Trip
LAS VEGAS Nonstop '39 On&-Woy
PHOENIXNonstop '42 One-Woy
KANSAS CITY , '225 Round-Trip
from Orange County (John Wayne)
DENVER '261 Round-irip
LAS VEGAS Nonstop '40 One-Woy
PHOENIX Nonstop '42 One-Woy
SALT LAKE CITY Nonstop '97 One-Way
Fores ore subject to change ond conditions may include odvonce purchase, specific
days of travel ond length of stoy requiremenl$. Discount seats may be limited.
For details and reservations, coll a travel agent or Republic,
Los Angeles (213) n2-5100, Burbank (213) 247-8333,
Orange County/Santa Ano/ Anaheim (714) 540-2060,
iiiii~~~O~ntorlo/Riverside (714) 988-8585.
Suit over
dogs won
by couple
ANNAPOLIS, Md.
(AP) -A couple terri-
fied by their neighbor's
three watchdogs have
received a jury award of
$56,200 -but what
they're really happy
about is the judge's in-
junction ordering that
the dogs be loc ked up
during the day.
"My main interest was
in protecting ourselves
from the dogs, from fu-
ture harassment," Henry
Beville said. "That's
what I'm happiest about
-the injunction. The
money ..yas incidental. I
didn't even give it a
thought."
~ville and his wife,
Loyce, said they were so
terrified by their neigh-
bor's two Doberman
pinschers and Labrador
retriever that they took
rocks and Mace with
them when they went
out to get the mail
In testimony during
the trial, the Bevilles
said the watchdogs pre-
ven ted them from wal-
king past the defendants'
12-acre estate to mail-
boxes on a right-of-way
shared by area property
owners.
"The re were many
near-bites," Mrs. Beville
testified in Anne Arun-
del Count Circuit C.ourt.
"It has Ieli me a nervous
wreck."
Their attorney argued
they suffer ed injury
from "fright without
impact.''
Mrs. Beville said her
fear of the dogs promp-
ted her to carry Mace, a
brand of tear gas, rocks
or a stick when she left
her house.
•
The couple said they
also resorted to carrying
a 6-foot pole with a spike
in the end to ward off
possible anacks.
The defendants, Mor-
ton and Pamela Lapides,1
argued the cue should
be thrown out because
there was no evidence
the Bevilles suffered any
serious physical injury.
But Judge James L .
Wray ruled the re waa
enough evidence to show
the Bevillea were upset
by the animals. ,
"They bark, but we
want them to bark," said
Lapides. "That's why we
have them. They let us
know when someone
comes on the property."
The Lapides said they
let theii' dop run free on
their estate near Anna-•
polis as a deterrent to
people who frequent. the
iaolated residential area,
whic h has become a
"lovers' lane."
An lnjunc:tion WU al8o
ordered prohibiting the
Lapides from allow~
their dogs to run free
from sunr18e to IUIWet.
. Spring ~
F~~:i .. ~ l
Spring coOections
pc:esented by Dotothy
Shreve Modeling Studio
Ff'i. at 7130, Sot. & Sun.
ot 1 & 3, MOI. 19 -21 .
111&!00 -ae.u.
Parton. 1 l1ter of ~~ti·
ftMewr Y~thl:
w•k promottna ber
MW l'4ioard. ttJ91f"lllla
Yo-.." Stella l8 four
~ youn~er than
I
Pric•s Ehctiw lhru Tu.sday, MaKh 30, 1981 :-wa...,........,,..,_,.,..ror-7'" _ _...~~m-~~~--~
COMPARE AND FIND OUT ~O:.~·#.:r•~i
WHY STANDARD BRANDS I-'~
IS ALWAYS AHEAD IN •
FACTORY DIRECT PAINT
INTERIOR
FLAT WALL PAINT or
SEMI-GLOSS ENAMEL
_COVER KOTE® L8TEX
Aat latex point Is Interior I exterl0<.
Semi-gloss eoomel for lnterlO< UH.
In white ond elf-white. Seml-9IOSS
Is olsd oYOI~ In beige.
'
CARPET REMNANTS
SCULPTURED PLUSH PILE
BROWN/BEIGE, MUL Tl~COLOA
or AUST /BEIGE
JUTE BACKED
CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON
. 6' x 6'
Comp. 35 95 Aetall •
6' x 9'
Comp. 53 95 Aetall •
12' x 9'
~~,· 106.95 Each
12' x 12'·
~~i 142.95
12' x 15'
~~~i 178.95 Each
Big. room size remnants from first quality notional manufact-
urer's groups ore perfect for any room In your house. Also
great for mobile homes. vans and as area rugs. Sizes other
than those listed above ore also available.
EVER¥ ITEM SOLD CARRIES STANDARD BRANDS UNCONDITIONAL
OUTSTANDING VALUES BRAND NAME QUALITY
Comp
Aetall
23( Each
CERAMIC TILE
4-1 I 4,. WHITE
•WS. 1 Anlsh that bathroom and
toke It easv on yoVf bUdget. too.
Comp.
Aetoll
15(
ELECTRIC
I AIRLESS
POWER
PAINTER
O.ts big jobs done fast De-
signed for high quolltv mater-
ials forduroblllty and continu-
ed us.. Spray l~ex points.
oils. stains ond VO<nishes.
Cover lorge SUtfoce oreos fast
Mokes one person o whole
pointing crew. •W280
· riiion ~ Or~
11561 ........ Awy. 16IO .... TUllln <• .... """"") <•·--"' Toft ....... ) (
I (114) 4f5.1JIJ '(714),9fl.U01
•
I
0
..
I ".Rete~enduiii
.;::have negative t;ffect
1 41:.• F~r the eecond time In alx It aps)ean the councU majo-:ti•: montha. Newport 8"ch iwidenta rtty went a lon1 way In payln1
I are aeeklna to overturn a major attention to the retldenta' c:oftCern
1 ·development proje(1t through a at¥>ut traffic and permitted UMe
. voter referendum. on the 76-acre parc:el. . r
T h e lateat puah 11 aimed at But it apparently wun't en-
the 75-acre Banning Ranch pro· ough to satisfy aome of the Weet
," Ject, which waa approved laat NOWPC>rt rsidenta. 14n ~rlda by the Newport City Billing themaelvea a1 the l~ • _, Newport Legislative Alliance,
;a '!t e development site, now they have decided to copy laat
9 covered with ahrubs and oil wella. year'1 referendum drive againat
.,t.ll located inland of Pacific Coast the Irvine Company's Newport
Hipway and west ot Superior Center expansion project. That
:J~ Avenue. It bump1 up ~ the drive was one major factor leading
~CosW Mea..dty_limits~ to council repeal of the project
1 '• The council voted to let de· approval. velo~r Hancock "Bill" Banning We a r e disappointed to see build S79 homes and a maximum this propoeed course of action. A
-:of 400,000 equare feet of office and "my way or else" approach t o
industrial space. community affairs says that the
, , The allowed d evelopment old-fashioned values of reasoning
was both Jess than what Banning together, compromise and give
,.. had asked for and more than a nd take considered essential for
'-,residents of West Newport want-good ongoing community
ed. functioning are not t~t meaning-
The council also increased the ful any more.
amount of road construction Ban-The proposed referendum is a
ning must complete as a condition negative approach which seems
to the project and agreed the city likely to breed more divisiveness.
I
-will explore purchasing ~k land Newport Beach should not
to answer West Newport s request follow a course of being a h ouse
for a park. divided against itself. ir
li Local voice needed
IJ , The developer of a proposed 38-acre. mud dump, was chosen
trash incinerating power plant in because it is close to Southern I Huntington Beach says he may California :EdisQn and the county's
I ask state energy commissioners.to trash transfer station anq its
approve his project, thereby sewage processing plant.
r. Temoving control from the City Ryan says his plant would use
Council. the trash and rubbish and sell I It appears, at this point, that's electricity to nearby F.ciison. Ryan
1 the only way the controversial says the Huntington Beach site is
project would be approved, be-the best in the county, but· he also
cause it is facing strong opposition says he wants to work with local
from local residents and at least officials.
five of the seven City Council The mud dump site is located
· members. across the road from a school, a
But with so much commuµity park, and a housing tract. Resi-
opposition and alternative loca-dents say they fear air pollution
tions available for the proPQsed and contend that numerous trash
plant. it would be unfortunate if deliveries to the proposed plant
the Energy Commission exercised are inappropriate for a residential
i ta power and overruled local area.
control on this issue. The controversy makes it im-
1 Developer Dan Ryan of portant that any state hearings
I• Newport Beach says his proposed and discussion on the proposal
i trash and sewage sludge incine-should be carried on at the local
' rator at Magnolia Street and level for the,benefit of city resi-
• Hamilton Avenue w ould be an dents, rather than at Sacramento.
· efficient way to -dispose of two-The proposed plant is large
· thirds of the county's trash and to enough to merit constderation by
generate electricity for 250,000 the st.ate Energy Comlnission, but
homes. . it would be best if local officials
He says the proposed site, a had authority over the plan.
: Beach park under way
' I State park commissioners For the most part, the various
have approved a multi-million special interest groups dedicated to
dollar development plan for newly preserving the expansive Irvine
created Crystal Cove State Park. Coast area appear satisfied by the
The tbree-ph.ue plan.includes park plan.
the creation of biking and eque-In fact, the major complainta
. strian trails, campsites and more were directed at the Irvine Com-
' than 1,800 parking spots off Paci-pany which is developing sur-
, fie Coast Highway. rounding acreage with estate-type
· • Work is expecte(i to begin homes, offices and hotels. Some
,next November with most of the feel the company project will do
. ~early effort to be directed at car-Jittle-1Q comj>lement the state
ving out parking lots and access park.
_paths to the park's more than While we can understand
' three miles of beach. Development their, concern. one must remember
of the park is expected to extend that there was a time when the j until the end of the century. entire Irvine Coast was slated for
: The state park is situated development. Much has been
i .midway between Corona del Mar gained and the Irvine Company
I and~ Beach and also takes 1ias contributed much. ln canyons, ridges and creeks on The state's development plans
;.the inland side of Pacific Coast seem good. It is right that :i! ! ~way. . ·spots be provided early i
' • Moat of th e park land was work project. Parking last e r
•a>urchued from the Irvine Com-was chaotic when the state's new
••'PUY for $32 million tn 1979. beach property was first open ed.
t! State offidala estimate that on Now we all will hope that the
• ~days, the park may attract up money sou.roe for all thete needed
, to 15,000 daily guests and at· other improvements doesn 't dry up
Umea average half ~t figure. down the road. t ~ -• • --·-..: .. • • '
' Opinions expressed In the s~ above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views -.x· ~ fprentd on tnis o.ge are those ot the tr a14thors clt\d art 1sts. Rea~r comment ~s 1nv1t ·
•;ed. Address The Oa•IV Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa MeS;il. '" 92626. Phone·<TU>
·16'2·•321. .. ·----........ ,,..------..---------""'"'--------.... ---------------:
.M. Boydl_Left-handed
Q. ID the 1930s, 10 percent of the
opulatlon waa reported to be
-banded. Now, 12 perce°' ii. Why
bit difference?
A. 'l'boie who analyse such matten
•J both parents and teachers
to9ped tryin1 to convert
eft·banden to rl1ht·handera dul't.q
e luUO years.
ORANGE COAST 'llitl Piiat
1 gather the lady dido 'l much like
the questlon! ~·How old are you?"
She replied: "I'm 15 -Celaiua."
What d9 you think of the Mona
Llaa? •The Soviet Union'• Leonld
Brelhnev dellvered tb1I Judament:
"She'• • plain aenslble-lookinl
woman."
,
New twist ill lawsuit • mania
WASHINGTON -Americana have
• become increaaingly lawsuit-happy ln
recent years. The courts, already over-burdened=y le 11mate lepl actk>nl, are
being ~ by nuiaance IUita that
have no oo the docket. ~an investigative reporter, rve had
my share of legal threata from corpora-
tions and individuals whoee particular ox
rve gored. 'nley rarely get beyond the
grumbling stage.
Now fve diac:overed a new wrinkle ln
the litigiousne91 that ia 'sweepina the
country -the lawsuit instigated behind
the scenes by a third party with an
interest in the outcome.
SWORN STATEMENTS filed in con-
nection with a recent lawsuit against
·ABC News show that the legal action was
prompted by the nation's largest seller of
cancer insurance, which had been criti-
cized on a televiaion series by the de-
fendants. Yet the company, American
Family Life Assurance, of Columbus,
Ga., was never a party to the lawsuit. ·
The plaintiff was a Virginia insurance
agent wh06e questionable sale. pitch was
clandestinely filme(i and was then shown
briefly on the nationall~ broadcast news
program in November 1978. It waa part of
a aeries on the House Agina Committee's
probe of so-called Medigap insurance
policies, which auppoeedly ·plug the gaps
ln Medicare coverage. The investigation,
incidentally, led to corrective legislation
by Congrea.
The agent's sworn depositions, and
conversations with her, make clear that
she didn't file the suit after suffering
Q
-Jl-Cl-Al-1-111_1_1 -~
financial hann viewing the TV show
herseU or evert-being told about it by
friends. In fact, she said in a deposition, "I
had no idea that such a thing had ever
been aired." And she told my asaocia~
Tony Capaccio that "people came up to
me after the show and talked about it, but
no one 8890dated it with me."
Yet the agent. sued ABC and the House
investiJatora for violating her civil rights.
How did this happen? Simple eno.._gh: An
attorney representing American Family
Life in another lawsuit slipped his busi·
ness card under the door of her boy-
friend'• apartment in Alexandria, Va., in
mid-1980. "He is the one who originally brought
this to my attention and aet up the whole
-the whole case for me," the insurance
agent said in sworn testimony.
She said the attorney, Anthony Dili-
metin, paiCt for her September 1980 trip
to New York. In the presence of an
American Family Life vice president, the
attorney played a videotape of the ABC
news show for her.
Did Dillmetin suggest, she was asked,
"that you ought to file suit?" The insu-
rance agent replied: "Yes:•
She testified that Dilimetin helpfully
identified the House investigators who appeared on·the tv show and were also
sued. "Since I had no idea who had to be
sued," she testified, "Mr. Dilimetin was
infonning me of the proper persons that
would be involved 1n the lawsuit.''
Her attorney told us that the insurance
company purchased depositions of the
House investigators and1ent them to him
because his client couldn't afford the transcripts.
DESPITE ALL THIS, the a~ent
doesn't feel she was used as a "front ' for
American Family Life. And Dilimetin
insists that "we absolutely did not have a
role in encouraging the ~uj~ we did not
pay for legal fees.'' The jury, by the way,
took just 40 minutes to decide that the
agent had no case.
Where have all the candidates gone? I
To the F.ditor:
Frederick Schoemehl of ~ staff
listed the candidates and the o · in the
Sunday, March 14 edition. Upon perusal
of the candidates for the primaries. it waa
most intereetihg to note the tarr number
of l!ll<>Ppoaed candidates. Th& is a bit
MAILBOX
astonishing in view of the pointed articles
over the lut few yeus noting the com·
plete dillatiafactioo of the "public'' with
the incumbents. &ve !i5' " really
given up on mto rellabJe, nonest, hard-wor ta into the
electoral prooe9I? It pertic:ularly diffi-
cult to note that two of the county
supervi8ora have no opposition whatllO-
ever. Thia is the kind -of opposition a
candidate bu ln RUllia. not America.
IS IT POSSIBLE that no one but an
incwnbent can affom to run an election
contest? Where are the buainell people
who ahould be out urging their fellow
business people to pface responsible
candidates into office? Where are the
environmentalists who should be urging
their candidates into office? Where are
the silent majority who should be out
behlnd the ecenes W'ging solid dtizens to
step foNqll'd and place their name11 on
the ballot?)l.pparently, they are all uleep
or really don't give a damn.
It ii aad to see the large number of
unoppoeed candidates. We can only hope
and pray that the unoppoeed will not tie
complacent and 11Dug in the light of
public apathy and will try ~nd do
90mething constructive during their co-
ming period in office which they proba-
bly "haven't tried to do durlng the pre-
vioua )'Ml"8 they were ln office. For the
others who can afford to run and lbould
be out there opposlng the~.
don't let another opportunity a-where
you fail to rai8e your voice when ll\'el\ the dwlce. .
CHARLFS D. LARSON
Fellow· sufferer
To the F.ditor:
Now tharMarch 10 bu pamed, and we
are all atill in Oranae County, it'• Ume foe
me to speak out! Bats off fo Mary Jane
Sanborn.'-and ber be1l~ crutade ~ the fnJnt door of the DMV1 of
• CGolallao(Mo!I~~, _ like to lip "P ,. the ol 81*9 ~ fw the • lan&mn uald._.._..._eo ID-llllllmd
W.. not u• M. r
The tint time, lbr 111N1•••11dd by on ~Wily
balM tram work....., l nia.ct •. row of M cMln lllld 1J..n people _...
=:·.=-oil~.:~~~
told m;liUlif.nd I w IDtlw tlD the DJIV,
the Did marntnc. aliout-16 ··-beioft ~.~and that lhoukt •at. ~11'*" tbeyopmatl a&. rmm ....., rtilr, bow ....., ~ Could be
tMn1 When I antwd. at lelit eG 1*i111e
were waiting, and 25 more came after me.
before the doors were opened!
My work time started at 10 a.m., but I
figured they would have plenty of fresh
faces to help all of us. Wrong! The 36
chairs filled, and I was stancii.nR. To make
a long story short, I left at 9:32 a.m. Two
windows were open, and a third lady
would wander over occasionally and help
90meone.
Mary Jane, I feel we have. shared an
emotional experience which unites us as
friends, so I may call you by your first
name . . . I'm ready to fight!
ROBBI SOIOONOVER
TE)..EPHONE YOUR
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
See instructions befow =. ... "·
Not our backyard
To the Editor.
Re-your March-5-article on the trash
burning power plant at Huntington
Beach: I share with Mr. Ryan bis sense of
support in cutting our dependence from
foreign oil by developing alternate
IOWU9 of energy, auch aa trash-burning
power plants, t>ut I perceive the feeling
that be wants others to pioneer the
all-American spirit for him.
For 1tarta, why not propose the
trash-burning plant at Newport Beach.
After all. it ti.u the ume environmental
setting u Hunttncton Beach does, i.e.
cloee to water, c1oee to eleetric power
ln line with PCH, and to thil date,
from the ume point of vfew and
ty of Mt. Ryan. Newport' Beach
bu been "un-American" by not having
the opportunlty, • Huntington Beach
hal. to ~ power plants and sanitary
~ planta which benefit all people.
Thia will put Mr. Ryan'• hometown,
Newport Beach, in tune with the concept
that ar-t ks.. lbouJd be8ln at borne,
and not in ~ el8e'11** yard. Mr. R~ ~ lnfonbed that bis
"~ action" and the "alternativee to the ~ -=Uon" call for findina a
lite w wlU not came irnven16le
damap to the enVlnmment and lta hab-
itat.
A TIUIB·BUllNING plant at Hun-
tinp.l a.eh or my other rellden1ial ... .m: lncrnue traffic e.111 24 boun a day, pcmtbly cau. hu-
arda frcn 9-•avy-ctui1 loa ed truclr.I .,..... .......... Ill r..w.nu.J
' ...... 1111 ...... far that; IDCHIJI e . , I
t1ranr '""" Nodtn art IDflcomt. Thf •
,....., to ea •••• ld&a'a to /ft apac• fW , '""""'* ,._, t. ~""* IAff_,., ot JOO word• or I•" ..,, be ,_.. ,,-.tfr'ffttt. All ,,,,,,. '""" *''* tipotutt """ "'°""° oddrtu but ltOPMI "'Gii be UIUMffd °" rt•
qH1f 1/ 1wJlscstftl rH•-" ta ~t
PoftJJ eotU not bf P"MilMd. Wtfffl ,.._be
ttwpltoMd to ea-«*. NoJM ""' P"olW
... mbft of tlw COftt,.btllor '""" be,..,.,. tor
~lkoUoft purpowl.
noile pollution and water consump~ produce.toxic emissions from the burning
stocks and will produce ash and other
particulate residue fall-outs, dispened
lor miles, depending on wind currents:
last and not least will drive ~pulation
and property values down including
summer touristic businels, for people
would not want to live in a place where
the tr¥h and garbage of the entire
county is hauled in smelly trucks tor
possibly many generations to come.
No one builds these types of plants
today ln the heart of already developed
touristic and residential area. U the
proper location can be found, let's all
support Mr. Ryan in hia noble cause.
JOHN E. PHILLIPS
·Accident solution
To the F.ditor:
There is a simf?le solution to the high
cost of automobile insurance -fewer
acdden~. And the solution to f~wer_ •
accidents is changing the timing of the stop lights. Is our time so valuable that a
few seconds would make a difference?
The ti.ming on almost all the liahta now
changes from green to red a00 red to
green with no hesitation. A few aeconds
difference -that ia, leave red on all four
Ugh ta for two or three eeconda before two
of them turn green. Thia would mean,
especially at main intereectiona, fewer
fenden bent and Uvea lost. .Too many
drivers still croea intel'8ections on red, and
aome drivers still make rabbit starta u
the J..i&ht changes green.
Please write to your city Traffic
Comm.isa1on suaestinc this change if you ~withme.
DEITY BRISCOE
bis letters
'I' F.di tor:
letters on general and local
political matters have appeared in the
local _papen in recent weeks, includina
the Dally Pilot, with llpaturel that
suggest they were written by me. I ~did not write theae letten. nor 81\Y
others tQ-local papen. ·
JOHN W. JOHN~
Ret., Newport-M•
Unlf.ied SchoOI D'8trict
Yo•'n trhkr llUlt crltteu. Som.._ "'-dail't Mllew Wiatt Mr. p,._. Wll JGU. YCMt WM tlaat Mr.
/ONme II tr"8I to puQ your .....
Remember that oolwna an wlalcb 1
reported tbat tM Army wu tolftl to uae YlMo 1UM1 to train IOldlen? I laid
tbat AMroldl, Space Jnvaden, Gorf
and tbe other 11mea were 10 pow.alar
wltb youas l*>Ple that th• .mWt.arx wu
1oiq to convert the 1ames into treiDlnl maeblDel.
Several of you tbou1ht that the
column wu satirical; that I wu Ullnl
It to poke fwi at the vldeo·1•me crue.
W• do not UN Mllir• ta.re. We don't like It. The video-game column waa ~ abeolutely true, and to back It up,
here'• another one. I
TRI!! U.S. NAVY has just announced
lta top recruiter for the last year. Sbe is
Chief Petty Officer Julie Reed, she la 2'1
years old, and last year she signed up 83
Navy enlistees. She was judaed the best or the Navy's 3,500 recruiters.
And how did she do it?
_Her favorite ploy was to go to a
video-game arcade-;-check out the younr
men plunking their quarters into the
slots challenge them to a game -and
~1llUFFELL'S ·
1beD .....,.., tbem for tM Navr:
"It kind ot 1tarted u a penoaaJ
adcllctkla oa my part," Reed Mid. 0 1
Juat love Pae·Maa. U I 10 OD a cblle1 I'll
11k my date to take me to u arc .. 10
we can play Pae-Man."
Whll' at tbe arcades, lbe .,_.ao to
realtae · that tM otber people then -
youna men 1n tbelr late t.... and early
111111111
20t -were precisely the catelOl'Y lbe
was 1uppoled to be recruWni for tbe
Navy.
"So I started 101111 into the arcades at ·
about 2 o'clock ln the alt.el'llOOll," she
said . "At 3 or 3:30 the places would
start to flll up, and by 4 they would be
packed.
"I'd look around for someone who
wasn?t too much overweilhl or didn't
have an 9bvtous physical dllablUty.
Then I'd walk up, offer to buy blm a
Coke and challenge him to a 1ame. I'd
offer to pay for the game, so usually he
would say yes."
. • UPHOLUllY
·::-;·-;Taiia -.. s.N "l . "WE-CARE" ro· &0 • ttzz HAilOl IL Yi.,.
J:OSTA Ml~ -54a.1 l564
Fql 'ALL Of YOUA
HIALTHMEEDS
OPEN EYEIY MY ~840
t:OO AM-t:OO f'M •
UASOMAIU FllS
~'5
.... lb-~
·f.:'~ ·~
Cringe Cout DAILY .,ILOTIThurlday, Mll'Ch 18, 1882
Reed won ber NAYY ~orm on au of
ber arcade Yilita, IO lt wun't lolla before ber q_~ nallaed &Mt abe wu
DOt • loulr. JOUI tiouewlt• wlth romance cm ber mlnd.
.. Al WE PLAYED the 1ame, I'd at.art
uklq them 'Wbat thelr plans were after bhrb ac:bool . . . tblqa like that,'' ahe
aald. '''lben I'd point out that the N'avy
wu a bl&bly electronic or1anlaaUon. l
~ew they'd be into that, beeauae they
were lnto the 1am"."
From that polnt, Reed would try to
talk the young men into taldnl a test to
1ee If they qualified for the Navy. "U I
fet them teated, I seldom lose them,"
1be said.
Sbe aald that ahe like• the kind or
recruits that come. from the, game
arcades:
.. Tbey look on the cam ea as a
cballen1e," she 1aid. ''They're not
han1ln1 around the street corners;
they're challenging themselves with
these games."
She said, in looking for a potential
Navy recruit, she was not neceuarily in
the market for perfect physical
specimens. "When I go into the arcade,
I'm not on the lookout for someone who
is capable of beating someone else up,'' .
0· ~c:;; ·f.:'~ ~v· t ~
rt!<:.' ~ 0't> ~..._o • (f o~ <:.''ti ,p 04\. fl; 0~ 'lie:;; ·f.:'~ ~
1be said. "More often, J'll find aomeone
wbo feels more powerful when he's
behind that button."
She reallaea that on• crilleilm of
younc military men la that many of
them uae dr\llJ dwilll thelr otf bowl. Tbe a.rclldel are neither a plus nor a
mlnu• ln that area, 1be said. ·
"Ia the ldd in an arcade aolna to be
any more atoned than a kid oo the street
corner?" she said. "I think not. If
anything, the arcade should be a
deterrent to drug use, because you can't
be any good at Asteroids or Space
Invaders if you're atoned out of your
head.
"If I'm talking to a potential recruit
who has alcohol on bls breath, or whose
eyes show he's stoned, 1 back away
fast." . Reed said that using the video-game
arcades is just a new application or an
old maxim.
"You do best when you go where the
kids are," she said. "Every recruiter
knows that. And today, the kids are at
the video arcades." ..
SHE SAID she thinks It is to her
advantage that s he is a female
recruiter:
"Part of recruiting is making cold
calla. Jmt teliPbonJDI proepeeta to talk
to them or to follow up. Aad 10UDI
male• wUJ QGl baq ~ OD a ... -.
Thty Juat won't do It. If J w .. a maa,
they ml&bt tell me to 10 to bell oa the
phoae, bu' beca•e I'm a woman tbey
won't."
Reed 1ald that when •he II playlna· •
pro.pect.lve recruit ln u arcade, lbe
wUl uauaUy try her best. '"Ibey like the
Idea that this woman baa enouah 1ut1 to
just walk Up to them and cballenst
them," she aald. "It helps 1et t.M
conversation goinl.''
But SOR\eUmea she pretends to be a
worse player than she really ii if a
young man seems close to 11ytn1 "yes"
to her recruiting pitch:
"When it's a close game, and IC looks
like they're coming close to aayina
they'll take the Navy test ... bey, I'm
not going to ruin their egos."
As for her own spare time, when she's
not recruiting potential Navy men, she
still is hooked on the Pac·Man machine.
She is not sure how to expla1n why.
"I don't know," she said. "I just like
to make that little thing gobble up other_
li~tle things, and then lose the other
little things off Its tail. . . . "
That's what she said, all right.
0· .,.,. ~ & ~ o· 'li'tj ~' ~· 0 ~ 0r., ·~' ~~ ~ ~0 ~°J ~~ ~ ~" ·rt!v ()0 ~"-d &'ti f.:'~ .~0· '?>
&'ti &"' ~o ~o ~~ ~ II "' ~o vO . (>• ~fl> 00-g ~ rJ .~ .. <:.'ro &0 ~ f.:'o ,<:.-<a ~G ~..._<t> ~" L..,.0c:;; o~ \" q,'5 ~'5 ,c:;;
REDWOOD
2X6-36LINFT.
775-1491
16808 S. HARBOR
DECKING
A TRADIT10lt
FOil 60 YEARS
F,.Mnl 11
l A.M.
· · DOWNEY SAVIN~ AND LOAN
has ..
FAST CASH
FOR HOME LOANS
(l 'p tu four uni1')
$10,000 to $1.000,000
OPE'
SATL'Rl>A' S
PurthaSt: mont..•v ... crnnds.
cqui~: and s\ring loans
CaJJ Marijke Da,·is
(714) 842-7424
-ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION
(no luun
hrul..c,..,.
plcu....,)
@
171.'"!0 M · .At. cnue. Fuunurn \l.illey S
THE
&lb
ANNUAL
collar 'n cuff
TIE HAPPBING
Just gather up old
worn-out ties and for
every one you bring .,.~
In we'll give you
$4.50 towards each
new one you pur-
chaee.
collar 'n cuff
333 E.. I 7• St.
Costa Mesa ®O
0... MOM.: ... flLJ::/.IAT. 1M:OO -.,.., ..
·~ ................. , ......
•
You can help your newspaper
carrier collect at tlmu conve-
ni.m to you by having your
c:tleCk or money order ready so
the carrier won't have to call
beck. Because thl1 young
per90n ls In bust,,..• for himself or heflelf, please be ready -and watch that big amlle which ,
1 1ay1 "Thank you.··
llily Pilat I
F A s H I 0 N A E R y
...
Join ,. '°'., lnlonnel .,...,,,,, of the Perry Ellis Spring 'collect/on. In our South Coas Plaza store, Friday, March 19.
From noon to 3 p. m. perry El/ls Is In our South C6ast Plaza store only.
l
. u ~...,..
GUNS REQUIRED -Dent Myers, pistol on
hip, relaxes in front of his Confederat~ me-
morabilia store in Kennesaw, Ga., which rec-
tntlY paaeed an ordinance requiring. ~eads of
households to ?_wn guns and ammurution .
. , apanese hook
~
·tells atrocities .
TOKYO (AP) -The No. 1 best.seller in Japan details Japanese Imperial Army atrocities against ~nera of war during World War Il. and interest
*':the tale of horror testifies that the conflict still anaws at the national conscience.
"Akwna no Hoshoku" (The Devil's Gluttony) ~ribell the Kwantung Army's top-~ret 73lst Gut. which is believed to have killed up to 3,000 ~hinese Soviet and Korean war prisoners in a . _. . ·tiuesome array of experiments. ~ --TI\e -story told by author Seiichi Morimura -a
~ter of bestselling mysteries -is not entirely
.... But since its release in December, the book has
~ 700,000 copies, the hottest item among World :War II-related books and movies that are educating,
~ghtening and sometimes shocking the Japanese.
;: • · By contrast with most material, in which Japan
:t¥ely is depicted as a transgressor, Morimura's
-book tells in horrifying detail how a germ warfare
u,njt in Manchuria injected victims with typhus,
~lera and plague genn.1, did live dissections, froze
'.P.tlsoners to death in. endurance tests, conduc.ted
-venereal disease studies on women. blasted pnso-
ners apart in grenade tests, and, when Soviet troops
arrived at war's end, gassed the last POWs to death.
• An article in the U.S. publication, The Bulletin
Qf, the Atomic Scientists, last year claimed some
American POWs were used in the tests. It said this
was confirmed in a 1956 FBI memo, and that U.S.
offlda1s knew it when they chose not to try the
3apanese as war crimina1B -suppasedly in return
tqo data obtained in the tests.
.,, The popularity of war themes also is indicated
~the fact that Ja~'s most popular l981 moviE'.
:If M orimura's book tells
~w a germ warfare unit in
anqhuria injected victims
.. it h typhus, cholera and
p lague germs.
.;. "Rengo Kantai" (The Grand Fleet), a saga of
~pan's Navy from Pearl Harbor to the sinking of '1le superbattleship Yamato in 1945. Its makers,
Toho, plan three more World War II films this year.
· The rival Toei company soon will release a ~vie in which the hero is Japan's wartime prime
minister, Gen. Hideki Tojo, who was executed as a
wrar criminal. The film reportedly treats him with
relative sympathy.
One major p'ublisher has begun selling a
20-volume hlatory of the Pacific air war, and ano-
ther offers 17 volumes of personal war experiences
laced with suffering and self-justifications.
Japan's anti-war groups are concerned about wJlat they call the "war boom" and its impression
~ Japane98 youth, who are taught little about their
attion's march to military self-destruction.
E'Young people go to war movies today the way
went to American Westerns or samurai films
n we were kids," said Ryow Watanabe, a pro-
rat Tokyo University. "It's all ancient history
,ft them, with no meaning to their lives."
• . One battle is being fought over school text-
lltoks, with the pro-defense conservative govem-
-nt trying to tone down critical accounts of Je-~·s pest and leftist teachers' groups urging more
Jhphlc treatment of war's inhumanness.
J n's large and active anti-war factions
ClOndemn war only from the standpoint of
suffering -3 miillon casualties, firebom-
lta cities and atomic attacks on Hiroshima
ap.aki. The Imperial Anny's subjugation of
~ of eatem Asia is .eldom mentioned.
· ''Japeneee tend to forger bad thinp quickly,''
'f!atanabe aaid.
~i In hia book, Morimura said be "felt an obU..a-= to document the 731st unit's activities 'to
the idea that war is wrong because Japanese
ered1 not becau.e Japlmeee cauaed suffering."
i. Be laid that although the unit's activities were
Oil at war tribunals in the ·Sovtet Union
tbe war and in various hiltoiical accounts,
n& J apanete knew of ita existence.
One ~· he said, was tha.t unit memben,
1o eecrecy when the war ended, have only blClm to "unload their burden." But it la abo a
, he Mid. that J apaneee have not been Mpr to
•
Movie firms Step up -war on pirate Cassette~ ·
CHICAGO (AP) -Motion-padure
compenl• have broadened the batt-
lef ron t-ln their war to 1top .r&tail
atone from aeWna pirated home vl-
deotape1, aay1 the chief lnveet11a\Or
for the lnduatry'• .:wity office.
home-video lndUIW)' Up to t700 mil•
lion annually ln lolt revenue, ~hew
eakl, and~ la be~ to be Uwt
hub of activity.
Four dvil laWMA!ta charatna p(raey were filed limulian.ou.ly -In ~
and auburbAn Ttnley Park ., weU u
Temecula and VI.at.a, Calif., Layhew
Mid. He added U.S. manha1a lmme·
diately entered the atoree after the
laWIUJta were filed.
Buckley, doh\I b u1lne11 at Vldeo and "Body Heat." All were d.lt&rtbu-
Bam Temecula; Chuck Mitchell of Wei by Wam.r Home Video, a Warner
C&H Audio & Video, Viata: Don Con\munlcatJon.a 1ubl(diary. = fu~~~ ~J~ ~tty~ :r,~J~wf:11\he civil
Home Encenabumnt Cent.er, C'hkqo. aulta, Layhew uld.
Brin1in1 the charae• were 1uch Forty pef(lef\t-of the Chicaao video
major fllm supplier• H Columbia, L stores ln the market are auapected of Em~. MOJlt!i Paramount, Twent-dullng :xlrated video materiala the ietb Century-Fox, United Artlata, .MPAA '
Univenal and I>Wney, all memben of ·
the MPPA. Don .fohnaon, manager of Ma1tc
Layhew said a lix-month uoderco-Video ln Tinley Park, denied wrona·
ver operatJon culminated in aaenta doinc ln the tale of videO CUlettel.
Armed wttb wrtta of llilure, U.S.
rnanha1a delcended on aw. ln four
clt!ft ln llUno1I and Califomt.. They
confiscated what they charaed are
lllHtally-for-eale copiet of IUCh movte. u"Supen'ft$1\:' 11Sharky'1 ~ ..
and "Rollover," aa1d Ewiq Layhew,
execuUve director o.f the filin aecu.rity
office of th~ Motion Picture Producen
Allociatlon.
Sales of plrated videotape COit. the
Layhew aa1d In a telephone inter·
view from La. Anaelea that thlt WM
the flnt time dvU aulta have been fl·
led agalnat retallen on a multi-city
bull. .
Named in the 1ult1 were Jim
purcbaaing pirated video '*"tte co-National Home Entertainment
P. l e 1 o f f i I m 1' 1 u c b a 1 • • 1 O , • • Cen~r In Cb.icaa<> and the California •
Superman," "Prlnce of the City," outletl had no immedlate comment.
To Celebrate The Imm inent
~
Opening ·of Our Expanded
Parking Lot in Corona de l Mar
Charcoal
#471 Black
Reg. $74.9'
559
·Black & Decker
Saw
#7392
..,. $69.97
'Mth proof of purchase
Black & Decker wi 11
send you an electric
stapler FREE. Valued at
$19.99. Total Value
$89.98. #9700. All for
one low pri~. $ 44 99
HEATER
CLEARANCE'
Al ..... :llk&
r..011
._.e11111 lll•n
25 3 oFF
VISE·GRle Locking Pliers
Save now•
10" straogru 1aw
o41t1fS are Qreat
for c11mp1no
1w1st1no and
pulling
#10R
TRASH·
BAGS
Our beat hHvy duty
b9ga. 2• Plk 20 gal llze
15 '*' 33 oei ... z:e ...... 19
Save also on
g 7 curved 11w
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cutter 8oth
ad1us1 e151ly to
pliers acr.on
-. #7WR
. KordiW
, 'Y .. -
Kord1te ..-,
,\""·' ... ~~ '° -'<A",•v"w. ~ ,.,
•
•
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n-·
IOO-Single Burner sugg. $316.29
Sak S220
llOO--Ooubte Burner sugg. S452.96
. Sale Sl I 0 2000 Rotisserie & Raised Rear Burner
sugg. $547.96
ScM Sl75
Priem inctude Lr ex Natural G• LP Includes tank.
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lnducle au.tz jgnltcx.
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Epoxy Rust-Mate. Just
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• It
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REG. 39.99 s19 aa
CUISIMART
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OLC8E $185
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Price
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3-Way Bulbs
Sylvania 3·Way bulbs give three
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Contempra
Quartz BBO
Electric Char-B-Oue 1 ••
..,. $129.tt
Sale
S99''
Mne Cooler by Trend
Pacific as seen 1n
magazines assorted
oolors. Reg. $40.00
Sale
..... d ......
9-h
Travel
Alcrm
1622·769 & 60. Brass &
dlrome. This QUlf1z alarm
smiles and cl'lirps "good
morning," Q)mplete. with
l)hOtohme.
PfrTSBURGH PAINTS
Manor Hair
LAnx FLAT ENAMEL
• OM fl .. 111 ftr ·-..... 1.,.
--, -·--$20" ..... • .. 111 lllJ ,_ . .,... ·er.:~
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./
-
THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 1982
CAVALCADE
TEilt,EVISION
82
86,
BY STEVE MARBLE or .. o.11 .... ,..,.
State Coutal Commlaionera
took turna Wednelday verbally
1laahing James Watt before
agreeing to oppose offshore oll
drilling plans for the Southland
oout.
One member called the interior
secretary'• push "Lraulting and
rnindlem.''
Another suggested Watt has ··~ down the gauntlet and
dared the residents of California
to pick lt up."
Commissioner John Corbett
npted, "It's very hard for us to be
reasonable when the other side
isn't." •
Corbett aald Watt la pW'lu1na
"a pump-America-dry-llnt po:
Ucy that, if adopted, wUJ only
mean that we're just that much more dependent on fOl"efgn oil tn
the future."
In the end, all 11 commllalon
members voted to oppoee leasina
any of the 172 of!ahore traou
under conaideratlon to oil com-
panies this June.
Eleven of the tracts are off
Newport Beach, Laguna Beach
and Huntington Beach. Others
are off Long Beach, Santa Mo-
nica and Santa Barbara.
Commissioners, meeting in Los
Angeles, endorsed a second mo-
tion specifically opposing driJ.llng
FOR THE BIRDS DEPT. -Journalists all across our
coastal region will no doubt be stretching and searching for
new angles to the story Friday when our birds return. You
know the ones.
This Friday is St. Joseph's Day when the sw~ows,
fabled Jn history, song and lore, return to the J ewel of the
Missions at San Juan Capistrano.
As almost every school
c hild of o ur coastline
knows, flocks of the spee-
/'a'\ • dy little forked-tail birds
TOM MORPHINE ~l>I abandon th_eir winter
l ,~ headquarters m Goya, Ar-_________ .......... .__ gentina, each year about
Feb. 1 and wing their way homeward to ~ion San Juan
Capistrano.
And the thousands of birds arrive precisely on St.
Joseph's Day, cirtjing the mission and then booting other
birds out of their T\ld p~~ beneath the eaves.
Bells of the Ml.SSion peal and celebrations begin. ·
WRONG THINKERS OVER the years have tried to
de-bunk the legend of the swallows returning on exacUy
St. Joseph's Day. Largely, they have failed in th.is effort.
Natives of the San J~an area have simple, ~asy ans-
wers for the doubters. When birds arrive early, these are
simply "scouts" in advance of the main flock. U swallows
......--~
-.<~~ . ~. -pistrano swallow-watchers miss the birds
arrive late, these are "stragglers" behind the main flock.
It's quite clear. 'l
Back in 1979, one wire service dug up a couple of or-
nithologists -bird scientists to you and me -who blasted
the precise return of the swallows as nothin.g more than
pure myth. Most people were outraged and the two scientific sa-
vants haven't been heard from since.
IN 1974, THERE WAS "The Lion Country Safari
Hoax" wherein a clever public relations man for the animal
place issued a press release noting that the swallows had
bypassed Capistrano and had made new homes at the Sa-
fari instead.
But Bill Smith, then public relations man for the
Mission scoffed at the.oeport as "a cheap publicity stunt.'' S~ith himself, liked to employ specific times and
nwnbers u; his Capistrano swallow reports to give them a
strong sense of authenticity. He used the technique well in
the Great Fog Deviation of 1969.
That year, our entire coastline disappeared under a fog
on St. Joseph's Day. The swallows had equally vanished.
But publicist Smith came on the radio and declared:
"THE SW .ALLOWS HA VE ARRIVED I Mission San
Juan Capistrano. They're stacked up above ~ke fogbound
airplanes. We can hear them twittering up there. We got
500 down on the ground at exactly 9:57.25 this morning ..
· · · So much for precision. Sm'ith loved to festoon his
swallow reports with exact numbers. One year, ahead of St.
Josei>h's Day, he ret>orted, 11We have 1,500 swallowa
sighted 50 miles north of Guadalajara. They're right on
scnedule, folks!'' Still, journalists will try to shoot a new angle on the ~· Maybe thia year the writers may fear our recent rain1
will delay the fast little birds. But that'1 been Uled before
I too. Smith blamed the rains ifl 1935 for making Ute swal-
· lows three daya late.
MOST FLATLAND TOURISTS who viait the Million
Friday will eee pigeons, doves or maybe a couple of stray
roo.ten and figure thtr,y've spotted the swallows. ~al swallowa are actually very hard to eee in flight. They're eo
tMt they're just a blur.
One y~ a jou.mallat figUred be had a new angle when
hll story trumpeted that 0 tlm will be the 199th year~·
1Wallow8 have returned to s.n JuanlCas:Utrano."
You are left to wonder what the birds did bet~ then.
ln 88 of the offshore tracta -dfic" and doeln't neect oU ri,p tn
including the 11 off Orange lta ocean.
<Aunty -if the .Department of Lat:d, resident and art.lit
lnterlol' move. forward with the Beth eakl "we don't want
leue aale. to kill our ocean juat to make
The movet were applauded by Jamea Watt happy." She save
dozena of coaatal resldenta and conuni9lionen a palntina of what
cri _, __ ... th lAcuna would look like with oU
civic leaden who u~ e rip off ita cout. It wu titled, pe~ leue sale, offshore dril-"Never in Laguna Beach."
Jing Watt. Leaders and realdenta of
Laguna Mayor ~Y Bellerue Newport Beach and San Cle-
detCI'ibed her town u a unique mente alto took their 1bota at
coromunlty, that depend. upon offabore drilling. Repreeentative.
tourism for survival. She said of Huntington Beach, which
offshore drillina platforms would hasn't oppoeed offshore drilling,
be unsightly. Charles Howell, a didn't speak. ·
Laguna. architect, said Lepmt-J 'The-achJ\tnistr:atlon in
Beach ls the "Riviera of the Pa-Washington appears bent on
A.FTER THE SCARE -Richard Durnell of 1053 W. Wilson,
Costa Mesa, looks over sections of fence ripped apart when a
Residents escape
tornado's pun~h
By STEVE TRIPOLI Of" the Deity Piiot Staff
Randy Chambliss had just
stepped into his van at a west
Costa Mesa comer when he saw
the funnel cloud touch on Pacific
Avenue, about 100 yards away.
As a native of Georgia, where
tornadoes are more common, his
first imp~ion was that it was a
"dust devil," a minor disturban-
ce. "Then I saw that it took up the
whol e street, 25 or 30 feet
across," he said. "I could see the
whole thing. It had some garbage
cans, trees and boxes swirling in
it."
His first reaction was fear -
"My heart was working a little,"
he said Wednesday afternoon. a
few hours after the incident -
but then be thought of protecting
those he had just left.
He ran back into his friend
Rich Durnell's house on West
Wilson Street and told several
children to open the doors to
equalize the air pressure inside
and outside u the funnel puaed.
Then he watched as the cloud
proceeded down Pacific Avenue
for 20 seconds and disappeared.
Witnesses' accounts Indicate
that the minor damages and lack
of injuries were more a fortunate
circumstance than testin;lony to
the cloud's punch.
In the hoU8e next to Durnell'•,
the sheet metal patio cover was
ripped apart.
About a block away, a metal
fence was ripped up and thrown
onto the roof of a nearby house.
Thic k trunks of trees were
snapped, and adjacent homes
were spared damage simply by
the way trees fell.
Further down Pacific, Sandi
Costley had juat delivered a
bottle o1 wine to her netghbora
Mark and Debby Jobmtcn.
A.a the three aat sipping wine
and 1ooki.na out the picture win-
dow at 2192 Padfic Ave.,~
things began happening on the
street.
Flrat s:· Coatley noticed a weather ten 6-foot rowboat-
turned-p ay box in the front
1yard that "came up, I'd aay,
~bout three feet off the ll'CJUlld,
then it WU jult tumblinj in the
air.'' .
Mark Jotm.wn aald the boat
1wlrled around ln tl)e clou d
briefly then 1lnded 12 ~ away.
M.awhlle, w. from the root
of ~ eo.u.,•a bowe wen flunc
on eclce and half-buried ln the
Johnltonl' yard. I '1t'a • aood \h1na no one WM out there when tlioae thine•
were f1ylna around," Mid Kn.
Johnston. "Someone could have
been killed if one of those had hit
them."
Later the three discovered a
75-pound ceramic planter outside
the Johnstons' door had moved
~bout four feet.
A few doors away. Cornell
Ilieseu's mother was sitting in
her son's apartment.
Ilieseu arrived later and saw
what his mother had only heard.
A 6-foot tall section of picket
fence along the driveway was
flW'lg into the side of his apart-
ment, smashing the twin win-
dows:
During the only brief sunny
interlude in an otherwise rainy
day, neighbors gathered to com-
pare damages and accounts of
what happened.
Trash cans and mailboxes tom
from their posts littered the
street. Freelance artist Jean
Hetllller's yard at 2220 Pacific was
almost covered with broken tree
branches, IOIDe several inches tn
diameter.
But the residents' general fee-
ling was a slight bemusement
mixed with gratitude that a little
luck had spared them from in-
jury.
Keys are one of the
oddities no one throws
away. Erma Bombeck
.I lists more on Page B2.
~ into th1a at a frantic and
frt1htening pace," voiced Bar-
bara Blake, a Sierra Club mem-
ber.
She charged that oU cornpanlee
already have hundreda of leued
offshore tracts around the coun-
try that have not been tapped or
explored. "3.,... ~ •• One Malibu woman WftO u.aa
she helped clean up ·after the
1969 Santa Barbara oll spW aaid
the oil firma have "a miserable
track record.•• uu everyone had experienced
trying to clean off a seagull co-
yered in oil, they wouldn't aup-
port any of these offshore
tracta," ahe said.
s~ for two oU ftmw -
Chevron and J!xxoo -Went Oft
hand, but didn't apeU.
Commillion officl.aJI edmltted
aft.er the heartnc that lt .. bard to
know whether the commilllon'•
action wlll have any effect on
Watt'• ultimate decialon on
which tracta will be offered for
ule in June.
The commlulon -.ay1 lt baa
veto power on ofbbonr oil dril-
ling and that lt can reject any
otuhore dri.tlina plan.
But the Department of Interior
reportedly 1ee1 the commlmion'•
power differently and the '-ae la
the subject of several lawsuits.
Dllr ,... ........ .,.,., ....,_
fwmel cloud passed through his neighborhood in 20 seconds
Wednesday. Boat in background was undamaged.
MISSING CONNECTIONS -Southern California Edison
personnel repair power lines downed by fallin8 trees. Back-
yard· fence was blown onto roof at 2230 Pacific, below.
··~
• r·
1.·
1· ; . 1
1 t-:
I
I.. • I
r ....
1!"'1 ....
• ,
·:
.
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1
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am nWdnc a
14-year-old daughter alone. She hu a boy-
friend, a1ao 14, who la very likable. They
have one unusual activity that I find b.-d to
undentand. He likes to tie her up, ma ob-
vioualy ahe likea to be t.ied. He U--18 her
very gently when be Uee her, although lhe
of ten gets tied Into aome very atrtngent
positiona. They often spend hotars inventing
new positi..Qns and new ways to tie her.
Some evenings they watch television for
hours while ahe is tied rigidly to a chair.
They aeem to ~eep this hobby of theirs
to themaelves, but are open about it at his
houae and ours. His mother and I have dis-
culled it. She feels it ia just their way of
having fun. I find it quite interesting to
watch them and am amued at how many
waya a per on can get tied up. 0,ll.two
occasions I let them tie me up -once to a
chair and once to a post. I found it to be a
faaclnating sensation.
This whole thing is IO unu.ual I don't
know what to think of it. How much of this
goes on in the world? Is there any harm in
HERB MEN ...
OUR MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO
Gettillg grip
on new-game
SON OF PAC-MAN; Jay Trachman
figures that Atari's gift of $1 million to the
save the Cable Cars fund i.a simply a pub-
lidty stunt for the company's next video
game, Grip-Man.
It was inevitable: Invitations to the Nat'l
Women's Political Caucus reception honoring
S.F.'s women commissioners carried this
notation at the bottom: "No-Hostess
Cocktails."
Joey Di.Maggio, Big Joe's nephoo, mu-
sing away at DiMaggio's down at the Wharf:
"l was 100 percent in favor of Reagan
sending millions of dollars to Central Ame-
rica tilI I found out he wasn't talking about
Kansai.''
AB SO: Who are the "truly needy"
~an's phrase) in this country? Perry J.
Rablin of Colusa finds one answer: the Govt.
has just sent more than 900 checks, totaling
•bout $1.5 million, to the C.Olusa C.Ounty
ASCS (Agriculture Stabilization and C.On-
servation Service) to be parceled out to
"needy" rice farmers. Also some $600,000 for
"needy'' wheat farmers. "If they weren't
truly needy," reasons Rablin, "the President
wouldn't send them money, would he?"
ITEM-TYPE item from Stan Smith:
The Church of Perfect Liberty on Park Blvd.
in Oakland bas barred windows ... Name-
drop: Leslie Lafayette of San Mateo was a
cl••mate, at Van Nuya Jr. Hiah, of Mike
CUrb, John Garamendi and Tom 'Selleck. Her
recollection: "Mike wu pioua, ~pous and
pushy and John was kind and intelllgmt but
t'd rather vote for Tom. even though be had
a big •pace between hia front teeth and shot
rubber bands at girls."
IS ANYBODY m0re middle-clue than
British royalty? You may recall that young
Johnny Hesketh recently married Anna
Wallace, the Pr1nDe of Wale9' cloeest lady
friend until they had a spat. Charles' wed-
ding present to the newlyweds was -bed
sheets. When Anna and Johnny asked
Princess Di and Charles what THEY'D like
for a wedding present, the Prince thought a
moment and then ventured, "Well, we
COULD use an annchair." Blimey.
EVEN THE BEST of restaurants can
have. an off niJZht. Aime Michaud. who's
reopening the Old Poodle Dog here in July,
ma3e hii first long-awaited visit to Berke-
ley' a celebrated Chez Panisse and was
rightfully dilappointed; fresh vegetables
IWlmmlng in a white sauce in a qgy
brioche; a abort..on-greens duck salad. and a
lob9t.er lost in what teemed like the aame
white auce -Aunt Penny'a? -aa the first
coune. Not only that, a wattnm apilled a
gUlll of water on hia attractive companion. I
repeat -an off night.
POT SHOD
~y ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
I HOP~ ·
I CAN
S~TLE
MY , INTERNAL:;; C.O._.FLIC~.S •
'I I
..
,
•
•ANN LANDERS
•HERB CAEN
•ERMA BOMBECK
' it? Should I continue to ~ln them in thl1
~· aa I've been dOOW? I'd apprec:t,ate your
adYt.Ce. -~ B.F., NO CITY OR STATE
PLEASE \
DEAR MRS. B.F.: WUt Y• deeerlbe 11
die pree'll'IOr to kl*y 1ex. I cu ,romJse
, .. &Mt u w .......... .,,. .,.... .......
Dwina the cocktail hour I waa 11eated 1n
the atudy talking with the alster of the
h09te. when I felt IOOMitliina run· aero. my fee:t. I looked down and waa ftonWed to eee
a amall gray motu1e. I controlled myaelf.
(How, rn never know! I am petrified of such
creatw..) I continued the conversation as if
sex
coaU.9", yov .daqiter Ml laer l»oyfrtelld
are 1•lq to be lato some pretty lteavy 1taff
before loag.
~~ ~~ter I·saw a amaller be Hre tlaey ~ave 1everal relaUves. S.Oa
IDOUle run acn:m the woodwork and into the 1omeoae wlll aotlce ud take appropriate
fte fact tUt )'OD became part Of tile
act lt uotlaer •truce OH. AM tlae boy'•
motlaer bows ud approves. More oddities.
hall. At that moment dinner waa 1erved. I acttoa.
couldn't eat a thing. On the way home I told CONFIDENTIAL to Wai I Jastlfletl?:
my husband of my unnerving experience. Not ID my book. Do yo• bn1b ynr teetll
I Hgest yoa talk to a tlteraplst abo•t
tlals. Y oa Deed to udentud wllat 11 101D1
OD between you da•pter ud Mr boyfriend
He felt I ahould phone the hoeteu the fol-with pnpowder? It soud1 like It, die way
lowing morning and inform her that there yoa 1ioot you moadl off. Apolop1e at cmee.
. . . ako wit~ yoarself ••• tbe-hy'1 DM-
tber. I cu't do U ID three hlcbes of new1-
paper space.
are m:Ice in her home. According to him, it U 1be Jor lvet oa, yoa're lack . -----+
would be-an-act of1Wianem. I woWQj)refer ---
to aend her -anonymously of course -a Is pot a drug? Can LSD, PCP, coca.i.ne
mouaetrap. ' and pills open new worlds for you? Stop
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband
and I were invited to a very elegant dinner
party ln the home of a couple we have
known for years. They are well-to-do people
and have four 1erVanta 1n their home.
Please hurry your advice. -POP· guessing. Get the fact.8 in Ann Landen' new oom THE WEASEL IN PrITSFIELD booklet, "The Lowdown on Dope." For each
DEAR PIT: Remala silent ud resiat
die DJ'le to aelHI die UODJIDH• gift. If you .
uw two mice witlda a few miD•tet, yoa can
BEAD PRODUCER -Robert Dorfman
(center) is flanked by models produced by a
Baltimore firm that he heads. The models were
made for Mud Island, a $63 million tourist at-
traction to open in July in the Miasissi i River
II 'Wtt""'6tD
off Memphis. Heads shown represent (from
left) an 1800s riverboatman, a lightkeeper,
young gambler, riverboat plain, riverboat
gambler, towboat dee , magician and a
levee worker.
GOREN ON BRIDGE
BY CHARLES H. GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF
North-South "ulnerable.
South deals.
NORTH
•984 o K 105
O((J95
•AU
WEST EAST
• KQJ8753 + 10%
<:'7 1 1:1 864
O tO 0 QI08
•O •K7651 SOUTH
+A
O AQJ9U
0 A7%
• QJ 10
The bidding: s.._. Weat North Ea1t
l 1:1 3 + 4 1;, Pu1
t 1:1 Pu1 PUI Pu1
Opening lead: KJng of +.
We are ambivalent about
preemptive jump overalls.
Often, they crowd the auc-
tion mercileuly and keep the
opponent.a from getting to
their beat contract. Bul
eometimes they force the op-
ponent• into makable con·
tracu that they wouldn't
reach on their own eteam, or
draw a blueprint for declarer
in the play of the hand.
Here'• an example.
Weal'• pnfempt did pre·
vent the opponents from con·
ducting a scientific investiga
tion of their prospect.a. But
South made up for the lack or
bidding 1pace by 1imply bid·
ding what he hoped he could
make.
West led the king of
spades. and declarer wu not
unhappy with hit chance•. It
seemed that the contract
would hinge on one or two
minor .. uit f111etH1, and the
oddl of Otll of t.llem IUC·
ceeding were better than
8·to-l. However, declarer
decided that, In view of
Wut'a pr.empt, the po•·
albility that neither finuae
would aucceed waa lncreaaed,
so he cut about for another
line.
He won the ace of 1pade1,
cro»ed lo dummy with the
ten of trumps and ruffed a
spade. A heart lo the king
put dedarer back In dummy
for another spade ruff. When
declArer now cubed the ace
or hearu, Eut had been
atrlp!*I of all his cards 1n the
major 1uiu.
Oeclaru continued with a
diamond to the king. a dla·
mond back t.o the ace and a
third diamond. East won the
queen but, because the suit
divided evenly, be wa1 end
p!Ayed. He wa1 forced to le.ad
a club away Crom the lung.
Dttlsrer won the ten or
clubs, croued lo dummy's
ace and discarded his last
club on the thirteenth
diamond.
What ii the diamonds had
split 4·2 and Eut had been
able to exit safely with a dis·
mood? Oedarer would have
been no worse off than ii he
tried both fineuea. He would
ruff the diamond and fall
back on the dub fine11e for
hi• 1lam. Only if West had
queen·thlrd. or queen.fourth
or diamond• would South'•
line fail, and that was unlike·
ly on the auction.
R•ltlter ltrlll1e ehlba
........... LM CMatl')' •M
LM r.w.....i ltriqe fwaaL
0. t.My !mew_...., JM
llea't? CberlH Gere•'•
"f'Hr·DeaJ Brlll1•" wlll .._. , ....... ltratecM• ....
tad.&u .. tWe fut-~
act.Me .... t.Mt pre.W.e
tit• eare fer ••e•lll•I
r-MMn. , .... "'' .... Kerepall, Mall U.15 t•
"G-a·FMI' Deal," e/e dale
... .,...,, P.O. Bes 159,
Nerweell,N~.M'48.Make
dleek8 .-,.We tAI Naw1-
,., arti II kJ
booklet ordered, send $2.00, plus a long,
self-addressed stamped envelope (37 cents
post.age) to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995,
Chicago, m. 60611.
.
flMA IOMlfCI
ATWIT'S END
Little things-
kept forever
f watched my mother put on lipstick the
other day.
She twisted the tube as far as it would ·
go. Then s he dipped in a toothpick and
scooped· a little piece off and put it on her
little finger. With quick, brisk strokes, she
covered her lips.
Then, she carefully ran her finger over
the rim to scrape any excess back into the
tube, twisted it down and put a cap on it.
You'd have thought it was an elixir to retairl
youth forever.
IT OCCURRED TO ME my mother has
two cars in her garage, owns her own home,
wears 35 credit cards next to her body and
goes through the lipstick ritual at least four
or five times ~ day. When I asked her why
she didn't buy a new tube of lipstick, she
said, "They don't make Persimmon Jungle
anymore."
There is an entire list of things people
never throw away in this country that has
nothing to do with sentiment. Lipstick is
only one of them. •
I have never known a woman who can
let go of a cookie sheet. In some of the finest
kitchens in America are cookie sheets that
look like they've been a drip pan for a 1938
Chrysler. They cost $2.95. You'd think they
cost $295. Keys are another commodity that have
permanent status in our culture. To throw
away a key is like dancing_ on a grave. It
doesn't matter that it doesn't fit anything.
Throw away· a key today and tomorrow a
trunk full of Krugerrands will fall in your
path and you won't be able to open it wi-
thout the key you threw away.
I'VE NEVER BEEN ABLE to figure
out why people save eyeglasses they can't
see out of anymore. We have a whole dra-
wer of them and my husband keeps saying,
"But they're good yet," and I keep saying,
"Only for bumping into walls."
It goes without saying that the No. 1
survivor among objects around the house is
underwear.
It's all part of my Mother's Law that I
learned at her knee: If it doesn't show, don't
replace it. If you're too full to eat it, save it
and throw it away later. If it's too dirty to
wash, store it. If it makes you happy when
you see it again, put it in the kitchen dra-
wer. If you can't get to it ... use a tooth-
pick.
Capricorn·: Avoid self-deception
Friday, Marc• 11
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Prom1aea
from 1Uperion are 1Ubject to change -be
aware, alert and protect your own int.enwts.
Aura of deceRt!on could surround bwdnem
tra.nuct.ion. • ·
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Dt.tance to
ultimate pl la ahortened; U.. of commu-
nication open, you get meaage aCl'Ole in-
rneentncful manner. ·
GBMINI (May 21-June 20): Bela-
tlonlblD II ~ money and cndit ratanp are Involved. Ex~ feelin,p CODCel'lllJW
cmnmltment, -=Urlty, broken ~ ln-
wMnc tJudc9t.
CANCB& (June 21-July 22): Old
......-ita. cantnctl may be -..cl .W.-
,ou'll have freah offer and could be ln
pollUan to ND88od&• majar polata.
..., (July 21--Aua. 22): l'ollow ~
on bunela1 Ont lmPl'H,laiaa..,.. ~
and your mtulttve. tntenect II baned to ruor
.. . ;...
sharpnem. Taska_which had been delayed or
neglected come into focus -tie loose ends.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Social acti-
vity acceleratea, communication.a abound
and forces tend to be acattered. Perceive
picture aa a whole, leave fine poi.nta, details
for another day.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Reltricdons
or delaya abou1d not be correlated with de-
feat. Attend to detaila, check aafety mea-
IUl'elt relnforce ...-ur111. Besin rebuilding prom& '
SCORPIO (Oat. 23-Nov. 21): Ernpbuia
oo movement, trip1. caDI, ~ changes
tnwlvina romantic 1n--.. Gemini, Vlqo,
s..Pttarfua perm filun promlnmtly.
SAGmAIU1JI (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): fur..
chue of luxury iwm could be on apnda.
llnapbMia on environment, re.tdence, con·
dl&atmy a-tun by t.nOy &Dlinber. Be rec-.
epUve, dlplomatlc and remember epecial
annlvenary.
HOIOSCOPf
BY SIDNEY OMARA
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Avoid
aelf-dea!ption, eee places and people in rea-
Ustlc Uant. Cycle moves up, timln1 and
Judgment will be on taraet. araam.tancea
lavor your efforts, lam will be temporary.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You'll
have man retpn"'INltty and dm ~
)\1th chance for .... reward. Owmwni-
cate with one confimcl to hcne or hmp&tal.
What bid been hidden Will be reveUid .
PISCES (Feb. 19-Marcb 20): FlnWl ra-
ther than tnit\&te project. Oet rid of burden
not rtchtly your own In nm plla. PoDula-
rity lncnum, you can win frienda anCI ln-
Ouence people. ..
'• ... '
Use O~ Easy Convenient
Layaway Plan ..
e ect1on o
Dresses, Pants,
Shorts, Sweaters,
'and Blouses. ·
E'verything You Want
'
t
.~,,.JI.,,
~ To Wear on the .. ' . , ..
~ . •. Jlt"
...
Tennis Courts, or in the
Easter Parade is
A vailahle Here Now.
~ .
YOU ALWAYS SA VE A MINIMUM
25o/o OFF REGULAR RETAIL
. -
..
~.
·· DRESS AFFAIR
' ·=
•'
..
t ~I
• . ..
..
•'
· ·-Women's Apparel
& Accessories
. 848-2242
19093 Beach Blvd. <at Garfield>
Huntington Bea~h •
OPEN: ..
Mon. -Fri. 10-6
Sat. 10-5
"Another Way to Your Rainbow's End"
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of 1981, competent. informed
preparation Is more impc:>rtant than
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your private appointment. in your tug-of·war with taxes and inflation. \ '--------~-------.J
Museum le~
' $35 million worth o
ST. Prl'JtRSBURO. na. (AP)
-Enabrlned In a former ahip
chandllry ln. ~ oom-
naunl&y that cMll'I IO the eldlfly ::. =:,;-:.~.~
marilb ~ -&M Yl.;r~
IUn...u.t 8alYlldcr Dali.
city'• I.Meline eoune ot IDll u r .
About s.o million people vtrk ....
............. abOut .llOO .......
I weriy. Coafulbl and cantrovwq IUI'·
round Dall'• work; Ira been 11'9
bit plee•1 are hand-painted ~·~m _pbotosraphl, a 1•nlu.-
lnlplted meld of thlnp .. they
are and thin .. u the)' .,-. per-
ceived.
Some find the juxtapolidcm ol
detaila and diatortion1 1t11Qula-
ttn1 and challen1tn1. Othen
c:onalder the works •tr.nae and
nlghtmarlah.
' The Po mlWan contenta of the s.1~ Dd MUleUm we.re do.
nate4 by • Cleveland couple, lonc·Ume frl-* GI the famed, ~t SJU.llb arUat.. wbme
style Ia ao diaUncUve that It ta
recognlJed ln tbe dlcUonary -"dalfeeque."
The ooUeoUon will eventuallJ
Include 93 olla, 200 watereolon
and drawinp, 1,000 araohb and aculptUl'ft and a 2,'SOO-volwne
library, the world'• lar1nt col-
lect.ion of 0.U'a worka.
Aa the public wandered
throuah the 1=.uare-foot ~ pllery, Mone He... • ~ not co .,..uuan the ex:hibtt .,., ~
TokaJ Bank will not only
take good care of your money,
we'll make It grow and
.. You need a panorama," be ::
aatd. "It atarta with Dall u a
youna man and movm to h1a later
worb contrutin1 amall worlu
with the lq, lt'•all planned to be
anti-eatabliabment. We have to
growl Our Individual
Retiremeat.Accounts
(IRAs) are currently
paying 160/o • Interest,
guaranteed for the
_next 18 months ...
And since IRA accounts
are tax-sheltered, •
the earned Interest is
tax-deferred. That's
about as good an
insured Investment as
you'll find.
Our NOW checking
account lets you
write checks and puts
your money to work
earning interest.
~
TAX..sHELTERED
TOKAJ IRA
ACCOUNT AT 1S°/o*
~AND HERE'S WHAT
YOU'LL RECEIVE.
• Current IRA rate 1&°/o*.
• FREE personal
checking account that
pays 51/,.0/o interest.
• FREE Bears. ,
When the doon opened tut
week, eome 1,400 people tumed
out to 1ee the :S7 palntinp hung
~~~~-f-jin[iffijthlfiel,iU million waterf~!'_!___Mll&E_UM O_PENS._: Artist ~ny-u . once~ WiOi ~s81Vidor Dall missed the de-monthly maintenance su~t~ and shrimp tanka where · dicati f th Sal ad Dall
f f th 18 h ships were brought lor repair. on 9 e v or ees or e mont Dali, 77, was at home in Port Museum in St. Petersburg,
term of your certificate. Lligat in Spain. and m1aeed the Fla. ..
That's a very good dedication. But to the donors,
deal Indeed. industrialist A. Reynolds Mone . the term.a and built a museum
and hia wife, the artist sent a strictly for Dall -not a wing of a
But there's still , telegram offering "strictly for museum somewhere."
more. We will also you, yourself and for Eleanor, The state appropriated nearly
give you cuddly bears. lots of kis8ea. For the government $2 million for the project. Th 'II h of Florida and the city of St. The city, populatiOn 216,159, is ey watc over you Petersburg, bonjour, bonjour, a resort and retirement commu-and let you know that bonjour." nity on Tampa Bay. It has the
everythlng_'s all right. The Morses spent 40 years highest concentration of elderly
Just as everything~s all collecting Dali'• art and for a people in the United States. with decade exhibited the paintings one of every three people 65 or right when your money privately in Ohio in &n office-like older in 1980, according to a Un-
is growing and earning setting with linoleum floors and iversity of Florida study.
at Tokal Bank. bright light.a. In the mid-19708, Tourism is the Gulf Coas t
the Mo1'9el realized estate taxes
"ttad-OW~
For M~ the mWleWD culmi-
nates a ~0-yeer f.udnation with a
master of "new ldeu, new con-
<.-ept.a, color . . . I aiee a man who
can pull from· the area of sleep
completely new concepts, can
look into childhood 50 yean ago
and see them as he aaw them as a
boy. He ta extraordinary . . . The
technique -elongations, skeletal
forms, luminescence . . . it sets
him apart."
Not everyone sees all that in
Dali, however.
"I think he's hallucinogenic,"
said Rosalia Minardi of Tampa.
"He has a mania for bosoms.
Bosoms everywhere. F88Cinating,
but not my type."
Many banks charge maintenance fees
for NOW accounts. But when you open
an IRA account for $500 or more, there
Call or drop in at the Tokal would force liquidation of the
office nearest you. And go home with collection.
new friends, and new financial security. Morse decided to give away
'Simple interest. ••Subs\antlal peNlty for 94r1Y wllhdrawa• the works, but only if the oollec-
Smoking fine OK'd
Rates subject to change. This offer la good white supplies last. tion stayed intact. That condition
Each depositor insured up to $100,000. J.lember FDIC. was too steep for universities and
I
Levy would apply in bus, elevator · Northern art-oonacioua cities. lOKAI BANK "St. Petersburg was chosen
~a primarily because they put their . , B<?ISE. Idaho (AP)· -U the Idaho Senate has its way,
at s going to cost smokers a minimum $5 if they're caught
smoking in elevators and public buses. ~,,, OF CAIJR>RNIA Otherofflces money where their mouth is," said Betaey Stalzer, museum in-NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE oonyenlently located In formation director. "They were 3333 We t Co t High (714) ., .. It! Hermosa Beach, Playa de/ willin s as way• 00t0·7121 Rey, Inglewood: Pasadena, · · g to accept it on Mr. Mor-
HUNTINGTON BEACH OFFICE Alhambra, Temple City, Los se's terms. Other places, institu-
19006 Brookhurst Street . (714) 963-5651 Angeles and San Francisco. tions and universities, wanted to keep the good stuff and sell the
rest. But St. Petersbmg accepted
The Senate voted 24-10 for a bill imposing a fine of $5 to
$10 for people cited for smoking in elevators and buses with
established rol.Ues.
"This b~ will help yqu all live longer," said sponsor
State Sen. Laird Noh, a Kimberly rancher.
The measure goes to the House.
Fine Jewelry -Appraising, Repairing, ustom
Designing and the Finest of Service
NEWPORTER INN JEWELERS
formerly Mary Ellsworth Fine Jewelry
1107 Jamboree Rd., Newport Beach 7Zt-Ntl
. ,,.,,. ________ Fitte SbHJ Sine• I 90j --------
SIZE SCALE
SS . 6·10 s . 6-10
N .. 5·10
M .4-10
AMALFI BASTIANO
The dressy interlaced vamp sondol ...
in sand or white coif.
~~ -~"'j~ SHOES
#99 Fashion Island
Newport Beach 759-9551
WE'RE A LOT M•E THAii
A •LL Oii Y-WALL
:t ·: ..
.•
Behind ffiibiTT. SitilncT the ~ 1
famou1 Seacoaat 1tlcker. Behind all the 1tat.-0Mhe an protection
devic.a we make and Install, Is
Seacoaat central 1tatlon.
When an aJarm goH oH on your propertyJ we get the algnal In a
"Hrby, 24-hour·a-day cantiil station. If the slgnal lndlClltM fire, •
burglary or hoodup, we .Cllll the' t ~rce or fire department.
Since our centraJ lt.atlon la UL J• l !lated, our c•ntral llatlon
customeq can qualify for a alzable
dlaoount on their lnaurance. :
And to Inc,.... o~r rMCf!, mlllW reapo(I• trma evtn faatef and lmprq¥e etflolenoy wa ·r~
t I icomputslzlng OW 8'11Jbn.
,,.:;:. lmpr011eme11ta aren't new to S..Coaet. Wa've t>Mn oettlnt bettef fOf 2\
And tod9y 'we're the IMderl In the MOUrity bualneaa In the hilfbor aNa wit~
B t0,000 °""'°"*" lnclucffng a wide ranee of big and amall ,._.11, lnduetrtat
OOll ..... ~ ••
o find °"' more aut 9-:o•t central atatlon writ• or oome b~ o.1r .,._,
Hty at~ Newport llvd .. Ca.ta MeN.
I
TBQWLEVAAO
\
More had news for smokers
Carbon monoxide can mean heart complications
WASlUNGTON (AP) -Nearly 80 percent of
smoken have potentially dangerous level.a of carbon
monoxide in their blood which can increase the
chance of complications from heart dileue, a fede-
rally funded survey reporta.
Only about 5 percent of non-smokers were
found to have comparable carbon monoxide levels,
the survey for the National Center for Health
Statistics found Wedneeday.
Of the four primary sources of carbon mono-
xide -smoking, occupational exposures and out-
door and indoor expoeures -smoking was found to
be "the most significant and widespread."
The study found that exposure to carbon
monoxide in winter from indoor llOIJl'CeS may be a
potential public health problem because there were
atri.k.fug differences betwetm blood carbon mono-
xide levels in summer and winter.
The conclusions were drawn from data collec-
ted by the center in its National Health and Nu-
trition Examination Survey, conducted from Fe-
bruary 1976 to February 1980.
It offers the first estimates of blood cal"bon
monoxide levels obtained on a representative sam-
ple of the U.S . population. About 11,000 persons
aged 3 to 74 years were tested. ,
Carbon monoxide is a byproduct of smoke
which can aggravate coronary heart diaease symp-
toms. Ekcessive exposure to it also can impair per-
ceptual and motor functions.
A carbon mono,.:ide level above 2 percent in
heeltby non-smokers is considered to be a potential
h~th hazard. Smokers are regularly expoeed to
hl1her levels of carbon monoxide from their bur-
ning tobaax>.
"The smoking population showed a mean car-
bon monoxide blOod level of more than 4 percent;
for never-smokers, the mean was leas than 1
percent." the report said.
of cigarette smoke on non-1mokera. Whfre there·
was evidence of elevated exK:.ture to carbon
monoxide among non-smokers, ord said he at-
tributed it to faulty heating systems. . '
The study also showed that there was little
evidence that outdoor sources of carbon monoxide
like industrial pollution pose a substantial health
hazard, Radford said. The study led him to conclude
that "carbon monoxide never was much of a pro-
blem in the United States."
Most of the exposure in the general population
comes from automobile exhausts and emission of
carbon monoxide from industr ial plants into the
outdoor air.
Exchange
of bulbs
offered
MODESTO (Al') -
Even if they're old and
burned out, 100-w att
light bulbs have some
value to Modesto-area
residents.
Directors of Modesto
Irrigation District voted
to offer \wo 90-watt
e nergy-saver bulbs to
anyone who trades in a
pair of 100-watt bulbs
whether they work or
not. BAMBOO CHOPSTICKS
14 ~" long .49palr
Newport Beach Fashion Island 644-4411 . at Mr. Elliot's: South Coast Plaza 557-6080
Real leaves are
permanently sealed
in clear, waterproof
plastic on brasa.
~~~
COTTON
HAREM
DRAWSTRING
PANTS "We have reason to s uspect that carbon
monoxide may play a role in precipitating heart
attacks," said Dr. F.dward P. Radford, an epide-
miologist from the University of Pittsburgh who
prepared the study for the Health and Human
Services Department agency.
The bulb exchange· is
a imed at encouraging
conservation . so custo-
mers who ,take part also
will receive a booklet
called "Light it Right."
BLACK STAINED ROSEWOOD
PLATE & VASE STANDS
MINIATURE TJN BUCKETS l TUBS
From Hong Kono
He said the role of carbon monoxide in heart
disease is not fully understood.
The ene rgy-saver
bulbs use less electricity
but produce as much
light and last three times
longer than r e gular
bulbs, said Ken McKin-
ney, chief of the district's
conservation depart-
ment.
"The population that is of particular concern is
espedaily men -but some women -over the age
of 45 who have not had any heart disease
diagnmed," he said in a telephone interview.
Where there is no history of heart ailments in a
patient, about 5 percent of men over 45 and a
analler, but unclear nwnber of women, may suffer
"stlent coronary vaac\.llar disease" which may be
auravated by exposure to high levels of carbon
mono~. he said. Deposits test
FRESNO (AP)
Some welfare payments
in Fresno and San Diego
counties will be automa-
tically deposi led into
recipients' checking ac-
counts under & pilot
pro~.
A spokelman for the Tobacco Institute said the
_,cation of cigarette manuf.acturen was puzzled
by the report. lfe said the institute is not aware of
any ICi.entific demonstration of hazards in healthy
people with carbon monoxide blood levels ot 2
percent.
Radford said the data in the study do not lend
themselves to drawing conclusions about the impact
.Court battle looming
Late madam's estate administrator upheld
SAN RAFAEL (AP) -A superior
court j\.adJe says he can find no evi-
dence tolamia Elizabeth Ann Phil-
lipe u administrator of the multi-
million dollar estate of the late ma-
dam, Sally Stanford.
Mn. Phillipa, who ia al80 named aa
main beneficiary of Miu Stanford's
t15 mlllJon estate, ls expected to be
the focua of a pro-
tncted court fight
over the eatate.
Mila Stanford for
years ran a famous
brothel ln San
J'ranciaco. Years
later, ahe waa
elected mayor of
S.••lho. She died
~~ -~~ .--;-... -· . . .. In February. .
A ttorneya fo · · IT~
John JJavld Owen, Mtg Stanfw;l'a
dlalnherlted aon, alleged that Ma. Ph1Dilll WM .. lootinl" the estate and lhouJa be NIDOWd M lldmlniltratot.
They claimed that Ma. Phillipe
removed jewelry from M,11 Stan-
ford'• bialllAtal roam JUI' houri before
lhe clied. lbreh 1 and ..... ,..,.....
valuablel from Mlil Stanford'• va-
, rioUl hOmel.
But .J~ Riobard Bnlner ruled
, tbat he could find no evidence to
.. ppin the clalml. °'81111 WdlDOl\1 J'rtda.y, ...... frimdl lind ......,_ of "Miia Btm-
f ord cleecrlMcl bow ah• 1taahed •
........... lncmbathsvmioul
bmw In San rt-..... See..Uto and .......
Breiner ruled that "the evidence
presented to the court falls far short
of establishing that Mrs. Phillips has
abeconded with estate aseets.
"Contrary to the allegatioM that
Mn. Phillips took and .,-eted dece-
dent's jewelry while she was
hospitalized,'' Breiner aald, "the cre-
dible evidence reveals otherwile.''
~ on testimony from a physi-
cian who treated Mt. Stanford, the
Judae said, "I am convinced . . . Miss Staiiford had no jewelry except, per-
haps a ring when ahe entered the
hospital and that Mrs. Phillipe had
nothing to spirit away."
Likewiae1 Breiner Mid, no evidence
w.s pre.ented to aapport clabm that
Mn. PhiWpa took any of the money
Mila !rtinford hlld lqUirreled away In
boxe. and bql.
'lbe j.ldae ildded, howevw, that he
WM puiiled by Mft. PhlDJ .. ' failure
to inventory the money and dlpoait 1t
1n a .:ure vault.
. Mn. Philltpa' tettimony that ahe
removed mo of ay. anc1 Jewelry •
requeateCI by Mlu Stanford
"aaUafactorlly e~na her conduct the morning of y'a death," ·the Judae .ud. In order 1IO "pvctJOte confidence'' in
the mlnda ol ~ contiMUDc the will.
BrtiAn.. appointed the a.nil of Ame-
lita u co-aclmlnllUator with Mn.
PblUipl.
They will Jol,ntl_y conduct an ac-
countlnl of lln. Stadford't WMlth
and conatnue as--~ ber Valhalla Inn ........,., 1n Se ho •
From Hong Kong
I I ,
I
I
"' /
VASE STANDS '
3 'It• dla. 2.39
4 '11 • dla. 2.99
5•1, • dla. 4.49
CLEAR GLASS
SPICE BOTTLE
From
Taiwan
With
plastic
stopper.
4• tall
.27
Delightful utlllty comes down to hold i-:;;;...;;::;_ _______ ~
.---· toothpicks. paperclips.
plant, pencils or whatever
ROUND TUBS
4• dia. x 1 •t. •deep .49
5" dla. x 2•1, • deep .59
CELADON GAE
PORCELAIN BOWLS, ,
From China
Soft green bowls have molded
surface designs.
FISH 5• dia.
.85 PITH HELMET
BUCKET$
3 '/• • to 5 v. • dla
2 •t. • deep .49
4 v. • deep .59
4 'Ii· deep .89
HOUSEHOLD HELPERS From Taiwan and Hong Kong
STAINLESS STEEL TEA INFUSER STAINLESS
0 )@~ STEEL
_ _ ~ UTENSILS
-------' Stir, turn or lllp•
Fork,
6" long .89
NATURAL
BAMBOO
SKEWERS
5• long .29
Pkg. of 100
10· long .49
Pkg. ol 100
Spoon,
BAM BOO Slol ted
TOOTHPICKS Spoon or
2'/i" long Turner •
• 49 Pkg To 13·
ot 300 tong
1.15
Multicolored
crewel work ~~1~;~~!~ of off-white
makes
stunning
plllow
covers .
11· x 17•
plus 4•
fringe
7.44
-.SHELF
17• long .69 BAMBOO
.,__ _ __,,,..-A~-.... ~--Will==~-------------~ UhlT BAMBOO l MONG BASKETRY From Chine From
SOLID IAASI TRAYS
I ROSEWOOD FINISH
HARDWOOD STANDS
,,,.elaed and
hammered trays to
aet on atands or
hang on the wall.
TRA vs From lndla
24" dla. 47.91
30• di•. 88.99 I
STANDS From Hono Kono
2.t• w1c1e2l.U
30• wtc1e 21.U
i
PLATE
HOLDER
10· dla.
r<a~~~~~~~ BREAD OR BUN Taiwan
11 '11 • long .49 ~~.~~11~0~
. 29
FIRESIDE OR
FLOWER To 12· tall
~-16Yt " long 3.99
18" long 4.99 22· long 5.99.
NATURAL TEAK OCCASIONAL
MONG GRASS BREAD
BASKET 151/t • long 1.59
ol 1owels
or little
plants.
48" tall
1a• wide
11 • deep .. ua.r.1.1r,,.
22. 79 Q,..a~~
TABLES From Hong Kono ~~;::::~-.;::~--::>.
Teak ven"r tops on solld teak
NATURAL RICE
STRAW
MAmNO
lega In tradltlonal
oriental or
contemporary
alyllng.
WITH
SHELF
20· >< 20• >< 11~ tan
44.88
1a· x 1a· x 1a· tall
32.88
_Fro.m...Cf\lna
Straw matting
In 9' widths
cut to any
lengths
deaked
to 38' long.
.48per
eq. foot
EXAMltl.ES:
l 'xt' 24.84
W.>< 1f .....
. ,. •' . .
~. ;,. .
J
... .. .. .·
.. ,!F'.=-
1Ml&i540NI
HAWM ....
UNDll ........
HUIMN191AVICM (is-
•• * "1•1119gtOUncl''
(11Mt) v ... Jolwwon. Jotwl
Hoctllle. AIMrtGlln ....,.
Of .. 1011t Alrtlome ()M.
tlon 9l'080' In .. ~
OMIP8lln 8ncl IN ..... °' ...... ®~'-.....oue
OLOWNI
Alofwd ~ hoMa "* doou11• IWy illiltlnO ttle
wand'• ~ c6Q!lfne.
ttom .. elrc:U8 t1'IO to ..
.... 8Cnl8n, '*"' fl!m foot119e, dr•m•llo , ..
8f\8Ctft181'1 .. Md lttll pho.
toe.
Cl)MOW
* * * ''Why Would I Lie?"
(1980) TIWt W98m8. U..
Bchhorn. A~ .., upeeta the ......,. quo
with hie refullll to oonfonn.
'PG' IACADf:MY~
1:1S PllDOE ~
Aegul8rty KfledUl8d ~
llfwnmlng ~ be d8l9yed
due to l)l8doe brWI.
-· THE HUMMNlllAO MAH
A profte8 of Ru8Mll Oog, a
c:ommwc'81 photOQt11Pher
wtlO IOllt ~ ... 1111
Yllllofl through I bout with
dleb9t9e. ltao. WELCOME MOK.
.t<OTTa
I .. •w AEJl'Ofl'T 8HEWI
llAAHEY Miu.EA
MOVIE * * "ThYnderblrdl In Out-., si>-" ( 1981) Puppets. The Thunderblrdl ,_
11Q111Mt """ to 11op 1 t~et from COlllOlng wtth
the""'· .
1kA1 (%) MOVIE
*** "s.t>ofu' (1'421
Prtectll• L•ne, Robert
Cumming•. AcouNd of
11t>Otage Ind IN munitlf
of hl8 .,.., friend, I ""'"
.... out to find IN rMI
Hui Mbot8Ul"I. t:IO. OYIA EA8Y
"Ceno8r" au.t: Am8nd8
B1Mt1.(R)Q
7:00 I C88 HEWS NBC NEWS
HAPPY DA.YI AOAIH
•• MCNEWI YOU AIKB> FOA rT
FMllll'ed: "Oolphln M8Qic;"
1nd "Mrt. WhMlch•lr
Am«lol.''
• w·A·a·H
Boeh CtlM1'e end Klnger
d8¥elop romentlo IW8ot'9
while totgettlng lMlt trou-
blee •1 Rolle'. 811. I JOKER'S WllD
Dea< CAVETT
au.t: Julan Bonet (R)
(I) P.M. MAOAZINE
A mll\ who II wllltlng lor ttw proper donot lor a
~i-itr
p6ent; • dlec: )oclley wtlO •
meta u · 1n on-th•1lr
metofvnektlf.
9 EHTERTA.IHMENT
TONOKT
An Interview with Bo
Dertll.
8 THE MUPPETI
Ou.t: Loll Fel8ne.
(8) THE UTT\.£ST ._..WD
OPP TO CONCBllT -Jl:laJne (Marilu
limner), ·~·· dmer Jim (Chriltopher
Lloyd) are nNMly to leeve for vtol1n con-
cert on "Taxi" t.cJniCht at 9:30 on Channel 7.
Animated. "loll8td
Cllambetlaln n.,r•t••
HIN Chri8aen AndettM't "°" llllOut • IMtmlld wtlO -ee IO Moolne • ~· * ·~ "Dot And TN K.M-lll'OO'', (1171) Al*nMed.
~ by YOf'Wll.Gfoa
• A ~ tltf '*°"'-loll
In .. "'*' .... tlultl end
ltbefrtelldedbyeken-
08t'OO .,., ...... '* • llft In .. poud\. 'G'
T:to. I ON THE TOWN
Fellturecl: the ~ty
ltudded 1111 reeort OI
Alpen, Co6oredo; • .,...,
Gllnlll; • '*1Y .... llouel
of --ca.or,. Heflllton; • loolc .. .. ""'°"' "-' / L.oe ~ .. ~ ,..... ..
I .,,.,. v fllUD
LAVIRHI a 8HIN.IV
leot#Ntt 1..--ne-9~-.,..
,.., to lie eubtec1a b a.
entlllc 111perlment1 In
ordtlf to Mm the monev
they need to attend •
codctal JIMY. •• l't'!ONL.A.
F•tuf'lct: a tMtdl kif Loe
Ang9111' beet mergmrtt~ •
,.._,on wMI -elq)eOt from men In • , ....
tlOn8hlp. I~
Whh Col. Pottt1r wrltll
l'lome, Frink Ind Hot Lipe
hew • wood C8Nlng made
lor him Ind Rider re80Ull
•horM. ....
I Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH
WiCH8&.1 L.BtAER
flll!l'ORT ·~FOAIT
Fe•tured: .. T1lwan'1
Sn•k• Alley Medlolne
Man" Ind •'The Wortd'1
Wllrdllt Hantylllt."
(8) MAL DP'fCTM!I:
THI! 8P!CK CAii
Tllll documentary lolowl
Ille Chk:ligo Potlcl °"*1·
ment'I ~ inw..
tlgMlon ol the murder ol
eight ltudent ~ In
their dormitory on July 14,
1Me. HO. Cl) MWUil, PJ.
Magnum~ lo IOIYI
• 3~-(lld ortmm. (R) 88,AME
The ..... plan I ltlOW
for .. llUdeMt Ind Oorl8 end.....,.,.,.......,.
to r.111 "°"*" 11ut lhe tNth tor•-· • THICINATWT
JOUNt!Y
Wlll8l'n SMtnef look• It
man'• ...... Into epece..
lromthl.,......._up
to th8 Spece 8tM1le.
8 0~SOUADI
A loghorn In the beet!·
ground of 1 tape II Frank
Drebln'1 onty e1111 10 the
wt.llboutl of I kld-
nec:iped ""'-· • MOYie * * * ''The SwlM Con-1plracy" (197n David J.-. Ell• Sommer.
Secret bll1tk _,n., leed
10 a m•Jor bl11ekmall
ICflllne If\ wtlictl muro.r
.,_,_ I pen .of the
pnel)lan.
• f'.M. MMAZIHI
A l'Nlft wtlO 18 waiting I«
tN "°"' --'°' • mud\oot I I ded ..... W..
p!Mt; a dleO ,... wtlO
act1 u 1n .,.. .. .,. .. ,
"'8tclfllnekat.
.MCMI * *~ "lellrdl For ~
fl'' I ,.72) Dooumentary. c.m.. crewt lolow Jun-
oi-8ncl pralr18 ~Of
Nor1ll Amlw1o8 8ncl ~
Ill In their relentleM QUiit
kif ...
• DOWNHOMm
COUNnff MUie cn.ney Pride, HOVI Axton
and Tmrnmy Wyne«• .,.
tne '-'• lor a ooun1ry
mu•lo 111tr1v1g1nu
~ the ITllnY •tylll
of country muelc; eoftld-
ulld enttlf1111n«e Include
Roy CWll, Mlciley ONiey,
Larry Gatlin Md Lacy J.
o.tton.
• INIAK PAEVllWI "°Oar Ebert Ind Gene
lleket revle• "DHth
TtLIP" Ind "Du Boot."
CJ:)MCMI *** "Joflnny, We Hardly Knew Ye" (1877) P8UI
Rucki, W11111m PrlooL An
embltloul young lrilh eo..
tonlen, John F. Kennedy,
ltlOWt Mr1y Ilona of I gift
tor Clf•tn181 • N begllw
1118 polltlc8I Journey t~
lhl Pl Mldelicy.
Cl) MARY MANILOW IH
CONCERT
MMllow PlrlOtml I Mlle·
tJon of .. hits. .MOVIE * * * "The Other Side Of The Moun...,, -Par1 II"
(1878) M8tllyn Hueett,
Timotny Bottom.. Former
cNrnplofl elder. Jll l(lf). •
lnOnt, rwlderld • quedrl-
,,.. by • tr8Qllc eccldent,
..,..... wttll Mlf-ctoubt
wtien 1 ,_ low en1•• her
life. U>. 9 IOeOM IUDDIEI
Kip llOcuell H«WY of mak·
lflQ llnpf0"9' adVlllOM ,_d Kip'• ........ Q
• ALL IN THI 'AMILY
Mike cr•tttly 09!* OU1 of
t .. 11no Olorla to a pwty eo
he '*' 00 llcllno with the ~
• PORTMIT8 IN
f'A8Tl!U
"Gold EMmge" ®M!OVll ••• ··on Ooc11" c19m ca.or,. Bumi. John Oen-
..,., , Ood 111ec11 •n
~young .....
lllll'Ut fNNIOlt to dellv;er
• ,,.... of llope and
OOod wll lo the Llleptic.I
peopa °' th8 modern-<lly wand. 'PG' aJ) WE'LL IE AIGHT
BACK
Avwy setw.iblr lltld CMa-
tlna Ferr•• hoet I look •t rv·a moet memot1bl1
commerdlll from the birth
of the medium to the ~
11\I dmy.
l :M (%) MOVIE
·CHANNEL LISTINGS
• ·~ "Bu1tln' LOOM" I lN 1) Ridllrd Pryor, Clol-
ty Tyt0n. A bumbllno bur-
g1.,, • concerned
eohoottllCttlr Ind liglll
ohlldren make 1 !tighten-
ing c:rOM-OOUntty trip In a
brokl!MSoo#n ldlool ~. ....
HO. (I) PEOPl.EI
c.tOICIAWAAD8
Amerlcl'1 fa'tl()(lll P«·
lorrner( televlllon pro-
grwna, movlll Md muelc:
wtll be l\llned 81 Ihle
llghtll 81111Ua1 -d• Otlf ..
mony, to lie tlllecelt from
!hi Sent• Mon1ce Civic
Auditorium.
88Dtff'AENT
8'T'AOl<U
' I.
8 KNXT <CBS> e KNBC (NBC>
8 KTLA (Ind.)
•t<ABC (ABC l
8 KFMB (CBS>
., KHJ·TV (Ind.)
• KCST (ABC)
• KTTV (Ind.)
'•KCOMV (Ind.I
.• KCET (PBS)
• l<OCE CPBS)
CU) On-TV
Cil Z·TV
<Bl HBO
a:J (Clnemu)
(!) (WORr NY.,N.Y
@ (WTBSl
(J) IESPNl
Cl) tShowtlme >
• $poUlglll
• IC.bl• News Network)
WIWl8 lllt1da In th8 llolpltal
wtien lie go.. lo the
defenM of A.mold, who la bllno 1t1rror1ud by hwO
bulllll. IPlrt 21 o
u ..... -=. . :=..-::-.. -:= ................ ..................
it:::: TMIATM "I ...... ,..,,. ... . ... w..n ........ ...
ef•d•ll fUtlft«, ... .
action • ...... et ,,...... .......... lflll
....... eofftNM °' ....... ..,.~'°
!!&ftwt4)Q
1111 ... AIMAK
N IHMadWI ... ",,..,.,.. ...... .
killed lat .......... by
:.i; TAJCI
-.. ll'M'I two oonoert --~.-.-... 88lfle '° ~.,. '*"·
10:00 •• HtU. ll'MIT
IUB
ltlk1t encl Wlllllllnoton
meet up wlll\ ~ wtlO
II *twit a Pollot tow
trudl, encl ~·· dllllU-tlonlNnt ..... thl o1rnlnel
Juttloe 8)'llem lleCOlnM ... II ••• NIWI
20/IO .
MOW
* • • "St•)' Hungry"
( 1878) .left Mllll•• 8ally
Field. The Oi'fbett IClon ol •
en old Sou1hem family
lrlee 10 .. ..,. • -Y gym
from tne lland8 of rMI
11t8t1~1or1. QJ)MOVll
* * • "C1ddy1hack"
(1980) 8111 Mutt9Y, Rodney
Dengerftlld. The dement-
ed O'oundl-«...,., of •
1w1nky country club
Wlgll W8t lglinlt Ille
gopherw Inhibiting hie IUrf.
'R'
Cl)llZARRE
"The Ultlmell McMI" .MOVIE * * * "Boye. NIO"t Out"
(1962) Kim Nova, J-
G•ner. When • 111..,.iy
young co-eel~.
-,_ch project, lhl
find• '°'" buelneeemen more 11\an wtlllng to ,....
en 81P*f1menl to 8ld her In
her ltucfy.
10:1SCli)TME IDT OF '0..
LOCAT10H'
Aobett Kllln h09tl I Nllc-
tlon of routlnll performed
by the Vlrioul comec:ll8N •
• Including Robin Wlllllml,
Billy Cryet81 Md 0.vld
Bt1nner --who h•v•
8'>Pllted on Home Box
Ollloe'• ltll\Cklp comedy Mr'lll. •
(Z)MOYll * * "Ewewlt,_.. '1870)
Mtrk L11t8t, 8u11n
George. A young boy
known for h•vlng •n
overactive lm1gln•tlon
o.n't convince .nyone thll
lie NI wlll'lllMd the mur-
Olr of I prominent black
man. 10:IOI HEWS TME 1.AWMAKEM
Corre1pond1nt1 Lind•
Wertheimer •nd Cotlle
Roberta jolt! PMll Duke lor
II\ up-~ti.mlnute mum-
mery of Congr-1on11
KtMtlll. •
Cl) l.Af'F.A-THON
A oomldlen holl IOd four
comic cont11tent1 wt1o
compete ag•ln11 one
ILnOlhlr .,. teet\lt9d In lhll
unoenlOfecl comedy geme
Dhow. 11:00988<1>98 HEWS
• IATUADAY NIOHT
Host: Hugh Hefner. Gullt
UbbyTltU9.
G KOJAK
•. THE JUflR80HS
• 8ANFOAD AHO SON. .......
WA.8HlHOTON
Cl)MOYIE
* * "Squeeze Pl1y")A
tnm of blll-plmylng bMu--
1111 ec:ore more Ulan hOml
~on IN fteld. 'R ..
11:10• Dea<CAVETT
Gueet: Batt>ar• Cet1JINI.
11:IO; Cl) NCM
IA8t<ET8ALL
1w•1"1t1nrr111na ... . A ..... ofllMlll=• ........ --Dll9i ---~ .... ~ ........ Nut .. ~ 11J41(C)MOWm ........ .,... .........
(1HO OM Wallao.,
, ........... ~WOIMl'I ,..,,... .......... ~. ~ Wllo ....,. to be •
........ 'fr ~*~Thief" (1881)
J8mff CHn, Tu11d8y
Wiid. A profeMlonil crook
Olvll up Ille llwMpelldefice
lat I big ICO<I that he
hopee .. llC:Ur• hll'fllt'N-
ty'L future, ·A'
12!00 e INT'PT,NNMIHT
TOHfGHT
An Interview with Bo
Derail. e a VICW
Den ,... In lo'll wffh I
-who .. Planning I multJ..mllllon dolllt ,.....
llellt. (R)
• MOVI( **°" "How To Commit M•trl109" I 1888) Bob
Hope, Jaottll GIMeon. An
unm•rrlld couple give
lhllr baby up lor 8doptlon,
Md the girt'• dlvOtoed per-
entl dle'dl to ,_ tlle
chlld under .... -· • MOVE * * • "Clndlt• Uberty" (1873) Jlll'lll Ceen, M8t·
Iha Maeon. A N11or llh In
low wltl't I 8Mllle prOl11-
tU1• he won lor a night In 1
poolpne.
• LOVE, AMEAICAN STYLI
(D)MOVIE
**~ ··Any Whldl Wmy
You Cen" (1880) Cllnt
e.twooo. Sondre Ladle.
Before Mltllng down with
NI glrl Md pet orangutlO,
1 blt•ll8ted fight.-llgn1
up tor one lut, tucntlve
"'8tdl. 'PO'
.MOVI(
***"~Now"
(1878) M•r1on BrMdo,
Mlftln ~. Directed by
Frandl Ford Coppola. An Int...,_ mgent ember11a
on • mlellon up rfvtlf Into
the viem-Jungle to
llnd and kll I mye1er1oua,
AWOL Army oflleer who
h.. lohd Ill prftloul
ltternptl It 1111 capture. 'R'
<Il M<>YE
**~ "Drlllld To IOI"
(18801 Mlohffl Caine.
Angil Dlc*lnlOn. Poltce -di'°' th8 ~
murdertr ""° ~. IUbwtl9ft ........ 'A'
12:.IO 8 8 LATE .-rrwrTH
DAVID lETTl!NMH
Gueete: authOf Hunt•r
Thompeon, Jimmy the
Gf9elt.
• OOUPl.U
T odeyt ep4eode de8le wttll
• huebend werttl 10 ......
thllf mtlfrlage but hie wife
•11nt1 to end It.
1= * • o,t "Dlelh Race 2000"
(111751 Oe..td Cerradlne,
Simone Grlfll1h. In Ille )'Ml'
2000 A.O.. hlt.,.nd·run
drivlnO II a Nttonel eport
In wtlich ""*' *'1rnl -worth 10 polnta. 'R'
1:009 MOYIE • * '" "Thi Outer Sp-ConnecUon" ( 1875) Docu-
.............. _ .. .... .. ........ :::.-.: .. -.:-... -:: ................. .. ...............
...... "' .. '9Mlln ~ ............... ;-:...
**""flnltp I 1Mp0ft "-"-" ,,_, YoM TMI.
OMrtall &.--. ~-··MDVII •'it "V.,,..,. Clrclut"
( 11721 Laurence ~.
--~
1:1•1=
..... "Hardly Wot1clng"
( 1881) Jettry Lei l.9wll,
8UMn OIMir. Alter IN
drQll cloNI down, • ..,....
•en CIOwrl 11111 hie hand .
at V8lioul ... lelllno
1:aoil"D ... :•·'PG'
1:I0(8)MOYE
*** ... "Ey1wltn•11"
(1881) Sigourney w....,.,,
Wiiiem Hurt. A leleYlllon
report• becOl'llll lnvotved
wtth 1 )lnltor Who mey
know more about 1 mur-
dtlf !Mt lie wttnellld than
N 18 M)'tng. 'R' 2!00 . MOVIE
* * * "The OoddeH"
( 1858) Kim Stanley, Lloyd
8'1dgee.
Cl)MOVIE • * * "Hopeootch" (1880)
Wlllter M1ttn.u, Olinda
Jac:ltlOCI. A former Int•
Oii'°' llglnl It 8iOld by WI
otd l'lllml In dodging the
KOB end lhe CIA. wtlO tlfl
trying 10 pr_,t him lrom
publlanlng hie memoltl. 'R'
(%)MOVE * * "Reilurn Of The Dra-gon" (1872) Bruce Lei,
alUdc Norrie. A mlttlll
.,... expert ~ from
Hong Kong to Rome to
help • friend Who II In trou-
ble with th8 mob. 'R' ~-MOYIE **°" ··R•ge .. (11188)
Glenn F0(.12, Steffi SI•
Yena. 2:30. MOYIE * * "8-1 Of Tiie Dead" I 1870) John A1hley,
Celeete v.,,,..,
.MOVIE * *"' "The Flendllh Plot Of Or. Fu Manc:hu" (1880)
Pettlf Sellen. Sid C-.
The F8I Md Sootland
Y•d'I Del. Haylend Smith
put.-the 1~-o6d
•ch ..,....., .. N -dlel
lor th8 lngr9dlenta, lnaud-
lng the CrOMI Jewels.
UMdlOINlle .. ~
longlng .... 'PG' 2;40. NIWI
l:M CJ:) MOY!! ** "The Apple" (1MO) ~ Mary St_.,,,
George Glflonour. In t"4, •
tinging duo 1111 Into the
hand• ol 1 dl•bollc•I
~.'PO' a:oo• ,.., a:aa CH) MOVIE
**"' ··Bu1un· LOOM"
(1N1) Rlc:hwd Pryor, Clce-
ly Tyeon. A bumbling bur·
glu, • concerned
IChooll~ end llOht
children mike • fright-
ing croas-country trtc> In •
~oken-doll>n KhOOI bul.
'R'
(%)MOVIE
**"' "Lladbell)"' (1875)
.. ...
r:'7'-=~ .. :.:.: ........ ......
Hi11 Mi"Allf---911 OM".( .. ... ., ......... ..... .... ....... .. ............. ................... ··--·-----.·PO· '*<I:>*** ~C»lcao. ..... '-!::.;:·~:.a:
NlwM to IM111 Md ---~--.................. ..................
!: .......... .,..
·~"Ullle .... .,.. (1MO) w-.,
......... Jul9~
...., on n. D9lftOft """'°" ...,,,. A f1Vlll, .._ . ... ......... .
...,. atouM ... ... ....... ..,.. .. ..... ,,........ . .,.. •• ,,... fur.,..
·~ ....... .,...·-a~:~ ......... -•c••••-,, ... , Aoblr1 ~. ..... ar... ,.,.., • .,.
••CJ:>••\+"~"(11191 oerou• oh•N lhroup
Rmque1 Weklll, """" Sta-Mulco, en Anwt ~ . ,_.,.,~·'-----••OlllfPl!Pl'olt.
go dlllCtlr 11 ~ to • * * * ''The Pi!Mwi
LP• Ang1111 by • a.,. .. (185n Doril o.y,
dtlfll\gld, pwenoiac k-JoM RMtl A union r...-
Who be11evw thll 811e 11 Mntlt~ , ... In to¥e with •
the ceute of the lallure of p1j1m• f1c1ory'1 new
hll marriage. 141t)etlntendent Md man-
(1) * * * ··why Would 1 1g11 10 c:Dnvtnc:e him 1hat
U.?" (tNO) Tr11t Wll-INwortlenrwectlr .....
lllms, Ula Elchhom. A • * * ~ "Fllgnt To Ten-
compWtve lier upMCa 11>1 g1t1r•• ( t853) Join Fon-
et•lua quo with hll ~ lllnl. Jac:k Plllanoe. A
10 oonlorm. ·PO· P4Ane c:rllhll IOd tN pllot
7:00 CBl * • + "When Hell Wu end pumengetl b811 out.
In Sealon" ( 1878) H81 HOI· beginning I hunt lor I
IM'ook, Ev1 Merle Sein!. 13,000,000 lllttlf of credit. ~ured by lhe Viel· Cl)*••.+ "au.tin' i.-"
nam111, •n Amerlcmn (1N1) Riclwlrd Pryor. ca..
nav81 oommendlr aum-ly Tyeon. A bumbling bur-
mon1 1111 wt11 ~ to glu, a ,concerned
mentally cornb•I NI 1or-ech0ol1Meher Ind eight
tur•• Ind organize other dllldten make • lrigtlt.ln-
Pf'la«llrl of wit Into IOtf!'I-Ing croaa-c:.ounlry Irle> In • 11'9 a rlllltanoe elllence. brOllen4own achoOI but. llt **'A ''PIN:tM:lltt 'R·
Grano Prix" (1880) Anl-1:1&(%)••"A"Dr....OT0
mtled. Alter hie car deelgt\ Kiii" ( 11180) Mlchllel Cline,
1a 1to1tn by 1n u-col-Angle Dlcklnlon. Pollce
!Ngul,. brlllllnl IMdlen--di '°' tN pa)'Clhotlc
1c decldll to build 1n -murder• who bulchtlfed •
belt« rmcing mechlnl Md aubwban houlewlfe. 'R'
oompele wUh hla nem1111. 1:30 ~ •*'A "8411111 Of St. ·a · Trlnl11n'1" (1954) At .. tw
7:30 (%) * • "Return Of The Sim, Joyce Grenfell. Thi
Dragon" (18721 Bruce Lii. problems of l'urWng •
Chudl Notri9.. A mertlal girll' IClhOOI -lnctellled
arte •llPll'I )ourrwys from by Ille llffivll ol tl>I hlld-
Hong l(oog to Rome to mlllreu 'a bookm•ker
help• lrllnd wtlO II In lrou-brother
b1e with the mob. 'R' 2:00 (B) * • ~ ••fhe Black
1:00 Cl:)*·~ "Bellle Of SI. Purl" ( 1871) Ollblt1
Trlnlen'I" (1854) Alastair Roland, Cert Andlraon. A
Sim, Joyce Grenfell. The llln·lgl peat1 diver mutt
problem1 of running 1 contend with a dlldly
g1r11· acnool .,. lncfMMd mentl r•y In or<llr lo
by I.lie entv• ol the helld· retrle\11 a vllulbll bt8Ck
mlitre11'1 bookmaker Pllf1 'PG'
b<othlt 2:30 0 * • ''Thvnderblrde In
8:06 <Il * * 'h "Llldbelly" Outer Space" (1N 1) Pup-
(1975) ROQ1t E. Molley. pe11. The Thundert>lrda
Paul BenJemln. Thi Ille ol raoe 1gllna1 tlmct lo atop •
the tegenc:tery im--IOlk rodcet lrom c:ollldlng '#Ith
lil)08r Md gultarlet, Hud· the aun.
die Ledbltltlf, II tr~ 3:00 IJ * *~ ··Cll\Qej My Rn-
e;ao e **"Thi Higtll Rid-ervellon·· (1872) Bob
.,. .. (1939) John w.yne, HOpe, Eva Mane 8.inl. A
OorMn McKay. A oowhlnd t1levl1lon celebrlly
elq)Olll • crook dalmlng becomll the ~ of •
to be I dllclndant of 8 homidde irwwtlolllon.
twnoue don. (%) * * "Allum Of The
a::>** "from Hoon Tiit Oregon" (1872) an-Lee
Tl\rM" ( 1877) Charle• Chudl Horria. A "'81118
Broneon, JIH h'elend. A lftl l)tpert JoutrllY9 from
drift• II recruited into • Hong Kong to Rome tc
r~tag robbery geog help I lr1end Who II In trou-
llJ * * * "Thi Other Stele bll With lhl mob .....
Of Thi Mounteln -Plrt H" . 4:36 (%) * *'A "My Which Wmy
1111111 Metllyn H-tt. You cen·· (1880) <:tint
Tifnothy Bottoms. Former E.ut'#OOO. Sondra L.odle.
cnemplon elcler, Jiii Kin-Before eellllng down with
mont, rendered • quadri-hi• girl Ind pet orll\gllten.
p1eg1c: by • 1r8Qlc; ~t. • t>er•fl91ecl lighter llgtl9
-ntlea with NH-doubt up tor one lat, lucrative
when a new love entt1r1 hit metch. 'PG'
lffe. 5:00 (CJ * * "Loving Couptel"
10:00 (ff)** 'A "Thi Rolllctllng ( 1880) Shirley MICUlne,
AdventurH 01 Eliza J-Coburn. A man1ed
Fr-·· ( 1871) &-1nlh couple 8tld a pelr of ~
Yl>fk. JOhn Wei.,. In linglM switch pertnerl In I
18th-oantury Auatrllla, a geme of llWtyle llfn9lnll
-CllPlllln'I' wife t• tor •nd romanllc rewnge.
a ~oue rogue &bolw'd 'PG'
Wlllern Nglonal ~
ftnll game (lrom PrOYO,
Utlh).
JOHN DARLING
88TONIGHT
Hoat: Johnny C•reon.
01.11111: Jack Lemmon,
M-Mn Murphy.
8 9 MCNEWI
NIGHTUNE
• AU. IN THI! FAMILY
Archie II lntervi.wed by 1
newt report« conducting
• "men on the street"
lntltVlew.
• LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE
ID CAriloHeo ABC
NEWS
fJO'<! I .st.JRE Al'PRE:CV..Tfi
HAVING 1'E~IFIC F~IEND0
LIKE YOU Gi.J'(5!
-.
. ~Hill Street' explores job alienation
BY FRED R~NBERG A#T .......... Wttw
NEW YORK -Anybody who's ever felt job
frustration and dilsatisfaction -and who hasn't?
-wUl find some kindred 1pirita on "Hill Street
Blue.9'' tonlghL
"HW Street," wilvler of eight Emmy awards, ii
the belt ahow in television for many reMOna. Not
tlie 1-t of which ii that the show rallea unlvenal e~ and themes that gain greater applica-
b ty because human, breathing characten are
'JOO .Stars' wins .. • •• • .pr~nie-t11De rating
NSW YORK (AP) -ABC acored with a
tbree-bour TV extravapma, "Night of 100 Stan,"
and woo t1le networkl' prlme·Ume rattno com-
peUUan fGr the aecond week in • row and tlie llxt.b
time ID the __, tllat bepn Oct. 6. fic\lns from
the A.C. NWlen Co. abowed. OnlJ one show, ces· "Da1lM." had a hlOer' ra*C ID die week endina March 14 than the ABC loidA1. tal*I .a Radio 'City Mualc Hall ID New
irortL "DllDM" now ha. t..l No. l ID the ~ ~*-10 tbDel 1n ~a ..a~• currmt
~ C "1our olhlr ..w. • • TaP ao -cm w nw. eoo -anc1 ~.mm.• the aua i1Q' pStod til 18.5 lo~ C11·1nif1U for
. DC. .
t.ryi.pg to make sense o{ them each week.
Their problems are our problems; both becauae
we care for them ae people and because we un-
derstand their sufiering and auocess.
Joyce Davenport, the sophisticated, self-
aaured public defender, is undergoing a career
crisis. It was triggered by the murder of a colle~e
and the tact that a major suspect in the cue was .et
free on a technica1i ty.
Joyoe ii ordinarily an advocate for th1a kind ol
vigilance of the individual'• conatitutional pro~
tiona, and 1he nonnally defends IOCiety'a lowest and
least defensible. But Pam GWlam's death hu forced
her to focua on whether there'• a place any more for
'dea)iwn in an often inverted world.
'On toniaht'• epa.ode at 10 on Channel 4, ahe
Ml to 'defend Q1l80Qe the prc>aeC'4tou1lancterizea
a1 a bopelw career criminal. It becolnea toQ much,
and Joyce nlla at a system that allowa Ii.elf to be ~-by low Uf• and blah-minded public..de-f.nden. Her f1l'lt explolkln cornea in a 8ril>r>lnl QOW't.-
room 1C1M in which ahe Ja thl'Mtintid" wf t.b con-
t.empt. All ij,.; while, her al1my client la ~y
clalmtnc hil rtchta have been abridpd.. and be de-marm ~ r;:;;ntatian from aomeone like 'T . Lee Blile7 or Ma.Ill.''
JOft9 -;e:'if •"'or.te .... but her lover, ==: llia8t ........Uve of talk~ Put Of iDMll&tfvtly COIMI from bi.
wllldMr' .. relatiOmllil> coWd ......
--·-~. P.n of lteiolw.hm the I.Kt .... iiliW If .......... UJ ~to qutt
tlmmnl:f "lit•• ~hri9tbe_....my-mon
to work a job through?" he aaka.
The first defection came from Sgt. Henry
Goldblume, normally a aolid, 90ft-spoken sort with
a atrong aenae of justice. But Henry has beeon puaed
over In bis bid to become a lieutenant. The promo-
tion went to a black officer. Henry considen it re-
vef9e diacrimination.
. He requests a temporary field asalgnment,
p~ferring to find an outlet for h.ia fnts1ratkln while
he' broods. He doem't want to push a perlcil in the
precinct houae while ~~·lieutenant II receiving
"bis attaboya."
Ironblly, Frank lends him to Ray CaJJetano. a
Puerto RJcan. and ~minority lleutllnant.. who
is orgahi.l:ing an undercoYer operatioG •. Bay II ha·
Ying job troilblea of hil own. Hil ~ la tIO
abort becau.e. aooountlna dedded to ~ fi"'9-<
year federal tmunnce cfedudicn enw In one lbot.
Hla race buUdlna. Ray threaten• to quit.
"Bureeucnta." ~ 1a19 md lkll"nw away.
If Ray'• peycbec:k Clll~ OIMK' bil '*' ~-. at leut be baa• car,~ out Set-Phil~
Phil la~ apal1 ~ hll vlnlaft_ alk!k hai
been ltOlen. ''I>eprMna a man of mobWt:y ill tan-
tan>cM.mt to ma1m1n8 the man hUmelf." be •19-Pbil, the precinct'• vctrboee, buffer-buffoon,
a.ya eombsly:
"Pnndl. rve been thinldM,.._.. ~rement ~lf." La•, Phil ll1lii • iCMilllll a = ID die Cll'-IMtt rtnc, a ......... hli ~=::-:.----~--.-two ............. 119 .._ ..........
aptn_toa&lht Wida Nial ..... f1d?11.wlii ....
....... nil( ...
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Marbles tourney may . end
Contest officials unable to ftnd spotµor ·
..
':• .
~ Wls114t1t1
CUMBERLAND, Md. (AP) -
An or1antser of the nation'•
marble• tournament aay1 that
becauae of tl'ouble llndin1 a
aponlOC', the c:ompeUtioo may be
ecrapped th1a year, Jult when th6
game of marble• 11 galnln1 in
~ty. 'The laat few yean the tour-
nament haa really picked up,"
aid (Jene Maon, who d1recta the
National Marble• Tournament
from th1a W9ltem Maryland city.
"For a while it wu reelly at a
low ebb bec:auae of lack of lnt&-
res.t in marblee."
The 1poD10r for the 59th an-
nual tourney, ICheduled th1a year
• . ON THE SET -Senior crew inemben of the i atarahip U.S.S. Enter'pri8e gather on the ship's f bridge in the new JSaramount picture "Star t. Trek: The Vengeance of Khan.'' eet for national
releue next summer. Crew members include
,actors William Shatner, seated, backed by,
from left, George Takei, DeForest Kelley,
Michelle Nichols, Walter Koenig, James Doo-
han. Kristie Alley and Leonard Nimoy.
;1
l . Evictions targeted Jackpot
tourney
scheduled
.
I 1
I
1
!
t
Knoxville ordinance aimed at landlords
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -The that the City Council deny a landlord
City Council has approved an ordi-the special 7.0lling exemption to rent
nance intended to stop evictions by on a short-term baail.
'landlorch hoping to cub in on the Mayor Randy Tyree said any
'World'• Fair tourist trade. apartment or mobile home park
But Joe Levitt, a landlord and landlord who rents to World's Fair
lawyer, says the ordinance ta un-tourists without a zoning exemption
conatitutional and that he may evict could face a m$ximum 30-day jail
aome of his leVeta1 hundred tenantl to term and $50 fine for each time he
test it in court. . rented illeg.Uy.
About 1,000 Knoxville tenants -"I have just had enough of these
about 5 percent of the city's renters -evictiom, and whatever lt ta.kes to
have been evicted by landlords who stop them we need to do it," Tyree
plan to rent to World'• Fair viaiton. said before the council approved the
'l'he exposition atart.a May 1 and runs ordinance. ''The reputation of Knox-
.six months. ville is being dragged through the
Because zoning laws prohibit mud by a few greedy individuals."
short-term rental of apartment. and John Austin, the lawyer for a citi-
mobile home lots, landlords must get zens group called Tenant. for Fair
exemptions to charge nightly rates. Housing, said he believes the ordi-
The ordinance sets up a panel ap.-nance wlll stop the e victions and
pointed by the mayor to hear com-help thoee already evicted to get their
plaints from tenants who believe they homes back or find pieces to live.
have been unjustly forced to move, "It's certainly intended to do the
including thoee who received eviction job," he said. "If landlords can't take
notices and those whose rent.I" were .. their apartments out of the long-term
greatly increased. market and put them in the short-
If the panel finds in favor of an term market, then they'll have to rent
evicted tenant, lt could recommend · them the way they did before."
LAS \'roAS (AP) -
A slot c hampionship
tournament featuring a
guaranteed $1 million to
the winner has been an-
nounced by the Hilton
Hotels Corp.
The tournament wm
feature all winners of big
"Pot-0-Gold" jackpots at
the three Hilton hotels in
Nevada over the next 12
months.
Hilton President Bar-
ron Hilton said he ex-
pects some 25 to 30 jack-
pot winners will compete
in the finals, scheduled
for the spring of 1983 at
the Reno Hilton.
Last year there were
25 giant slot winners at
the two Las Vegas Hil-
tons who pocketed near-
ly $8 million.
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EVERY· •1111
for June 11-Jww 24 at Wild-
w~_..,,.N.J., would" pay about $1~.uuv for lodltna. mftll and '1'~ -cant.t11Mnt9 Md theU' .....
"The national tponaor aet•
quite • bit of publldty,.. Muon
aaid.
Since 1874, the marblea tour-
ney, run blolunteen, had been International Tele-~ elegraph through lta
televilion ~. The Bia Blue
Marble.
But, Maaon aatd, IT&T rec-
ently informed him the TV
~"had been canceled, and
'everything connected with the
televlaton 1how ha1 been
canceW,1' lncludina 1ponaonhlp
of the IDU'bliM pme. .~
Maaon aald ~p to 2 mllllon
younpten partidpate ln the lo-
cal elimination rounds prior.-to "'
the national tournament.
The tournament 11 open to
boys and girls 14 years of age and
under~ In the compe tition. 13
marblei are placed ln the form of
a cr"lss inalde a ring 10 feet In
~ter. Two players at a time
use their shooters to try to knock
the marbles from the ring. The
finrt player to knock eeven of the
orbs from the ring is the winner.
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Running can be
. a perilous exercise.
See story. Page , C4.
an.other idol
M"l, .. ,......,.·Fernando is io baseball
FERNANDO'S RIVAL -Josele Garza, the auto racing cir-
cuit's Rookie of the Year in 1981, is just as popular, if not
more so, in his native country of Mexico as is the Dodgers'
Fernando Valenzuela. Garza will compete in the 1''ormula
Atlantic series in Long Beach later this year. ·
By HOWARD L. HANDY O(the Deify ........ .,.
Whe n you are the heir -
apparent to the fortunes of
Mexico's largest bank and real
estate development venture, why
would you want to risk your life
·on a high-speed race track? -
Josele Garza, an Idol of the
Mexican populace along with the
DoQgers' Fernando Valenzuela of
baseball fame, passed through
town recently on a treadmill that
is his usual way of life.
HE Ir, perhaps, the hottest
item on the Indianapolis cham-
pionship car circuit and was roo-
kie of the year at the brickyard
last season.
But he isn't satisfied with part
performance or r esting on his
laurels. The 21-year-old race
driver is currently under the
tutelage of Bobby Unser, himself
a multiple winner at Indy inclu-
ding last year's contested victory.
"Bobby has had a lot taken out
of him and has developed an
ulcer," his manager. Bruce Bar-
nes. of Laguna Beach with of-
fices in Newport Beach, says.
''That's why, w.hen Pat Patrick
suggested to him that he team up
with a younger driver and serve
as his manager, he was willing to
accept the challenge with
Josele."
GARZA PARTED company
with Newport Beach's David
Psache at mid-season in 1981 and
after the campaign. looked
around for another team and car
to drive. He seemingly has found
it with Bobby Unser.
Hicks would like to go hack • ID • time
UC Irvine relief specialist is hoping to regain the form that made him almost invincible in 1980
By J OHN SEV ANO
O("tM D...., Piiot Steff
In 1980, Larry Hie.la had one of thoee
seasons every athlete dreams about.
It was Hicks, in fact, who was on the
mound for the final out as the Pirates
defeated LA Valley for the state title.
quickly turned to despondency and de-"During the middle of the year, when
spair. I was giving ut more ruts than I should
Not that Hicks had a horrible year as a have, I knew was in trouble," offered
member of the UC Irvine basebaJl team Hicks. Still, the right-hander appeared It was the kind that happens once in a
lifetime -like Roger Maris hitting 61
homers, or Wilt Chamberlain scoring 100
points in one game, or Norm Van
Bracklin rushing for 554 yards in a re-
cord performance against the New York
Yanks in 1951.
"It's something rll always remember,"
recalled Hicks the other day. "I know it ... but It's one he'd just as soon forget. in half (27 to be exact) of UCI's 54
I knew that it was
going to be tougher,
"It was quite a learning experience for games, allowing 41 ruts and 20 earned
me," said Hicks. who finished his first runs in 27 innings of work. It was those
season at the major college level with a numbers, however, that prompted Hicks
6-1 record, seven saves. a 4.82 ERA and a to return to Alaska during the summer
sore arm ''What I learned 1s that you to work on his repertoire and seek advice
ALTHOUGH EACH individual went
on to have more successful seasons -
and games -none approached the bril-
lance of their respective feats.
but I thought I could
overcome t.he adjust-
ment. I couldn't.'
can't get by in college on just two pi't-from his former pitching coach at OCC,
ches. -Tom KeJJy.
"I knew (in <:oming from OCC to lr-"It just helped for me to talk to' him
vine) that it was going to be a little agam," said Hicks of Kelly, who is now
•tougher, but I thought I could overcomt-the pitching coach at Ariz.ona State. "I
Hicks was one of several instrumental
figures who led Orange Coast College to
the state baseball championship in 1980.
A right-handed relief pitcher , Hicks
possessed an unblemjgh ed 6-0 record
with 17 saves and a miniscule 0-99 ERA,
will be hard to ever top something like
that."
the adjustment. l couldn't." guess the one thing he told me that sticks
, out in my mind is to aJways be aggres-
UNFORTUNATELY, THE cloud
Hicks was riding after 1980 became dark
and cumulus with all the fury of a tor-
nado in '81. The joy and. exhilarationi
DURJNG HIS heyday with the Pi-sive and never give in to a hitter."
rates, Hicks survived on a fastball and a Hicks took Kelly's advice and so far
wicked slider. He tried to do the same this season it seems to have paid off. Of
with the Anteaters, too, but Hick s course, it helped that Hicks developed a
quickly found it wasn't enouji!h (See HICKS, Page C3)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--";..___~~~~~~~~
Angels, Dodgers dealt •osses
Henderson's hot bat carries A's; Braves stay h_Qt
From AP dispatches
PHOENIX -Rickey Hender-
son, who reached base all six
times he batted, singled home the
winning run in the 11th inning to
give the Oakland A's a 7-6 ex-
hibition victory over the Angels
Wednesday. 1
A near-capacity crowd of 7,324
saw the three-hour, 50-minute
basebalJ game which was played
for the benefit of the Ken Boyer
Fund. Almost $15,000 was raised
for the former St. Louis Cardi-
nals manager who is the brother
of A's coach Clete Boyer. Ken
Boyer has cancer and is under-
going treatment in Mexico.
Winning pitcher Jeff Jones
worked out of a bases-loaded,
Red Chinese coming
Gymnasts will stay in Costa Mesa
The People's R epublic of
China national gymnastics team,
which will Uce an AmericAn
squad March 26-27 at UCLA,
will arrive in <;psta Mesa Tues-
day and wlll spend most of its
leisure time in ~e Orange Coast
area.
The 16-member Red Chinese
contingent are due to stay at the
Sou th Coast Plaza Hotel. The
men wlll work out at the Ath-
letes in Action gymnasium in
Fountain Valley while the wo-
men will drill in Huntington
Beach at the SCA TS (Southern
California Aero Team) facility.
The men's competition la set
for Friday, March 26 at UCLA's
Pauley Pavilion while tlte wo-
.men '1 events will be held the
following day. The meet beglnl
both ~YI at 7:30 p.m_
E x p e c te d a m·o n g th e
16-member Chlnne contingent
-ere Tong Fel, 1982 men'• high
bar champMm; Li Yuejiu, world
champion in the men's floor
exen:t.e; and Ma Y~, 1981
allver medallat Jp the women'•
uneven parallel ban.
The U.S.A. team will be led by
1980 Olympic team members Ju-
lianne McNamara, Tracee Tala-
vera and UCLA standout Peter
Vidmar. The countries met in
head-to-head competition last
summer in Hawaii, with the
Chinese winnin~ ln both the
men's and women s divisions.
Ticket prices per match are $10
for adults and $8 for children
under the age of 16 and are
available at the UCLA ticket of-
fice. Special discount tickets at $7
for aduha and $5 for children are
available at McDonald's restau-
rants throughout Southern Cali-
fornia.
The meet ia sanctioned by the
U.S. Gymnastics Federation and
hosted by SCA TS in auociation
wfth the UCLA Department of
Athletics.
Although only competing at
the international level aince 1978,
the Chlnne are re1arded a1 an
emerging power in the sport,
havlng placed third behind the
Ru11ian1 ind Japanese ln the
men's dlvillon and leCOnd behind
the Sovieta ~ the women'• dlvi-
1lon at the 1981 World Cham-
plonahip1 in Moecow.
no-out jam in the top of the 11th.
Tony Phillips got a one-out single
in the bottom of the inning to
begin the winning rally off the
Angels' Curt Brown.
Phillips stole second base, went
to third on a groundout by Rick
Bosetti. and scored when Hen-
derson singled to left.
H enderson doubled in the
ninth, scoring Rob Picciolo Crom
first base with the tying run.
Earlier in the game, Henderson
reached base ·on a single, two
walks and a fielder's choice. Plc-
ciolo belted a bases-empty homer
in the fifth.
The Angels' batting star was
Rod Carew, who drove in four
runs with a two-run homer in
the third and a two-run single in
the eighth. Reggie Jackson had a
pair of sacrifice rues for the other
Angels' runs.
Guerrero homers
VERO BEACH -Brook Ja-
coby's run-scoring single in the
seventh lnning broke a 2-2 tie
and Atlanta went on to a 6-2
victory over the Dodgers Wed-
nesday, the Braves' ninth victory
in 10 Grapefruit Leagoe atarta.
The Braves, who have won
three straight, collected 15 bita
Including a double by Rafael
Ramirez and a triple by Ken
Smith.
Joe Alvarez, the eeoond of four
pitchers, earned the victory. ,
Brian Hol\On took the to..
Pedro Guerrero alugged hla
second homer of the spring for
Loe "-n1eles, a two-run 1hot In
the fourth lnning off Alvuez.
Bob Walk started for the
Braws and didn't allow a hit ln
four lnnln11 but had to leave
bee.au. of a hamstririg injury.
I •
IN YOUR FACE -Kareem Abdul~abbar of the La.ken
9eef1l8 to be giving Utah'• Jeff Willdm a shove with one
hand while taking a hook shot with the other durlna
Wednesday night's game ln Salt Lake City.
"He (Unser) will manag~ my
team and will drive for Roger
Penske at Indianapolis,'' Garza
says. "I will be driving a M.areh
racing machine this year and we
have been testing it at Phoenix.
"We have two ca.rs entered at
Indianapolis and one of them will
be a brand new car for that race.
"I think this is a better car
than the PC-9 (Penske) I drove
last year. It had already been
pushed to its limits. The March
car has a lot more potent.lal.
"Our base of operationa-irnr--
Albuquerque and I will be doing
a lot more with the new team. 1
won't be working on the engine
because that Is a bit more of a
specialty. But I will work on
thesuspension and the aerodyna-
mics of the car .
"IT IS UP to the driver to get
the car set up right. You are 50
percent a race driver and 50
percent a test driver. It ia so
technical these days.
"In the old days, you just had
to jump in the car and drive the
hell out of it. It didn't matter
how it was set up. Nowadays the
driver has to set it up to make it
go faster."
Garza has had the dream of
winning at Indianapolis since he
was a youngster.
"I have been dreaming of
winning at Indy and in Formula
One racing since I was two years
old," Garza says. "But right now
I am concentrating on the Indy
championship cars and when the
right time comes to move to the
Formula One cars, I~ know it.
I will not favor them over the
Indy cars."
Garza's family has been busi-
ness oriented all the way until
Josele came along. He has an
interest in the family business
but ~: "I would iike to stay in
auto racing, even when I am
through driving. I will st.ay in-
volved with the family business
but I would really like to find a
balance between both of them.'·
Garza has an eye peeled
(See GARZA. P age Cl)
Lake r s make
Jazz play
losing tune
SALT LAKE ClTY (AP) -
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar scored 28
points and Earvin "Magic"
Johnson added 23 as the Los
Angeles Lakers handed the lttah
Jazz its 12th straight defeat,
120-112. in the National Basket-
ball Association Wednesday
night.
The Jazz were led by Darrell
Griffith, with 32 points and
Adrian Dantley, who had 31 be-
fore being ejected with 1 ~ mi-
nutes left in the third period.
Dantley receiving two techni-
cal fouls after strongly objecting
to a call.
With seven minutes left, the
Jazz trailed by 100-98, but the
La.kers broke open the game.
The Lakers took a 36-34 lead
at the end of an evenly played
first <Juarter. But Jabbar scored
10 points a11d Norm Nixon nine
points in the second period as the
Lakers jumped to a 77-59 lead at
the half.
Utah rallied and outsrored Los
Angeles 28-15 in the third period
and went into the final quart.er
down oy just five, 92-87.
Kings explode
for 9-4 w in
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Bernie
Nicholls struck for three power-
play goals to lead the Los An-
geles Kings to a 9-4 National
Hockey League victory over the
Calgary Flames Wednesday
night.
Charlie Simmer got hla first
two-goal.game of the season for
Los Angeles, and rookie Steve
Boi.ek alao connected for a pair of goals. .
Nicholls, a 20-year-old cent.er,
ignited a five-goal outbubt by
the Kinga in the second period
when he scoted a pair of pla.
He added hla third goal of the
contest with 6:52 left to play for
his first three-goal game in the
NHL
He now baa five aoaia and 10
aqtata since being brought up
h;bm the Ktnga' New Haven,
Conn., farm club 12 amnee ..
Marcel Dionne ancJ Jimmy Tax
eech ICOl"ed • pl and Md twp
Ul1IU fer Loe Anaelea.
Calgary'• flnt-perlod ~
were 8COred by Mel Brtd~ and 'Ed...... ...
(1 '
.. ,.
I•
, ..
·Kansa s football
to he broadcast
Kansas Unlvel"llty'a football · game. for the
1982 seaton will be a.(red to Southern Ei1 Callfornla, announced Roy Engle-e , •.
brecht of the Englebrecht Company.
"I've signed a contract with the -
University of Kansas Athletic Department," says
Englebrecht. "It's becaUle of F.d1aon High School.
C'm aure there are a lot of Orange C"oaat area
football fans who want to follow the Kenny
Majors and Kerwin Bells." ,
There a.re eight fonner Edison High players
on the Kansas roster, including Frank and Troy
Seurer, Kerwin and Dino Bell, Bill Malavasi,
Major, Dave Gerowc and Troy Richardaon.
"The director of Kansas Sports Network,
Tom Heddrick, is excited about this and you
should hear the Kansas football coach. They're an real happy abo\.at it."
Englebrecht says a decision on which spec-
ific station will carry the broadcasts, includinR all
away games as well as home games, wilI be
reached in the near future.
Quote of the day
"The only way they got him on the plane
was to tell him he was getting an award."
-Rick Monday, acknowledging the busy
banquet schedule of Dodgers Manager
Tommy Lasorda.
Bullet• can't keep up with Jonn
..... , , ... IC.'Ol'ed 22 "°'-"ta and helped
l..cl a fourth.quarter •urae d\at car-1
lied Philadelphia to a 102-93 vlc1oC'y m owr Wa&hinlton Wedneeday n.\aht in
the National Buketball AaoclaUon.
The km marked the filth defeat for the Bullets
ln five 1amn wlth the 7Sen . . . Ellewhere, MJkt Woodl08 ICOl'ed 23 potni. u Kanua Oty
edaed Oold~n State, 117-116 ... Cltreace
Walker •tole an inboundl pa11 and aank a tree
throw "with one second left,
llfllng New Jersey to a 93-
90 victory over San
Antonio . . . RoD Brewer
ICOred 11 of h1a 31 point. in
overtime,. and Scoh Wedmu
and J amet Edward• each
ICOred 22 pointa U Cleveland
outlasted San D ieg o,
113-107 ..• It.via McHale
' notched 25 pointa u Bolton
'°9118 built a 16-point fourtb-
quarter lead and survived a late rally to deleat
Atlanta, 113-109 ... IUti Vudewepe aoored
eight of his 30 points in overtime to give Denver
a 135-133 W\n in Phoenix, the Nuggets' first win
over the Suns in five contests this
aeaaon ... Ricky Soben poured in 14 points in
a fourth-quarter rall~ that gave Chicago a 102-92 victory over Dallaa. -
Islanders show who's Boss(y)
Mike Bo11y'1 56th goal of the season proved
to be the game-winner as the New Sil
York Islanders added to their league. ,
leading point total with a 5-2 victory'
over COlorado Wednesday night in the
National Hockey League. The Islanders have 104
points, three more than Montreal ... Elsewhere,
a goal by rookie Bobby Carpenter with 76 se-
conds left enabled Washington to secure a 6-6 tie
with Vancouver, the Canucks' sixth straight
setback . . . Wayne Gretzky scored three goals
and added two assists to set three more NHL
records as Edmonton routed Pittsburgh, 10·4.
Foster burns hie former matet
~ormer Red Oeor1e Pe1&tr elamm.d b1I
llnt two home MJN for the New York Ill Mew. and Pat Zacra.ry pttched eix in,. ninet of no-hit ball to beet Cindnnau,
5-1 Wedneeday afternoon in exhlbl-
tJon buebe.11 play. In tadna h1I former team for
the flnt Ume, Foewr drilled a two-nm homer In
the flret lnnlna and a 1010 blast ln the
aecond ... Dne Bo1tetler hlt a th ree-run
homer and Gary CaJ1ff droY ln th.rM nuw on
two hiw u Montrftl belat the
Yankees, 6·4 ..• Pat P•&-
••m'1 1econd-lnnlns home
run lanlted-an 18-hJt attack u
Texa1 bla1ted Minneaot•,
12-4 . . . Kirk Gibson belted
a three-run homer to lead
Detroit to a ~-0 victory over
Philadelphia ... The
Boston Red Sox capiLallr.ed on
three HOUiton errors to ICOl'e
six unearned run.a and defeat
the Aatros, 8-1 . . . Scott Tlaomp1oa'1 alngle
with two ouw and the baae9 loaded in the 11th
inning h e lped the Cubs shade Cleveland,
10-9 . . . Jack Clark homered in the first inning
and singled home two more runs In a six-run
teventh to lead San Franci.ICO "¥1' 8-5 win over
Milwaukee ... Ex-Golden West product Terry
Balll.Dg'1 two-run single keyed a lour-run rally
as Seattle topped San Diego, 4-2 .x .. Two
une4l'ned runs in the seventh helped Toronto
upend St. Louia. 3· l ... Tom Pacior e k'•
three-run homer th the eighth inning boosted the
Whit e Sox to a 9 -5 win ove r
Pittsburgh . . . Baltimore scored seven in the
, first inning and went on to rout Kansas City 14-3. •
Television. radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Basketball -Dallas at Lakers, 7:20
p.rn., KLAC (570).
WEDNESDAY'S RADIO
Philadelphia vs. Dodgers at Vero Beach,
10:10 a.m., KA.BC (790); Oakland vs. Angels at
Palm Springs, 12:55 p.m., KMPC (710).
Area volleyball players making their marks
Orange Coast products dot rosters of Southern California college powers
By JIM McCURDLE
Of IM o.-, Pltot ltaff
When it comes to stocking major college volley.
ball teams with top-quality talent, the Orange Coast
area is often the first place coaches look.
An examination of the rosters of the nine teams
in the California Intercollegiate Volleyball Assocla-
tion would seem to support that claim.
That conference contains such perennial.....olley·
ball heavyweights as UCLA, USC, UC Santa Bar-
bara and Pepperdine and has produced the NCAA
champion 11 of the last 12 years.
There are 27 area products competing in the
conference i? 1982 and it's highly likely that at least
one will be r member of the NCAA championship
team.
Based pu~ly on the numbers, Newport Harbor
High would have to be considered the primary
contributor df volleyball talent. There are 10 former
Sailors playip.g in the CIV A ranks. Laguna Beach is
second with' five while F.stancia ancf Huntington
Beach have three alums competing and Corona del
Mar has two.
UCLA is ranked No. 1 in the nation and is the
Fountain Valley
opens w'th win
La Quinta High beat Ocean View while
Fountain Valley sw ept Huntington Beach in Sunset
League volleyball openers Wednesday.
La Quinta began its transition to a new l~e
with a 16-14. 15-12, 6-15, 15-12 win over h06t Ocean
View. The Aztecs have moved over to the Sunset
circuit for volleyball after previously competing in
the Sea View Leaille.
La Quinta trailed, 6-2, in the fourth game, b.ut
rallied from behind to close out the match.
Fountain Valley opened league~ with a
15-12, 15-9, 1~13 win over Huntington in the
Oilers' gym. Baron Coach Rick Evans wu able to
utilize· his bench as his team rebounded from a
non-league l~ to Dana Hills on Tueeday.
"We played everybody," Evans Wd. "It waa
just a really good team win for us."
Senior middle blocker John Kosty led the way
with nine kills and 13 blocks while junior outside
hitter Rob Whitehair contributed 10 kills and four
blocks. The Barons are now 3-2 overall
In non-league play, Laguna Hilla won a tight
four-game match over visiting Mater Dei, 15-13,
7-15, 15-11, 15-12.
Marina tuned up for Friday's Sunset League
opener with Westminster with a 15-2, 16-14, 15-8
win over a Viking Alumni team.
Back row specialist Mark C.ox led the winners
with hi8 passing and strong defensive play.
In community college action, Orange Coast
College rolled to a three-game sweep over Santa
Ana in a South Coast CQnference opener at Sant1t
Ana.
The Pirates were led by back row specla)ist·
Jeff Cutler and outside hitter Bill Mattias -both
freshmen out of Eetancia High. Setters Greg Ovalle
and Paul Kubis also played well.
favorite to repeat as NCAA 11champion. Newport
Harbor grad Mark Slevcove is in his senior year
with the Bruins while Mark Anderson is a sopho-
more out of San Clemente.
Across town, the Trojans of USC have five local
products, including senior Steve Timmon s
(Newport Harbor) who led them into last year's
NCAA championship match . S ophomo re Bill
Yardley is also out of Newport Harbor while La-
guna Beach has contributed freshman Eric Clark
and junior Todd Miller to the Trojan program.
Doug Killian, a junior out of Corona del Mar, is the
other area player on the roster.
San Diego State is not considered a serious con-
tender for this year's national title but the Aztecs
have four former area athletes out to change that.
Kevin Droke and Bruce Caldwell, teammates on
Newporlliarbor's 1980 ClF championship team, are
both key players for the Aztecs as sophomores as
are Robert Rieden (&tancia) and Terry deBos (La
Quinta and Golden West College).
R;ay Ratelle, a first-year coach at Cal State Long
Beach, has enough local talent to put an All-Orange
Coast team on the court. Senior Mike D'Alessandro,
a Huntington Beach High graduate, transferred to
Rustlers,
OCC post
• • v1ctor1es
Orange Coast and
Golden West colleges
each scored conference
wins in community col·
lege women's basketball
action Wedne9day.
In South Coast Confe-
rence play, Orange Coast
got out to a big lead and
held on in the final mi-
nutes to defeat San Die-
go Meaa, 79-74. Kris
Kroyer paced the Pirates
with a game-high 29
points and 12 rebounds.
San Diego Mesa com-
mitted six turnovers in
the first four minutes of
the game to help Orange
Coast take a 17-4 lead.
The wln puts the Pi -
rates at 3·0 in conference
play, 12-1 overall.
Meanwhile, Golde n
West rolled to an easy
win in Southern Califor-
nia Conference action,
beating LA Clty on the
Cuti.• bomecourt, 106-50.
The Rustlers (2-0,
13-1) were led by Marcia
Mathews who was 10 of
17 from the floor and
had 21_points and 11 .
steals. Kelly Harrison
had 15 allista.
•
Candlestick
dome studied GROUP GOLF LESSOllS
SCOTTSDALE. Artz. •
(AP) -Bob Lurie, pre-
sident of the San Fran-
ciaco Giants, haa received
a rough draft of an eco-
nomic feaaibUlty study
on the propoeed doming
of CandlestSck Park.
"We•n releue the tin-
d i ngs in two to t hree
weeks, maybe 100rter,"
Lurie said Wedneaday at
the Olanta' 1prin1 trai-
ning camp. "Aft.er we go
over it, we'll take it to
the printer and t hen
show it to the mayor."
Starting March 23
8 weeks for s25
Golf Bah & Instruction
~ Included
Leaton Hour.a
Tues., Wed., Thur1.,
9 a.m. or 6 p.m.
Sat. at 1 p.m.
l
Long Beach after one year at San Diego State.
Newport Harbor has reached out to the Long
Beach program with junior Thegn Putnam, sopho-
more Tom Bunnell (1980 CIF Co-Player of the
Year) and freshman Lane Peterson . Seniors Joe
DiPietro (Golden West College) and John Herman
(Edison) also play for the 49ers.
The University of Hawaii would seem to have
quite a bit to offer prospective college athletes and
the tropical paradise was enough to entice three
area players to enroll.
Junior Tom Pestolesi came to the Rainbows as
transfer from Long Beach State. Pestolesi gradua-
ted from Huntington Beach High as did Dan
Moorhouse. who transferred to Hawaii from Golden
West College. Dan VrebaJovich (Estancia) is in his
sophomore year at Hawaii.
UC Santa Barbara, always near the top of the
NCAA rankings. has Randy Harris, a sophomore
out of Fountain Valley and Doug Parsons. a
freshman from Laguna Beach. on its r~ter.
Stanford has senior Kip Engen and junior Randy
Smith, both out of Laguna Beach, while Loyola has
a pair of talented sophomores in Craig K eup
(Estancia) and Greg Sullivan (Newport Harbor).
F~om PapC2
GARZA: POPULAR • •
for other ty.,_, of racing and compete at Lona
1 Beach in the Fonnula AtlantJc ..ne. the day before
the Lona Beach Grand Prix In April. He would alto
1 like to try hl.t hand behind the wheel of a 1tock car
before he quJw. But th.at 11 ln the future.
I . Hil relatJol\lhlp with Uauer appean to bt a laltina one.
"That Unaer, he keepe me ln ahape," Gana t
aaya. "He Lt a aelt-rnade enaf.neer. I could not be-
lieve the thingJ he knowa and Mkl about a rad.ni
car when he ls taJ.k.ina with an engineer.
"He can look at the a1r around the pita and be
know1 exactly what to expect on the track. When
he goee on a track, he jwnpe in the car and goes all
out.
"l take one lap and make aure the trade ii ltill
there. He pulled me in aft.er one lap at Phoenix and
asked: 'Wht are you doing? You went 28 aeoonda for
one lap. You don't need a wannup lap.' That'• good
training.''
LAST YEAR, during May at lndlanapolla,
Gan.a went around and talked with various dttVen
to get their opinion on how to take the different
turns. .
"Everybody had a different answer," he aaya.
"One would say to back off in the middle of the
tum and another would tell me something diffe-
rent.
"Bobby has helped me a lot but at Indy I want
to find a reason for beating him. I can figure out
how I can beat A. J . Foyt, Rick Mean and the
others but I still haven't figured out Bobby yet.
Maybe I'll have to keep something to myeelf and
not tell him.''
He enjoys having the crowd on his side and
says it helps to know they are with him.
"I HA VE TO look at my performance," he says
as the first Latin American to qualify at Indy and the
public really supported me in good times and in bad
times. ln Mexico City, I had one of thoee weekends
you wouldn't believe. First the brakes went out and
then the engine and chassls were nothing but pro-
blems.
"I was in the pits for 10 or 20 laps and when I
came back out, the people all cheered and I really
appreciated it. And belie me, I tried very hard."
He rides motocrolilS but only for pleasure -and
exercise. "It's a great exercise," he says.
Barnes. a lonj(·time business associate of Unser,
says the disputed Indy winner had no intentions of
cutting back on his racing schedule.
"But he has been through an awful lot this last
year and has developed an ulcer from the
situation ," Ba.mes says. He is referring to Unser's
controversial win over Mario Andretti that is cur-
rently being con tested in the higher courts. Barnes
says the purse money for both drivers is still being
held up.
HE SAYS HE has a major oil cmompany for a
sponsor and has three or four other associate spon-
sors lined up for the Garza racing team.
But right now, Garza has his feet on the
ground, the good looks to attract feminine admirers
on and off the track and the intelligence to go as far
as he cares to go in the driving world with a boost
Crom lady luck to keep him from mishaps.
His mother, Nadina, is not exactly enchanted·
with his racing career.
·"Mother went to every race last year and she
will go to as many as she can this year," Garza says.
"But she would like to see me doing 80mething ebe.
"Since I am already in this, however, she has
learned to accept it."
;
~ >· ...
WllTON COMR•MCI , .... DNWOI\
" L "°" Q9 Ull.. 45 21 '82
S..ttl• 42 f2 656 2
Phoenbl 38 29 5$4 I"" Oolclen State 35 30 .Me ....
P0<tland 32 31 .&08 11 "°' Sen DieOO 18 50 .242 29 ....... Dfttelofl
Sen Antonio 40 26 8f5 -
Houston 36 29 SS4 4 0..-36 30 .545 4\t
Ktnua Clly 23 43 .348 17'" o.nu 22 43 338 ta
lJt.ii 19 7 288 2 t 'h
IA9TIM COHRMNCI
Atlenltc otYWoft 50 15
46 18
34 32
31 ;13
29 37
Cenltel Ol'tWoft
.789
719 3'A .515 16\t
484 18\t
.439 21 ...
.... 21 877 -:Ill ;\.~ 441? ,. 29 34 4ec> 14
30 311 455 14'"
27 38 415 17
15 48 .238 28 • ...., •• acor..
&Ml.. 120, VIII\ 112
Botton 113, Att1111t1 109 lffw JefMy Ila. :>an Antonio 90
Plltladelphla 102. WUl>lng1on 93
Cleveland 113, Sen Oieoc> 107 (Ot)
Chlcego 102. Oe11u 92 o.n-135, Plloenlll 133 (ot)
K-.a City 117, Gold4lll State 118 ,....,. ... a....
Houston at Atlanta Seattle at Detroit
GOiden State at Portland
Laken 120, Jau 112
LOI ANGIL.al -RamDla 6, WHk .. 14,
Abdul -Jabber 28, Nixon 19. Johnson 23,
Cooe>e< t4, McGM 8, L.anc:tal>erger 6, Bra-
wer 2. Total1 53 1'-19 12g
UTAH -Oentley 3 t. Poquet1e 10. Wllllln•
18. ~ 12, Grltlttl\ 32, o.;,.,, 0, Hwc:ty O. Sc11ayH 3. Wood 8, Nickl o. To1a11 50
12-18 112.
korebf~
Lot AngelM 36 41 15 211-120
Utah 34 25 28 25-112
Fouled ou1 -None. Total foul• -Loa
ArigeiM 22, Uteh 19. Technlcels -LOI An·
gelH Coacl\ Riiey, Utell Co1cl\ Leyden. Oentley 2. A -t2.078
COMMUNITY COUEOE WOMEN
Golden WMt 108, LACC 50
GOU>Pt WllT -Clements 8. Kr111Men
9, Outline 14. POfle 4, HM19on 10, ~
ken 20. Rea 10, Mattr-. 21. Duncan 10
Totela: 49 8-22 t08
LA CITY -Ouan 8, Montes 1. Adams 10.
McGee 10. Dlaregon 16, Cheadle 7 Totals 20 t0-20 50.
Halftime· Gotc:ten WNI 411-25
Total IOI.Ill GOiden Wee1 2 t, LA City 24.
Fouled out: McGee (LA City~
o~ Coa•t 71, SD *-74
a..ANOI COAIT -Elftnger 11, Carroll 8. M1111t 7. Kroyet 29, p., .. ., 14, Berry 3, ~
2, Sanc:tviken 5 To18la 33 13-28 79
SAN DIEGO •IA -Tentor 4, Hlgnt~
10, T JohnlO<I 23, 0. Jonnson 15. Wee1on 10, PINipa 10, Conn0<1 2. Totala. 28 18-27 74
Hllftl,,,.: Orllll09 Coa11. 43·26
Total loula. Orange Coast 21, San Otego Mesa 27: Fouled out Carroll (C>enge Coal).
Weston (Sen Diego Mesa), Pllllllpa (Sen
OlegoMeae)
WCT toumement , .... ,...,....,,_,
Sec:oM "-"' .......
Heinz Guntl\ardl del Eddla Oibba, &-3.
6-0, Te<ry MoOf c:tef. Vljey Arnrilrej, M , 11--4. Sanc:ty Mayer c:tef Ride~. &-4. 7.5
Flr•t ftound 0...... Sandy Meyer-Frew McMiiian def. Steve
Krulevltz· l'lm Mayotte, 8-2. 8-2.
Otand Pl11 toumament (et....._,_,
9ecoNI Round ...... Henri Leconte dll Pal Oupt-. 8-3, 8-1,
Jan Gunn.,ason 0.1 Netl Doyle, 8-3. 8-3.
Erle lalteral<y c:tef KM! Meller. tN, 3-6, 8-3
lecond "-"f DOllllMM
Uoyc:t 8ourne-An<lt-Palll9ofl Oel Ed<lle
Edlw.,d...iohn ~. 7-6, 8-2. •
Grand Prt• tournament
(et ltott«dem, ~)
Tlllrd ftOllftd ....
Busie< Mollrlm c:tel Brian Teacher. 8-4,
3&, 7-5; Chip Hooper c:tef. Mel Putc:el. M .
a;:); G.....,mo VllM c:tel. Tlnl Wllltteon. &-t,
8-3
Women'• tourNt11Mnt (84 ..... )
~ .. ~ *"""" Yvonne v .. -c:tef Mary Lou Plalelt, 3-6,M Fnl~•tne'" l(elhy JOfdan def Peanut Lovitt, 6-2, 8-4,
"n"" Hobb• c:tel. Nancy Yeargin, 6-2. 8-2
W~wtlca C COLLIGI!
Veult -Sptlnger (OCC). Hoffman (OOCJ.
8.4; Bere -Mantua (OCC), 8.t : Belanae
llMrn -Conwll)' (OC:C~ 8.3: Floor -Coo>-.., (OCC). ~ (OCCt 8.8: Al-wound
-Hoffmen (OCC~ 33 3.
I
Ce11orn1e 102 010 oao oo-t 10 1 0.ltfld 000 120 021 01-7 1) I
Wttl, SonMldltt5). H......-(1). 8rown(10)
and 8oone1 F«gueon ( 10). Keough, MoO•lty (I). T. un~Ood (t). ,,_ (8) llld K-·
ney, Mii~ (8). TttlletOft 18), ~ (t).
W-Jo11 ... L-lrown. HA1-C1lllornl1 , Ceffw. C>akllnc:t, PICCllolo • .,_ .. DMtert •
(e4V-._.)
AllehtA 010 100 $0f-e 15 0 LOI AngeM 000 200 000-2 8 2 w-. Al¥#w ,.,. c.,,. m Hr-.v et>
enc:t llenldlct, HoolOI\, ""'°" (t) Nildeniu.;
• (8) enc:t klolcla. W-ANwei. l-Hollon. HR-Loe Angelee, Guerreto. .,.,....,. 4, , .... 2
(atT_,..)
San DieOO 000 001 010-2 8 o
S..ltla 000 004 00•-4 10 I
Curtis. Flreovld (8), Cl\lller (8) and
Gwoadz; Moore, Young (8). V~g (8)
end Bulling W-Y OUflQ. L-FncM<I GIMft .. .,_.
(al acotudele)
MllwaukM 002 000 111-$ IS 0
San Frlf'Qlsco 100 000 81•-8 I 1 0 • Celc:twetl, Sleton (8>, Petron (7). Porter ta)
and Moore, Schroec:let (7k Gile. Lukey (5),
Hotlanc:t (7) and May, Pruitt 1n W-Holland.
L-Patron. HR-San FralWlllco, Clarie
... t1 a,RMI1 (at,_,.., New YO<ll (NL) 4 10 000 000-5 13 0
ClncAnnetl 000 000 010-1 3 2
Zachry. HOiman (7) 1nd StHrn1. Soto. Brlto (4). Combe (7). ~ (9) enc:t Tre-tlno,
Van Gorder (7) W-Zecllry. L-Soto
HRs-lffw YOril, Fottw 2 o.w.. 14. flor• a
(•tllllanll), t<en.as City 100 101 000-3 8 3
Baltimore 740 030 oox-14 t8 3
Hemmoer. Bleck (3J, Brown ( 7). and
Quirk, Slaugh! (8), Lllllejohn (8); Pelmer.
Remlrc (71 end l>lmptiey, Stetwo (7). W-
Pelmw. L-Ha~ket HRa-Kanaas City
Mft 2 Ballkn«e, Rl!*en, Bonnet
wtllta SCH t, ..., .... 5
(etlltadetlton)
Chicego (AL) 300 101 CM0-11 14 1
Pltlat>urgl\ 003 000 020-5 10 2
Burns, P111erton (8) and FOiey. Hiii ;8);
Eequet. JonH (4), Nlem1nn (6), Cruz (8).
Tekulve (91 anc:t Nicoala, A*ander (81. W-
Burns. L-JonH HRe-Clllcago, Suther-
land. Paciorek Pll111>urgh, Easler, B Ro-
1>111son
Ranpen 12. Twine •
(•I Of1ando)
Texas 030 122 040-12 18 O
Minnesota 020 ooo 002-4 5 t Oarwm. Ketner (8). Whitehouse (6). la·
lOfllo (9) enc:t Sunclbetg. B Jotv'90n (8), VJ.
ola. Lillia (3). Arroyo (5). Ha-.. (71. KOfczyll
(Ill and Butera, L1udner (8) W-Oarwln
L-Vlola. HRs-Te•n. Putnam, B Johnson
M1nneeo1a. Hrl:HllC.
11.,. "819 3. Cardlneltl 1
(at 81. ... twNur9)
Toronto 000 000 201-3 8 1
SI LOUIS 000 001 000-1 5 2
S..engucw. 8omDecit ( 4 ). Jad!son (7) end
Manonez. Md!*' (I). Muri, Bair (5). Kut (7)
Sutter (9) ind Ten•c•. Sancllez (8 ) W-8ombilci< L-Kut HR-Toronlo. Mart~.
lJlpoe '· Y.,._ 4 (el WMI l'elftl 9Ndl)
New Yor1c (All 102 000 100-4 I 1
Montreat 400 010 '0•-f 10 3
Guidry, Goa.age (8). Frazier (8) and Gui·
den. Burris. 8ahnHn (8). Reardon (9) and
Carter. W-Burrla L-Guldry. HR -
Monlreal. Hotlatl« 11.cS ..... ...,.. 1
(et Cocoe)
Boston 080 020 000-8 9 O
Houston 100 000 000-I 10 4 Eckersley, Stanley (5) end Sullivan. L•·
Frencois (8), Placbon, B Smith (4). LysM!der
(71. Ro11 (Ill and Athby. Knicely (81 W-
Ecket...,, L-Plac:teon c.-10,......,.1 , ....... ,
Clevelend 012 110 000 40-9 15 1
Chleago(NL)200 010 200 41-10 15 2 Andei~n. L•w•l!yn (6!, Merllnez (7).
Glyl1n (I). ~ (10) end Bando: lanlon. Knapp (5). Mira~ (7). Sernal1 (9). Segelke
( 101 and Moreland, lta.re (7). w -Segelke
L -5-'ge.
Men'• voffeybafl
COWllUNITY COUEGE
Orenge CoHI d1t Santa Ana. 15· I I
15-3. IS.2
HIGH ICHOOL
Founte•n Valley def Hun11ng1on Beech
15-12. 15-9. 15-13 La Quinta c:tel. Ocean V19w, 111-14. t5-12.
8-15. 15-12 Marina def. Marine Alumni, 15-2. 111-14
15-8
Malet Del c:tef L.agune Hiiie, 16-13, 7-15,
15-11. 1S.12
lwlmmlftg
COlllMUMITY COUEGI
Qotden Weal 15. °""99 C-1 • 400 medley reley I Goldi n WHI.
3 580
1,000 Ir•• -I Stephenson (GW), 10·23.9: 2 Wiiims (OCC). 10.42.5. 3 Shoe!
1occ1:10:5'1 o
200 frM -I Burchell (GW). 1:47 8, 2 Pottewnt (OOC). 1 52 8; 3 Brownle'( (OCC).
1·S4.4.
SO lrM -1 Cooling tOCC), 22.3: 2 Serro
(<JW}. 23 3. 3 Mellalfey (GW}, 23 3.
200 IM -I Lund (GW). 2.08 4; 2 Ol1M
(OCC). 2 12 5, 3 um,,nenour tGW). 2· 18.2.
200 fly -1 Ga ... (OW). 2·05 1 2 Ste-
phenson (GWI. 2 05 6; 3 S.ltyer (OCC)
2'05 7
100 lree -1 p~ (00C). so 5, 2
Wood (OW). 50 8. 3 Lunc:t (GW). 5Cl.9.
200 beck -1 ~ (GW), 2:10 4. 2. StepMNOn (GW). 2: 1• 5; 3. Davis (OCC). 2·18 4 •
500 lrH -1 Burcll•ll tGW), 4:52.8; 2
Stloef (OCCI. 5:06.•. 3 Be<ro (GW), S: 13.4
200 1><-1 -1 Sutton (GW), 2:24.•; 2 Wont0<ek (OCC). 2 35 7, 3 ~ IOCC).
2 35 7. .~ 1ree rl6ey -I Golcltn Waet. 3·21.8
-
.... ICMOO&. c.-....... .,......,.
----~~· l'.U.I. aoo rr .. -' w11111 tvr. , .... 4: a "'*-(CM). IN 3 l'llttl<:M>. UU, too .. -1.~1111.11ot:t ~ !CMt. I' ti I: t ._._,ICM>. 2 1t 4
llC) If• -1. ,......, J 2~.3. 2. ht'Mtl ;CM tU. ll. tCM 141 1~0 lly -~lllo CM). 1 01,1, I . 1ar11911 (U), 1:-02 I; I (CM). 1.~.0.
100 1r.. 1. 9o11w.,"' 1v1. 1tt; a.•• ruwltll (CM). ea •.i.. a. EMMlt (CM). 12.t.
100 trH -1. 1.1•11ton IU). 4111.0l t .
'rlck•ll (OM), 6112.1, I. H11gll .. (Ot.t); u o ...
•OO """ 1 1. '""•" 1u . t·oa !l. t . lltWlrt (CM). 1M I; I. Not10ft (C411L 1,1111oT.
100 .,,... -1 ......... (CM). foe.~ 2.
AIMIJ (CM). l:ot.I , a Ale•llllfff (CM). MO,,_
400 11w rt1tay -1 eo.ca ...._ ue.1 ,._.
C~lllfn COWllll
0r ..... c....-.o...... .... 11
.200 medley reley -1. O••nee OoHt,
2.CM.2, 200 IM -1 letrttt IOCXl). i:au: 00 tr• -I t4uOO (OOC). H.d, 100 II-* -
I Slllelde (FW~ 1.ot t . 100 brMel -I
Thompson (OC1.1). no time, 200 ,, .. -1
Perri.II\ (OW), 2·02 8. 50 fly -I e.trett
(OW), 21 2; 0Mne -1 "-1111 (GW). no polrll
toW: 100 !Ne -Pwrllh (GW). 57.0; 100 fly
-lrown (OCC). no llme, 10 beck -f
&lll•lct• (OW). 30 2, 100 IM -1. Hugo
(0CC). 1:07.2; 500 It• -I Perrleh (OW),
6..21.3; ISO br-t -ThomplO<l (OOC). 3.4.8, 400 l{M rNly -r ... y -Or 200 tree retey
-Orange CoMI. 1'48.8
. l•nt• Anita
ftDNllOA V'I Mlut. Tl
'111ST MCI. 8 l\Hlongt PllO!lnc:teric (St ...... ) 19 40 7 80 5.80
Tu!Me (H~ 3 80 3.20
Prot-°'-(Lil>t*n) 8.00 Aleo rac.d: Emperor JO/In, Elforll .. aly.
Fancy Guy, Tough Mld!IM, Right On TOiiin.
Ti,ne-1:11
MCOMO MCI. 8 lurtonge.
Wln<IY Scott (McCerron) 8.00 3 40 3.00 LOlll FIM (M-) 4.00 3 llO
Tl\e Quilted Klct (AlmlrN) 6.40
Also recec:t Sir Wing Out, ~•vs Rellat>te,
Piiot Pate. Time. 1'11-3/5
92 OAIL Y ooual pakl 841.00
114!'!>.P.C:~-'.J~8 .~ ... _
F r1endly Roytllty (MCCtn) 5 60 3 60 2 60
In Trlpllcate (Vltlel 8.eo 3 60
Pro'8C10<tl• (ZOOk) 3 40
Aleo raced; ArcovlHe, Sir SprU(;9, Bruay
Kn1ve.
Tlmct• 1 :48.
FOUlrnt MCI. 6 lurlongs
Ballkln (Olivanle) 30 20 11 20 7 20
Va Victorian (Altllen) 7 00 4 00
LHha Negre (Elamirei) 11.40
Also rllQec:I: Sporting Spirn. Bumi Amber.
PHI Memoriee. Nelurelly Orey. Blue Eyed
OucMsa. n,,,. 1.1:i-115
F'"'" ftACE. 11·16 mltea
Oellghtec:tly (Cttnda) r 40 3.60 2.60
Mayan (Steiner) 3.a<l 3.eo See My Agent (Aamu-) 3.40
Also r-0: Apothecary Miu , Oudingly,
Lec:ty Tr~. Granja OuclUMa
Tl,,,. 1:45-215
15 IXACTA pe1c:t $87 SO
SIXTit MCI. I· 1118 INIM
TrM HOUM (Shoemkr) 7 00 5 20 3 20 Seneuously (CutlM<la) II 20 3 40
Valuat ... (O!lv.,•I 3 00
Also recec:t. Billie Kunoc:ty, Rec:t Sky, Tza-rina, High On Robbery.
Time: 1.47-115
HYENTII flACI. S furlongs
G-al Jimmy (SltMlle) 4 00 2 60 2.60 P041y'1 Ruler (~) 3 80 4 00
Ebony Bf~• lCutaneda) 4.80
Alt o reced Ski Reeer. Oe L1 Guerra, Me&MgeToGareta
Ttme· 1·11.
• DACTA. (1-3) pakl ISO SO
II '9Clt atX 17· 1.s,.e..2.1) paid I 18, 107.40
will\ Mven w111nlng Uckett (t lx hOrMe, 12
Pick Six conl04allon paid S 134.00 with 272 winning tickets (five hor-).
IJOffnt MCI. 8'h llHtonge
Glac:tc:tie'a Reb (Guera) 11 80 7 40 5 20
Jonee Time Mec:Nne !M<:C<n) 4 40 4 00
Colt9e Maid (Steiner) 6 00
Also rllQec:I Cl\Mp S..ts. Tlc:tletec:t, Glo-wlr'll Regards, Jena G . Don't Juc:tg« T-· 118
NINTH ltACI. 1·1118 mllM Miu Huntington (Gucwra) 8 20 4 20 2 80
Sl (ValdMeso) 7.20 4.20
Swift Bird (Slloernalltr) 4 20
Also raced: W11tern S1ar1e1. Colacka. Scarlet O'Wonc:ter. lmpellenl Lau
Tlmct I 47.
15 EXACT A (5-1) paj<I S210 SO
Anenc:tance 27.NS
Loa A.l•m ltoa
WEDNEIOAY'a llESULTS ""'of ec>-nlghl ...,.,_ ...... 11r19) Flfl9T ltACE. One mile pace
SI., Chlll'mtr tL°"90) 25 00 10 40 8 00
POPI., 0.Mm (Rllcllf0<dl 17 20 10 40
Titan lnsll (Trembley) 6 00 Also racec:t Joct Lord. Penaway Bey, The P"f'i~l'<f }L"1;:"'"' On Red, Orange Jute.
92EXACTA111·91 pe"'.11239 20
aECONO ltACI. One m,.. trot
0-,, Ouchele CT ISher I SS 80 18 40 7 20 Toe> Cat (Grundy) 6 20 3.80
Mighty L• IHtCnmonOI ,4.40 Al.o raced: Gullgef. T~ Rejec:lllcl, Pa-
ducah, Wiii He Be Gooc:t, Juet A Hu1llef.
Time: 2:09-115.
THlllO llACE. One mile pace
Alsque lac:ty (Goudreau) 22 60 6 20 5 40
Howdy Sc<M (Pertter) 4.80 3 40
Andy's Winston tGoutert•I 4 60 Aleo raced Rllythm And Blues. Balle s
PrlmrOM, Cloudt>ullet. Mon Ami Me;estle
' "<Iv SISiie. Faraway B,. Time-2:09-215
II EXACTA (2-ti Palc:t 580 00
FOUflTH ftACI. One mile trot Nol>le Vl<:lory (Parker) 5.00 3 llO 3 20
M8191ah (Wine 111 8.00 4.60 Tenllno (Wishard) 4 40
Also raeec:t Upper Crull, Firing Squad.
Bofbon Wl\taltey. Gallon·• Mltt'f, Orn<lcll1
Stw n,,,. 2:0a-415
Flf'T'H RACE. One mile pece
Ananias (Kueblerl 5 ao 3 ao 2 .40
Royal Slgnlll (Longo) 4 00 2.40
Oenclng S..ux (Foley) 3.00
Also rac;ec:t: Ster C,_., Siar Rleky. Foo·
Hall Fortune, $teac:ty Image. HalGyon Han
Time. 2.06. 92 EXACTA (1-4) paid $15 60
• SUCTH MCL One mile trot ,,.., .. ~
(Goudreau) 1 I 00 4.00 3.'4(1
....
Orenge Cout DAILY PILOT./Thurtdey, Marett 18, 1882 '3
TIMTM MCa. One mtle pece
K.enclalla lay (Sherren) 35 ao 10 20 7.80 OH~1 br~ (K.ueO!er) 2 80 3 00
OH·Rl«*Y Dir~ (Martin) 4 40 • 80
OH -OMdt!Mt tor plecie Aleo r-0: Able 8-. J-Gt'llUM,
.Nl1 A Smoothie, Berl Glenvale, Mlolll«
Time: 2;0f-415. '2 lllACTA (7-5) paid $85.00. *2 IJIACTA (7-8) paid $128.00
TPA a .. tl•ttc.
lcol1ne l..Ndwa
1 Tom Kile, 88 90; 2 Johnny MUter
81 54, 3 CaMn Peete. 89 59, 4 Craig
Stll<ller,.81.83. 5 J-Nicklaus, 8183
A...,...o.Mne~ 1 G..-y Tr~. ~72 s. 2 (lie) Teteo Ozaki anc:t Bruce Oooglue. 271.9, 4 FUZZ)
Zoeller. 271 2. 5. Tom Purtter. 269.11 OrlYlha ,_...,.In ,a1nir.,
I CaMn lieete .. 791, 2 Danny Edwerds,
788, 3. Tom Kile .. 7511. 4 Mike Relc:t, 757; 5. JOhn Mahaffey, 752 a.-In llegulatlon 1 John Mellaffey, 772. 2 Miiie Ael<I. 764;
3 (Ila) Tom Kile anc:t Dan HalldO<son 757.
S Pet., Jaeobe«t. 755 A..,... l"vttl ~ Ro-.1
1 Tom Shaw. 27 92, 1 Lerry Rink.,.
28 08, 3. IAO Aolu. 28 20, 4 Ken Gteet1,
28 25. 5 eta Britton. 28 52
~~of t.llM'w HcMea I Tom Kite .. 272; 2. Tom Welson, .260, 3
Fuuy Zoeller, .243; 4 Creig Stadlet, .240. 5.
(Ila) Jack Nlcidaua Ind Wayne Levi, 235 Eagle l..Hdef9
I (lie) Jerry Pate ln<I Nick Faklo. 6; 3 (Ile)
Tom Wllaltopf and BoC> Clarnpetl alntle~ I (lie) Tom 1()18 anc:t A.Nty 8Mn, 141. 3
Craig Stadler, 134, 4 c..rtll Strange 132 5
Vance Heelner 128 Mn .._., LMclet'I
1 Tom Kite. $150,910, 2 CrelQ Stllc:ller.
$121,338. 3. JOhn~ Miner, Slf2,447, 4. Anc:ty Bean, $102,371, :;i Hile lrwlrl, $g3.•21;
II. JIC'lc Nlcklau•. $78,4ec>. 7. Tom Watson, S70,519: a Wayne Levi. 178.&05; e. Lanny
Wec:tklnt. 172.740; 10 Jim Simona. $70,440.
C..t ... rMUlt•
LAGUNA •ACM GOU' USOCIATlON (el 11...cM .... .,... ca.-C-)
Lo-Ne4 Toum......,t Flight A -t. Franil
Roeel. 82-14-e&; 2. Wiii Moore. 85-18-69.
Flight B -1 1u.1 Mel Cwpent•. 8S.18-e7
and Chatlel Kaufman, 83-18-87; 3. JO/In
Wheeler, 85-17-'8. Flight c -1. RotMr1 Lothringer. 82-19-83, 2. Rit:herd Entwt>let·
i.. ee-21-aa.. Flight o -1..1t1a1 o.ie wie.e. llQ..n-eT enc:t 0-V-Will•. 111)..ft-:tr;
3 Ted Lehner. 95-24-11 Fllglll E -1.
Rtch.,d Peterson. 100·30-70. 2 Emlho
AlttJlanc:I.-, 101-28-73
CommtanltY ~ (llx-4-'-'"I
TIAllt STAM091Ga -1. Futler1on, 384: 2. Ml. San Antonio, 391; 3. Onlnge Cou1. 395;
4. Santa Ana. 402: s. c..rttoe. 4 19; a. San
Diego Mau. 423.
.......... Mack Sm<lll (Ml SAC~ Pal
Shero 1Fuller1onl, 75. °""99 Co.t -CMa McK•, Tc:im 8ell, 77: Merit Moore, 19: Seo« McCtoec:t, 80;
Mwun Farrel, 82; Ron Wellel, 85
.... c~c=:..••c•
•••••o =-~
WLTWU ....
... 17 11 * 211 101 • 11 II :ICM 111 N . ... ,. ..... 21 a4 ,, l7t Ill ..
17 ... 11 Ill .,. ... ...... .,......
aa 20 20 a13 111 .. 21 n 13 2e:s aot 11 21 11 • 273 111 82
ffll5102HH2 H ,, ,..,. 213 m 12
18 41 12 240 312 .. WAUICONJIUDCtl ....,..,........
ltrNY ..._. 41 II I "46 223 10t MY........ 3' 24 13 273 270 1 1 "tMt ...... M 21 t 2N 288 78 ~ 27 .. 11 270 304 88 w...... 23 37 11 287 $01 57 ..... .,........
~ 42 12 17 328 196 101
loelon 34 24 10 280 247 H
luflekl 35 21 18 N7 228 85 Oulbtc 31 :l7 14 321 312 78 Hanford 20 34 18 238 305 5e
a-ctloehec:t nr11 pl9ce In dlYleion. . ........,. ........
lt"'91 9, Celgary 4
NY Ranger9 5, PlllleOelONa 2 v...--e. w..n1ng1on 8 Toronto 8, au.ii.c: 3 W~ 3, Mln'*Ot& 2 NY~ 5, Coloredo 2
Edmonton 10, Plttaburgl\ 4 ,.....,....o-..
81 LOUlt et Oelroll
Blllflkl 11 Hlrlford CNcago .. PNCac:telphle Vencouveo-II MontrMI
• Klnoa liFlatMa 4 ._...,,..,...
CllQary 2 2 0-4 Loe AngelM 2 5 2-1
Flm f'erted
1 CllQary, 8-a 1 (Bridgman, Muroocti),
1 45 2 lot At1g91ea, Dionne .. (l Murl>l\y),
5.31 3 CllQwy, Bridgman 31 (8ourgeole).
5:48 4 Loe Angel .. , Bozek 32 (Fo11.
Terrlon). 7:37. Penalties -8ourgeolt, Cal,
12:4 t, Nleflollt. LA. 17.23
~,erted
5 lot Angetee, Ntcholle 3 (K0<1b, Tlylor),
2 52 8 Lo• AngelH, Foa 28 (L. Murphy.
K•llYI. 3 58 7. C11gary. McDonald 34
(Rautlllcalllo. NHaaon). 7 se • Lot Ange!M,
Simmer 12 (Dionne. Hardy), 8 48 9 Los
Angelel, Nldlolll 4 (Taylor. Dionne> 1 ,., 8
10 Ce lgary. McOone td 35 (Ntluon, Ctloulnard), 14.40 11 Loe Angetee, Bozell
33 (Smith). 15:29, PenaHIM -Chouln.,d, Cal, 2· 11. Koreb, LA, mejor-mlnor. 8:44;
Plell, Cai. m1jor. 8:44, BHre, Cet, 9·48:
Murdodl, Cal, 10:59; M Murphy, LA, 14: 14, Plett, Cal, me)o<, 15:29; t<or1b, LA. 15.29,
Hltlop, Cat, 11 ~ =· LA, 19 04
12 Loe Ange!M, Simmer 13 (Fo•. Terrlon).
10 47 13 LOI Angelea, Nlctloll9 5 (S-.
Tey!Ofj 13 08. Penaltlel -Bridgman, Cal. 11 48, Wells, LA, 17:28
Shott on goal -Calg..-y 11-10-9-27 LOI
Anoelea 18-22·10-50.
Goallel -Celgary, Riggtn, lemeffn lot Angeles, l-d. A -8,995
Wedn .. cS.y•e tranwtlon•
IAIEaAU.
Netlonll Lff9"9 NEW YORK METS -Sent Tim Leery. Tom
Thurbetg,•HICll uwnoey, JOlln Semprini end
01.,,. Von Ohten ... jXtchert. Ronn Aeyn04ds
end Miii• Fltrgereio, Cale'-•· Mile• Howerd
end M""811 Wynne. outfiel<letl, and B<lan
Gllas and JQM Oquenc:to, inflelc:terl, 10 lhetr
mH'IOf league c:amo 10< reaNignmClnl
IUKrTIAU ...---A~ MILWAUKEE BUCKS -Placed Junior
Bridgeman. torwerd. on the Injured lltl
S~ned Rot>e<t Smith, guard, IO • 10·d•y
oontrect
90CCIJI Noni\ a-tc8ft loccer i.....-
JACt<SONVILLE TEA MEN -Named
ColYec:t Smhh public r ... llOM dlrec10<
POR TLANO TIMBERS -Purctlue<I tlWI
oon1tec1 ol 811 lnlrWI, goallt-. lrom UWI
Tempe Bay AowdlM.
VANCOUVER WHITECAPS -Signed
Wiiiie Johnston. forward. lo • one -yeer
I oonfrlC1
COLUGI
EAST TENNESSEE STATE -Fired Jim
H1llll\an. head l>UkatblH eoec:h, and Herry
Krohn. Lerry Devis and Henry Arg1bnle,
Ullatent bUl<etball coaehe•
HOFSTRA -Named Harold Hastings lleed men's and women's cron-counlry
CC*!\ MICHIGAN TECH -Nemed J1mea
Nehrgang heed hockey C08Ch
One Tool
Does It All!
______________________ ..__
From Page C1
HICKS • • •
chan10-up ind lorkball to 80 alona with b1t fast.ball and 1lldt.r
Thus far, tho aenlor has •P·
peared ln 12 of UCI'• 26 .aarne..
He'• worked 27 ~ lnnJns1, allo-
1' wine 26 hita while 1trtJc1nt out 1 7
and walJdna five. Hkka curreDf·
• 1y bout.I a 3..() ~. three UV
and a 1.98 ERA.
"BY FAR HIS mOllt tmwrt.ant
quality ls his mental toughness,"
analyzed Mike Mayne, hla form·
er coach at OCC. "But that'»
something Larrv had before he
ca.me to OJ-ange Coast. He's just a
very calm, poised. but mentally
lOUfth lndlviduaJ.
"We started developing Larry
as a short-man his freshman
year. His success just snowballed
as a sophomore. I think it!s a
testament to Larry that he
handled the success as well as he
dld. -"Do you realize he went tht-
entire year (1980) without o ne
bad outing?" Ma7ne continued.
"He was in 29 o our 40 games
t h at year (when OCC finished
33-7) and didn't have one bad
ouung."
Hicks had enoufb bad outmgi;
last year, though. to keep things
in perspective.
"It was frustrating in the sense
that I had done good and then all
of a s udden things turn e d
around," admitted Hicks of the
transition from JC to maJOr col-
lege. "l was frustrated because I
wasn't getting the job done. But
it's all mental.
"MY FRAME OF mind is di!·
ferent this year, but it also helps
to have a guy like Gary Brahs (J
for mer OCC teammate) in the
pen with me. Last year. after ml',
I felt like there was nobody elsi'
Now I go out and if I'm not doing
the job there's always Gary and
vice-versa.
"If ou r starters can get us
through the first five or six
innings," said Hicks, "the n it's uµ
to us, " referring to himself and
Brahs.
"I compare our team to so
someone like Oak.land. We don t
have the big names. W e just g11
out and play baseball -hard
baseball."
"THE THING I r emember
most about Larry is the affect h{'
had on our club when he came
into the game," recalled MaynE.-
"Whenever he came in, no mat-
t.er how bad things were going,
he turned things around and
gave us a positive attitude.
"Maybe his biggest quality 1s
that he didn't trv to oitch outs1dr
his ability. He didn't try to do
more than he was capable of
doing.
"What he did was a once 1n "
life time season for a relief p11
c her ... and he was a ble to
handle it, that w as the b 1fo!
thing." UCI is h oping H1cki.
can handle il for one more s1 a
son.
Stop by at our
demonstration
and learn about .
Limited-Time
Factory-Direct
Savings!
PLUS
FREE Bonus
Merchandise and
Educational Offer-
yours with the
purchase of a
MARK V!
The Shopsmith MARK V FREE Gifts just
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See how the MARK V will give you lhe accuracy you need lo make home repairs or remodel, build line
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lakes no more space than a bicycle In 1h1s compacl and economteal un11 you gel lhe ltve most needed
workshop tools: 10" Table Saw. I 6'h" Vertical Onll Press. Honzon1a1
Bonng Machine. 34'' Lathe ar1d 12"
Oise Sander Come and see It in use
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dunng lhrs hmited-hme lactory-
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--
e Shopemilt'lh:.
t ........ ~c. ..
•Sllopsmlll\ Inc. 1981
. .---------------,---------------------------------------------------------•• 111..UVE DIMONST'RATIONI DMY l4f'.
America You can Do It Yourself
Orange County FairgrolU'd•
Cotta Mesa
Fri.:• M#. 19 thru Sun .• Mar. 21
.. Frt. 12-9, Sit. M. SUn. 12·9
AlTENOTit~OEMONSTRATIONAND RECEIVE FREE GIFTS WORTH OVER 110.001
Bring this coupon to our C1emons1ra1ton. and we'll give you FREE WoodWOl'k•no Gins 'wof1h over $10.00' Thefe's no
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watch the most vefSahle wooctwol'l11ng tOOI tn operation
Ctl'f---------------.-....--..;.. S••----------------.-·
~( , __________ ....._ __
N ~~~L~i~-~!!'t-~-------·-··--
'The peril~
·of rullning·
,
It can be a jungle out there
RUN FOR YOUR LIFE: Proponenta o1 run-
ning will tell you that it ls a relatively safe, non-
contact form of healthy exercbe. It doesn't always
work out that way.
Consider the cue of a colleaRue of mine. Kevin
Baxter hu been running since hfs high school days.
· In the past three years, he's had a few running
encounters of the bizarre kind.
Three years ago, while running at night near
bis San Gabriel Valley home; Baxter was assaulted
by four men who had crept up behind him in a car
and jumped him. He came out of that incident with
cuts and lacerations.
More r.::ently, when logging miles near Green
River Golf Course, Baxter drew the wrath -
among other things -of an unsuspecting skunk.
"l was running on an asphalt roadway and I
saw this black spot," h e explained. "At first, I
thought it was an oil spot but then I saw it move. I
· figured it was a cat.
''Once I got close enough, I could see the white
stripe. By that time, it was too late." .
It didn't stop there. Recently, while running
through a park, Baxter was attacked by a wild
gooee.
"It just jumped out in my path and started
honking," he said. "I stopped and was going to just
head in the other direction but it started chasing
me. •
"I didn't want to tum my back on it so I started
backpedaling. It just kept coming at me with its
feathers ruffled. t turned around to run and ran
llD8Ck into a tree.
"I didn't think running was such a dangerous
sport," he said. U only Baxter could find a way to
log all his miles indoors, away from the wildlife. It's
a jungle out there.
THE CHINA CUP SERIES: More than 600
runners participated in the Off Shore lOk, held last
Saturday at Mason Park in Irvine. The race is the
second leg of an 11 -race circuit in the China Cup
Ser;ies, a Newport Beach Runners Association Pro-
duction.
Armando Cendejas turned in a 30:53 clocking
to win the event ahead of second-place finisher
Martti Kilholma of Finland who was clocked at
31:28.
Pamela Morris as first in the women's division
(SOth overall) at 36:27 while Jeannie Studenmund
finished second (36:51).
The next stop for the China Cup is the Eclipse
Sun Run. April 17 at Muon Park. At the oonclusion
of the aeries, the top two men and women (baaed on
ooints aocwnulated) will receive all-exPemeS paid
tripe to Taiwan for international competition.
FOR· THE MARA THON ELITE: The Catalina
Marathon will be held this Sunday at Cherry Cove
in Avalon. but don't expect to ~ able to pay a $4 late registratJon fee and sacrifice the T-shirt.
This one is limited to 250 entrants and involves
a $50 regi.Stration fee. Of courae, th.at includes boat
fare, lodgmg and meals for the extravaganza.
lt's run on a demanding, extremely hilly
c:ourse. The point-to-point route includes three hill
climbs with 0 to l,500 feet ascents.
* * * * * * Running Khedule ,
ISMndeJ, Merch 21 Jimmy 81•••rt Netlonal Reier
Ro 111 n t TI h n • 5 k I 1 0 k Marathon. Begins al 8 e.m. al
ftuahlfhtn. 05k run begin• el Grlllllh Park. Each runner runa
7:30 Lm. '10k pvlher1 t>eglna at 8 one-lltln of a marathon . For fur· a .m . IOk run bag1n1 at 8 ther l nlormallon call (213)
Lm. FM II $9 wllh T ·•hlrl. 14 wl· 829-8968
lhout. For further lnlormetlon
conl9CI Cal St•I• Futlef1on Office
of Unlverally Recreation 11
713-3117.
C8'llllM Mlllllfflofl Md 10L Al
Cherry Cove, Avalon. Rec.. llml-
led 10 ftn1 250 en1ran11. Fee i. 150
and lncludea bo11 fire, lodging
lrMI meals.
r lktnd9y, *'di 211
10ll ...... Y-At1 Out. Begins Ot I
8 1.m. ot Babey O!'tve. Newport :
R11ach. near the Nowportor Inn.
FM II 18 with T·ahlr1, $4 wtthout
For further Information contact
Roy Fuuell et 551-7303 or
855-7330. I
Yachting s cene:
plenty of action
While the eyes of most of the yachtiJl8 world
are focused on Long Beach Yacht Club's Congres-.
sional Cup match racing series Friday and Satur-
c:t.y, sailors who prefer their own competition will
Me plenty of action this weekend.
On the local front, Newport Harbor Yacht Club
has scheduled a One-Design Regatta for outside
claaaes on Saturday. and Capistrano Bay "':l acht
C ub will obeerve a bit of social activity at its ope-
~day ceremonies Sunday.
c.ompetition will be light, with the eXL'eption of
elbow bending at Marina del Rey where all yacht
clubs will be oblerving opening day Saturday and
Sunday.
In other Southern California Yachting Asso-
dation areas:
.... 0-.. . MIMlon Bey Yacht Cklb -Lldo-14 Spring lnvltatk>MI Regatta, Setuntey, Sunday
Sen Dllifo Yocht CM> -Colline 8ertoa (Cat-20); 8prtng s.teo
(J·24):
--SIM allmlnatlont,(Star); Spring Seri. (T-&lrcHtdlalo-22); Spt1rlg lerloa (~). Saturday, &lndoy.
Coronado Yocht Club -Welllng1oo 9::,l:idk911) Sunesoy. Santo CWo Racing A880Clatlon -M a.tea (ol CS-)
~--~tern Yacht Club -8ortna 8ortoo (llandlc9p) Sundey . .................
, Vtnlunl Yechf Club -~ TUM-UP (PHAF} S.tur"-Y.
1 Mecepo Yachl Club -All Floeto Dey, 8aturdoy; Youth FUfldeX_ tiNoy (labot, LllMf). Santa llorboto Yacht Club -Spring 8or1'iJI, IOA, PHRf, lalurdoy; ~·SurM!ay.
Fernando denies rumors
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Holdout pitcher
h.rnando Valenzuela of the Dodgen hM returned
tb Lo. Anpln from his Mexican }\omeland and
denied teporta he WU clme to ~ 8 1M2 CiCJOo
lnC1. Allo dt.c1Urned WM a report that be Md fired
........ Antonio De.Marco.
,· Tbe Wt-hander wbo won the Cy Yomac a-.d
u a rookie in 1811 now repOl'iedlJ ta a11lta1 ·=' while tbrt DodCw'I ............ ~ 1111 .ooo. 1Wnudo iii retUmlQI to Lil «1 'n to w-
wer quemtlona penonall1 to lbow nothtna hu ......., An our aUIUon. .. DalilllnD .ad..
411 Oii TIMBOUR
BOARD
27""
You'•• probably •Mn tbla atuff on rolitop
deaka>but you can u .. U for ~kca1H.
plantena. and more. 3118" thick. unflnlabed
oak.
418'
o/a" SllDED SHOP
PLYWOOD
s•"
Lumber pricH me the beat they'•• been.in
years. U you'•• got lt ln yow bead to build you
can aaT• bucka by dolng lt yourself (wtio me?).
GLIDDEI EXTERIOR
SP RED
OIL STAllf ·a•• CILJ.011
A nice .. lectlon of aolld or Hmi·tranaparent
colors for aldlng. ahlnglH. or fenc••·
Penetrate• and protect• the wood.
HIRSH ROUTER 81
SABRE SAW TABLE
11" 1 • 1r· w • 1r· 1
l ·S~!r-2
It may ... m otrrious to you from the title what
thla doea ao maybe 1'11 juat huah up and give
you a break tbla time.
BLACK 81 DECKER
SHARP 'H SllfD
19!!
Hook this guy up to yow If•" or ¥1" drill and
aharpen yow lawn mower bladH. aclaoora.
cb.lMla or aand moulding or mitres.
MUllQY BICYCLE
CLEllWICE
C'IDOD DOW, doa't alt around the bouM.
maplog, get OD th. bjlrecmd get W good
enldee. lncartcmecwaft the floor aa le.
ir 1111' mrnu ..... #1..adll ..._.. ..... ..... . .... ....... __ SS.97 ....,
r lll'l'm .... , --rlftl'-. 7-t.97
W' 1111' ---UI . •.• ,
n.•1
MANVILLE
nREGLASS m
FIBERGLASS
SHINGLES
2' X 2' CEDAR
DECK . SQUIRES
3•!
BDL.
SavH a lot of time and work when you're
putting together a deck, walkway, entry or
ataira. Ready to paint or a ta in.
CRAWFORD EEZEE
3-SRELF BRACKET
69 ~
Slap a couple of thH• on the wall ... don't
forget to cbeclr to ... if they' N level... throw on
a couple of board1 and you'•• got ahelYH.
FIVE DfCH CUSTOM
IMSTALLED RAllf GU fTER
on: n nn nut
t• "· Jiii. ·157 ran.
LEIS TUI t• n .
se n .•.
1 7!.n.
Order either white or brown enameled
aluminum at the store and it'll be inatalled for
you. Prlc•• are for normal lnatallatlon on
realdentlal property. Dowuapouta a.re extra.
DOMIHO
ELECTROHIC
COMBIHAnOH
LOCK 1333
Work• with your electric gmag• door opener.
U you don't bcne your tranamltter or are·
without your lr•y .1uat u .. th• 3 dlglt
c:omblnat lon.
GEJflE ELEC'QUC GARAGE
ftORMAL
IKITALLATIOft OF
OUR 100T, Compi.te
wttll ooey.ar haU
WQll'Cllltf· 11.M
DOOR OPEIERS
y, .. CUii lll'fl
99?!
1381!!
~·tott.fuetpNHtbe
buttoocmclapaieappelut
CIDdglfte,WtbrM .......
(oicoune, _.of .._.._to
beto.,..ibe~4ootl.·
Weatherproof. comes with a 20 year
wa rranty. and has the highest fire
resistance rating of any shingle
around . That's a comforting thought.
why it should give you peace of mind
(or you can have a piece of my mind).
GUMOUT CARBURETOR
81 FUEL
SYSTEM CLEAIER
97~2oz. W.l'V.-....
CM<mdlrtycarbweton. lntake•al .. o. PCV
amog •al•"· Hey you can't get good mUeage
with a dirty carb. UH it regularly.
WlllK FULL YIEW MIRRORS
~Hnrun 1077
Put one of thffe up on your
car and you'll never haT• a
blind a pot. It' 1 a lot better
than loqklng crNr yow
shoulder. Margo.
35" nn: PUEL
1177
ClllEn'IDI MDfl
AMBER DRIYDfG
LIGHT KIT
7"7
Light up the ol' buggy afore they bit• ya. (My.
what a maaoacN of the l<m9"'Qg•. Ain't no
reapecttbe .. daya.) '
~ .. , ""-
·~
11.LTBIDE ~,,DI%"
DBIYE 1 ~ .:~·m69•
i'
lt'•alreadrbappenlng. Warm w .. kend•. trips to
.... beach. backyard barbec:uff. plc:Dk•.
Gotta a great Mlecilon ot cbaSrs.
YllYL
~REPAIR m ~
1 I 1 9
-< th. title .ara lt all so why ahould I daule you c~ with all mr brilliance and lnault your
lDtelligenc:e (that'• no fun I).
MEGUIAR'S CAR
CLEARER/WAX
31•
Mak•• your car a• ahlny a• a new
penny(well. I couldn't think of
cmythlngelM). NoabraalYea. In 16
oa. Uquld or 14 oa. paate.
MECUllR'S FAST FDllSB
Just put It on and wipe It oU. (What could be
easter? Taldag lt to the car waah.) Buy now
and get a 11 REFUND ln the mall from
)hguiar. 377
£ MOllRCB MOTOR FLUSH
I 77c ~ ~ 320Z.
..... bmetobcn• bath.a
... pubow. Thls•tuff '1i !tee out all the mung and
that builds up in the
DTll1'm:WD
ha mwU-eolond webblDQ.
CllW
·Sxu...-..
13!!'.
F8l.lllC
11-llCI or•m 17!!
33!! 74'" Fll.lllfC
5 NSll Ill Clllll
STIClllC STBIP
Des1ped with hlP laave.
beaTy gauge. fme reelskmt
PVC.Yellow •traps with
white accent.. 25!!
49!.!
ca111
74Ya"mE HS11•m•m
139
6 88
5 UL
Planta. don't talk tom•
ahoutplcmt•. I'mgolDg
c:nDJ nery tlme J ...
planta. I h'"9 to buy .om•
=~theminmr
BARE ROOT
CLOSE-OUTS
IOSES•.Zlml 1 59
•. 1-·PlmrT 237
nm TUES
nlDlll
2•• 7••
t i I planted a Mr. Lmcoln, a
Sterling SU Yer. and two
climbers in th• baclryu:rd.
LoH thOM roaea. I talk to
themneryday. What
beauUeal Limited quantlll••·
DRIP lllST WITEBllli DSIEllS
Wat.rail JOUf plant9 at ~wbetber
u..,'N OD tM patio, gardm. °" balcoDf. Scrneupto~OD ........
Extra optSooa cmdlable.
~from 1CJ.3aalat. It
Saa. at B1111tmgtoa leach cmd
El Toro. -1'1ale •tarter ... COGtalM I
-Stten, I ~at Made cmd
75teetoitublag ••. ••! --llt IDdwlee 11...atten ••
.................. of ........
BllDlll SUPER BLUE ----\ • Lii. • Lii. 4•• 9••
A blgb Dltrog9A fertUIMr
(tl\at'• the stuff that mczk9e
..-• IOgrMQaftercm
electnc atora). For
lena\ldaa, It. AugutlM.
lhaeOraeeCIDd otben.
Ortnge COUt DAILY PtlOTIThuttday. Mwch ~I. 1982
GEM
ELECTRICAL COIVERTER
8~
I don't know much about thla. I neHr woe
crmy fo~ electric thing•. You may be but I'd
rather not be an electric fan.
DP SUPERSTAR
BACKBOARD
159-?u.
Backboard? Flrat thing I
though of waa something
to put under the mattreH
(must be getting old). Net
and goal not included.
DP 3 PC PRO ADJUSTDLE
BACKBOARD POST
49~!11
Put one of thH• bablH up and the klde'll neHr le<rTe
home (I heard that). Eaay to aa .. mble. Back.board.
goal and net are extra. ...
McCULLOCH £1.ECTRAMAC
10" ELECTRIC
CBAlllSAW ~ ~~:~~~t:S 4hil'"HB' I
that) and quletto • I operate (maybe I
ahoulda t1aded the kid 66
inononeoftheM). 46 #lllll
Safety feature•.
TRUE TEMPER LORG
RAllDLED GIRDElt TOOLS
mm 37!s.,
UIE 44!14
-48!
AMtofth .... afew
packagH of Med and
a little work, you can
Mt up fOW'OJIPD
garden and atlll ba ..
enough to buy k:e
cream. --,.,
ClLIFORIOA CLIPPER \ I
GAS MOWERS ~ _J~
JI" U IP
117~
zrm.m
Ull llllD U IP
187!!'
n.. .. Cll9 ou.r own mowers
made by one of the
blOglff. Cb.cir out the
fea1wesootbeM
bablH. 3tn HP Inns It
Stratton engine•.
--:-:----..
SUPEB-CBO
PLAIT FOOD
I~!
SUNBEAM
GAS GRILLS
S1ICL£ IDIEI
99'!!
I love to barbecue flab
and chicken. Approx. 225
Je
aq. in. otcooklng area. .>rl
lava rock. and a 20 lb. Jrl
tank. 18.CIOO BTU'•· -m
llTUUL W DIDEPEIDEITLY
CGITllLLED DUIL HUEI
159~.
qi Redwood aide table. "Llte·A·Matlc" ignitor. o{
adjuatable cooking grlda. and roughly 462 aq. in. of
cooking apace. (Well. hot dog.)
ucu.n . 1899 &..w. ....... :
Jl"la15"1h15"1
#IS·
Fire teeted to wtthatcmd 1700 degree• of heat for up
to an hour. Spyproof ahroud let• you work the
combination without anyoneelM ... 1ng.
ROCKY MOUllTAIN
CAME ROCKER
31 99
The world would be a better place lf everyone had
on• of thH• chalra. Then no one would be ofJ their
rockers. Wal~ut flnlab. you aaMmble.
PACU1C .mcBElf
CABDfETS
CLICIEID
Solid oak frame. oak
veneered panel.
SIEIU
Oak Yen"r laminated
to 518" fiberboard door
PICll'X
Solid oak ral..ct panel
doors and drawer
tronta.
Y ou.r wile wtU lo"N JOU U you. Nplace thoM old
kitchen cablnet• (wltb a new fur cottt). Fully
acQuatable m.1 ... cmd hlnQ" are .. u-cloelng.
CLASSIC OAK SYSTEMS
SDI.YES
T'1J2" 13.77 ,
ll"aJJ" 17.77
1r.r 19.77
ir.r 25.77
n11111DS
Good aturdy ahelHa
made of eolld oak.
Pr.flnlahed
MICROWAVE
UTILITY CDT
33~
sen .. you c:ou.nter 1pace
and the,.·1 one~ •h•lf
below It to •tore all thoH
at~cnecllahM. Ecny
toa....W.. oakbDllh.
I
... 5.77
7r 8.77
c.---·~---°'If!' Cout DAILY PtLOTITnUr9d1Y, Mard\ 11. 1M2
rnrn@~~~~~
Executives' confidence
l jll Rea~an plan slips
WASHINGTON. (AP) -Wall
Street'• •t.rona bacldns of J>re91.
dent Reapa\'• economic pl'Oll'am
hu fallen oU substantially 1n the
lut year, larcely becauae of the huae federal budget deficits pro-
pelled for the next aeveral yean,
a key New York financier 'has
aald.
"The bad news for the presi-
dent is that Wall Street's entbu-
alum ia definitely .Upping," Ar-
thur Levitt Jr., cha.innan~ the
American Stock Exchange, said
1n releasing the results of a new
poll of 350 financial executives.
The poll found that 67 percent
of the Wall Street executives last
year strongly approved of the
way Reagan was handling the
economy, but only 41 percent do
ao now, said Levitt.
When stven a U.t of ways to
reduce pemment spending, 76
percent favored 1lowing the
an>wth 1n defeme 1pend.lng and
81 ~t supported cuta in So.-
clal Security and other entitle-
ment programa. Levitt reported.
Fewer than halt -•6 pen:eht were 1n favor of deferrina next
)'.ear'• sci)eduled reduction in
personal income tax rates, he
said.
'The survey alAo found that 84
percent of the Wall Street ex-
ecutives said Reagan should
stand behind the Federal Res-
erve Board's current tight money
policy, which it is pursuing in an
effort to fight inflation.
Overall support was 88 percent
last year, compared with 78 per-
cent this year, according to the
survey results. Eighty-six per-
cent of the executives felt that
eventually the economic program
would help, rather than hurt, the
economy, it said.
LOSING SUPPORT -Wall
Street's enthusiasm for Pres-
ident Reagan's economic
program is falling because of
exf,ected huge federal defi-
cits.
"While over the ne.xt six mon-
ths, T1108l believe that the outlook
for inflation, interest rates and
the stock market will lrnprove -
ea unemployment and corporate
profits worsen -one of the poll's
underlying currents is that there
is still a substantial' fear of
inflation," Levitt said.
"U, as many economic experts
are now suggesting, we are
entering a new era of perma-
nently lower prices and wages -
millions of investors are not
convinced.''
"In general, the poll shows
that while there is not yet a run
on Reaganomics, l}le signals have
definitely changed from an en-
th~tic buy to something bet-
ween ·hold and sell,'' he said in
the prepared text of a speech to
the National Press Club.
the administration's economic
program was concern over the
size of the deficits, projected to be
$96.5 billion in 1983. The telephone survey was
conducted March 3-9 by Decima
Research of McLean, Va. It was
sponsored by the American Stock
Exchange. Levitt said the biggest cause
.for the shift in the popularity of
Eighty-four percent of those
surveyed in the poll felt it was
critical to the economy that the
red ink figures be reduced now,
he said.
Fight over teletexi heats up
WASHINGTON {AP) -A regulatory procee-
ding on how TV stations may use a new service
known as teletext 'is spawning a broader dispute
over the discretion of cable TV operators to decide
what they offer their subscribers.
At stake in the fight is whether cable operators
will have to retransmit a TV station's teletext ser-
vice along with the station's regular programming.
While the dispute raises a broad policy question
concerning the relationship between cable televi-
sion and broadcasters, the Federal Communications
Commission's d~ision also could have the more
practical effect of determining the commercial fu-
ture of teletext.
Broadcaaten could lose a substantial part of
YOUR BETTER HEAL TH
IS OUR CHtEF INTEREST
A CHILD WlLL SWALLOW
NEARLY EVERYTHING
Taste is unimportant
Children have swallowed
lye, gasoline, ammonia,
a nt poison. bleach ,
l ight er rue!, wo rm
m edicine. deodorants. shampoo, alcohol, paint,
fertilizer. plant roods,
glues, cements and every
type or medicine
Underestimating the
risk is the real cause or
~hild poisoning Adults
must protect them by
keeping every danger
safely out of their reach
and access. Give the
children a brnk. fl is up
to all. adults lo make it
impossible for children lo
touch an y thin g
dangerous.
YOUR DOCTOR CAN
PHONE US when you
need a medicine. Pick up
your prescription if
shopping nearby, or we
will deliver promptly
without extra charge A
great man y peo pl e
entrust us with their
prescriptions. May we
compound and dispense
yours?
, .. UDO PHAlcMACY
'"'Dtlwry Jll ............ ....,... ....
641-lllO
Incredible
Bread Machine
Free fantasy theater show
for the kids at Huntington
Center features magic.
mechanical wizardry &
mime. Shows every
afternoon on the hour
Thurs thru Sun .. Mar. 18-
21 plus 7 & 8 on Thurs./Frl.
ConstructiOn money
available at
lleritage Bank .
• Reslden•lal
• COl1lmerdal Bulldlngs:
1'llk.eouf OJmmltmeN required
along whh leases.
their audience for teletext if cable operators don't
have to .-etransmit it to viewers hooked up to cable.
Teletext is the generic term for an electronic
information service that allows consumers to dis·
play written or graphic material on their TV set
through the use of a special decoder. The techno-
logy works through a process in which the TV
broadcaster embeds information on the blank ver-
tical lines that are contained in any television pic-
ture.
Without a decoder, the consumer sees only the
regular picture. With a decoder, the consumer turns
off the regular picture and can then call up the
written lnfonnation on his set.
Teletext systems are expected to compete with
a related technology known as videotext. The major
difference is that the latter is transmitted via tele-
phone or cable TV lines instead of over-the-air
within a TV signal.
While teletext systems are cheaper to build and
operate, videotext systems are more flexible be-
cause the wire connection allows a consumer to talk
back to the computer that stores the information.
Last October, the FCC launched a rule.making
proceeding to authorize TV stations to provide
teletext service. The major debate at the time was
whether the commission should select one of several
oompeting systems as the industry standard or leave
it to broadcasters to decide which system they liked
best.
In soliciting public comment, the FCC said it
had tentatively decided to leave selection of a
technical standard to the marketplace. While that
has proved controversial, the agency has been de-
luged with public comments focusing on the related
question of the role of cable.
Broadcast.en, as might be expected, maintain
the .commission must prohibit cable operators from
deleting their tele1ext transmissions. •-fhe viablUty of teletext as a local lnfonnation
service offered free to the public depends upon the
adoption of must-earry rules," the National Asso-
ciation of Broedcasters, the industry's largest trade
group, argued in comments filed last week.
U cable operators could delete a teletext signal,
added CBS, "there would be little likelihood that
teleJext services would ever be able to grow and
compete."
"In essence, CBS asks not just to have its cake
and eat it too; it wants the run of \he whole
bakery," responded the National Cable Television
Aaociation, that industry's largest trade organiz.a-
tion. "Whatever cable's other cfuties, it la emphati-
cally not obliged to subsidize the broadcast indu·
stry's attempts to gain a toehold in the teletext
market."
:Responds Erwin G. Krasnow, the NAB's gen-
eral counsel: "The power to delete the teletext
sigJUll is tantamount to the power to monopolize
vidoetext eervices in a given market."
••
A~ wn,tloto
ANTI-CLOCKWISE WATCH -Watches
which turn counter-clockwise are on sale in
Japan for the first time in the world, ac-
cording to a watchmaker. The Puma Quartz
Southern Crosa W8' developed as an exer-
cise in humor, the watchmaker said. The
watch is priced at 25,000 yen (about $108.70
in U.S. dollars). Said the watchmaker, "One_
gets used to it completely alter two hours."
Bank per01it OK
The Comptroller of the Currency has issued a
permit to a group of Orange County business lea-
ders to organiz.e a new full.service bank that will
specialize in servina small-and medium-size busi-
ness and professional firms throughout Orange
County.
The Enterprise National Bank (in organization)
has been granted approval to establish offices in the
area of the Irvine industrial complex, Tim Peralta,
the new bank's president, announced.
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
MUTUAL FUND
Fact~ry use
"" µp · to 71.8%
.I
l
February • ID
WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. factory -rciee
in February for the flrtt Uma 1n &even month.I, f
reaching a rate of 71 .8 percen( of capacity, the
Federal Re.erve Board has reported. •
The news was basically in line with the board't !
Tuelday report that February induatrial production !
levela roee l.6 percent for U.S. industry u a whole i
and 1.8 percent for manufacturing. •
With manufacturers turning out more goods '
last month than in January, it stood to reason that ·
they would have been utilizing more of their pro-;
duction capacity. :
Analysts noted that bad January weather ap-:
parently had held down both production and fac-:
tory use, and they cauuoned that by compari9on the ;
February improvement might seem more robuat ;
than 1t actually was. ·
So no one was predicting any sudden alowing :
of unemployment with companies calling laid-off :
workers back to their factories. : .
Still, the utilization rate did rise after six ;
straight monthly dedines, a development sure to ;
stir new popes that the recession might be nearing :
~~d. :
In February. the new report said, capacity use ;
improved 1.2 percentage points for both manufac-!
turers and producers of industrial materials "as :
industrial activity increased from its low level in ·
January that was induced in part by unusually ae-
vere weather."
The utilization rate for production of motor
vehicles and parts rose for the first time in aeveral
months but remained under 50 percent, the report
said.
"Operating rates also increased substantially
for producers of textiles, and more moderately for
producers of paper, chemicals .. rubber and plastics,
fabricated metals, non-electric equipment, instru-
ments and stone, clay and glass products."
On the negative sid e, the report said,
"production in the primary metals industry conti-
nued to weaken in February as operating rates
declined for producers of iron and steel and of
non-ferrous metals."
Pct. Up 2U up no Up 23.l Up 21.4 Up 21A Up Xl.O Up 20.0
Up 20.0 UP 20.0 Up 1'.0
Up IU Up 17.l
Up 17.6 Up 16.7 UP 1' 7 Up 1...0 Up 1U Up 1'.J
Up 13.5 Up IU
Up 12.7 Up 1:1.5
UP ·~ll,f u .. n.a Up IU
"-:1.
Off 2S.O g: 20.6 f 20.0 11.I Off lt.I 8:: ~ ()It 10.5 Off tO..J Off 10.3 Off 10.0 Off 10.0 Off • 5
Off t.S Off t.4 ~ t.4 u t.2 g: '·' u ..,. :
Off l .J ·.: Off ..,
()It 7.7
Off 7.7
Golden West,
Pall Am talking
·mm 6:>m-----.....
Golda Wess AJrJlnes, the financially ailing
Newpott ae.ch ttgional carrier, Ls reportedly~
ling aelllna up to 25 percent of tht airliM to Pu
Amerlcu World Alrw1y1. Pan Am in a statement Is--.
sued lat.e Tuelday said "dl.9custiona about a pcmible
commuter operation have been held with Goldtn
West'' but declined to elaborate. Meanwhile, Golden
West employees are voting on the airlil)e's requeet ti>r
a 10 percent pay cut
Newport Ptuarmaceiiuca11 lnteruttou.1 i.e. aaid
it bas withdrawn Its reque1t for a Food and Drug
Adm1rustration hearing for its controvenial anti-viral
drug bopri.n08ine. The drug, which ts legal in ~2
countries, wu developed to treat sub-acute lclero.tng
panencephalitil, a di.lease that affects about 200 chil·
Oren annually an the United States. Company presi-
dent and boa.rd chairman, Alvin J. Ola.sky, said the
firm withdrew ita request becauae of the heavy ex-
penses incurred in trying to have the drug approved.
In the -~t two years. the company has spent IOllle
$2.5 million, Glaaky reported. Efforts will continue.
however, in trying to get lsoprinosine approved tor
treatment of other diseases . . .
111111 c;::z _____ _
A new round of newsprint price iDcrea1et is be-
ginning to take effect, despite forecasts that there will
be a supply glut this year and reports that 90me
Canadian producers already have scheduled produc-
tion cutbacks. A spokeswoman for Cooaolldated-
Batbunt Inc. of Montreal -one of eastern Can.ada'1
major newsprint producers -said the company raised
prices for U.S. customers by 5 percent March 1. The
change. which was announced last fall, boosted the
price by $25 to $525 per metric ton.
General Dynamics Corp. said It has completed the
purchase of Chrysler Corp.'1 tank manufacturing
subsidiary for $336.l million. The price was $12.4
million le$ than the price set In the preliminary
agreement announced Feb. 19, reflecting what Gen~
eral Dynamics called "certain agreed-upon adjust-
ments arising since that date." ...
John J . Casey has resigned his post as chairman
and chief executive of Braniff lnternatioaaJ to accept
a position with Pao Amencan World Airways. Ho-
ward D. Patnam was subsequently elected Braniff
chairman of the board. He already holds the title of
president and chief executive o((icer.
IUlllCI ;I=;
Newport Pbarmaceatical1 lnternat1oaaJ Inc. said
total revenues for the nine-month period ended Jan.
31 were $7.4 million. an increase of $656,000 over the
like period last year. Total product sales increased $1.2
million from $5.3 million in 1981 to ·$6.5 mililon in
1982. Net loss was $709,000, or 9 centa a a.hare, com-
pared wi\h income of $830,000, or 10 cents. for the
comparable nine-month period last year . . .
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
AMERICAN LEADERS
GOLD' COINS
l('N1911M4, 1 troy oz.. '330.50. °" 110,2! .
........ ..... I ~ Ol., f.S)(),50, oft
S10.25 • ...... 50 petO, U tlor OI., '392.16, off 11-.00 • .....-100 otown, NOa troy oa .. a:n ua. °" at.75
~o.11 ......
NEW...i......YOftK(AP) -RNI Dow--'-••• ~-· ,,.,, 17.
JD Ind ~Of :t'10 ~ ~ ?.J lD Tm JM.la .... m.u DUO+ 0 S5 IS UU IQUZ IG6..Cl5 IOU.1 105 JI>.-0 .. '5 sa. nu1 llS." Jll n J1> »-o .s. ~~ ............... •.1'14,D ·-· .. .. .... .. .. 1,m ,100 ~I~ :::.:'.::'.::'.:'.· .... :.. ..ro:::
WHAT STOCKS DID
HEW YOftK (AP) Mltr. 11
.ldWarQd
\llltO •h
Prev ci.J,
Dlc1 .... m w ~::, 4 .. 4S6 , ... ,.., _,,..,. , ' -lows
102 ..
WttATAMUOIO
... EW \"Ofll( IAPI Mer 11 .......
illldYtnCICI w;:o cHJ.
Oetll ..... "' ,.
~=-lll n7 1S' ,., -"""' , > '--lows .. 41
METALS -•v
' Cop.,., 74~·76 cents a pound, US. destine Ilona.
lb
LNd 28-32 cents a oound
Zinc: 40 oent1 a pound, dell....-9d.
Tin S6 7631 Metal• Wfflt compollto
Alwftlnum 76-77 cen11 a pound, N Y
llorcwy 1390 00 per ll&P
l"tettiwrn $320 00 lroy 02 • N Y
SILVER
Handy & Harman, S7. 130 par Hoy
IOUO<:e.
GOLD QUOTATIONS __...
Londoft: "'°'"'"" llXI""' $3 14 60 off $10.00 ... .... . •
London; afternoon II••"" 1318 oo oft S8 50. • ... • ,_,.1 '323.81, on 11.87. ,., ... ...., 1315.ff, off .. 01
~ Lato filling 1315.00. on M.00
blO. 131 e.oo eakod. Hon4r a H.,•en: (only dally quote
1316.00, ofl $8.50 r,....,ct: {orly dally quote) 5311;00
ue>M.50.
SYMBOLS
l
J
I
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I
I I I .
I I
t
I I
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~ oOMt DAILY PILOT/Thufldly, Mlt'Ch 18, 1812
"Our teocher doesn't know much. Whenever
she wants to know something she asks us."
by Brad Anderson
GARF"IELD ~ 1ME UNIQUE
A01LIT'{ 10 MEAF\ A CAN
OPENER F"ROM ANVWMERE.
IN 1HE MOO~E
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
Tt:MBLEWEEDI
~ f"AJAMAS I
NO VOJVE:R '
1lff:¥ AL.I.. CAJ.L ~ . '«>O LAti..
·~~~~-£~ ~ I SHO~·-·-E .. -........ ~----....-.i · .lVt.·· ~· ~ by Jeff Ma~ly
"Old you lff the face of the guy wHrtng the
tortol1t·1hell coat?"
Hank Ketchum
IT's AMAZING··· THE
SUN IS MILLIONS OF
MILES AWAY·--AND Y ET,
THE RAYS GET HERE
IN A FE\V MINUTES
Ft.:NKl' •INKERBEAN
AND ~ lHE. l..A5T ~IN& ~ SANm ANNA'!:> ~ ~ lHE Af..ANO ...
Ml 1'11!.U, ~llCI<\ ... ~·~
1\IE.f\izA ~
~~OE.tltO.
I by Ernie 9ushm1ller
SO WHAT?--·
ITs DOWNHILL
ALL THE 'WAY
~ I AA-J£.tf1' \.E"f' Ill~ °"1
Of Mi ~\{,~ ~L\. W.'4 ~ I
~MOW "t <:MOtl'T ~~
!>SW f~f. ~E ... MOW 010
'O) c,er "fltt .-----..
~tit~
eee.'?rrs
SlMPl..E. !
·-I
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, March 18, 1982 ..
~ ........ .
G R IM REMINDER -Comedian Richard
Pryor, shown during a scene in bis latest film,
"Live on Sunset S::;!f!;" is letting his audiences
in on the grim de of his drug use, admit-
ting in tile movie that "cocaine is the enemy."
Filmex ente rs
second decade
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Filmex enters its se-
cond decade this week with good humor and hi,gh
hopes.
The Los Angeles International Film Exposition
has been full of hope ever since its humble begin-
ning& in 1971. What's new this year is the comedic
turn among the festival's 100 attractions,
"There are more comedies this year than ever
before," reports Filmex director Gary Fa;art. "We
Opened with a comedy, Blake Edwards' 'Victor ,
Victoria.' and we're having a 50-hour marathon of
oomedies.
''The films we are sh~wing also have a strong
comedic flavor, not only from this country but
others as well. I can't explain it, except that perhaps
the gloom and doom of the threat t,>f nuclear war
and the recession everywhere has gotten to people
and film makers as well as the general public are
lqoking for ways to laugh."
So is Gary Essart, who founded Filmex with
the help of Rosalind Russell, George Cukor and a
few other civic-minded citizens. Filmex has had
good years and bad, and 1981 was not one of the
good ones. After being centered in Century City,
the event branched out to nine theaters last year
with its most ambitious schedule yet. The result was
a wave of red ink.
"We've gone back to Century City this year,"
said FBsart.. ''The schedule is structured one-third
smaller, 100 events instead of 150, We have sho-
wings all day on the weekends, but only at night
during the week. Last year we ran all day, every
day. Prices remain the same ($5)."
Like most non-profit organizations, Filmex is
in a financial bind, entering its 11th year with a
$100,000 debt. Some $40,000 has already been rai-
sed, F.&art said, thanks to a $20,000 donation by
Tom Laughlin and matching grants from others.
EBSart is hoping for more contributions and predicts
that this year's event will produce a profit, further
reducing the debt.
The 11th Filmex is dedicated to the Jate Natalie
Wood. Seven of her films, including "Rebel Withott
a Cauae," "Splendor in the .Grass" and "Love with
a Proper Stranger" will be shown free of charge.
Following "West Side Story" viewers will see five
minutes of Miss Wood in "Brainstorm," the film she
was making at the time she died.
Wlfha
competitor ...
how close can you get ?
Earth and-man-United-
Musician explores sounds to produce spirit of freedom
HARTJORD1 Co.in. (AP) -D1c:1ariu hbbMlt
alienated by 111Teedy" rec:ord companfn, Paul
Wint.et bu pulled out of the ma.lnlU'elm of Amtts-
klan mUllAc to form bil own compmy, and will do-
nate the prof.lta to •ve beby -i.. wbaJee. -.i.
and WolWll.
111 ma.Y not tell • million 19DOl'da bnmedlateiy,
but the mu.le wlll keep ee:~~c:!' 10 years or l'Nire/' Mid the 42-yeer-old , who tpenda
hiHwmnera living in a tee~ an a 77-ac:re fUJD ln
rural Litchfield, Conn. ·
The mtWc of the Paul Winter Conaort may
never sell io a mus audience. Even Winter bu
trouble deecribtng it.
''Contemporary contrapuntal Connecticut
country consort music," wa• the red-bearded,
hazel-eyed musidan'a de9cription.
0Amerlcan music that derive1 from that w\ique
convergence of cultures that baa oocumd in North
America and South America, thus a blendina of the
music of EW'ope and Africa," he addec1 tn an
lntervtew after rehearsal for an upoornin«i concert
in Hartford. >
Winter's professional training began with an
introduction to cla•ical music at the age of 6. At 13,
he fonned • Gennan dance band. Later, he created
a jazz sextet that took flrat prize in a national
intercollegiate festival in 1961.
HI.a music combines elements of all three styles,
plus rhythms from nearly every country in the
world.
"It expresiee the spirit of freedom -the theme
of America," he explained.
But it goes beyond that.
Winter describes himself as a philosophical
explorer -"Aren't we all?'' he asked -and his
Consort an "explorer of sounds."
His latest albums -marketed through the
Living Music FOWldation in Litchfield -include
"We are all connected with
nature when we' re born."
mUSlcal conversations between Winter's saxophone
or clarinet and a wolf, whales, seals and an eagle. ,
"It's a fusion of many sounds that affect people
in different ways. That's the fun of being a
musician," he said, his soft, deep voice echoing
musically through the sanctuary of St. Peter's
Church.
His latest project. is a musical "celebration of
the history, geology, plants and people of the Grand
Canyon." Recorded deep in the canyon over a pe-
riod of more than two years, the forthcoming aix-
sided album will feature aounds of "the water of
the Colorado River, the birds, the environment" as
w ell as more traditional instrumental accompani-
ment.
Winter said the album will state his belief that
"we are all connected with nature when we're
born," Somehow, he contended, the human race has
strayed from the unity of man, animal and their
natural roots.
"U people simply breathed the way their bo-
dies were suppoeed to, spent 80l1le time in the sun,
moved, exercised, they'd see how easy it is to feel
good.
'"Ille challenge of the human race is to learn
how to grow up, bow to be together. There's a lot of
conflict and destruction in the envirorunent. We can
learn from our elders on our planet -the whales,
the wolves, Look to tho8e creatures as a teacher.
They know how io do theee things."
The Winter Conaort plays many of its concerts.
not in large reverberant auditoriums, but in chur-
ches. Winter is an artist in residence at the Cathe-
dral of St. John the DiVine in New York, the largest ,
Gothic cathedral in the world.
\
I--·----·· --'
"It'• the eenee of wonder evoked in people by
thelr rnce in a church," he laid. ln~r'a belief in the apUituallty of mumc and '
ltl lm~ fO mankind dJHettntJatet him from I
today a ~ muadciana, many of whom he 1 I
l&ld are out t::> "eell anyth.lna immed.lately and hu-
Jiely to the mmt cullibfe public market.
''The companle. are getting more and more areed oriented and further and further away from
musk:. They have the attitude of shoe salesmen -
not that shoe aalesmen are bad, but the mualc has
been forptten."
NOW PLAYINQ
lllU UMf.11._..
tltU ""11 WHllWOOll U9 ~339 ~30 4401
COlll •U OllMGl ln;wdl 811stoj Ol""OI Mal
540 IU4 637 0340
llTOllO ...U
fdW11cls ~ 51-.... Duve Ill
581 ~HO 6394110
FOWTAI• fWU OUllCll
lwntillfl Y*'f Ot,.. Ill UA Clly C-
9611481 634 ltl I
BASED ON
A TRUE STORY.
....... ,..., ..... .....
·-· ... 1t'l
M41rlel Hemln1w•y N~msT (") 121JO J 100 5: 30 •:oo 10120
~Sp•cek "8(PQ) 12:30 2 :50 5:10
7 :40 10:00
,.I., Utllnov In
SVILUWO.R TtC SUll (PO)
I :00 3 115 $:3$ 7 :115 10:10
"°*'1rrf A~ Nor'*-CHAalOTS Of' f'lllE ("G) 12130 2 :50S:15 7 145 10:10 ,,_,,_.,,, ,._....,,,....
IUUCMIQ Ofl ,.._
LOST AltK (POI I 100
J :1S l tJO 7:45 ••SS
1 .. '7omm
Terror On Th• High SeHI ORIEAT WHITE (PO) Plual Co·H ll Tiw llDRt (!IQ
uoubl• Terror! nta.-AST WfY'H .. l(R) lo Deadly 111 .. JJn1 (R) ·1
l
c::::::===:i
~,._......._
A RT'NUR (PG) 5"•rtry•a Machine CR>
lknlln' L.ooM (")
John 9eiuahl In
.... 11.W(") Modern
"obleftU ("G)
Dro.,.ona Open 6:45
WMkn•ohtl/6:30W•k9ncH .Und9r12FREEUnlessNoted
Keep an eye oat
fmrtbe fa1'nieat movie
ibOatgtOWingup--
ever made!
---------------
DEATHTRAP -
MICHAEL CAINE CHRISTO PHER REl!'YE
DYAN CANNON
The trap is set ...
For a widcedly funny
who'll-do-it.
"' .. IAWf'I .. DEATHTRAP"
be<Ut~ Producer JAY PRESSON ALLEN At!OC"1te Pl'OdYcer ALFRED de LIAGRE. JR.
MuSIC by JOHNNY MANDEL Produced by BURTI HARRIS
S<reenpt.y by JAY PRESSON ALLEN Ba~d on Ille si.ae play by IRA LEVIN
O.rectt<I by SIDNEY LUMET
===-=~~=:":~='!""'='\ ,lll()M .......
I -I
Toa 'II be glad JQu.cameJ_
MELVIN SIMON PRODUCTIONS/ASTRAL BELI.EVUE PATHE INC.
FllllC BOB CLARK'S "PORKY'S" KIM CATIRAll scorr COlOMBY·t'NU HUNTER· ALEX KARRAS. Ti.Sllnf
SUSAN CLARt< .o.ryrawr ~,.._,HAROLD GREENBERG n1 MELVIN SIMON "'**' 11y DON CARMODY n1 BOB CLARK
.. Fascinating•'
Jo,; MMll•. Nllff >'OltlnMH
··Remarkable"
PROPl.£ MAOAZINB
*BARGAIN MATINEES •
Monday thru Saturday
All Perlorm1ncH belore 5:00 PM
(Exe.pt Specill Enp""""'' Ind Holldlya)
I A MlllA(JA MALI
LA MIRADA WALK·IN
"PERSONAL BEST' 1111 -··-...... -......... -"THEY ALL LAUOH£D•• --·••Lt•-•na,9'•,-
"THE BEAST WITHIN .. I'll •••. ....,.~•--.e:a-.........
, .......... .-....... .....-.
"CHARIOTS OF FIRE" -........ ._. ....... ...
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALK·IN
ltA'fttl:afMC ..._,.UMI .... "ONOA
"ON GOLDEN POND' tt'OI ...... , ..... ., ...... .
M1rooo 01 Ro1•c1on1
99•·2•00
CMMUl-llO
"DEATH WISH II'" 111
tt:4'4~:464:-..:_ ........
"THE AMAT£Uft" 111 •••.•t1.ea1-. ...
"RICHARD PRYOR LIVE
ON THE SUNSET STRIP ..
focu11y a l <;ondlewooa
213/531·9510
'MISSING" tl'Cll
U.a JH .... 111.1t.M
_°"_,_._...., .... ,_ ~= .::. :! !.!'::-.--C = :.";-"THEY ALL LAUGHED ,_ tt• IM IH I . t•...t1
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WAlk llol
"EVIL UNOER THE SUN" ~I ••• , •• 1t, ..... , ,.
LAGUNA so . COAST WALK·IN
REDS -.,. ........
"MAKING LOVr 1111 ,,_ ... , .............. . w.o.., ,., ........ ..
.... 0...,..-........... ...
• ._. CttOll ....... ~
CHARIOTS Of: FIRE' ... 1
t tt., JI •t. e tt., M-' .._,,
Soull\ Cooll H1woy
or llooowoy
49 .... 1514
"'"ICHMO PftY°" LIVE
OH TI« SUNSET STRIP'" t1t1 "EVlL UNDV. THE SON· --..... . -·-.-·-... ,....,.. ........ , ...... -=» ....... ~ ........ , ..... ..
IMPORTANT NOTICE! CHILDREN UNOER 12 FRU!
".,.,, •nf w,, .. , lltfO 111111 '" 5 30 • Sii S.• "1114'30 r11
Cl!IHI S0UNo • fO\J~ AM tAll llAOIO IS fOOll $IUllf1I
nl IO() AM tAll AAIJll) W!Tll QllT1)I< ACCUSOlll ~
--N' l'OllTAtlf 1·~ CINf..ll OIWf.4ICS D Oii NA IWllO
ANAHllM
ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN
•••••or" ol l•mo" St a79·9150
C>WIU&'-• 'OEATM Wl$t II" 111 PUla
THE BURNING" 11
CUit II SOU..0
"HALLOWEEN II'",.. -""AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF
~'oOH"'f CR~ ---
ITS ONLY THUHOER" -
IN LONDOH'"flt
CIN( fl SOUNO
BUE NA PAii~
BUENA PARK ORIVE,IN
llncol11 A .. Weol ol ICM"
121·4070
BUINA PAl1l
LINCOLN ORIVE·IN
l•n<oln ••• we., ot 1nott
121·,070
-"'MY 80DYGU.MD" -
CINI h~I)
"RICHARD flttYOft LIVE
OH THE SUNSET STRIP"' t1t1 -"THINK OtffTY'' "I
'"VICE SOOAO''"" -"T HE 80ftDOI" 1111
81.llltll"• ::::::~~::..::::
So11 01eoo ,,..., 01 1100-1\u•tt (So) I 962·2411 C•Hf ,. MIUHO 1-l• .. ?.~;f" }
"HAlLO!!Bt II"... I I .._ .... , ... NQ .. .,.. I "AN AMll!RICAH WERIWOU' I -IN LONDON" I'll "8°"0DUJNI" -i CUit ff $OU110
CM " ----:::_'."'."_-<~LR ... -··--.. CHAllTI,! .. f ." 1111
"M ATHIHtP"t'l1
Cllll'.> '1 SOU110
"-~! A. fill,. A
LA HABRA rlRIVl IN
"DEATH :!SH II .. 1111
"THf auRHINO" 1111
Cflll, .. ~
""!CHARO l'RYOR LIVI
OH THI IUNKT """'" I'll -_..,_,. __ ,.., .. ...., "T .. otRTY" tilt
'7MM I
-~-.... ~ ..
Os:lANGE OQIVE IN
·~p:· ...
''VtQllQUAD'' ...
1•, .. ..r. ...
M ISSION OQIVf IN
'°""' """ ,...., • llOle Coffe9e
558·70 22
ITI °"'-Y TttUNDIR" tNt 0 A Wlll'NfJI CQMMUNl()Afl()Ht COlilf'MY ................ ....._ W!Glnnl Dlall IJf BOB CLARK -·~-~ l'ftn~ ii).
----' 0-. 0 0
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~
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..... -----------------.....,,----~....,..------------------------------~---
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NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -
S1nlel' Donna ra.rao •Y. lhe a. eo~fnl well with multiple ~le
rolit, a crlppllna dl1eate that
lltNCk her four years .,o.
Mill Farao, se. best known for
her 1872 hlt .. Happleat Girl in
the Whole USA," bu maintained
a falr!f~l ll.featyle alnce belna with the neuro-
lqpcal dt.eue in 1978.
"The dlaeaae, often called the
"my1t,rlou• crippler of youn1
adulta.'' hail no cu.re. In Mill Far-
go'• cue, the tymptoma are body
pain, moetly ln the back, numb-
ness and fa e.
"I feel =ul," lhe aki ln a recent Cele interview from
her Naahvllle home momenta
before leavina on a five-day
concert tour. "It'a an erratic dll· ..... • stranae diaeale. lThe doc·
ton don't know where ft oomee
·from or why. But I won't let It
p& me clown unleet it hM to. 0 1 feel pretty aood," she Mid.
"YOU deal wt th it every day and
there II aorne d.ilcomfort. but' lt'1
not .. bad • it WU. y OU can feel
a aJ.iaht improvement over a 111.x·
month period. I feel I'm In a
holding pattern."
A former high achool Engliah
•
teacher, lht m1-d four mont.hl
of entwtalnlna when the dlleue WU~· But lhe .....-
her career ln late 1978 and .UU Ii
wrtttna ~nca. recordln1 music
and ~ c:onQel't eppearalll* . >.. a oanc irron to her health, lbe
triel to .reetrict her ahowa to one a
day and limit the travel between concerti. ~are about normal, Mid
Mill Farso, whme other hitt ln·
dude "Funny Face," ''Th.at Wu
Yesterday,•• ''SUpet'DMUl, '' ''YOU
Were Alw•r There" and "UtUe
Girl Gone.'
"I feel better physically when I
•
!::fa u1ht 1ebedule on the
. I llaf. on my diet belt.er Mill
I exerdle, ' ahe MW. She lh1nU It helpe her to .ack
to a diet of fn<a and ve,etablel
and avoid refined 1u1ar and
white flour. And lbe trlet to relt
d~ the day and not,., too
tlred.
''It'• • man.a1•ble dlleue If
you are aware of it riaht at the
1tart and you d on't pre11
younel1," ahe aald ... The .. thlnc
that 1CareS me ii every Urrie you
have an attack, you're left with
10,methlng you didn't have
before."
•
She ha1 found U helphalto
reed booki on htalth and~ to
tapes about 1pl.rltual develop·
mtnt. "YOU CD do It (lilten to alCli
tapea) while you put your ma-
keup on. lt't lib acMa to church
every day; it'• loocf for your
apUiL"
Mm Fargo hu not had an al-
bum releued '1nce ''Brotherly
Love," a collection of 101pel
IOtlgl put out 1ut aunmer. But
lhe'a cummtly writing ''a variety
of sons•" for anotller album
which likely will be released th.is
1pring.
PRE~SEASCfN CLEARANCE 0
FURNITURE & II
ACCESSORIES! m 0 Alu-mont --~ 0 ..,._~
0 FF BELOW ARE JUST A FEW
. EXAMPLES OF SOME OF THE
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reg. 44.95 Reg. 51.95
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r
..
(
,.. ..........
LONG BEACH CLEANUP -A tractor shoves
tons of debris which was washed ashore rec-
enUy by storm in Southern California into
piles along the strand in Long Beach.
Writer "Works
around palsy
MADISONVILLE, Ky. (AP) -Like many
newspaper reporters, Garth Gamblin bas trouble
with spelling.
"l speJl worse than a second grader," he
admits. Other than that, he considers himself "just
another working newsperson." .
Gamblin, a full-time reporter for The
Messenger in Madisonville since April, covers the
court beat, Hopkins County government,
agriculture a nd a couple of nearby small
communities. All in all, pretty standard work for
any reporter on a small daily.
But there is something special about Gamblin.
He has suffered cerebral palsy since birth. His
speech is slurred and indistinct. He wallts with a
pronounced limp, which makes it seem as if he is
struggling on a rolling ship. .
He also has a 'quick, d ry wit, boundless
curiosity and an intense love for his fellow man.
Gr.mblin, 42, began writing a weekly column
for The Messenger in 1964. He was not paid, but
did receive a S25 Christmas bonus that year.
With the bonus came the message that he
would begin receiving $5 for each column. His
journalism careet wasn't exactly off and running,
but it was moving.
By 1970, he began regular coverage of city
council meetings in Earlingwn for the paper.
During that time, he also owned a bookstore in
Earlington.
Early in 1981 , Tom Clinton, editor of The
Messenger, had a staffer on leave and needed
someone to fjll in.
·'There was some apprehension, both with the
staH and myself." Clinton remembers. "We
wondered about his communication problems.
"For the first few days, everybody was ill at
ease, including Garth," Clinton says. "But he has
proved to me and everybody else that he would do
a good job.''
In April , Gamblin was made a full -time
reporter.
Like most reporters, Gamblin has had his
sha re of disputes with officials. There was the
for~er Earlington mayor, for instance, who tried
to bar him from city council meetings.
Hopkins County officials and others with
whom he works rto longer look upon Gamblin as a
special case. He receives the same treatment
accorded other reporters. which isn't always frien~
o n· ocl:asions when be does h.ave trouble
communicating with someone, other reporters on
the staff are happy to help.
Clinton says Gamblin has a job as long as he
wants one, and continues his good work. ·
. enfune'Societv Er&'°OON 8URI~ AT !fEA 646-7431 .
Our literature tells the complete story of our
IOC~ _)!_ ......... ,._~
ULTllHGUOH
SMITH & TUTHILL
WISTCLlff CHAf'IL
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
t'4f;·!l3 71
rtHCI NOTHUS
IMITHI' MOITUAaT
627 Main St
Hunhnaton &ach
536-6539
rACIAC ••w MIMORIALr.-w
Cernttery 'Mortuary
Chapel·Crematorv
3500 Pacific View Drove
NewPOr1 Beacri
644·2700
McCoaMK:ll MOltTUARIH
• Laouna Beach
49'4·9415
laouna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Clp1s1rano
495-1776
f
EITI Im
Brown signs
freeway bill.
.Death penalty eyed
LONOON (AP) -Brlt:lah police have launched
an unprecedented advert1slna campaign to restore
the death penalty for most types of premeditated
murder.
"We urge all citizens who share our view that
the time has come to restore capital punishment for
murder, to make their representatives in Parlia-
ment aware of their opinion," the Police Federation
aaid Wednesay in half-page ads in five national
newspapers.
'Onion Field' hearing set
SACRAMENTO (AP) -State parole offidaJa
have scheduled an April 27 hearing to determine lf
they will revoke the scheduled June 18 release of
Gregory Ulaa Powell,· convicted of the "Onion
Field" murder of a Loi· Angeles policeman.
The re.cila1on hearini will be held at the Cali-
fornia Medical Facility at Yac•ville, said RObin·
Dezember , executive dlrector of the state Board of
PrilJon Tertna.
The March 9, 1963, murder of Officer Ian
Campbell was the subject of a book. "The Onion
Field," by former police Sgt. Joeeph Wambaugh,
and a movie.
Inf ant I ormula recalled
WASHINGTON (AP) -Two types of Nunoy
brand infaiit formulas are being recalled because
they do not have vitamin B6, the Food and Drug
Adminiatration says.
· Abeence of B6 in the diet can cauae convulsions
and other health problems.
The products involved, the FDA said, are
13-ounce cans of Nursoy concentrated liquid and
32-ounce cana of NW"IOy ready-to-feed.
Evacuation plan dropped
SAN RAFAEL (AP) -Calling federally re-
quested _plans "senseless,'' Marin C.Ounty officlals
have.abandoned any more planning for mass eva-
cuation in the event of a nuclear attack.
"We're not going to prepare a relocation plan
for skeletons," Superviaor Gary Giacomini aaid af-
ter the Board of Superviaors vote.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency
last year asked countiea and local governments
aero. the nation to begin prepering at their own
expense a preliminary plan for the evacuation of
civilian popu]ationa in the event of an anticipated
nuclear attack.
Fingers lost to 'bomb'
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Tammy Lockhart, 14, bas
lost two fingers of her left hand in the expWlion of
a "seiil bomb" firecracker which she found at home
and mistook for a candle, police said.
A eeal bomb i.a a dgar-siz.ed firecracker uaed by
fishennen to scare off seals that interfere with tuna
~e girl said she thought it was a candle and lit
ita fuse, thinking it was a wick. Police said none of
her family knew where the device came from.
Breast feeding ban fought
ORLANOO, Fla. (AP) -A teacher who took a
forced leave of abeence after she was prohibited
from breast feeding her baby on echool _grounda.
says she'll challenge a Judie'• ruling upholding the.
ban.
But the teachers' association which financed
her three-year legal battle aaainst the Orange
County School Board plan.a to consider carefully
whether an appeal is feasible, the auociation'a
general counael says.
~.=r Tiii '*""""' ~ .. CIOinO "'*-, _______ .....,. __ _
u: 'ICTITIOUIMlllM•ll If.OT I H~ CllAHlAt. 12'0 "-t· lfAMI ITAT9MSW'.f • kt '°"'9".,d, Wte H. COiia MMt, Oel-Tl>e totie.l"tl .... -• .,_ ...... llOtnNI t"37. MIMU ...
I ,,.. •. LAe, t --,..,., !MM. C• IAI .Cc•HT OH H.lllLI• ce1 ~~mu • fl\11 t>u.i"9H 11 ~O~led by an In· .llCCllHT OH HAit.i av Tt:ltl, 1111! -'•rli.et lte•d, t.at11fl• Nlt1HI, '------------------------~ J• S. LM C<tllf•r11le, ~ 0, '2t1J. "Not the Qld run-out·Of·rne>ney llnel" Tiii• 11•1•"1•111 wu lll•d •1111111• Or•t•rl' s. e 11d Teri A ~ly (lleJtl ol 0r""09 Coullty on Me/Clll l>w<kW«VI, HwlleN Md WW., 21'1 I
------------------------11. 1M2 '•relH , Mluloft vi.i., C•tllef'11te ·~ ""'·
Legionnaire bug
still baffling
ATLANTA <AP) -It's been five years since
the cause was discovered by a missing link
remains: What other factor combines with
bacteria to produce the deadly Legionnaires'
disease?
"Legionella plus some 'black box' is ...
responsible for causing the disease. Now what is in
the black box , another organism, temperature ...
other bacteria? I mean the list goes on and on,"
Marguerite Neill, medical epidemiologist at the
national Centers for Disease Control said in an
interview.
The C DC recently marked the fifth.
anniversary of the discovery or Legionella.
Director William Foege accepted a plaque on.
behalf of the CDC from the Infectious Disease
Society.
And, meanwhile, researchers "are certainly
continuing to work on therapies, the development
of a skin test, better laboratory methods for
diagnosis," Ms . Neill said.
The disease jolted the nation when it struck at
the Bellevue-Stratford Hotel in Philadelphia in
1976, killing 36 people. most or them members of
the American Legion and their wives. The deaths
also included hotel workers. ·
The disease quickly was dubbed for the
veterans group, but the cause was not found and
announced for five months.
The bacteria was called Legionella and seven
strains have been discovered since. An estimated
25,000 people contracted it each year since 1978
with about 15 percent or the cues fatal. said a
CDC epidemiologist, Arthur Reingold.
The pneumonia-like illness is contracted rrom
environmental sources, rather than from people.
and can be cured with a common antibiotic,
erythromycin, Reingold said.
The bacterium is widely distributed in the
environment but does not always cause the
disease, Ms. Neill said, leaving researchers
without an answer to fill in the "black box."
Ms. Neill said the CDC is not seeking a vaccine
because the disease occurs "only in outbreaks or
spor adic cases."
,ICTITIOUS AUllNIU 'ICTITloUI aUSINESS
MAMlllTATIEMl:NT NAMaSTATaMaNT
Tiie followlnt pe,.011 IS dolnt Tiie lofl-lflt peoons are dolng ~~"' bvsl...ss•• GEORGE ffCK ENTERPRISE. DETAILS UNLIMITED 711 ~i::=.:-· t•A, Coat• Mete. Pa<lll< Coe•• Hl911••v. Hunll-
G-.. P 8ock Ill 1>00 ollcleml 8N<ll,C.lllonlle""7.
A..-t•A . c-i. ~ Cellfontl• Tom A.. 8-lett. 711 Poc:lfk Coosl n.26 ' ' ' H lgllw•y, Hu11tlnglo11 8e•clt,
Tt>ls llullMIS II cOftducled by ... CellforftloE I ~" t , ..... , M-lncllvlduel '< "· "' uo r. '*" ..,,.. ~ '· 9eck LeM. HUfltlflllOn Boocl>, Callfornle
Tiiis ~ W61 llled wltl> lllo ~j -~ C41UnlY , ...... of Or•noe County Oft Tll I _,,.. .. Is corodu<IM by •
Merch J, 1"2. ,...., llmlled ~.:,;...n
Pulll~Or~Cout Delly PllOI, This~"::': flied wlltl.,.
Mar.•. 11• 11• U , tm .,...., county Clerk of Or•nee Cout'lty on
Maret>>. ttl2.
l'llUft
Pllt>41.-Or.,._ Coast Deity Piiot,
~rel\ 4, II, 1t. 2S, 1"2 t41-G.
PuDllalleG Oranoe Coaat D11ty Piiot, Mary ltMllMNlll, _, H.......,.,
Merell ''· 26. AjWtl I. •. 1M2 t:ts.82 ·-.. ..__ Gell'9mle *''·
'FOUi MlllN•SS ITAT•M9NT
Tll• ollowh•O '"'"°" h doing ..,.,,.. .. ;
SU8¥Alt1HE l!NOIHIEElttHG
ASSO(IATESJ '°4 )Ill Slreet, -pert
a..c11, <:.llfomle '*3.
Tlllt *"'-l...U h celldu<IH by a
~rel jNt1Mf alllf.
Teri A °"'*-Tlllt .......... w• flied Wltll h Co.inly Clef1l of ~ ... c-t¥ .,.
M.,<11 1, IW ,, ...
,ubll-Or.,,.. CM• OellY Pll04, Merell II, It. U . Aorll I, 1tl2 tm.G.
Lorenzo C Miiiar . 21S VI• P1aJC ma =_""•· __, BH<ll, C•lltorllla r------------
1,.:1~::."-• 11 condu<t..i 11¥ Ml • F~~~':!:::::.,ss
LontftlD C.. Miii~. Ow,.r The followlllO pet'tofll are dolnt
Tiii• --• WM flled with Ille t>Ytlneu u . C-ly Ct-of Oren99 County 011 8 U C H A N A N · R I C C I I Fat>r~rvn.1.s. ASSOCIATES. 2020 OIHll. Newport
FIQ7U 8HC1', Callfornle t2MO
PllOU'"9CI OrMCll COH I Delly Phol, Lerry N. Rl<cl, U171 i..e....-.
Fett. 25, MMdt•,.11, II, tta .. ,..,, L119una N'9119I, C•lllOrnl• t»n
Berwa K. 8UCM1*>1 1100 l!Jwlla
L•ne, Newport Jl,NCh. Celllornl• tM60 fhii '11111s1nest ts ~ucted llY an un1ncorll0'.wd .. toc:letlon olllar tltall
STATIEMIENT OF WITNORAWAL epartnerllllp.
,ltOM LMrv ... Ricci l'ollltTNIEltSNll' OPl:ltAT ING ~·K.euchenan
UNOIElt Tiii• rtMltmenl Wft fllOO wltll -"CTITICM.11 SUSIHISS NA.Ml County Clerk OI Oranoe COUlllY on
Tiie IOI~ perlOll lies wttl>dl'-n M•rcll J. t"2
es • 1•11•r•I portnar lrom Ill• Fl .....
partnarslllp operating und•r Ill• Pul>ll"*I Or.,.ge Coost Dolly Pllol, ~c!l1t::~~::~~: ~~l~E Mell,: Mer •. 11, 11, U, 1"2 ~
Bucknell ROOcl, Co5\.t MeM, Cetllornla .,.,.
Tit• llcllltoys by1ln .. 1 nam•1------------~tetemeMl<w '"" ,,.,tnenNp wH lllod 'l<TITIOUI •UllNllS
on Aprll 12, 1'11 Ill Ille County of ·--ITATIE ... NT
Or•ft91 Tiie followln9 --• e ro doing Full Heme ano AOOress of Ille 111tt1""1os:
Perton Wlthdr-"'9 LENK WOOD ASSOCIATES, 2G2
Rol>arl Gareth K•nnedv. JOO Nlefera Way, Go&te Mne, c..1._• 8u<knell R...O. CMta Me\8, Calll...-nla .,..,.
'26'16 Lon\I lo-* ~. U22 N1899ra 111R-rtGore111ic_, wey,C--.c..HonMe..a.
'09HIS Rk llef"d M. ~. 1422 H~a Publl"*I Or919 Coost Dally Piiot, Way, C..U Mew, C..lfomle ..-.
M•r •. 11. 11. 15. 1"2 •~ Tiiis -lness h conducted by •
-r•l !NfWnHp.
LofNL-W.... Tiiis ... ...._, wos 11100 wlltt IN
County Clerk of Ore.,.. County on
FIC"TITIOUI BUllNIEll March 10, 1"2. ..,... 8TAnmwT ,,._,
,..!."-.,!otloWI""' P9fllOll• 111a dOl"i! -1• Pullllthl4 Or919 C:O.st Oeltr Pttot.
FEGHALl'S TEXACO, 2176 N-po<I -rel\ 11, 11, U, """111, 1"2 IOfl.C.
Boulev111d. Coel• Meu. Celllornl• t2fl2e
EllH V Fegll•ll. 45fl Fern SttHI. 0ranoe. Clllltomi• noe1
AtlOo Feo11a11. 4511 Fein Sueel, NOTICE Oii Oranoe. ca11tornl• 92681
Th'* .,...,_, la oonclUC1eCI by • km!teel ~
patl-alllp £Mat f~ On "P<M 22. 1992. at 10:30 a.m . PACI·
Tlllt italem•nl wu llled with the FIC SENTINEL CORPORATION. a C&tt-Cou<itr Cletl< ot Oranoe County on M~ lotnla corporation. H duty eppOlntao
1e IN2 '"'"" unde• and purauant to 0..0 ol . ,, .. ,,...., recoroeo June 9. 1111 .......... No
Pul>ll•hod O<•n1• COHI Delly Piiot ,.,~. boOll l4'003. pege '"· OI Ofllclal
MMcll 1e. 25, Acwt u . 1992 12'4-82 ~~~d:;,;•~1~d Jr P~~~.·~~
--· .. trualora. .. -olllce ot l1le ~J11=~~~SerL <tr:ru~~~ ---flC-11TIOUl ___ eutlNIP _____ AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR
...-ITA,,_.,. CASH (payaDte at U-of .... In i.wf\11
1o110wo111g 11 C10inQ --money ot U. Unllm St••I el .,_ 1M •The ...,_ main IObby ol Lawver• Tiiie ln..,r11nce
PHOTOOOK, tllH Petlcan Pl•<.• Corl>otedon. UIOO-~.S.U
Coet• ........ ~ 92626 Ana_ Calllornia. .. r1Qllt. ---Mary lollddlolon CUAninQllam 11A7 ~IO-__ ..,,h __
P•ttcen Place Coel• MM• Ca11tor111a ~ OI T..-., .,. "'°'*" .,_ Ir>
92t26 • Mid c-.tJ -SIMa deeo1lbed -T1111 l>Uainffe •• conducteo br an In· Loi 1 ot TrllC1 HO .ea. • I* INP
.,..,..... ,__In -180. Pao-43 -U ol Mery M Cun11inQNm .........,_ ..._, In tM oMoe ot -
Tllll 11ateman1 wH llfad with 1111 C-ty Recorder ot MIO Counl)o.
c-ty Clerti OI 0.111199 Count)' on Merell The alreel ..,.,,_ - -common
15 IM2.. dl"'Vn•llOf\, 11.,,y. ol the reel pr~y
' Fltll1S _,\bed -la purponeCI to be: 2n
Publlalled Orange CoHI Oally Piiot Br;::.~=.,~~
Marc:ll 111. ts. Aptll t, a, 1112 1211-12 IMlCOl!ly":'or ..., -·ea-ot IM'st,..":
addr----daalgNtlon. '1
., •• ~."::.'be made. bul without ------------•or ...ny, _,,,...or tmPlllCI. 1'1CTTTIOUe .,.._., 1aoerdln9 Ulla. POSMHIOn. or enc.um· ..... ITAT-.wT bf.._.. to pay the remaining princlpel o.. tottowlnO peraon 1e CIOinO .,..,_ eum o111>111101e(1J -.ere b)' MIO ~ of
•· Trutl with lnl••l 1.--. N pro.lcleO In
THE 8LU£8·REMED'I', 775 Laguna MIO nottl(a). ec1v-. n .,,,. -the Canyon Road. Studio e, Laguna 8Nc:lt, 1erma ol Mid Deed ol Truei,-. c:h#QM
Cellfomla 92951 -••-o1 111o T,...t .. -o1 111o Johll Cllertee Wllaon, 22) Avenue ltU9ta .,..,.., br -~ ~ 01 Trust. '°' ~ ..... c Sen ...__._ Calllornla Ille -,_...,., ----to be: 12tfa.. .... . ----'67.83293 .
Thia l>vein.ta le cond~t..i by an In The 1>ane11c1ary unoer H id OooO 01
-True! _ .. _. u:-.teo ---.S
Jol\ll C Wbon to IN Ut-eigi..O e -Oedar9llon Thie te-1 ... -w1111 Ille 01 0.leult end O.mend lor Sale. end a
Clerk ol 0r•"91 County on Merell 10 wrlli.n Not101 ot Del--E1ec:11on to ,......, 'Sell flleUI~.--~ ..... Pttel1'0 of Def9ull Md !Jeclloft IO ... to 1119 ,_
PubHallecl Orenoe C"11 Delly Piiot O<ded In Ille COU11tr -. Ille rMI 11'0-
_ 11, 26, AjWtl 1 ••• ttez ,,12-12. r;:;z :.::'':':. 1112
PACIFlC SENTINEL COAP . 81NidT,_
~SW Kelly
NOTICE OF DEATH OP ~s ~~·
BLANCHE M. CU&TIS, ah cm~201 BLANC BE CU ll TIS, a k 8 Pybll•IMMI Ora"il• Coeat Del~
BLANCHE MARIE CURTIS ....,, 11• tt, ""'· '· tta
AND OP PE11TION 'ro ADMJ.
NISTER ESTATE NO. AllZHI.
'
.. ...-.-...-... ................... .-..-..-. ....................... w.. ................. ~ .............................................................................. ._ ............................................................... ..., ................................. "'-...................................... -.:: .... .....,...,. ....... ._ ........................ ....-.-.-..-. .... ~~ .... --
PICTITtOUSaUMNIU NAMa ITATIEMllll'f Tf\e followlno perso" II Clolno
1111•1-•: THI! WOQO DOCTOR, 1914
Mon,_..,la, C:.U llMM, CA '1U7
Glll~O ALLAN llllY, IU4
Moftnrvle, C:..U Mew, CA '2'17. Tllll .,...._. II conducltG 1i1Y eft
lncllvlelllel. 01'194. ,.,..,
Tiiis st....._1 w• flltd wltlt 1..e
County C .. rll of Oranoe C"'"'" ... Merc"a.1t12. ,.,..,,
Plltll._ Or.,. c .. 11 Delly Piiot.
• Ml!<ll •,JI, II. 2', 1tll2 tiWf
-,ICTriious IUlllllHS NAMa ITA'nMllN'f
Tiie 1o11ow1no Pttoon• •re dol110 bll.1lnt11 1.1:
ARMEN'S, 21• Plecentle A-.w, Coste Mtst, (tllfornle 92627. SttdOllll Al-leyetl, Ill Opal
Betbol lsMncl. c .. ''°"'" t2162. lltrbare Al-B•v•tt. \JI Ooel.
B•lbot lllMd, Celltornla t2M2 T"ls buslntu I• conducted by e11 lncllvld.,.I.
SMclolln Al·Btyetl Tlllf Sia-I we.1 fllecl wllh Ille County Cltrk of Orenee county on
•ICTl'ftOUS aUSINIS$ ..,.,,.. S'fA'fllM«MT
T"• loftowlno pert0no ere Clolt\11 bllsiMU•:
THE CORNERSTONE CAFE, lOOO
Br11101 Strwt, Colla MeH, C.llfO•"'• '2627.
lntemellofttl l'Ulltktllons Inc., • Oelawere corponllon U SS Noire
O.mt Road, C:.le MeM. C.llfOr'llle .,,,.
Thomes o. llennelt, USS Not,..
O.mt Aoact, Cosle MHe. Catltorme
'2'2t.
T"I• bllSIMSt h condllcttd by • cor_ • ._
lnternetlonat P\ielllc.tlont, IM.
Tltotnts o. lleilnalt. Viet PrftlO.nl
T"la Ila"'"""' was llled wit" Ille County Ct-Of Or•nee County on
F .orwtry It, 1"1.
TO Wtt¢M IT MAY OOHCrM Notl09 II htNOr .._, IO IN Crtdllora ti OM'-HOVll ClfA't(llS. INC .. Tr-19'ore. wflOM .,....,_ adell-II 4U 2 larrane• Parkwe1. lr¥1nt , Coun11 01 Ofenoe, •••tt Of CtllfO<nle, 111e1 • bulk trllllllfit t. flllolll to lilt Mtde 10 .IAWAIO
JUMAHI, ,., ....... wllOM --ad• crrtn It lllH LHll'ltrwood, lrvlnt , 0-.IY o1 Oranoe. State OI Cellofa
Tiie IWOl*tr IO be trWIMtrroo • toe.-led II tM0t .-._ Parllwy, "-H ... c_,, Of Or .... tUM °' Celilor"'41 8•1<1 proPtflr 11 dotc~ln ,_..,
ea: Al llocil "'.,... "" ~. ,,..,._and~ --
•lld OOOd wlll ol 111•1 dry clMnlnQ bolal·
-'-M ALISO HILl.8 CLEANl!llS end IOCelee:t et tNQI Allele Perle-.., i.e-~·· COll<lty ol Otano-. 11•1• ol
The """" .,.,,..., .... be _1.., °" or •"• Ille ttll Cle'f of Aptll, 1112 and clelma mey b• lll•d al W~LLS FAMO B4HI<, N.A.~«-ow ~I. Re: E• crow No. ta4. MO Newport Center Drive. &Ille 230. /fOwPOr1 lleedl, C-r,
of °'*'99. 84aM of ~ Al dlltM ,,,..., ... ........, ., ..... ed·
cir.. by.,,. '"' dey of Aprt, 1$82. -llltblllk ....... ~111e11 .... 1 ..
ol llQllO< "'*-· In ~ ... cl• ..... m11at be received prlo to lhe d•I• on
-.... llqUor llClwlW .. 11-••ftd by the Otptrtm ... I ol AICOllOllC 8evtft9e Cclnlrol
Orange OoUt DAJLV PILOT/Thurldly, M1rah 18, 1812 ......
":::::::::::::-":=m:::.~· '==~~ .. TM .. , ..... ,_. tOlll •t• ffifll T... ......Int W-1 ,,. ._.,_, Tiie let ... I .. ._, ue ......
MlMtlM Mlfiett .. · ..... MM.I THI NAU, A"Alll, ... tltefl VlllONAll't' MAllltlTllll6 ...... ~ .... tua ..... ,. llr•••· Sill&• 1•, ....... .._.,, c°"cll'TI, .,,.,. cerrllM ,....,..w, c .. t., Orlw, tullt 1 ... tr¥111t, c .. ..,.,.,.... · u111t a .--.callfofMe..... cat11ot•mu "''"" ....... m ""I"'"'· • ...,.~ 9*CMllMCllC... e. I( ....... ''.·t ....... -H~ hetll.C.iiflrflMtM ..... ~· ~. Cali..,. •• ,.._., • ._ C.&t -· CAll*fli• Tt•I 0•"•"· tt• ""' .. ,..t, ..... • ...,,,
H_..._, IMC.fl. c.Ml~HMI 04'Nllf _.,.,._ a.1 .,..._,.,., catt .. _...._. -..,, ......
LIMI c-.1. ,,, -.. w ..... c ......... ~..,, .... 1 ••• ,, • ..,. MMIM, "' .. '""' Hllfttlll"'911 '-di, Cellfetftl• tiMt Tllla ...._ It c~aH •Y e '11411. Tlllt ......_ It teM\lctff 111' .... ,_...,_,... ..._. H. N ... 911. tl6 ._ ... ...
IHllfl<W,., .... -·--....., l .....,. ........ ~.,.., ...... c.I"""'• .... . • .. rt_.. " T"lt ............ WM lllH wit" IN ~ T. -f,17 ~ "NI,
T ~1 .......... .._ e"'"" ci.r11 of OrMltle county .,. 111v.,.._, c..tNllMll•-. lllt _.. •• ...._ w.... Merell t t•. Jt lftlt I . ui, tttl w C.Mt
C"'nly Cltrt. of °'""" C_.Y ' p~ a..1eve.-, Le <MIMI, (el"trnte Merell t. la fll l'WlltNd Or-c;..., OellY l>tfot. tlt11. •
,.utlll.-Ortntt Cotti Oelly IOI... Merell •• 11. ti. IS. 1m t>UJ, T"ll IMltl-h C.~M Illy a
"""•• cou .. n 1u ... a1ot M•r.•.,11.1us.1'92 • Piil.iC •lll .. ,. ... ~.':::.,,,.,
l'ICTIT4IOUStUMI.. '910lfll=Dr.w-. -· .... I' Tiii• ,..,_ -.. ..., wllfl ...
NU 11111·
NAMalT-'f8MCNT ......... C...fDM ,._ 1-. Couftty Cl«ll of Oralltlt C:-ty"'
Tiie ftllowlflt "'"" I• dolltt ,LAINTllll't· llONIV wa1ss, NOTtCllOfl'fllUIT•l'SSA&.• fl~tJ. IC
MlntHtsl •Oll•T C. UIMOIGOlll -KAI II-~ ..... ~ '--y ....... ....,., Ptm'M CONOOll I N61NlllllNO, , ... ICOJlllUI a IJllC'*"9 of tM lltlttt of p,o,...... A. .... ,... l>lllllltillN 0r"'lt ee-1 Deity l>llOt,
Wot Klltll•, O••nve. C.llftrlll• M.M . MOM..LAV. .. ...... "'"''' T. o. llllVf~I CO¥ftAlllV .. 4'\lly ,. ... u. Marell•, "· ••• ,.., ....,_
'2217· OlflCNOANTl1 LIA&ON 11 . PL1ll'fTlllP1 WILLll C&.4•K •PMln ... Tn.-.""""'U.fOltow"'8 Tiie-• Oontkl lltll, Ceolll Ut l"OMlllOV AllO(IATH INC • ,&.UMalMO, INC. .._, ........ of ,,.,. Wl&.L llLl Tre~o Trtct, 11.0 . llox "'· TrU..Co ,.,._._ NTlll TINTUIUN ..... oaPll•D-NTt MA&. M>ITTCHall AT 'Ul&.IC 4UCTION TO THI
(Mytn.Celllorntant19 WIUATliicTUIUN,JACkA.LONO. 9MaUTMllOtlTTCM•a, .... ,,....,, HIOHllT ••oo•• 1'011 (ASH Tlllo bol\IM$$ 1' t-llCtecl by .., MAROAllllT WOOD HASTINOS, a• f , , a / I / HAND II 8 II c,.ullllt et time ef .... In ....... I
l"dtvldllal . CNCOMl ~lll'rV ASSOCIATU oav1&.0l'MUJ1T ..... 0011 I -y .. tM u ...... SC-> et• rlfllt, T ........ e OoNICI ll•ll MAROAlllT HOWE, aAllllY v'. ....... .X.X, ._ .... ._.. Ullt Ind"'-C-vM ti end -
Tiii' NI-I wet llled wltll IM WlllNSTOCK, ELMEll flOX , · IUMMOHI ::.ldll~~'!~~.~~lll
County Cltrk Of o ...... COllllt\I °" WlSTHllME• & COMP'ANV • ~MUNI• •1111•1 tllUSTOll: l(A$SEM MESHKAT, Mart h 2, t"2 t•ntrel pertfltrt"lp, '" I II I LL. NOTICll v ....... .._ ....._ Tiit an unmen'lecl mt11
fllMi.4 CALIFOllNIA lllAL l!STATI! ~..rt111ty -.CW. ..... 1t""wt-llENEFICIAllY : O.A O N ,,,tubll"'9410renoe Coaol 0allvl'tlOI. INVESTMllNT TllUST. t lllullllflt ::..-::e::.=~~ ... COlll>OAATION, t Otltwere
ercll 4 II, 1' U . l'92 -~ T r 11 I t , II A L L E Y $ 0 I L --<MPC>rttlotl
l!NOINEElllNO COllP., RETAIL & -:~.W wl-" to -the tlMO of_, lttc.,_ OctoOtr ao, t• .. lnalr, M I 0 I c A L c 0 L L E c T I 0 H Ho •.... 71 In bOOI< t•n ..... "" .. ASSOCIATION, INC ... ~··loll attorMy In""' matter, .,., lflowld dO Olflclal Reconh In tlle Offkt .. "" db• ALLS 'f AT IE I" I NANCI AL M> prom111tv tQ tllat ,our wrltltn llecor<itr Of Or.,.. c....,.,.: said -
NS-Hlfl SlllVICIES, LTD .. O.C. SUIVICES ••-te,lf'"'·""'YlltllledOflllme. ol trilat ducrlbe1 tlle tolltwlno COltPOllATION, l'tltST CITIZENS AYl$01 U ... Ila t* -~. It .,,_,Y> NOTICE OF DEATH OP aANK & TllUST_ COMl>ANY, .,.._.,_.•I* t-• IH.... oatcll•""*
VI R G f NI A CARR 0 LL llAllaAltA JUDV. •k• llARIAllA :::::r!: • - -IH. ,._.. PAllCEL 1: ,. .. olmple tlttt to
MERJUM.AN, ab VIRGINIA P. L I a JU 0 Y, 0 E II O It AH H. • .... '-'tt 1• ,....,,,, .... Condominium Unit Ho. uo ""• MERRIMAN AND OP PETI· CATIUCONE, S.J. DAVIS, MElllT _..._. "Unit"), u '"own upon Ill•
TION TO ADMINISTER ES CONSTllUCTION COMPANY. SIUattd-..IGllcl1trt1 con1ejo0t Condomin ium Plen (enllll•d · • LL.OVO'S IAHI( 01" CALll"OllNIA, • un •b009Cl0 .,. ffW Hunlo, dellerle "ConOonllnlum Pl.,, lot Lot t fJf Trect
TATE NO. A·llHZS. c 0 , porellon, Gl>A It ANT I! E ... cerlo lmmtdl•temente, oe est• No. 1owr·1.C-yofOr.,.., Stele of To 111 h eirs, be n e flclarlH , COLLECT ION COMPANY ............... ,_la et<rlt•. ti ... ., CellfOnlle .... "P141n"I, rKOrWd Oii
cred1tont end contlnaent credl· <tf'Hr•tloft, M & "' ltEPOllTtNG ··~~o~~'::':~:!:T~''.!""'°ctvit Jiiiy n. ''"· .. Doc-No. u•10. tont of VlRG INIA C ARROLL ANO 111.FEllllAL SIEllVICll, INC., 111 -tm., Peoitt 71to11s lnclll1lve,
MERRIMAN -•·-VIRGlNIAP dlU McCtulty & MANNING, complelnt .... -" lllte by the Olllcl•t llecord1, of .. Id Oren0t • ..,... · CL IN IE · I UC IC NE It , INC ., e ptelntlff IOllntt l'Oll. If YOll Wlllt to Covnl,i, Which Plen per1eln1 to thel
MERRIMAN and pentOlll who c~•llon, COLDWELL. llANICEll & defend this llWIUll. you mu11, wltNn property detlcrlbtd !ft Trtcl No. ICl•I.
may \,. otherwise interested In c O M PAN Y SAM M Y L I! IE • • day• eller this wm"'°"' 11 MrYt4 recorded !ft -..,, .....,.. s ..w '· the wW and/or SWe: llOSAUNO L.EE -MRS. 11 ICHAllO on vow ..... wfUI INI court • wrlu.. MIK•ll-Mec>I. In Ille offk• Of
A petition has been filed by IMAGAWA. OllAHOE COUNT\' TAX re1po11w lo IN <MftPlelnt. Uflles• 'l'Oll ti.county ,_Clttof,.ldc-y c 0 L LIE c T 0 II • s TA T E 0 F dO IO, .,_ ........ " Wiii be ......... on PAllCEL 2: •n UMllvl-00211 TIMCYI'HY PAUL MERRIMAN CAL. I flOllNI A EMPLOVMIH T ewlketlllft of IN llt•ln41ff, and INs PtKenllntll'ftlln and to Ille Common
in the Superior Court of On.nae Ol!VELOPM&NT OEPAllTMl!NT, '°"" MIV ....... ,..,.._t ~'"'' Aru1 .. "-" •lld Cltflned Oii Ille County req_untina tti.t TIM-ANO ALL OTHl!R Pl!llSO!'U you tor u. rtllef clemendtd '"the Pltn. CYI'HY PAUL MERRIMAN i,. UNKN~ CLAIMING ANY lllGltT, compl•lnt, whl<" could reautt 111 EXCEPT THERllFllO# all oft, oei. TITLE, EST AT IE, LI If N 0 11 9trnl1llmtnt Of wa0t1, tekln9 of mln•relt end OIMr "ydrocerbont, appointed 8B pertontl re pre· I "TE RE s T ' N T H E II EAL money oir pn>perty -ot ... , relief below .......... 500 '•'-wn-1 tM
sentatlve lO adrrunilte r the a -l>llOPEllTY Ol!SCllllEO IH THE ,..._..., ... .,.~nt.. •llM .. -1tct .,tty, ...... rveci In
tateof VIRGINIA CARROLL COMl>LAINT ADVERSE TO OATEOApt-lllJ,1 .. 1. IMlr-ofrtc<-MERRlMAN, Qieta Me.a, CA PLAINTIFfl'S OWNERSHIP 011 .... J.,.ln L Rttllff, PAllCl!L J: Aft .. <f\jjjft ,,9.,t eftd
(under the Independent Ad.ml-~~TvL;L~~ .. ~~N :N~l~~;:n JOMN .. T.~ ... u. l>.O. IO.X -· :::,i::, :.;., .... ·:. ~~~~~ .!::
nlalratlon of Eat.al.el Act). The THllOUGH 10, INCLUSllll. YIMN•, CAtmL (1991 7~ •PPllrt•IWlltotlle Unit.
pet I tlon ia aet for hearing In SUMMONI Publllhltd Orenot Coest D•llY Pl tot, l'AllCEL 4: An ••clu\lv• rloflt eno
DepL No 3 at 700 Civic Center c:.. .... MU'!• Feti u. Merctl 4, II, ••• 111112 "7-12 UMmtnt IO Iii. , .. perlll"9 -·
NOTICa TO CMDn'OM Oii 9;ILJl TMMW«ll ......... t .. "1
U.C.C.)
NOlloe le ""'°Y ti..., lo Ctedl1ota ot
111tt wl!fllfl traneleror• lllel •I><*"""""
.. ~ fo ....... °" perMMI "'°""" _.....,...~
The -tnd .,....._add<-of .... tnlended 111ntlerofl ••• MA880UO M4HOAYI MCI MDO MAHOA\11, 10001
8Mdl eo.-wo. """""Oton IMdl. c-.
lfor111a 12&41 The ,,_ and .,....,_ acldr.a of Ille
Intended tran•ler-•re UL YSSl!S V. OU\MATICO MCI LOUllOEt 8 ~A· TICO. H•t Vetwel Cl1c1e Huntington
a.di. Calolomla
Tll•l IM prOj)efly -" .. "' ...... 0 .. ___ . ...,... ............. -
-la toceled at 2000 I a.di &oul9vwd, Hll(l""91on INetl, CelHor'llle 112148. Tll• bualnen name uatd br, th• aelCI trenale<o•t at Hid locatlOfl 1 M & M EXXON Sl!A'lllCl STATION
Tllat Mid -It-ia In-IO lie con...,.,....,.., at the ofloce Of 9tlta Et-c1 ow Enlerpr1 .... SOS N Tuaun A.¥9 ..
S...te 150, Sente Ane. c.tomte 92705 on or etter Apt1I o. 11112 Tiit name eno add• .. • 01 Ille peraon wllh wllorn clalma may .,. rited t• Batta Etcrow l!nlttprlMa Inc ~5 N T11111n ••• .. S111te 180. Santi An•. Calllornla
92706 and IN -dey lor 111119 -I» ""Y crtdllOr -bt Apfll •• 1te2 wnicll • the bll"'-dey Delore Ille con.....,_
llon dale apec:llled -So far u la hnown 10 .. Id ln1endeo Tran•ferMa H IO 1nl..,deel Trenalerort
II.ltd IN lolfowlno llddltloMI bll*'-nt"'" end tdd•-within Ille 111r ..
y<Mra IUI peat -lor ....._.., Meh dew. Wir'4..,..,_ UQuor Store loo Mehcl
1.1-.1 0.let:t Fe\)Nllty 2S, 1082
1111-"· OlllMellcc LAw .... ~ ........Tr---.
Publlall•CI Oranu• COHI Delly Piiot
Merell "· 1112. llOl-a2 Merell), tta. 111..,,. 111'*7 PUblllNd Or-Cotsl o .. ty Piiot. Put>ll-Oranoe COHI Daily Piiot,
Solar u ..,_, 10 tr. 11-...
1111alnoa1 n•"'" and lddr-ultd by Tr.....,ora tor 11'4 llv• ~ -poet, If Cllfforenl '1om tr. eboft, .,., A.llto ctt .. -a. 25e0t Allela Parlt._,, L991111t llJlla, CA. Allio CrHk One·Hour Clo nart. 2•1a2 L• Pu Ad . L89UM Nlgut l, CA, l ro Pt•u CIHile•a. •ot Aaeoc1a1ed
Aoacl, a..... C4. c.nyo,, c.n...., "$5M 8tntt Ana Canyon Ad .. Anthelm, C4. H11trtaon'a 8oet COllltt, 2327 S Mein. 8tllla M l, CA, Hatrlfon'a Mtllnt, tnc:., 2327 S. Meiil, $enle Ana. CA; Herrt.on'a Merine. Inc .• db• ~•" Diego M•rln• Ct nler. 3711 Spo'1• Arent lll•d , Sen OleQo. CA; lakt For"1 Ono Hout CIM--s. 2~1 MWtalcla, El Toro. CA. Mid-..., One Hour ~ JIOI Mid'"*>' Dr .
Sen Olago, CA. """" 0..0e1 c.-w. 24322 MUirtenda, Et Toro. CA, SI-.-~ •250 ..,.,_, UNI "II", 1NtM. CA: Trabuco Cleaner•. 2543 I Trebuco Rel . Sult• B. El loro. CA, l/H111Q41 One Dey c-....a. 1MM Jtll1ay Rd • IMno. CA. Wooclb<IOQe ~ 4722 llar•tne:a. Ir· -Me.CA.
DATED: io__, 2•, 11112
J-aldJumenl TraNletM
Dr ive West, Sen ta An1, CA NOTICE! You.,..,. Ileen..-T"9 dHlonei.d on ttot Pleft M Perktno cour1 mey CIKldle ... 11\St 'l'Oll wlt"°"t PlllJC '911C( S~e Ho. PS..X. 92701 on April 7. 1982 at 9:30 .,..,r be"'9 '-rd""'"'.,..., .. __ •JJ 102 Slloft:i Plelt, N--111 .. e11, Merell 4, 11, 11. u , tta ,....., Fetl. U. Mel-di•. 11, 11, 1"1 •t.a. a.m. within ao .., .. Rtecl Ille Information NOTICI INVITING 1105 C•lltorftl• ......,
NOTlCI TO C_,.OflS
M IMIUI TllANIAll
fllCTITIOUS au11Nau NAMI STATaMINT Tiie lottowln9 perso11 Is dolno
bllslMnn: OAVIO GARLAND MUSIC, t»
22"d Sll'Mt, C<att MHtl CA t2'27. DAVID BENTON OAltLANO, No. •I Monteoelller, -POr1 &M<h.
CA. t2MO. Tiiis -'""s is c-11<l4id by ...,
lndlvkl.,.I. Otvld 8. Garland This 11.i-t wM Iii.cl wllll ,.,. Coun1v Clerk of Or•noe C011nty °" Feti. 22, ltlJ ,., .....
Publlshocl Orllll98 Coest Delly Piiot.
Mire"•. II, II. U, 1"1 tl0-12
STATaMaNTOfl AaANOO..MaMT
01' UM CW l'KTl'flOUI aUSIMUS MAM« ,, ... ..,...... __ .... __
t,. uM of tl4 fldltlout lllltllltu name:
ACCaNT Off HAILS,"'""°"* ll••d, Suitt D. Le1una -.1ouel, Cetlfornle .. n.
Tiie FkUtlous 8wslntu Name
r•rttd to.....,. wu filed In 0r..,.. C-'Y 9t' s.pM-e 2", ltn. Fite No. F-41»10. Ttrtu Penutt•, IU Nor\l'I
Syc.tm-. 1.M Aft9itlff, Ctlltol'lllt. Tiiis builMU WllS ~ttd lllY ...
lndlvl-.
T"'"'8l>auutle
T"ls ... .._ -llltd wl1" lite County Cltf'k ot Or ..... County °" Mtrc111,1-.
PlllMI~ 0rllll98 CoK1 Oelly Piiot,
~"" 1..'· ": u. !J'ri' ·'· ,..,_ !~
STATIM«NTOPwtntOaAWAL
"llOM PAltTMallSMI P OP9UTlMO UNOaa
PICTITIOUS IMll&MISS MAlllltl
Tiie feltow4nt---..ttlldr_,, •I • o•n•••• ptrtntr trom t"•
per1"•""1P eptretlno urtclar t ... fictitious 1>1Ml11tu n•mt of SU KO
CREATIVE OESIGNS et llOJ
•tttttff Or'l"'9, ~ llH<.h, CA
~. Tiit llctltlt111 ll111lne11 nelfta
llMlfNM ,., .. ,.,._""--• llW
on 12-17.., "' -County of Or.,.... fllLE NO. Ft""6. Full Namt tMI Aedren or tlle
Ptr-Wl"'*••lflo: GEOllOI! W. GAULDING, Jiii., 1t0t e. Ym4Mrt
llNd, • ne. I.I ....... CA tclll31. Gtel9t w. GtlM!nt Jr. ........... o-.... c-.t Dally Pllol,
Fell. JS, M8rc:h 4, I I, ti. 1"2 -.et
c; •ICTITIOUS IUSINIU MAMI STATIMINT
Tfl• fottewlno oerson II doing
-..slntH•t: ORAN G E J ULIE
CHAll·8URGEll, 2200 Hert>or llowleven:t, eo.te MtH, Cetllornl• mu.
J-P. llffl, 402 Hor111 H....,.,.
Orono-. c.llfornle 9*7. Tiiis llullnffs Is concNcltd by en
lndl•ldllel.
Jow"MI This 111....,_. WIS llltd wit" ltle CoufttV C .. n of Ofenge County on
Merell J. 1"1. fl1Mm !'viii'-Or ..... Coeot Delly Piiot, -...rcll 4, II, I, 1', ltllJ 1001.ci.
P11bl1thed Orano• Co•tl Dally Piiot, M.,c:h ti, 11112 1310~2
AC'fmOUI ......
IF Y O U OBJEC T t o the be~°:.Sot Usttd.,. tldo demendedO Nollet 11 Mreby 9lven tllet tM t2.U gra nlin" of the petition. you El Tri-__ ~ldlr contr• Ud. Boerd <ff Tr-<ff -H""llft91on "l lT • tlr--•u or com,,_ sho uld either appea r et the 1111 •u"'l•ncle 1 ~enoa Que Ud. lletcll City ScllOOI Dl1trk1, In IM dulonatlon h 1hown •bove, no
hean no and state your ob....,.· ,.,~ ~ .,. 3111 OieL La• I• c-., et 0r.,.., wltl rtcelw b"*' \IP •• rr enty I• 9 l ven •• t o 111 " ,..~ 1~ ~ ·'--lo, ""1 nol ,_, tl\ell 2:00 '·"'·on--comp .. '"-t w cwrec\Mnl " , uons Or file wntten objectioru1 ~v•mec-.-.._. tw.,.tv t!Wrd (Drdl dey of Mere.,, 1"1 TM benffkl•r¥ -Mhl Dwd of with the court before the hee-I . TO THE OEFIEHOANT: A chlll lw -...... -Ill only 10'. J2' Trvtl, by,..._,"'. bAtchor del•ult -M9-4tt-
MMmSTAru.wT
Tll9 t~ ~ we CI01fl9 bull· --1•1 NEWPQAT HOME LOAN •287. (bl Nt:Wl'Oln HOME LOAN •218; le) NEW· PORT HOME LOAH 12•: (di NEWPOflT HOME LOAN •ttO: (el NIWPORT HOME LOAN •291; 111 NEWPORT HOME LOAN •"2: (0) NEWPORT HOME LOAN ""3 ~=~.:OAT HOME L04N •214;"'17
Pieu. Newport llMcll. CA 126e0 NEWPORT HOME LOAN. INC . e Ctlllorn1a corporellon, I 7 Corpora1e
Plau, Newport a-en. CA I Meel
lhlt --.. condllelet:t by. ration __,_\.olltl,lftc:
Cot1 lllotl•. Preildent
~.._.
Al9'L I/lee Pl'Wldtnt Tiiie 11a1eman1 wu llled wltll lh
Coumy an OI Orange County on Me<
T .S. MO. lttJJ
MOTICIOll TllUIT•IS' IALll On AprM L tta et 11:00 e.m. FlllSl"
AMl!lllCAN TITLE tHSU ll.ytCI! COMl>ANV, • c:.iHontle <__..IOI!
M Trv~. or •~ Tn111H or SutKtl1-Trvstw,1 of ,.,., cer1•1n
0.•d •• Trull ... <wttd by JOH#f MICHAEL SIMPSON, e ,.._, .. m..,,
end recorded Fetwu.,., u , 1 .. 1 H
1n1t""'*ll no. mn. In bOOI< tmt, p ... 1141, of Offlcl•I Recoro1 of
Orenvt Ctunly, Celllornle, end PIHW..ftt IO ll>tt 'ertelft NfJflce fJf
15, 11181
Dete111t eno Et•ctlon to Sell
t ... rtu ..... recoir-No.....,ber JO,
ltlf u .....,_, "°· JIHll, In boo11 ·~· Hiit 5", of Dff}<lel lltcwcn of
"19111 .... ~ ...... -· -.,...,,., ... , l'vbllthetl °''"99 co .. 1 Dally P•IOI t• Mid o.11 of TNll •fl .. IMA>lk Mwo1t 11, H , Aof1I I. I, 11112 1291~ auctloft tw Call, lewllll _., of lllt
DCllOW NO..,.,. NOTICE TO ClllDfTOM 0# MIU(,....,..,...
1--.etet-u.c .c.1
UnHecl Stattsof Atnenu, et llle meln e11tr111co to Flrat A-l<en Tiiie
1n1urenca c~r louted et tu
l!Ht "'"" Slrwt, !ft IN City of Seftte AM. CM!fomie. ell th« rlflll, 11111 eftd
llltffeU ~"'end llOW helCI..., ,,
under H id O.eo of Trull In IM ~ slt"'9letl In .. Id County anc1
Nolk:e II ..... by gl¥et> 10 eteohor• ot SIAlte CletcrMletl H :
1h• wllhln n•m•d parllH 111e1 a bulh Lot 1 <ff Trtct Ho."'° H per m119
1,-1., '• Intended 10 bt maoe on ,_. recorded 111 9ooll MO. pevas M •nd n tonal pr-'Y ,,.,.....,.., daecrlbtd lnctuslvt of ml•cellenffu1 Mep1,
DOING BUSI NESS AS Econo Lube rtc:orcbofOr .... c-,,c.11tornl• N'T..,.. T"• street •ddrtn or ot "•' l he Mmt(llJ -tdd,_ ot t"' c:fltel ~ommon .........., Of Mid pr-rtv execullve -Of lht tr-1•"'1•1 we "1t ....,.__ to bt: J9S SVllrlte C'lrclt, CORPORATE OFFICE (NAM! AHO Coste MeM,CellfOmte. ADORl!SSI: ECONO LUBE INC .. 49 1 I Said .... wlll r.. mecle wll .. out Birch SI .. .t 100, Ntwpor! Beach, CA covtntnt or wer e11ty, upreu or
U .. 0; PAINClllAL PLACE OF SUSI· lmp1i,e1 M lo lltle POSMUlon or
MISSt 901 w Com111011_,,_ F.-ion. encumtWentn to .. ti91y 111t unpeld CA 9"32. The NfN(~ llddr.-OI the ,,...,,_ betence due on tlle note or nolH
dad lr_..,M(ll we PATAIC.f( H. Mil· IOCUrecl bor Nld DWd of TNlt, to wit:
· y be complalnt ., .. been med by lh• TRAILEll,Sll't'llMC-ron. • In the otlllvettona M<urecl tnenby, nng our appearance may 111 pletnutt tet!M1 \lou. (SH footMtt"I tnttr-blddffs ,.,.Y ln1Pt<t "'* Mr•totor. •U<'*'d -O.llvend to
pel"llOn or by your attoTney. • " '°" _... '° Otftnd t"h '•'"""· tbove Item. "on site" el 770-t 7t" Ille ulldenitlntd • wrftten Otcterlllorl
IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR YOll must, •Mlft JO devs -r tnl• Str•t. ""'711nvton BMcll, C•lllomle. fJf l>efellll -o.m*"' tor Salt, -or a contingent creditor of the wmmons Is_._°" YOll, Ille wit" 81<1 ..,_and tpe<lflc.t~ mey be wrltten~ofbreec"•rwlofel«Jloft
d ed t fll '"'' court • written Ple•d1"0 '" olllltlned trom th• Purche1tno to ,..., .. .,,. under"9ntd to•" Mid
clalmeceawis th• t~u mu• e your ruponM to t"• compttllll. I ll • D•P•rtment, et 7JS·UI" Street propert\I to .. u11y .. 1e1 oC>1'9etlons,
1,.., oourl Ot' preeent It JIKtk• Olllft, 'l'Oll ....,.. Ille wl111 tN Hunllft91Dn llM<ll, C•tlfomle! ' end lMr'ffflff u.. undtt\IOMd ceuNd
lO the personal representative court • wntttn pltadffto or ,.._ en SHIH blclt ""°'' 11e recelwct '" tlle 1eld notlc.e of llrff<h and fJf ele<tJon to
a ppointed by the court w ithin orel P1Mdll'l9 to be •nlered In IM Purcllulno Oepertment el tll• be rtcorOt<I November 23, ltll es four montha fro m the date of do<ketl.U.,...'l'OlldO,..,y....,._..,11 Huntl.._,IMcJICltySc_O ... rkt, lftl1r.No.-.Sln-1uio.-1'7.
(' . f l __,j wlll be -td ""'°" _.lutloft of tlle 7U-Utll "'-'-HIA'ltlftollOll 8oKll. C•. Of Hid OMdaf 11«-IJ'I\ 1MUanCe O et~ as r v .. · pltl11tlft, .,. Wt <Ollft ....., ••• • -... ,,.. or.....,. 2:00 p.m ""Mitt" Seid .-will be ,.,...,., bllt wiu-t
ded in Stttlon 700 of the Pro· ,.,.._ ....,_. .,.., few -rellef n. 1t12, et wllkll time -"'4Kt 1i. co,,.n•"' or werrenty, .. .,. .. 1 or bale Code of California. The Cl•m•NM In tN c.omp1a111t, wtlkll bldowlllbe....,.._ 1m1111ect,._d"'9lltl•,-»sston,w
time Jor filing clelms wUJ not could rt9lllt lft etr'ftllt"'*" of ...... ttom IO lie IOlcl Is offered .. .,,, .. and .,,<umbr-. to poy tlle remelntno
expire prior to four months from ltlllfll el,..,.,. oir P'-r1y « °"'9f' "•flt,.. 11", -.,,. llotrd of Trust"" Pf'l11ctpel wm of 111t note Isl M<llr'td rtllef r......., kl"" ~Int. rHar"" U. rlgM to tc<.etll or reject by uld 09d of Trvst, wl1" tntere11 es the date of the heari.ng noticed b. If,......, .. _Ille td\llcttf eny or ell bid•, to••••• ... ., ,,. .. kl--ldtcl • ..,,,_,lf•ny,
above. .., ,......,, Ill llMI INhw,.,.., -Id 1-....itty or .,,......,Iv, -to 111 under ---of .. 1c1 OteO et Trvst. YOU MAY EXAMINE the • • ,,_..... • !Mt .,_ writte" end ect •_..,.,.of tlle ....... 11 -,.._, clter9H enc1 .. _ ... of -
file kept by the court. I! you a.re ,_,".,.,.,,.....,lie flied on time. q.,.lllke«leM"' t,. ............ ly oro.r Tr\ltt• -of IN trustt <.,..._ 11¥
· terened \he f!lltlte '"'"' ~~I, I• of tll• loerd of TrultHI of '"• .. 1e1 DffdofTrwt. 111 111 • ~--may &.. A,...._, Ci9rt Huntt""°" 9-:tl Saki _.. .. Wiii be lleld on l'rlCl•Y.
fUe a requelt with the court'° ,,...,.,.""""".~ •r: •"-......,C*'i Aprll 2. H•2 et 2·00 P.m. et tll• receive apeclal nouoe of the In· I . SUMMONS: TN ....,,. ..,.tt..,. ef .. 0---......, Olllrln c ... pm.,. A-•ntr•nco• to u.. cMc
ventory of estate auetl and of tctleft ~ -..,_llftt ~ or .... c--,.~ Ct11tK lkllldlftll. JOO Ent ,,_,,.,.
the -uuoft• account.I and ,._ty _,... ..... cetM•••-~I,•• Avenue, In '"• City of orano•. .-,._ r'e* 9t' ~ a , ,_, lft .. Or.. Pullllslttd Or-Coel1 Delly PllOt. Catlfornla.
ports de9cribed In 5«1.1orl 1200.~ Ceuftty ~-~rt lty Sl-y Mere" It, 1 .. 1"1 11:31., At 1 ... ,..._of lN tntti.1 publl<etloft
ol \he Ca!Jfornia Probete Code. ...... llollert c. ~r. K•I . of .... llCltk•, -tot•I ·-· of ...
Jamta A. Stearmu, At&eBey koJlfM • I!....,.. of tM llnne at PlllJC 19f1C£ unpeld betenc,e 01 lhe oblloellon
al Law, 14tt N. HerMr Blvd.., ""i!l'ai:=1c~ri!'":.-::":i;. 1, N"'t-::!'tre::::.=:='.~
Salte UI, Pellertoa, CA tHU; ..,_. to "' ~ erwl -to .,,.. .,,,u erwl ""-'• Mll,Jn 47
Tel. 17141 170.IHI. quiet Utle" • .,, .... ~TM NOTICE OF DEATH OF T• -•"" -i..o bid,.,....
Klloft ~-,.... -"" 11-'"' C H A R l E S M I L T 0 N mey call 171~1 U7~ Publltll•O Or•no• COH I D•lly Pliol. In o ...... C-t,i, Cellto,,,la, ... d D•t•: Mere"•· 1"1 M.,ch 18 111 u. 1082 1211-12 -..crllltd•tollollln: · W A L T E R S , a k a T.o. se11v1ce COMPAN Y
"Lot 11_,1111111c1C11 U4 of 'Lek• CHARLES M . WAL TE RS es .. ld T"'"• PllUC•Tll fr«1,......,.e.ec11:1n-c.ttyof ANO OF PETITION TO By:VlcklJ.Anclrldgt,
MN·IOl63 ~t·~~f=~r~:sofpo~·-:~~ ADMINISTER ESTATE ~~':;':!:::;:wnt.
OT CE 0 DE rtcorlltd In llook 4, P•11t u , of ~O. A·110016 ~.CAt2* N I F ATH OF mtsc•ll-ma,ei, '"ti. offl<•., T o a I I h e i r s 0141 ~ Wt LLIAM F . LEWIS aka tlle C°""'V 11econ111r of Wld County:· be n e f le i a ries c red i tors PubltsNd Orenot coeu oei•v Pttot,
, .... ,,.1..,., U-C.C.)
lfoloca 11 hereby given 10 Ctadttor1 OI
Ille -,,_.,.....,on tnet • -
··-.... ti •~t 10 ... -°" 119'-P'OOWIY htr--'1er daKob4id
Tiie n-and bualMst ICldr-Ol lhe 1ntanotd 1r1111teror1 t11t JIU. SUZA.NNE SIMON enO ROBIN ANNE GOODE ·
HOUGH D&A GOOO£HOIJGH NA fUAAL FOOD The IOUllOfl In Ctlitornt• OI IM clllel u eevu .. onica or pnncepa1 bu-Of· l'Ct OI lht '"lenoed lr-lerort 11 S,i.ME AS A801/E Ari 0111er DllllMn nemes end tod1-
--by 1ht '"'ended ,,_..,or """''" llVW .,..,, lea! PMI IO ,., u to..-. 10
lhe ,,....._ 1ren-...,. NONE Tne,,_...O_aclOr ... ofllle
.n1-Ir-• ere. SHANE LEE Tllll '"" propeny pe•11...,,1 ..... ,o II ducrobed 111 general u SANDWICH SHOP ano II loc:aiecl at 106 MllHI S1r•I.
S...le • Belboa, CA 92961 T"' 1>1111n .. 1 name uMCI by Illa H•d
transl11tora a1 Nici --,. GOOOE· NOUGH NATURAL FOOD
That Uid -11 ......... -lobt c.,,....mm•ted •I Ill• ottoce of EXECU· Tll/E l'~RK ESC ROW. INC 17110 N• -"Stretl. 51111• •7. ,,_,, ..... v~.
Celltornle 9270I on or after AprV I , 1062
Thd -lraM ... lo eubjeCt 10 Celifor· n1• Un1IOfm C°"'m•reial Coclt Socllon 6106
""'n1--..,.,, ... Of .... ---•ltft whom ct1fm1 m•y be filed 11 ES· CROW NO 28311>41. EXECUTll/E PARK ESCROW INC. 17290 .,.,...._St &.;le •7. Fo..nta1n \/111ey, CA 92708, BET"T¥ KELLER C S E 0 Eacr-Officer. end 1ne IHI O•y tor 1111"9 cl••ma by •"Y by ..,Y "''""'°' -bt Al><• I tte2, -19 Ille -. O•Y before Ille c0<1aumm•llon
O•le -'*' 900"9 0.ltd MARCH 10, 1992
$11-LW lnlanotd lr•nsleree
Ml-t:no1 b-'" 11"'11 E--lftc:. ,.,_......_,.,_
....... 1 ,_...,, V..,. CA 127'1
'-.........
Publ••M•O Orano• Cotti Daily Pilot. Werth 18, tM2 130t-&2 Lf.A -IEllHEOA c MILLE.A. 2021 w U6,2SS.•, plus llle tollowlno tst.lmetetl
C"9 A-. Anaheim. C4 92804. Coat$, • ._. -eclvtn<M at Ille
Thao '"' prope<ty perunent horeto 11 Ifni. ot 1IW lnltlel publketlon of '"'' CMecrl-In ...,..., u · Ma1 ... 1ate. MIC>· NotkeofSelo:i7.t1L"I
BUD LEWIS AND OF TMc-~OfllleeDove d ti t' d ' f M., 11,11,n .1ta 1101., p E T 1 T 1 0 N T 0 de1crtbtd-rtv 11: JtJ...., J1s.:wt11 an con ngen e re 1tors o •------------
ADM I NI STER EST~TE s1rwt,"-18tocll.C.llfornla. Charles Milton Walters, -.X •net Piil.iC llTI[
0 co.x,CASTLa&NICMOUOH aka C harles M . Walters ----------------------
N · A11250S. •:;,.~:,:i and person s who may be -.-
plea,.....--, equtprnenl -t1 10-DATED: Fttlr\itryll, 1"1
caltd et· tO t W ~I\. fuller FlllST AMElllCAN TITLE
ton. CA f2t32_ INSUAAHCE COMPANY,
T 0 a 1 1 h e i r s • _..._ otherwise interested in the •""°""'a. THI -41 •TATDEWT
b e n ef iciaries , c reditors ..,Clmllll'yl'ena... w i ll and/or estate: ~11Aul!R 1NSuAAHCE COAPORrrtON. 300 s1 P...C "'-· BelllmOf•.
and c ontingent c reditors of ~~~..., A petition has been filed Mwy1...o 21202
Thea Mid 111111< 11.naier It lnl-IO be a Ctllfomlt C0<11«ttlon --""'*' .i IN -<ff HEAl'TAGE O...Oirmered COMPANY ESCROW SERVICES. INC. ~-Offk ...
Wiiiia m F . Lewis and ""°''"*'°"111t1t<:oestoauyP11o,, by Charles Mark Walters
pers ons who may be Mercf111,t1,ts,Aer111,tt12 1m.a. ·n the Supe ·or c f t 0•11Y othe rwise interested In the • · · 1 rt our 0
.10j.H2 will and/or estate: -.X 191a Orange County requesting
A petition has been filed that Charles Mark Walters
NS-tH41 be appointed as personal
4111 8irch SI., Siii!• 102. Nowpcwt 8Ncll, t M llll fllfth S"-1 ~ neeo. on or ett• Ajlfll 111. '*· s.nte AM ea t21W ,,.::. ~ S::'-;1~~ IO 1M pro-(ll4) 1tNill •
Lall O.le tor 111f10 -In , .. -ft11llll111ed Ofenee COHI II Metcll 3t, 1112. l'llOt-.11. 11.25. lta
DATED. -IL 1912 Patllc* H. Miier ....... c.Mllw Intended Tr......,_ PublllhOd Or•no• co .. t Delly Piiot,
-... 1911 1307-82
by William Gui llermo NOTICE OF DEATH OP r e pre s enta t ive to
NS-tHU L e wis in the Superior WALTER DOUGLAS ENGEL-administer the es tate of
NOTICE OF DEATH OF Court of Orange County HAllDT, aka WALTER D. EN· Ch I Miit W I
VERONICA ALLGAIER requesting that William GELBARDT AND OF PETI· ares on a ters,
O'BE.DlN AND OF PETITION Gu 11 l e rmo L e wi s be TJON TO ADMINISTER ES-Cos ta Mesa, CA (under the TO ADMINISTER EST A TE NO. I t d I I n d e P e n d e n t NOTaTocOlmlACTo... appo n e as. persona TATE NO. A·lllHt . Administration of Estates
CALL9tG '°" ..,. A·llUH. . r e p r e s e n t a t I v e t o To all heir•. beneficlarlea,
Oteltlct: °'*'09CouneyS11pettm-• °' 'l'o all helra. beneficia ries. administe r the estate of credlton and contingent credl-Act). The petition Is set for
ao-, 0ranoe c-., Oo1c1t. ot ~ crediton and contingent cred.J-W iiii F L I ( d f WALTER DOUG LAS hearing In Dept. No. 3 at am · ew S un ~r tora 0 100 Cl v lc Center Drive = DMdllr19' 1~0·-~'" "'.,...., ton of VE.RONICA ALLGAIER t h e I n de p e n de n t ENGELHARDT. aka WALT ER
ciey of Aptfl, 1182. O'BE[RN and persons who may Administration of Estates D. ENCELHARDl' and pertlON West, Santa Ana, CA 92701 P••~• 01 lld Aece191 Or•"Ot Count> be otherwiae ln~rested In the Ac t). The petition Is set for who may~ otherwise Inter-on March 31 , 1982 at 9 :30
o.pt of Educdon. Aoom 2 t3B. 1300 s. wW and/or t!lltate: h I I Dept N J ested In the w1.U and/or at.ate: A M =A~~;:., Relocelable A petition hu been filed by e ar ng n • 0 • at A JKt!llon hq been filed bv ·, F. YOU OBJECT to the B-'205
cie..,oom Blllldtnoi. Pa;u 1ctt Etem ROBERT K . S ALL in t h e 700 C ivic Cente r Drive, RA y MOND w . ENGEL· granting of the petition, SYNOPSIS OF THE ANNUAL STATEMENT ~. 121s111. Yorbe It.. er.noe. CA Superior Court of Oran~e Wes t , in the City of Santa HARM in the Superior c.oi.ut -.11d ·th OF
,.._ ........ on .. TNlllwodl'"-c I h R Ana, ca1·1tornlaon Aprll 7, ....... Co you Stl'l{\ol el er appear SELECTINSUR .. NCECOMP .. NY =C:A~.r:-~""d · Newpo<1 mTtk.rslr.rt:!~1ee1 .; 1982 at 9:30 a .m . • ~~.";:;.~Mo~f:Y.J1Na~'L~ at the hearing and state 3015 c.ur Spr1"9;, O.llH, TX '1s219
NOTICE is HEAHY G111EN t11a1 "" penooaJ repre.eniatlve to ad-I F YOU OBJECT to the HARIYI' be appointed u pereo-your objections or file Year Ended ~ember 31 1911 :l:*f.0'::=,: ?;.~~~i minister the estate of VERO. granting of the petition, nal repreaentatlve to adml· written objections with the Total admitted'assets '
"OllTRici;· w11 rece!W up to. 11111 not NICA ALLGAIER O 'BEIRN, you should either appear Nnller the tstete ol WALTER court before the hearll'9. Total liabllltles
-.,. 111e ~·1ec1 ,....., ......, Irvine. CA (under the lndepen· at the hearing and state DOUGLAS ENGELHARDT, Your appearance may be Special surplus funds o ::..1or~-e1 of •-tcw111e dentAdmlniaU"ation ofbtates your objections or flle CostaM-.CA(undertheln-In pers on or by your Capltalpald·up/Guarantv •
S-47,-479,SS2
JS,329,9SS
ic:.41:.:11~==e1ii!"~'= Ah ct). The petltioNn i.3set 7f0o0r written objections with the ~ndepnt ~~niltretlon of attol rFneyy. 0 U A R E A Capital/Statutory Depos it 1,S00,000
eerlng In Dept. o. •t "OUrt before the hearlnn. _,.lei ADt) .... ..., peUtion la RI Gross paid-In and Na& Illa · ::,.~·:=, a1011C1 •1 '"' .--....ieiec1 Civic Center Drive Wt'9t, Sania Your appearance may b( for Marina IJ> Dept. No. 3 at 700 C R E D I T 0 R o r a contributed surplus
----------TNre-bt•ttoOOdepoelt•etll*Od Ana.CA92701onAptil7,198:l In person or by your OvlcC-enterDriveWe.t.&nw contingent creditor of the Unassl.........tfuouts -4,80S,239
l'ICTITIOUStustMHS for ··~~.!!..1111n':'O::u~o .... It 9:30 a.m. attorhey. AN, CA 92701onApril7,1982 ~eceesed, you must file (s11rp"'1us"""'> ""' s .... 358
IWll4il'fATH•NT r1nt.eeu-·-"bia oo ......... -·wltNll lPVOUOBJEC Ttothe t9-.JO II lththe rt " ·-· Tiit ...,_1.,. ,.,_.,.. dOlnt "":~"':..,.,.o:'::C.°':! FM 1ranuna of the petition, you I F Y 0 U ARE A '!JP' y*QU OBJECT t o the ~~urp~:s~n~ It to c~~e ~urplusas reQards policyholders 12,1-49,S97
wu::-E'linve M091LE W4SH, Doler• IN.001-~ ,.,. ci.. abould either appear at the C R E D I T 0 R o r a 1ranlln1 of the petition, you personal representatl ncome for the vear 29,990,617
•7 llrdl 91,_, Wt• •u. -~ "Tac~ ~.'=in end'",. .. hearlna and 1~1.e your objcc-contingent creditor of the ahould either 1ppear at the 1 t d b ve Disbursements for the year 26 479 409
... cfl,ClllfwlN9*0. pont1¥ttolhlCOftltect-. tJonsorfllewrlttenobjectJona deceastct, you must file beartnaandetateyourobJec· !~~~n\:Ur ~~~s cf~~~ We hereby certify that the above Items ' are In •--....,..,u """· °'.,...· led! 11111.,,.. •--!ltd llJ!: wiU\ the court ~ote the hff· your claim with' the court UOna or tile written obJlcUona the date of first lssuanc: accd~~daOecnce with the Annual Statement for the veer c.i=~nsv .. 1eyvi.w, ~~U::,~=:.i ... .,.. ,.._Your•ppeara.MemlYbeln or present It to the withthet'OW'tMfonthehee· of letters as provided In en~ ember 31, 1981, made to the Insurance
1"'1111,Clt"-1.atVIS. °":.~ ... ,.,. .. pel'IODYOI' by.J:': a~ITolt peµonal repre~entatlve ""'· Youra!ppearanmmayMln Section 700 of the Probate c,a"wmmlssloner of the State of Callfornla, pursuant to '"'1!.~t:.~f'v .. ...,v .... 110t111Yor11.---:-::....,..,..,:: or1!'t'On~pnt•~ttoror the :Jfft,~~n~~r b~~t~s cf~~~ s-;ic~~u"~;~rroB Code of California. The • R
Tiii• ....,_ I• ~" ..., • ~ tnfortNlll• .. -.iy.,.. or Ill dectued, )'OU mu1t fllt your the date of first Issuance or • continpnt creditor of tht time for fltl09 clalms will vie. Fetherston
..,_,.I,._...... TNOI AICTll4ltOlltMtedfffmlhe aea.__. ....... __ ,_ -·1"' f d a..t fll not expire prior to four C&-presldent -..~ °""or Of"" °"*'IMlll of inowetn.1 ,.._,..,, .. , __ .err-· " o · tetters as P:O."lllded In ece.u.,.., you muat e yous mo .. t .. s from t ..... dat• of R.C. Fetherston
TMI ...... ._ ,..., "'*" .. """''°"' ""...., .. .,,..,......, .. ,of to tbe pe...onal repnmentaU" ~ctlon 700 of ~' Pr•t• claim with thecou.nor s--t 11 " " ,.,. "' Secretary
C-IY a-at OrM9t c-ty ..-,.._ .... ., .. .-ey1nwN111ttN1 appointed 'b)' &.he court wiU\ln Code of Ca.'tf . nil. The to the personal rtpremnt.etlve the hNrl09notlced above. Published Orantwo Coast ~D.tta .-11io11i,...,...!Of.a1tftflo. four nionthe from th• ... ol time for flllng c1411ms wlll 1ppolnted by the court wUbln YOU MAY EXAMINE l9, 191 Z2, 1982 •-"'*' ... °"..,.c.Mo.i:= =:,:.."":',=-..'~-=-:::::: ftrst i.uance of let~ .. prov!· not eicplrt prior to tour four month• trom the dai. of the flle kept by ,the court.
..... tt.Mardl•. "· .. ,.. ..,... 011TNCT01111»10e1Nct• uooe.Ortnd ded ln s.cuon 700 of the Pro· month$ from the date of flnt i.u.not of kmen • provt. If you er. Interested In tht
-•.. A-..~CA.c:.,...-~ tMwCod•ofC1Ufornta.The theh.,rlrl9notlcedabove dedlnSecti<lo700of~P...,. estate vou may file a Pallllll ,...... :;' .. ,.._ ,..::!T3': = •• '*-toe llllna c1-l1nt will not YOU MAY EXAMINE bate Cod• of California. The request with the court to•----------
Dally Piiot. March 16, t7
123s-82
_
--;;m;;m;::a-.;;;;;;;---t..., • • oP'n prior to low mowul» from th• fife k t .... __ rt tlnW foe fUlf\I clatma will no1 recelvt specie I notice. to ...:..-., .. ~ :...........__.·., •tClh •di....... It ellall bt ,.......IN) i...-"'° CQN. the ~ .. of \he beerinl noUced "' ep vy mw COU , explnt prior to'°"" montJw tram th I t f t t ..,_ - -llW IT•~ TflACTOlt to to ""OM 111o COfttrac111 abow If you are fnttrested In the the detit of \ht "-""' ~ • nven ory o ts a e ,....,... ~..., • ~ OOMT ..!::..~~ _._ .,. ..,"" ~.·:i~e:.".:=":.aa.:: YOU MAY llXAMiifl tb• H tatt, you may fife a abaft. assets and of th• petitions, ,_.,,....._....,.._....,,.._
OA111v··1 •oa1u WAIH o" ......,,.. ... ~.......,Dr tt1e k«pt by \Neoun. lf yo\! AN requ.st with the court to YOU MA.Y IXAMJNI the ~~:::.s1 a~~·~;:J T...,...,.._. --,.._.
iAMU tCA, "" • ._.._ .. or1n, ";:.::, ":"°"......:-=:-.., , in~ tn the .-ai.t, )'OU m111 r•celw $S)t(lal notice of mt bpt b)' the coun. U'fOU an of the c.a:for 1 ;,..t T• ...._ Mt~==:::.....,; ..,... .. ~._...,..,....., .. ._ ft1e • r.queat wttb the murt to '"• Inventory of estate in-....1 In the-.W.10'lmaY Code n 1 • ......... .....,,.~ ~om., '"•• 111 ~t' .. ,.~·.=.-.=: .... --. ....w. .,.nu nodee of \hit lft· assets end of the .,._ttfofts, ll>-• ~ wttb tti. oourt '° PATTIN PAITH o.-~P""" ~-... ' • ....,. ... ,...,..""" .. ......,.,""'°"of ......... "' aftd of acc.ounts and reports NlC!lfve lpedal ~of the 1n. c: o... u..._....._.,.._... • .....,....n. ........... .,.. \he .,.uuona. acoounta and re-dtscrlbtd In Section 1100 ventoey ol•tate ..... and of & SAND RD .o.-"':.~..-wn f • ....,. ~:=.: °""• t._ .. _. .._, ~ ._..,_... ...... ,....., ... ..-dliwlbedlnlcdGn l~U of thl Callfornla probate tti. ,.UUom. eccount1 and re-a,: Win II. Pal1tt ~.._..,,... ,~ ~;....,... 1, '-_... ... _,~ .. _.,.,,.. ...... .,a'..,.,_ ilf .. Olllbl!M ........ Oadt. Code. ,.,.,.~1ns.caoa1 A=•U. .,.....,...,...._..._, .,.,.,...
IMlhlf ',...,......... .. ...... ~~!' ..... IALL•llDll. T,AI ...... ..., •• Laldley & L••H" ofthe~ProbaleCodL mw ...... , • .,,... =:'."!.':C" .. ,.., t::::~ ...,~.-.. "="a::'"'-~~= Law, •>"1 a elltN . ur7, AttorMz..t L8w -w' DAYID II. llOLlllD. IMC .. Meftr~~ N16 w....., ~ ....... ._ ._. -• _, -.. .. ~ &!..: I -...... • llM ~1= • WI) Pa ... 0. Alida, ..... Tltlr,. .._., .e.t:''-... • Al •rHJ 11 L•w, IHI N, (211) ~ · .......... "' .. tw ... ~ S1, 1'1t.. ....._. • .. ..__ ..--.-. ., "'-~ • "' ,,__ • 1111 Lue••'·llftla. CA tHll; l.ot 'A......,._,._ CA 1 _.., , .... ..,....... PubllShed orenoe Cont °""''..,"'11.t=-=:'Oe1110m1a.....,....••" -
..._ ~o..r •• ·"~!"• tfl•> "'"'*· ct11, -~w' ~ 8'L t'H> -...... O.lly Pflot, ~rct\ 11, t2, l: ~ ,....~ca............ .....-..-,;;;.. c..t o.ltJ l"IMt; ~ 0.....0.. OlllW ....... ~ ~.,...,.., 11, 1912 ~ :--.n ............ ~ -.,...,••.::i ,_.. .......... ., ......... ~11n,1a.w. _.. tns.11 .._.....Gml9twa.D1111P-. .... ..,.,.,,., ..... _
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llDUCED TO SILL Deughlful new 4 Bilrm
w/traditional design! Ubrary It den, forma
dinlnj!. bay view, corner
locatioD in Old Corona det Mar. SS9S.OOO. owe.
Excellent terms
lnlde.
E5 ~~~~:_~r: 1st :: owe 2nd. 2 bdrm, all
ml elec, pool, RV Pking,
:: e lubhse. Adil comm.
'"' 71'•495 ·90~8 . o r mz 5Cn-Sll2-022IS
.. .........
IUtlf DTlTI
Special 5 BR Home On Approx. 5 Al:re!I..
Solar Heated Pool. Spa. Boom For Ten-
nil Court, Hones, Guest House. Mag-
nificent View Of Surrounding Valley &
Adj. To Miles Of Equestrian Tralla ..
$1,975,000.
751-9100 uc..,.. ........ -., -"" .,,
:::.=: .... ,.. c.hr' , .. ,,_..,.,. ~========~ l Br, S.A. f72,000 ..111
l Br, I" S77.SOO
Wll -----... --.., -..., -------.. j
3 Br, C.M. $113,000
38r,C.M. $114,800
2Br. E.sldee.M.$119,500 3 Br, H.B. $129.900
3Br,C.K. $129,900
All have excellent tinlndtts. Call now ror a
viniDS IPIJt. '11-7370
T~\Dll I()\ \I
l~I \I l " ~-.... Dllinble 2 BR la din dlconton home in
1unny puttlt. Ideal end unit. A/C, c:blrl*'I..,.... Pmd n,bt.
_o_s_s_u_E _I 1, t
1 r 1 1 . 1
1
y E " A L I I -,-, -,-, -,-sion M.n on • beckyans ' rtnett "hwaN. lad 0oo. To .._....___._ ....... _...~. "' ~ .... you're• blqlw.
--,.-E-0 _T_E_C -I To lllrn yOl(rt -."
I I' I I' I • e-:: :-.:=. ~ _.._ ................ __.__. ~ .............. , ....
DMl£NAB AVN:.
~-·
J • COMDO • 11'1MI. Highly up~raded condo w /closed in
patio. Great location. Assumable
loans. $UY11000. Beril Mitchell
~(054)
P~C '11W 0. OCMMI •
Cameo Shores. south °' Pal. See sensational s un sets 6
atirm1ering sails 1 3 BR. ram nn + rmny'extna. Priced to sell at
. f'129,900. Darlene Herman
'S1414. ..
C=Loh/ 1500
••••••••••••••••••••••• l Burial plot. Harbor Lawn Mt . Olive Men1uut Prk. 5SH3U
4 Cemetery plots, Hubor Lawn Mermrial Park.
. 7 87
C-rcW Property 1600 •••••••••••••••••••••••
slcMPJ~lER
34,tm sq I\ rentable 7 ~t acres. Out of town owner. Sl,800,000 Terms.
(714) 846· 3278. ( 213)
1J~Wr.WtR
LIKE NEW QUALITY Well kept Trll>lex nur S.C. P1au. Priced below
rornparables at 1241.SOO Owner will tarry 2nd Sne yourself com
!JUsslon. Points ' hlllh tnterest. Open THU RS.
thru SUN. 817 Jennifer Lane, e.M. By Owner
1575. -----
Deluxe Covincton 4-plex choice F.V. IOc. Good as· 1urn loan. OWC. Great f.mnl. Bj!r ?'71~391, .
twWt
\'I ~~~,,~" 2 bdrm. z ba *I• ater *-· IJ"-' fiatd loan. for 30yra. BJ owner.
----'-=-"'lCllS _ .........
..... J7M .................
. . ... --,
r
Cout OAILV PILOT/Thurtdav. March 18, 1882
,..._,__ ....... u.fwlltttH U.LJ111H 14wtU. ..... *4 _.,alw•t1,..1Md A.fl•MM•f•UiiM'a. .,_, ..... ....._ . -...e. J70G lrc:b•• 2100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••.! ••••••••••••••••••••••• .............................................. CothiMHe lJ24 .......... lZSJ Ml•,.rfltect. 3J6'Mt:.,.,.lteclt 376t c..t.Mtt. 3124 Mno ll24
,_ • A.t • w ... ~, w.w NO DOWN ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••··············· ··•···················· ~······················ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••• ••••••• ,........... , •• ru.1• bt.no ..... , lt!..t!'f..s.rtlet. ully Execut&v• ltvinf( Nrw<lrtanv\ewSBr.don.2b111. N..,t'WJ!_Ort Creal Wini llOmt'th1n11 Klru 111..111.311. I Hft u.io. Ulll 1)11 - -•-.,. W11fft._ ~.IKIO et'(u II Orluns Condo. Lur111 Shoro home t:ttll' iOWllnvlllt'2 Br 2lt R11 apt'clal in II 2 llr Newfi-<fi·eor Cius pcJ i·:i111ort No l>l'll• J11:1 W
Larn Si•ol. ~-·t T11'ce as 1u.1.1. OR TUBE •.• ~:,~ctti1':,'J~:'i1~~!&,1 end unit. 3 Br. 2 811 1uard N•ar poolA bt'ttch. = 1.-nnl1ti ~I. MPll Townhou$t'L <·om11lrlt>ly ent'I 1111r d ~ U\ht•r . Holy 548 9516 .. "89 II. ftft f> I Cl u re ~ q u t• T1kf over low pay frptr.patlo.pool,\'lbhse. 800/lult'. uwn1•r 646-11mo . 4 .. 3350 or rum·~ MO 7fi(l !ll17 pool. bb9 Adult~. no Buu11ru1 2 Br :! 11.1
L lnf.ftb T I ' bll walk to a hop~ 1150 49NS38o1'93'92M lltm -prta 00 5073 $MCJ rm ruri1t·I' ch' r'Al.l.OROOKrnnt·b.15 r11eormo t' ~~.4t30803 n.~l""' .. m"~1T'"1 r ....... iR-,....._. _,_ 3~76 h~.1i.btt1 A\ull .tl!I at·res. lo~ly home -.1th homt <.:1m~rtruck. P• -.-.. ""' .....-.. v .. , --...... • IMMa OCCPMCYl m~ ~ n. t tenni ruUrl, P Cat\ Answer Ad 11 631. E:sstslde. rlun Z BR, I Pllln J . 4 BR. 2 Ru , fam ••••••••••••••••••••••• $400 mo 2 Br I ll;i
POOi. ndln11 trwlls. Tr11de 642 4.Dl24 hra Ba_._ patio & yard. NO nn, Comm pool. J11e . Sllonclff Pool. l!funwd t•t••l•nl!. Su!)l•r .. rp 2 llr 11.11 ui:t·
for smaller homl• in Newport Beal'h CdM P~"Tii~mtl.Mlt·OO&O teMls, walk to pvt bl·h. 4 BR , 2 ba. frp t , luundry ruom No pi•b 1tvu110 N111wt.
Otunge Co. Full price spect11 cul&r view oi Niee clean 2 Br. 1 Ba . ~1~ ~f.\~00 .1 '7~ !i~92 w11Sh/dry. Fri.11. mrl pvt Nola.~• mo n•nt 64:! ~ 995.ooo. Call ~kr1ds 81lboa l slun d & l!nt'lsd garuu. yard. $36-8l4Z • ·yd, lkh t clbhse. Nu TSl.MGMT 642 1603 ~4,1,1ddHK ""''.ml
MS-SX>O. u t 200 or ut Pemnsuh1 6 Buth 2 fpk new pau11 & c&t""I. Nol ~ .. ~Simo 496 8818 ut1.ll'h ~ .. r s.s~ m•• 111111 110 Wttkdavs 831 14"" d I · ..,, Room• 3 Hr 1'owohouw • •• # vv + en+poo room.u~ pets SS2Stliecurity 3 br. 2 ba, lat' m1t ster L-.a 3216 ' ~fl~~~ ...._.._L.A... rTremdeod,el.l lge humr ~ Ora~I!. house r-; •U•ll'. micro. n1mm. •••••••-.,-••••-••••••••••• apt in qull'I adult com -.. ._.. 548 zn& plex Ne~I> 1!t>t•orJll'(I. ~: ,1de tn pie' h: 11u1t•t
bct.aMJt 2100 sn!in ho~ro~1:" 1~;~j0• · ~).:.., S77S/~o ~kdy Older 3 br. I b11 (kun f1 replat't'. enl"li.d pat111 & 2br. Ind!). µallo. ;i1ll1i. .
... •••••••••••••••••••• Pvl ply, 640.4947
1
3 HR + bo11u11 rm' 2 b11. 111 """'._t; evs .,.,0.4025 vu S8SO I mu . 30K31 SOKioue stud io• one l(arage Sorl'}. no µels. no JICIS ~ li73 34~HI
WANTED: llouseonLido yd. tr~s. frp<'. hot !Ub, Mtwportltoch 3269 ManlynDr.11401441 andtwobedfoomapan SS7S Mo ti4 ~ :1:1H1 ur ('1\1 Si\nl'unrsr P\utu
l.sle for lnc'Ome proPt'r Real &tet. Sl.000, 1st. last. Sl'l' ....................... CCNtda-UMI ments FURNISHED 675-5949 ~ hdrm 2 IJ;i Jll rnnd
t.Y Prln~ly 642 U369 W-.d 2900 :>411 ~488 • SEAVIEW LEASE Ulrfwwlsa..d 3425 and UNFURNISHED I Hr F: 'Ilk ,111,ill hul Pml l'h1ld or t .;l 1)1\
Exrh Honolulu 2 BR ••••••••••••••••••.-.••• ~TSIDl 4 tidrm 3 Ba F II 0 R ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oakwood also oflers l'VZ) ~ loh ul lll'Jl $595 iall !I'll tlli2\ or Marina rondo for lst TD Pm ate Party seeking 2. Br • ousl'I t;•lhk dl·n. city t 0t·ea~ vu i:uard 2 BR. 2 sly. pool, () W. ~vod $3.'111 ,\dull~ unl1 7~ OOJll .~
or•msMeq BalS72M + 3Br.2Bahome.RW Ntdc• ~a~~· w \ ';f "£i. gate Pool t tl'nnis stove. HU $500 mu 'AllUtilillesPald H.Sl~l t\\all """' I In ilµIA.
812'.PP714·64471170 C.1\1 Have S25K for . 11"'1'e~111 ~ r ,et• Sl700°/nl>. Bob or Dov•<> Avail imn11.•c1842·0~ 'lmmodlale ~'IRl-:PLAl't: Pool iTµl~.<lrplt.~:11 111 No down.puymen~ Pnn on ~a:s iwr at · ~II 06411 Koo11. :igt 759-1221 U:AS Jo: OPTION cx1•1· Ocx:upency pm ale put w & 11 " iJt'h• $4111 IH:! ~!I
I)· l~~t~ct t:on111c or l'OOdo. NH Orl':in & b.11 • $l Mituon In h"ashcn, m XTllA I.Ci I
' Bill 642·2533 aft 51'M 4 bdrtn. 2 ba. frJll' IJm \'ll'~ 1 Bil +-den. f1i1 Reeretuon &. 2 Ur l(.orden .1plh 1111 W '1d1• l~e 1 & ~hi l>W
Pref loan assum rm. Rardener 1nl"luded IAYFIOHT rrure 111fo l'Jll 673 411!1'J AO<:t Mucn Mote• ~:a ~h 11lt S 1110 ss1;11 •It P~ tndri l'Jl11t•t I ms mo A1a1I 1mmt'd 2 story. 4 t bdrm,. 2 t'IS ror a montti or a hlP 557 2214 1 ~&~ 64~ 662~
ltlfttah 559-49114 bat hs . I 1 rep I J 1· l' . 2 bd I , 1 M""hl ,. 1 fo'.J\STSILIE 2 hdrm I h,1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AS ~or.:euus 'Jl'W Pcl•r anct l rm. ~en i.:arai.:<>. pil ime UVC'sooen.,aiv Hahi;i Mar ·'1>1~ iJt'I and l'hlhl 1<1•1t'omt· E TSIOJo: l)uarnt & shp.SJOOOpermo i\\ail patio (,1~1i.:1·o~t)\ cll•1·111 9am to6pm Nopets l,.HRl' l llr l'ar1111rl. $!17!16429771 Houses r..rnislwd (.'O-LY 2 bed. p:it10. y1t. f'l'b 1 $850 n•• 640 SJ:.!4 pool l;iunllr~ <\llult~. 11u
••••••••••••••••••••••• i:ur. s.s95 HAl'llELOll !It'll> ~50 !131 W l!lth EASTSIDE a.a.....-1-•--' l 106 apt. Ulll pd S3li5 t>31 4320 2BH Sii S(' l'l.i\ZA Oakwood St ~ tl-192 --Adult 1·omlo:. Trl'l·~ ~Woods ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 bdrm duple\. l·arpd1·1I. pool. JJl" SStiS l!J~ irwl Garden Apartments 1 Bi l(JrJl(t' ,arcl \u l..1rl(t' 1 Br lofl :\o µl'l,,
Bayfront 21Jr Iba, J\.011 i.:arnopt'64t~. S479?; 556-lti<!G, 77~ 2.Sl\11 4 Ne........-Beach/No peL~ Kub 01\ ~!>II mo s.IHJ mo 180 21,l St 4 I lo 6 II. $300 "k or ' " _.,...., &ll UitiJ D.1)' ti 46 4lti2. fo:, ,., $975, mo 673 8H21 or • . . 4parfmtnts F.irnisht'd 880 ltv1ne 1~15 9543 615-4!W. S harµ llPIH'I' fo. ~11ll' I ••••••••••••••••••••• ra1 lfllhJ
twnhm. 2lir 'l1:ba. cfrn.,Canal Front. Nt•"IJlll'l lalboalsl d 37061 (714)&45-1104 Eoshi•4.PIH COf"OM det Mar l 122 frµk . dbl i:urai.:1·. vo11I. Shor~ 4 fir + l.l·J~e or °" ~wport Beach/So "6lFlleld i/ Br l Ba IJll(l' ,un ••••••••••••••••••• •• •• Jill". sauna $0l5 mo nn option to buy Sl51HI. mo (i.~··••••••• • •••• • • • ••• ilvi·k 1tara1te "1th 1.11111
Decorator's .Bii( l'~"·"'" µ\'ls W ;I\ n ,. . \ t.!l Trnnis. pool. "';ill, 111 ~r~rn1t pn ~. 1 Hr 1 c~~, 1~1~~1 APARTMENTS iln hk uµ \dulh 1111 1'4nhome. 2 br. ;! ba. &16-lt!llti b(.•t11·h AR<>nl li4b 11~11 u1 & laundr) · i.:ar 111'1. no 7 "'~ lk•aulllul l(.ord.l•n apt,. •k·l~ SS20 iS2 .!5So t formal DR. 1·ompl furn ~ 22!1~ I pt-I:. $151! )l'Jrll I);"' ( 141 ""'2·51!3 PallOlt dl01'k~ St1J. hl'.Ol r
lxt f\n 1"'_) n . • IJ•••I Sll7SHkr.646U295 E,\STSIOE Moll' 111 l 2l3 KJK :!~I :.!: Ell'~ µatd~OJll'IS 1l~l'l l Br I Ila :--1•\\ Htlc& 0"'"'" • 1'.'11hlCll. 4t1r i tlll. Nt'\\l'orl llGCAMYOH LSE I 213 4~1 m~l 2 HR l HA SSi!5 I rrµb & <Irv~ (i 11ud
00 St· s. $800 mu llt•f,, l'llH ~11·l.ain l"1111d11 1,..__ :NJW W1l~on li3l ~~113 E:i"l~rdl' 1111· ~Ltl urt•
fhevest-iacket has top pr101rly Houses Uftfuraished 752 i4MO htw H Siil:> Ill'' mo l';1IH:1•rr~ ..._ta Mesa 37 24 Souffl LCICJUl'IO 37 86 • . ;iclulls ooh $3541 mo
I01no11nd themonlhstocome ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~VaHew 32341 b'13i7tilor7t>O l:l!Ji ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• F.asbldl'.! llr '·!~a lol.j lli E 18ih S1 "l I' :.t ....... __ ,_._.. 3206 , c.a.t ... OE ORO l..tj(UllJ lk.t1 h I . l 1a1w $19S 11111 .!f•25 ll&~ ~sual. comloitable sl1m1111n2' -~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hart>or R' eta. l ~"" r . '1 ii II f'lden 131 Ii~ 2Ur "lia l" nh--t' r Sult• C1ochet Ion& ~I 1n an easy ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Bii 2 H;1. mu 111 mo . 411 3b r 1
111\i ·~·r \l.l.l Tll.ITIES 1' \Ill um '01.•t· .! 1111 '!'·1 • ,. · 1 ,;.. old \II ~~·mo
openpa11ern slltch of synll1e11C • Duple,.. 4Br. Ila~ \ll'"· $750 •<'1•h11· KuhOI\ ,. r J. ~.m 1111'.1~ •1. • 1 'JunJ ''11''11!11' I\ I:! Hr I Ila 1'1111 \l,iµl (.·1 149t1i3ui1 .,h , 1>11lo. •Or\led with contrast bOlders Ol'Wb dl•t•orull·1I. cw l !ltiO:Jltl~S I )~~· 'r'bul •I." 11:11 tumpJr1· ht'l1111· \1111 ~nJ 11I ~1·n s.11111 "'k t\H• l'tt-la11,., qu1t·l.1111 ti-IH2"126cH·~ \,k111b
Pa•.lern 7363· "ir""trons foi s11.. s::: I {lt'llt, $11150. 752 Hl211 I 1,C'l ~:. 1a •. t ,111 " ·1 11,1 I n•nt 1 ·11,.111m 1lt•,.11:n 1 • l·l 4!19 :tai pcb <! 1>1.·rso11' s.12:> mo . · ·
u " <• I I Huntington leach 324 0 1:ic.iru1. 1 i::i 1 · 1>1111 1111 I ft·11t un·" 1'11111. B IHJ s 1 t' r r a :'11 i: m I 1·11 "' a1l 1mlTlt'<I . le" 1·11 :! 111 38·40. 42-44 rncluded L., -m, ... i ..... ..ffjl<..~.. ............._, . I 3207 ms ~Ml mo ,\):l llcih . I I ~ •. •) I • 11.o I .: lo.ti & I I tr\ 0 25 f h I Ill• 1111 'I' ,-ftMllSUO 5••.:,•k•••••••••••L~j••••••.~ 111 l>m11'1\1N1jJ iS!l l:!:!I l'tl\ Ill lg.11 .1lgl•1• 1"'"h l~fth l:.t.~ ; • .,. ~ ... l·r., • .,.. 11 ~-or eac pallern Add ••••••••••••••••• •••••• .... s lll lll'l'an r. t•g;111l -r tlU Ill l'I II I I " u" Uftfurnistt.d Llk I l h I ,..,.,,,, "" ........ soc each pallern lor postage ' •• , br houi.e II" rourut nt1 Hr ..... n11h nm & lkn 111 u rr ' :l 11 t -:! 11.1 IJIMl-1-.1111111: '-:11 IJl'l:. t .. ~ till'\\ 1:•1' I ""•' 'THI l'I L'Y ?Hr • 1 llJ and II di S d I ' . . . I _, '1 t•l h ' ·r h ., l I' l I • ~,.. ••••••••••••••••• • •••• • ......... t-<·on1p ,., nu l'l" ' ~r"';" .. -an 1n& u o: pell> 5.S54• 1 blk 111 ht'J•·h ....,.1 ~ 11 th apt.. :. • , 11" n 1111,. l' • t' .1 1 'r 11111 tum "'"'"'1 ._ ........ _ p . 1 38 07 .. ,.1, • \I -1, hhn rJn"l' & •l\l'n " tlk •t-....... <1) · u. '" t· · • •I· "II "· ~ l'"n • \ 11 ., ...... l ·n I · 1 S5Xll -fftlflSll a ""' • " up t''J Hit"" .. · ,...,. ..,_,. ~ 67>211111 n.I 'ti ,11 '" i.: ·''" '1111 11!· ,1,.,1 ti" l I I ,1 I -nr -Ill 1110 • ""'""'II I 'l'I ·•14· 111 d r..,('h W U h1111k up NHdlecnft Dept. 105' 11" 1· k. ii h I ,. ,1 r 111 ' ~1.11 "'I s~11111 11111 .16.'l 'I\ W1b1111 Ci42 l!li I •••••••••••• • ••• • • • • • • • "'""' Jt '1· a ~ ' I . · . .. "---'·'M 3222 .. .. .. ti 1>1"%',., N1{2&3Hll W 1\ ,, ••• ,.11 I p.1110 $-17Smtl 64fi .131U 01llyPllot ...___.. or i.;.ir.ii.:t . 111 ~ "'·11111 •···· IN11·1• l llr clpl\ ll1111•1 · ··Br l Ba 11ppt·r d1' los 153, Old Clltlsea Sb. llew Ones sqort) one s d1Hlt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~uni Nup\'li. lnquin· •1• 1 Fw1· I llr 'l th lpl i'St·v h1 i.:.or l 1•n1plltl ~·µIi· !111111:-. j!.ir 1"1"~ -h"asht-r 1.111111 pJt1i1 It fl~. gar. dwn~lri. c·htl~
YoR. •IY 10113. l'ri1t Na111t, i sew both lor much less than lht ~ ~m·ul:ir tl\'l'all & i•rli 52"1 lltth ~I !l!~I li:i:tt ;l~h~'ht•r n~·" ',1·1·1·11t '1 :1<1ull 11\l'I' 3.~ Nu ,,..j, 111.~ 1 i~"l;t' .}11 ,11::' ·~· 1 , J 1po1 '" \ct 11I1 ' (~I\ 1~1 & IJ;.l "511~1 .'~" •~ 2J•'. l'attem •1111ber. f puce ol e111te1 readJm>dt lllel' fl ithL~ 1 It'" from "' "" lll'l'I FX 11•1 I h 1 I! 1 1111 1 \\ ,. 'I 1 I 1 r I $3511 ~ ltr.!I I IM 1 '111 1 r h '5 1 "-t>IS 100 ... Bill \pl 11 5.1 I 5·131
--. ,. room L;irj(l' 2 Br fqlli-· .. \ 111 Sl 325 m 1 41 ··•• u lk , .. ml ront 1nin11 "" J I s.14ll -1912 ,..._,aft ~ J 1 11.e yo11 lO many IUy-.lttt mJ n 1 a Oll' 1111 11,, 1 111)..'ltHl 1 11· ll\'lo;111 'It'" 7 '. 1 " • • • -·' ~ X~<!>I 1r,1tll'I 111 quit'l 3 Ur .111., ·,1 µIt ,1111 .. 1, :! llr :! HJ lllM>I 1.111>1'h .
tree pa«ems inside 170 best t diy chlllcH and chaners Sl2l•I rno CJll \nl honi 'ol k~ b.111 n I. I ll t 52 l:'>5! I adult .,.11 k l!J' ~ ":11t•r 1 • 1 1 1lniJll~ ~u 11 .. 1, Bu,1 2 mi to leach
tKkels. dolls qurlts more" P11nltd Pattein 9397 Halt dav:. 642.5757. ·l'\ ,.,, ~ ssu1 nu :! llr $1iOO n111 llG CANYON p;u<I tii J i7K7 SI~ 1' Jr '··~ 1~~' l' 1 '1, Ill~~ & µrol 1.1t•ovh• $4:.ll I :I hdr!,'1 2 ba. f;~n111~. 111111 Knil. Crochet. Embroider SI SO S11~ 1011 12'1. 14'1 1611 ~k.nd~03Hiti30 or n•nl l'lllll'l' 1l11p1, .. , 1111· .,m , 1 ""j "" · 11 '11 " S-18 4Kil7 ur 7:11 tiK:rn ~\15 181111182. !'>22 l r.t l
W.CUFTllOOllS..SZ.OOtadl l8'1 l0'1 Women'sS1m34 • · Sllo11 mu l'all ll11h . CONDO LocJunoleach 3748 1 .i.t14 i a~~ Agent r" 1 d ·7 H .,11 1 AllWsald~ad~SIM 36 38 40 42 O 46 48 • LEASE OH OPTION 4hr Mt•Hr ~i :L')INI ofr 111 3 Hr. Cull .iulf 1·0111M· ••••••••.••••••••••••··.·iCOf"OMdetMar 3822 h'~'ht • r j "1
1
1' ...... .._ _._ .. _ ..... : .11• Stftd S2.25 lol udl ,,ueia. 2ba 1u l'\Ct' hm $141HI titil .71i:a hom1• \I\'\\ h'n111~. po•I 'II•' Luxun ,111(1111 'Ila T\ Stud111 \pl 1111 11·nl I "'J't rr. i:.it >.o1t.:l' 't -•.., ..-~ -.. mti thlnr 1\•t i5.'llllHNi IA.'o1-'l·$121~1 \1,111 IHI\\ . d . .• hin ., ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'n1Jlt'l0ntr.in11· hJlh& IX"J P"Jllu & .r11n1 n ll~Dolls ,CletlleO..l'afHI • M450C1arudlP't*•1er . ~ l ll~I 2hJ. s;~1 11111 l!fllll l'nm.·loi· ti4-l ?l:!lllki mu k''i\~1w "' ' 1"'511,l'arl~ l.1:1•m1•il1•rn l 11.rri i.:r 1o.11 , hi·u rn11m S5t•1mo 1>.11111!1!•~
134-14 ~ lldillt Qlilts 1*1-Md MIMlli11i. S...d Iii: ·>< Spa1·1111L, .?Hr. rrv1t· 1h·11 (oltHll'l'"""I NI 1111!-oh:tnl • Sll.'i\\ . l11trm (,;JrJj!I' " 111111 1 llll \lh'Jtl'lt ~:.u ow . llJ.Fllll• ltlalt Qlilti•& lilAlllll MWlll sm5 rra1 ~ & ,\tlam" ~~>II 1,.l!ll Hh1~r, .r rnnt . "'"' lr.1~ I Heaut furn 2 llr aiit N11 p1•1:-~2 9911t lnd cb utib :! hlh fro m Deina P0tnt 3826 112r.:: onr,·1111s Patttm Dept. 442 H-10·111181 I I II\\' 2 br. 2 ha. 1h· ·ean \It'" ,,,.. "aurl"I . h " I ., l lk I) r l' l 3 f ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dally Piiot :! Br l'11111t11, 111101 1;11·111.11 n1ral11r hon1t' Allull~. 1111 S-1 .11 1 , '-j· \: · · m :i ; 1j S.•:11• 3 '." ~ -' •a • 1 ' l ,_ ·h t11,1 . ~ l rut'.' :! Hr o 1· t' Jn ' 1 1· '' 130-..... aslliofts.Simll-56 232 "'-' 11""' SL.·-f-4. llY l'lhh~t'. 1·arp11rl. fl'll!l' 111•1s Sl<!IHI mo lt•;1"1' a l I t l oi111 mu l r1om bl .11 h $11511 lllll )(;ii .j((' ~:JI (. 'l.llll I hJlmnl l(arJl!t' ... , ..... IZH...,.Patdlwtl)rilb .._ ·"' ,... .. ., 3bdrm 2 bath Jlhl o.rr l ,'.1;11 ""I" $.5IHl 11111 b l L"1l.h •II· '·• t II · 11' ,.cn11·1• S •2131493 36!111 •'I •'>°' lll'l l(hborh111111 (all .,,,,..,., .-.... l'11" I I 1>1 ......_ 10011 l'rilt •AME ADOl£SS Q..) · · "" "' 11 an"'s 1 1'1 OI w1n1 •t·~n·•1•1·tl t!l!IJOl~ ~1'16i3"""u ~kda · il-~1\81 2 ...,_ " 1 uu • IZ7-Aftllm .... --. • • (~;e:in Rll ct 1.1-(l' pal Ill :! h~l + <11•11 71ill 7ti:l:I il~I &14 . { . r · • . . 11 • I ~;,....... t ) ~ • I • :!13 -11r.! ~i I l'lllll'l1 I '1!?"!~ .. ~fts· " ... Is ~ Sl~ri ~I·::·~ l'il~ ,i:aral(l'. hrt·~IJI I' I llr l'1tt1'111 111101 11•11111, ~~ Hill •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
, ... .._. 1 .,....... •ns•en 1n °"' fll(W SPIUNC neut SISUU ""' 1'" 111 l"lhhw l11g1· 1·ar1>1111 · 1 I 123-5* '1' Patttl~ nRhl ll'f\Jnl I :\ · · t 'i 5 Spl•,1 • ar "'"'all 'rt'YI ' • 122-5111.ft I I , It • SUMl.l[A PATICRN CAIALOC I • II Jlt'l" "" .. -~~I ·~· I :1 + fom1h . r111111.1 I 11111 t • l~Y!M.-!Mr:ep,~=0 1~~;'"~!~ r.~,~1,..1111~1 Il,,/(m j ,",1;:111t11~1::~:::11::··';'.11.111lu I ~~~~:&;·,:~~s p;1. ~:!111111 I • 8-DA Y WEEK SPECIAL • ll~Ea, Alt If f1owtf Clttlltt 100 slyles Ca111oe SI 50 • • f'1• • " an llMlifty ritty ~· Ml ClAfl IOO«S .. $2.00 exll t'..ll ,J, J •' ' I I\ ... n•nkr .in·.• l 1""" I 3lu . :!hJ iJCHll. 11111 I Ill t 111 • 8 Days 3 lines • 8 Dollars • 1 ,_ Cloclltt -tb4tr'7UJ/.P.HU'J 11• bl•J1'h l\l o ""'' rm 11110 l"l.1, 'II }~~"Gift m::-Mer:~I = ~ 67.1 ~~9~ s.'>25 mi ll'\3 7Xl~I $11'°"1 n•1 r\1:,'1 ~I ~1:1.! • • lot.S..+llit(llllktiuei·.n 123_5 .... 11 ••• , .... ~ ""'"'-. • -, • 3 bdnft, I >1.1a 11 ~easy lo P lace yo ur 8 -0 ay Week Cla ssifie d bY. mall a nd 1t e .... , ~... ......"""" I r.imtl~room. flpt" '" • ·cos ts t S8 lh I I d II d l T I f IOS.i.tllt Ciochet t2'~icl ···Easy Tr11Kttd l;ohk•n Wl'"' & E<lin i:•·• WESTCLIFF 1us - a son Ya o ar a a y o Qu~1 y o r lh1s e
102·Mllllllll Qlilts Boo~ ind Calaloe •00 50< "-to .... ·sa 3224 ~akr amt r~nll•nt•r "" &'POOL • s pecial o ff e r you· mu~I be a no n -co mmercial user o ffering 101-Qttilt 8IM Cdltctioll I each lor posta&e and handhni ....._ ,_. S750 m IWli ti-13 l h d I I t $800 • f ••••••••••••••••••••••• i · 1 · Lrl( enoui.:h ·<or a 1.1111111 e mere an •SP o r sa e up o p e r ad a nd the p ric e mu~t Most Becoming! Sunshine Special! • •s••• cooDo~:A1..1i.:Jhr.i1i.i Stl·~tolll'h.ihr i.:.u butnottoolargi·ro11111t· be in your ad The cost stays lhe same wh ether yo ur ad e • " lrop1rJI Jl:lllU $4!.1~ I rnl'd. kid jll'l~ llnl~ ~tMI EIC'j?lllll det'ltr •• ,,.,. l •
I ()(' R"'.NT,\l..S 7~~331 1 oc R. t:NTAl.S 7!'>11331~ Bd. i:ardt!nt'r &. p1•nl ,11· • needs eight days selhnq lime Or JUSI o ne • ind A\Jll "ai<h 1111,•1
/ Oii MY' j!rl'al lbr~lJrl ~on n•fni: $16511 mo \~I I • cr ~a11appl.NOW s1x5 HarbOur 3242 1.(1.,.&:111266 e Use o ne wo rd in eac h box About 4 wo rds m ak e one
oc R .. :NTAI~" 1~0 3314 w~~:.;j;,:r~~·H·.~~.:,1~·,:c;,~ Hl.l'n'S I • c lass1 f1ed llne o f tyoe Minimum ad lS 3 lines Please prinl •
IEOHEOF 2btlrm. :.rh:i frplt· "l'l J t11 . 21: b:i. on ~·l·1•n 1 • plainly e
THfLUCkY FEW I liar 11lil l:Jr 'hfl ;llJll bell nr pool Li.:l' '•'Oll'll
Rent rn C'osla M1·,J·, p a l1 0 S!l i5 mo patio Ne" l'll>l •Ill" • • NEWEST ~all'd 211 ci lllb'75 71i l Xlnll'Cllld $10541 l!ll 1;31~. r------------------------------,
ToYtrhomt' \'11.LMiE I HUMTIHGTOH "'"1213155616ifi 1 • I I •
COMMUN ITY. 2 & 3 Ill HillOUR Nwpl. Crest rnnil11 1h1I. • I • 2l 2 Ila. l6C•l-lll4Mlsq. fl uf TY 212b11. hi', din. farn rm &J I .. ..., .... purl' luxury. Gural((.'~. IEACH ,.O,ER wood n Pool jal' ll'lln• • I I •
rml hydro tubs in masl,·r OWNERS l~~e$1fl\I 631115641 • 1 • ~= ~~bu~~~~r.r:~'1'~~.:. ~~~~r~~nl k~11~~r~i·~~ ()lean View 3 br 1·1111rto I
• micro-~all' cHt·o ~. Hrah~. 1213 1592 21171. N~i>I Cri'!il. yrll """I • 1
1 I •
pnvale pallos & ~anb ask for Bill 4 I Mr r l:irk ·•l!I. • I I •
Gard<>ner pro11drd • 3244 li4S33illafl.6 I
Elei:ant lll'lo)? only 15 lll'YIM LARta: Ol1 Pl.~:x 2hr I • minutes from Fashion 1••••••••••••••••••••••• Iha l(ar. ln<ln . ;w· 111 • I rri. Island. 7 minutes to S l' T~llhollll'. nt'" 3 br. 3 ha. lx•h$750yrl) 962 ~!II~ 1 • I • Plaza or o c Airport patio. 1tur Park. pool.
Just east of Newport J8<". $975 mo 83.19057 BLUFFS 3 BR 2•, hJ 1 • •
Blvd & so. of San Dtl'l(O Turtlerork 3h<lrm, Zha. (pit. upj(radl'cl 11·11111 I •
f)"wy Starting :it S!kMI a I !block park pool. $1115 S900 mo or 1~1• 011• •• I
month 631 ·5439. 2473 tst&la.~t 644·5-444 7608384 • I • Oranite Al'e .. Cos ta Clover Or rn Wt•,td1rr
Mesa I TURnEROCk Condo. Ultimatt• 111 mi:., • / •
3Br. atrium. S925 mo master suite ~1th frpk. p bl h d f 8 d OC RENTALS l.:iuleEnt Rllri31·4445 sunderk + 1 Rr & den. • U IS my a Or ays Starttng •
I 5br"s S200 to S2000 -frplc. h\ mg rm & hul(r
7S0.3314 7 da)S RE:KTALS ~alto. pool. s pa hh11 • C lassificat ion • I br. l ba $650 Spar. 2 br. 21 , ba, bit ms. 2brtden 2 ha $975 1000 mo . 645 7298. • N • J3C, pool, quiet arc•a 3br,2ba $950 49.l·<M!Q.'l ame __ ....._ ____________________ _
Bkr,675·4912. 3br.2ba $1500 fo'urn • •
l.ol'elyMesaVerde3BR 4br.2•2ta • s12011 2BrAptnrWeskhff • Address •
fam rm. 2 ba. S800 mo I 3br2ba S975(;o~ta Mesa $650
Kids pets nei: Johe. 4br.2ba Slk>Ollunt Bl'h Eastblu!fF'am1t~ llom1· • Cit y Ztp Phone •
yi ~-2313 Le Rmsor Rily 833-8611() SISOO • •
House. horse ok. 2 Fir RanrhoSanJoaqum2Hr Bayfrontk~~mw diwk CheckorM.O enc tosedO
$65()/mo. 20002 Bin•h St den. 2 bu. Vll'W or l(olf Walerlront Homes lnr • Ch d t • Sa n la An a ll 11 t s course & nij(hl lit es. 631-1400 • a rge my a o : I • _ _ -~l-~31. Avail Apr I 5875 mo
675-Til6 -OOTSIDE Clean 1 Br Dll DnA BAY CLUB e 0 r-;;;:;-# Exp I e cott I I The l..altes Lo\'ely 2 Br. DILDU age. coup e or snit · Townhouse. many ex· I Br Excellent view • I •
Sollnei1isi01Jetonunc10,ov Buel dmnt11111 ptket bale ~IS t_se~·-851.:~0 trasinl'ld pool.spa.ten SlOOO/mo. Take over 0 ILlilfjJ # I
l$1>K•atly the soltness ol su~ sllou!Mt dlm-dtlic!Otls cem. Eltec.48r.c1AStom bome. ms. No peli1. $625/mo. lease. 644-9513 or • l'!l!!ll Exp. I •
loptd tact or eyelet sltMS , b1nal~ one sun$111ne day 3 frplc. private slreel. ?.!4J1ln~2. ~5000_t>~l0 1 10 •
f*eeillurl ndllne cenlle hntS •fttt •llOlher Jiit sew1n1 s e.lla Rent or lease option. Woodbridge Lake view. I br Versaill es rondo. • L _ - --_. - ----- - --- ----- - -- - --- -- -I Stwtblstorsu~nrdm £~~;t::1~1~a,:r,r,: mW~:~::i~tro,~2,: 3 er. 2•1 ea ram rm. h1gh1y upgraded. jlreut e r-----···· WE'LL PAY TRE POSTAGE-----------··· e P11nlt(j Pattein 9041 Hall p fl"pk.wetbar&a1r.ro\' amenl1es. S600 trurn I
$11tS 1011 1711 1411 1611 Scm 8 IO 12 14 16· 11 Silt ...&_. __ tred patio. french doors av111 l l!;l!-0749, 752 1925 • : : • 1a•1 2'011 Sc1t 1'11 (bust 371 12 (bust l•I dress IK~ l"i I It 2 Br. Trailers. Sl8S & to large sun deck. 11050. • 1
1
111 NO POS TAG£ 1 • 1aM5 z•nds CS• 1 lcont11st ~illds 60~nc'h bordel l•b11c up + U SO s e C. NII No_P!'~S. 752·~ Under markt!l t•ondo NE Cl SSA RY I
s.1 SU.5 ler •• ,....... s-4 SUS * udl ........ children °'lo1•· 133 F. LEASE/OPTION On f~~~.rl?frm. 2 t • : If MAllEO : • ::: .: ~: ::: .;.;.-.....-:: = I ~ IQhSt.!§42· 19 for t yr. Woodbridge rot· ba ~.Pool. spa. tennb • t· " IN TH[ 0 • .... mini llAllAll-,... clous 4 Br. 2 Ra. Ea. 1 tage. Good .erms. Great p!S.644-0549ev 957 3046 1 UNITE O ST ATES .M f'rl>I. II! 11ar. j!rtal ~~ --• • l> • >
,,...,,....,. .... 2 ,."•ml>epe.~ lex' Le~ seootmo · -Westcliff area rondo. 1ae BUSINESS REPLY 'tABEL ee ; •
' D.-Y,... Dally,.,. · 63i·I054. L.Alfll-IHdl 3241 2 br. den. 2 b11. newly • ' • •
lJZWllll•St,a..Ttll,IY U2w.stl•St., ... YM,lf ht nd di d f j•HHuot•uu .... uu dee .. frplc, p11t111, pool W J'I A\T CLA~~PE llMIT NO !J CO\U MH A (.t.l l~Olllll•• ~ "'
1•&1. 1'11111 IMlf. MlllftSS. IOlll. l'rillt Ulll, MIOll$$, f\11M•n• .111 ~t. z":iste~ ~~ .11~ 2~~ 1'v1can~ s rm 11111 f1t~lly f150. 646-4067 . • g ; e ' "'·sm•mu.-a. ~;.5':.ii~~,'::-~ 111~11 ·".,... ba l'plc bat krnrd yd 21dwelhn1t.SlllS/mo ind bdrm 4 b11tlul :i c·11r ~ DOStAG£.,..,ll.L lllP•()A••~'l.-..1 0 e .~
Wl!olf ~11 ' ..t4•' 11'"' tilt + cu 111r (..o(a\td at 1932 gardener. 442 Monterey 11ar111e'. Unoblltrurtabll· • <-Orange Coast Dally Piiot ~' "' OUI NlW SP•INC "')Wt'' in ou1 NtW SPRING Mey!r Stt lo apprer Dr 494-01~ v1st1 view S30tKI mn • •
SUMltttR PAlllRN UIM.06 :•~ :u~ ;:,:,~ CalU314.322for 11ppt. lt~rRt I bdrm dplx. tX'tan ~.(AM()Of'..1 *·11126 .. I .1·1y P1•1 1 1~ ' :t't1;'p,:. 1~~ ti feet l'~n COUOOll Owtt arant 3 br twnhle, dbl : •itw. t~ utll" incl Ntwport Hts Cult Wr. • ~ •
100 slflt\ ~ SI ~O 100 sttlfS i::f. SI SO pr. Nr SC Plu1. Im· : fn!Oln:->· ·S69S. 2b1 rott111e. l.11 rard • ij •
1u•nau .. u.•• ~Clln .. sz•• mac. ""'' OK. M2S. I °' .. View ::11 lmmed. 1751 /mo. • I Box 1E..&ft •; 11~0.W II~~ 541-1J74 : z et. l'tba. 2 nr aar _ms j '1941 !ll.~111111 11$ 1 111&rlll"' I I I
1 • mo. 28r. tBa. no · Im/rm Avail Mar 20. tlnlcaUtr~llthl'. • 330 W, 81y St • iiA':::,r.-., !~lc~!s~ :Zu.ld Victoria. u. ~~~1 btfort$pm -~Rf{(/J'U; <~~S:.4 e Co1t1 Mtlt, CA 92821 ••
.... ., C-. :.: _. "' ... ...._... a.:2 81 . .;1 • .reers. O..SO Oft aotf rourae 3 18r4 Br.3 Ba. homt m·ar • • lilt 19 ,...., 11ffnwelt'O•.m Br. w/d. pool. ado Baek •·~· I uory . •
..._ ... ma. a . .,,. __ .FSLmoJ4..;Jtll ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
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. • .·' • T ' &...-. I . Ct I c.,l'fllli9let, • ..._. .__·I ll11,1111M..._.. ..._. • ~ .. 1 .......... . ........ ••••••••••••••• ......... •••-••••••u ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••H•nn•••••••••••• H•••••en••••••••••••• u•••••••••••••••••••• ... " .... • .. •••••••••• ueuuuuu••••••••" MJoor:r RATES U 'd 'IJm~«'R!f V:.':m~el~f~= %frJ;·~~1mft~~ M•11t•....,. HAJ!=~~~S tn=\.~l:r~tc• ./o1iNf:rt0N~~J>1~.~t/ ~Lf~Mi 00 rl.owcn61,!ft\J~10;~1 AddlOou lltrnodtUn• 'mark mo1mt unit lar1t or 1rnall Jobs. t'IW flt l<fli d ·MlSS and •••td. UHlll "~ll m,. .Acout ~ct u111. ...... Call Ben at ~-· -
Doon, YilftdowtJ1tlo W°'1...J."lr ' MH718 • MG SU~ tRDENl~Ci --- -..12lYll.l.lkl\lfJ&J4~JM ~ert F\'tuat e111 • · • "' ..... L••u•lat '"""' ..... J ..... •••••••••••••••••• Ui;. ,31;_. · al'io Shampoo' 1leam clean. LIC 0 ELECTRICIAN & NDSCAPING H•••utuin•••••••u• ................ •••••••• """Jt&• 1t-enl n01 ex· ....... ,,..,. TTLI INSTALLED · ~ · Color bri&htenett1 wht QIAll work· Re11. rates J~t. 0~. 5'5·1Q12 DUMP JOBS VANDl!NBERG ~ lnt/f1'\. ~ln· IOI " ................. ,... A1J Klnd1G u1r11teed
FtNEHOME ~ • 10 min. bie1ch. Fr.teett. 131 ~U'om MOWING CLEAN·UPS '8ma11Movln Jobt LAHDSCAPING·LndJ<'P ~111~"2fil_ll Neatpetr1wl6ltlltu.rtt 840-7
IMPltOVEll ENTS Hill, Uv/dtn r~ Sl.5 , ror QUALITY Haullnt · Landstapln II MIKE ·1391 malnl, comm/reald, tret ~•Soe PaLnUn1 ,,_... HJ.HU
,MciltloN . Rtmod1Un' IYI l'OOJft suo, coutb £1.ECTl(ICAL WORK ~" ~ . .842· ... G •. DUMP lrimmlna. clHD•UJ>. )() )'rt np, ln Beach '"' s..lce . 110, <'hr~-Guar. eUm. Rn&. ra 5~1· S '-'· . J'"'o~L.INk,• R d lna'd/bonded/Jfr'd. lttl. Free t..641-1029 PWT!RPATCHJNO "••••••tt••••••n••••• A.tlihrm Pllodor.C11>tt!P•lr. rullmamt 'clun·ups uo,U .or ID y, 979-514& -R9tucNt. llll/t~t . IO ·~TrftPrunjna• ·vour D"I o 15 >'ll tx9. Do work R!SID/COMM'L/IND Spec. In comm at s~~..P· -1 PITll1 PAIMTIM6 n . eat. Paul S45-2tI1 Coaunercl1I Ludlral)f
ce !rectory • 4l _l'ftl:AG, f mp!!. atr•. 531.;t>lOl_ 20yra. Do my own work. ~l'.!:..Toni...&«-1~ Dtmolltlon Grading Mllwy ·1G"yiitxptr, fofor ext. MR. ED'S P~TERINd s.rvt HJ.:8318
--tetlv• ' -CfW, -.......,._ ~27804 I . 126 Tr•"•""tt " phalt " "•••••tt•••••••••••••• $SZ-CMSI ~II J l E t ''""""" ~ Uc .,.,n.Aitu ,,,__,, -, -Mowln1 SlO·IU·S2U. ... .. ..,.. · nl •~on· BRICKWORK· Sm•ll n or 11; • ~a.ctTrttS.rvlcf
••"liltliiHi?ii!i'liifiiltliilii!illli-1 . ~ ............... •••••••• RESID/COMM L Haul/du~pi!l.&_SIS..$20. 'Socr1~e & trr rrmornal. Jobs Newport Coato Ptlolln1. wallcoverlna, t)'eeeu; •Gell'lr)n·up&Jrrl~-· MKHALI COMSTI Elater. var .day camp. ~·Clean. dependable. 7M.-llltW~ @II:! Mark. , pre.J> . p .ant •· M • 1 1 · R f wood refinish Inf by Pllz+h Lawnanov. $38·C!Jj Cuilom llomea fram· Hlkina. Olhln& boatln&. rklr reuon1ble. --· <lPerattd eqwp. Comm I tu, rv °' e 1 · (i(!rtn1n·trained ratber •·-•I -~nalk; Ina. remodel. '••rench A.Dril ~·Ith. Alff Jolt ~ta __ S3l·2345 Hmillt)tm• ~"'Rnld'Ltq.11138 1-'1~3175. & IOll. 40 yrs ex . Rer1 ........................ 1 ....
....................... doOn. sllyU1hta &.patio WlrlD,bomey.NewPOrt II llil ........... .. ..................... HAULING/~ l.AMUP MW.. Ur. .831· a °"W'~~~~~'f1J10 ...................... . p~'t!~-.~~n;,s~n;~· -:g;~~:iRONER, Meu aru. 540.SOll, ~~~;t;;,~&.0r~~!:1~~-~!~~~~~~~=r~~ ·con.T:~~~rMJa 'iiiNi~~iNDSCI~~·;;;· r=t:~'M,. Frt!t!l;t.Mftil913_ M~=:~·:t:~~:-
GEN'LCONTRACTOR ClULD CARE lnc. AntlQut1. rattan, • Ut Rat..840.5144_ • Alao RV I, bo1ta, trlra, W eLefOer UXOYEI f'l+rfrM•111•.. y...L.. WJU!i . . HavecalcuJater. will Lie. 1399463 845 ~ My C.M. home . Xlnl ref. new furniture. Chair HOME IMPROVEMENT H•tdir•ilt rmblle boine•. alrtran, l.Y11 7S1·9103 ....................... ,,...., s.ntc. travel! All ac~& serv. Wanl·4. MS..a46 c an I n Jl , rus h in B. REPAIR-PLUMBING ••u•uueuuo••o• .. el . F\'eeest. 645·861& PIOPllTY .... ~ ..... , ........... . llfoupet.''160-7122. 1._ .. S..Cleht 4 SPECIAL-any chair Heating carpentry WantaREALLY CLEAN ti40 ,....... .uNA•EMINT Typ1n1·resumea, term
FIRST RATE BKKPG Cullom c(rpentrl• Canhadort. wtMt'Cll any color. hand stripped elec, tlle.' Free est. No HOUSE? Call Gin11bam ....................... •••euueoeuuo••••• 0rin&e CO area-:-·15 yr1 papedra, dluierutRiona,
Services for indiv. & deci. & patios. J.S. ••••••••••••••••••••••• or reglued, $19.75. A ~toos_mall.615·2!1.L Girl.Frje~l.,_845·5123_ -AICMOYIMG-Farthinjlnt.eriorDealfrt experience~Call ior lnfo, ~ P'Of_e•ina0,,,!s•
I ine s.966· 3 ~orkt. Liq,c .. Tnoop. quOIOallllY. ~IDan,Ns~/LRl~~d~DGE.!-0'~1Ge TouchotClaSss lnterclors. ,, .... ~I e d I re ROBIN'SCLEANING J\icf..,carerut. SS2·0410 HANGIN~ S~O/ROL andr••-ra ea. . .7135
ft 31 "' 7ll W 17th l A2 .. M ....... rn ry, r mo e ·. · Servi~ alhoroughly Quallly. Uc/ms Strip· -.c:-· ........ Freeest.~SSU PUmer&Sons,MH932. 642-nt2 p~1r, pal1os. patnlu~g. cleanhous., M0-08.57 •A-I MOYIMG• p1ng. Disc. on paper. tH-1112 'TYDifti W(atlna. Edittna
••AUSfA'f9E•P•A•ViN••G••• AQD'N~tREM9DEL COMM 'Lt,RESID.. fl!. ....... wmrlows. drs. quality -. "'---Top Quality. Sperial Vt§a·MCS~oU6'S·932S .-Af Ml!!..MT M'v «ihce or yours. Sml
Design 1nrl W11ferl & Rermd. Add ns Repairs ••= 9 work. ~~1 -----Exp d Housecl~aner cart" 1n handling. 25 yrs ' R '"'"" • w ok. 842-2 42. Sealroating · StriptnJ Sen S48 · . I . 390 ••••••••••••••••••••••• J :l"'ILOFALLTRADES Mature & Rell able exp Competitive rates UC. PAPER HAN GE By OCJ (Oranae Co. Repairs.Comm./Res1d. · ·l83'1art 4 m. Veryreu.Lc. 250· K&DLandsc11peM111nt ""&nd ; ht 542·QS/&GJ·0416 Noovertime 730.1353 · lbnded & guar. No Job lnv.Prop.)Ed5~·1!840 °WllldDwCIHMIM)
Lk Ulnl62 00·8181 C:.,."'91 c:e'!i~~lr~nne~/.9i42 Resid /Comm.Cle11n -up •Ja =~5.°'f._· l6:1fil!lL -· toosmaUortoolar,e. • .................... ~·· Driveways Parking Lot ....................... --UHauling. ~48-~89-!S. ~ ~ HOUSECLEANING STARVING COLLEGE fteee!!l. Tony 89 ·2128 a.tW1talll9 "l.«lheSuni blne.fo
Repairs Se11lcoat1ng. RF.PAIRSIREMOD All ronslruction, large at Landsrapin&·Yd Clnups llome Malnlenunce Exp'd refs & reliable STIJDENTS MOVING Exptirt wallcovering In· ••••••··~··••••.••••••• Call Sunshine Window S & S Asphalt Int text & boat docks small. Ollie to Sr. adulls. Tree trim· ExJ)t!rt ma int , Yard work & tree trim Ca ll aii,nime 955-24 LB CO Lie. ltTl24·436. stallatioo. Reas pnces. J.1p tonillerin11hln1 Cleanin&. Ltd.· 541·8853 Lie 631-41!}9 2.S yrs. . . Char 645·3749 Wayne 539" 7ll2 Jim 851-0129_ ~yrs._ Gelle 552·04~ -~--Insured. 641-3427 Consultant Assicnment Antaq~., kit. rablnets. 20'k Monthly Dl!count DRArrlNGSERVICE Housecleanmg morning WATCHUSGROW ' 18560 • rtnepemtan&.645-0664 ........... FINEF1tJISHWORK 20 yrs uper.comm re· Res1d 1romm ind us. LOYITOWOIK hrs Mesa Verde area. STARVING ACTORS · --•RESIDENTIAL• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Retrodellng/Doors hung . d Mainl, clean.ups . lree Carpenlry. p:&inting, C M" Ha ve rers. S40.9915 MOVING COMPANY WALLPAPERING loofllc) Avg 1 sfy $30. avg 2 sty .... b "tt · c .. Rand 720-1260CdM std.673-6047 i_xs~vs tnm. Free "st 641-1096 lreu & grdos, gen . . Exp'd, bonded. Lie ••••••••••••••••••••••• .Chrii9S7-8388 ~~.1~\r:"& o~ur_ A;i1. BOB'S CARPENTRY REMODELiADD·ONS Pet~ " maint. It haulln~. Free HOUS~CLEANlNG Fast & Careful Lowes! C-6/388843. Di!counts on REPAJRS FOR LESS WINDOW CLEANING
tl ........... ".•••21 6·575 All tyr.s N~ob too and Carpent~ Lic'd. est llonest&dependable ~tes ~w Allows. M3/C wallcoverings. Free est Shlngles. rial 30 yrs 7yrs 1·narea· Ex"ellent
..... "'"'-c•G Clean-ups,TreeTnm Pr f . I ~2690_ Vl5a.Ltl·/lns.67_!.~ Rodl-739 exp fteeest.7702125 .. CHILD CARE lgeism . Refs. -6297 25,>:rs. lrw n .....,.2719 Mainl. Resid./Comm"I. 0 8$$10R3 fl""""--· . 64Z-5449,00·79J_2
M C CUSTO 0-SflC --A · .... 3•14 lneOMt Tax _....., w LLPAPL'U H .... Roofi Ill y \;.M. home w /yard. ~f CAR PENT RY nue_....., ... ~--. ••••••••••••••••••••••• A "'" uuo:r ing-11 ype• Orange Coast Windows
I/hour. 642-0162 BY * •JAY •• •·oRvwA!.L.TA.PiNc•• Jessie's c41rdening TOW:h Service Co. p;~~~i·& .. e~;i~·e·~·;~~ flne pal~tin8 by Rirhard Contractor & Paintini New-recover·decks. "We leave you with a
.... ~ -642-8809aft.5pm Alltexlures&acoustic Clean·ups ,treetrim 12131 592·3537 or (7141 t>O mc Tax Return Sinor. Llc, ms. 13 yrs or OC.23J:rs.)Jc.32824 Lic141lll02.548·9734 brighteroutlook!" ...... '!.~!............ RE.510/COM M'L Free est. Kevin 615Jl088 & maint. serv S40.803~ 841).861.8 Preparation Avail for ~PPt local custoJrrs. Gm ompr 494-4366 ROOF LEAK•H??" f)-eeeStimates 830-fil!!
For all you need to know All-Around Carpentry Drywa1 CARDEN ING WANTED Evenings & Weekend Of an you. H 4tU ,.,... ..... Courtright & Son WrifflMJ
about bank~try. call John 775-8082 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mowin&. edging, raking, Carpentry Masonry fire or Home Appo~nt C•to. PailitWG ••••••••••••••••••••••• f)-ee Est. 586·52112 ~•••••••••••••••••••••• 714/llJS.9162 I NoSteamtNoShampoo DRYWALLtACOUSTIC sweeping , free Roor111g Plumbi11g rrents James L. Zam· 25 yrs exp. Lie. 4"3941 •BRYANT'S• OrangeCout Roofing WRJTIN~ RESEARCH. Stain Sper1altst. Fast 14 yrs exp FUiiy lic'd & estimates 645-5737 or Drywall Sturro ·Tile mennan SPA. 645·4ll.L Bonded. Ins. Refs. Color Walloovering Removal Re-foof.1111/Repairs EDITINu Any subjet>t Want Ad Resulls 642·5678 _ii . Freeest~839~ Insured. · 5!2-5549 64.S-Ul2 !k!!!!Q~ J.B._6_4_6.:.sm ::g_~A~562!_ ex rt. 963-0911 Dick All s. 642·1343 Reaa.rates 541·1733 format , style. 646·4965_
Real Estate-th~ complete Orange Coast Market Place
ATIAVB.JOI Nalicitial Chemfcal Co.
has openinJs for 10 men Ir women who are 18 or over. sinale. neal In ap-
pearance at free to
travel. FoUow lhe sun to
Phoenix. Dallas. Miami at other major U.S. cities with unique busineu
group. Must be able to
start immediately .
Transportation & tratn· Ing provided. For in· tervlew please call Ms.
Caires, LOAM to 5PM
Thun. Fri. only . 55 7-3000
An&nlOM:
IEAUTICIAM S&S. \:rm. Hayr Barn. ~8480. 19th, C .. M.
IOOllCHrfl CUstomrr serv1te want-
ed by small but growing medita 1-e lec:t roni cs
firm in El Toro. 951-3602
CASHIEI& HOUSEW ARE SALES ~ply m person: Crown
Hardware. 1614 San Miguel, Newport_ Beach.
CHJLDCARE & HSKPG In exch. for room & board. Student or ptt·
time empt, OK. Nwpt.
644 ·481 7 <pis Ive
ll"l?s.sagel
Clerical PRJCl.NG CLERK. full tlme, must be accurate
w/figures, xlnt company
benefits. Ca ll Balboa Marine Hardy,•are
M9-967l. E.O.E. M 1F tH
I M i"Pf t~ T E
OPENING for entry level me clerk.
Four 11l>nth assignment
in Newport Beach. Work
8:1>to4:30 C.11752·9109
rorappt.
Ambitlous boys ~nd
girts 10-13 years oio. to
wort one or two even-ings a week getting
newspaper subacrlp-·
lions. Transportation --------• and constant adult
supervision provided.
Call Uo5:30PM. ask for
Andfta, 842-4321. ext.
HS
COOK /lilt' bs.kp Aide & natural roods t'xp
helpful. rem prt'r. Can
live in. Rer req. No
smoke. CM 642·348J _
COOK/lite hskp. Aide It natural' foods exp
helpful. Fem pref .. ran
live In. Ref req No lll»ke. CM 14.2-3481._ -
COOl'S ASSIST. Fllimt. ~xp·d pref.
ScMlltaandwiches. APP· ly 1Q peraon. l ·$em. M·f': Oowu S t .
Rest1u.ranl. 1000 Bristol
St. N1rth. Ntwport
_adl. --.
COOK 8renf11t experience. ~Y Patio care. 1900
W .• ~!boa Blvd, N.B.
Dtlivt11 min ovtr 18 fqr L.A. Tlmt1 to bomu
C.M . hm -eam . &-oaomy ~ar ~llirf'd.
No colle c t l na .
... ldO/mo + bonus -~-
o.11 Ala'\. O.U.O np. ·~RD.\ ...... ,, ••. ;aut I~
1i!!!fft.~ .......... ,.,.~ ,., "·
Diak clJrk It po-;t;';
needed tor and motel on PCH. f'Jll/part lime.
Apply In peraon to ant
mar. 34812 So. Coaet .J!n. CaPO Bch.
DIC, SICllT ARY Sedlii1 lntellf ient ex.
per. peraon w/uceJ,
skills for real estate dt· velopment team. O.C
AlnlOrt area. Call btwn
8:30 am aod Lt: 30 am tor a . 714 5S641M
MNa.il Offtcl Pari:nm;, approx .
211\r., 5-Day Week, Sat & ~. lnd. Hu. nex, typ·
tn1. fllln1. telephone. S3.»4. bOOn dependlnJ
<ii exp. Call: Mon·Frf. for appt. 646-7441
U.OYD'S NURSERY
HAii STYLIST Experienced ·cutter for
first class Newrort me n 's ha i r s a o n .
846-2716
.s
~ ..... ~~~ ~~ ....... ~.~~ ......................................... ~ ~r~a::,~··········
--MY ._. '11111 let. Alpul. NIW ,...._ dlMtet Ht.• ~ t~ tuO. ~·==~':A:: ~~=:~ ncr•·ctryr =':i~:!.'°l.;~ lnJ:lld ., .. ru1. l._ _____ ,
t7 to ttara HW •• -~ -ntW • NII 1100. ~ ..... ,_ ........ bo Wwlltitt ~ Gr111d .
..
ltH•&ntu llfri~, IN maker, 41'7·~ "'---W/ 1 ... ,. GoodtOlld.
•t'.SWll•.Y\illi m--:.= SISO. f' eora ;j'm1tchl11& ~tretnroTTY "IOVlha111~rPtr.ttblt
-.dttat, daftt1I • .__ dra~, rrs. z ch1lre. ... lff J a.r Hn llm • \Nit ot~r l11ura1u It· IWrif!ll'at.or clua1 late '50 ea. Rad colfH tablt. N1u1. ncllntJ.L ~f 25, ............ ••••••••••• tAr1'. All/FM 1 track. 'l'ml &HllcaUoa from mcdil autodtfroe1 $15S. $100. Duneaa P"yft dln. Eaa dtr $'15. w"" cbr Ma QI aoou. Nordlca CB R11J10 ~'.::' ~--t d:out Co11ununlty table.m1bQ&.srN.hod ,.175' 7 9~ lated once Pt -. -
Colle&.ti...1170 Adami au tU ft GE froat free tali'•. A6 ta. D1nltb l«al Yadlt~ub am· · · llltt tt4t ~Toyota.1 & 1pd\ lon .. 1 Ave, C • W ·*' 6 -A.a " 0.. wain. cltak w/chalr, .._ .. , i .. 000 ._. nu I rea, c1utcn, MAbmit 'bisPM April ..... ~,J,ra. ••new~ -••P °'1 ... , ' s,1 ...... lff4 ....................... br 195G.m.1eu Mll()J~Pll. . s Iron' brus bed w/new ....................... ,.~r&3C~1 'M Ford \-Ii ton P.U. ,., .. ~Pi: Wiibert, dryer, refrla. box •J>rina • matt .. iclnt C.._ ,_ · DiK'ount aportlfta &ooda. 7 · · w/Gtm top ahtll. xlnt WAMTID UT'AI.. SALIS •ta't t •11 1Ve. Guar. Alto trade. oond f!OOBO "5-5914,. C11at1tn1~plrever med. Top namu.; many ~Jl~.$4S.$113 atalOl .. Uito Flu ·rrn1erre • nJ'IBr~-.:~ ""1.work!D ornot ~ , 1 • t W/t.Ulij)Ulhu.WuSHO, 1~clal1. o.\;. Swap· •POOH JDOped. Ex· ----~,...c y awim"ar bOutlque ln CIOGltDl&I c:.uce, -qf'I, uao•&ner I nvtn ory Mll$120 C12,S/ • ct11e1X cond. #JS call '77 O.e-
•hlldon 1bow1, as to Newport location. "'::':A.kfo.rM Wuher/DrUer Dis· 'eountSlJ,'dder chair•. Marlin 375 Win 1150 PJU1cla71 ~-• Auto. air, slereo S3J9S •cb'. a~l~s!'';:;.,0r•naponene•dltbdle. liter or MraSc:t hwuher. 125 ' each. ~:~in oak 'sz~iun~z PA. N AM two for one l"irm. fflrR 12 'iauee Mo-peel tor .. 11. '71'.Puch ~---
•Hllr lhowe, IZS lo UO Comauuloo OJ>portunl· ~.... Refrl era or. $250. ~Wfet, oak. 2· dwr, coupon, 18 countries. ~.made In Spain l3$0 N rter. Good cond '76 FlOO &ix cyl stk, runs $rin •fl -·-i l . Xlnt cond. Call COi· wo. jJrrn. 493-3307 • 70 areal. Orig, 11975 OBO :~c~~rioni sas + &)'. ~eueinma ,.,u"l DICUTIVI SidebySlct.Refrigerator ect. 1213)27M939 or 544·0500afUPM ty a.lo. MOP£D v u a. red ~·29'l2.J.7kQ.m •
dot.lMe ~.f:Y.~~M;b, · 1.ar .. ~~~l1ency with Ice Maker. 1150. l7142760-3667N.B. 2f>:. l~rld;!3•,~r~a,f? Hif: St.No Iott Grande, P.h1. t~. Must Lona·BedTrurk
-Oallery art photos up to haeCIPfGlna co IUll d ~2741 Sears complete Canopx • 1()()(1 • • ••••••••••••••••••••··~ be 1ttn to appreciate. umpershell S3$U 1100. '!!~~·~ Pll'IQDtou.Ji:~!rto~y set w/mattma xln t ea. ·2Mt BEAUTIFUL 25" RCA Dual exhaust. carrier 9M-Z786.Jfa1a NoQPfJ'net. All types. W e P n ed. of reapooalblliU". Must $400. Antique Barber Port .ewlna mach sso. 30 color 1V aale. z yr wrn· box, mt!\)' extras. Cost '7
6
C:ltt Ln PU THI.IOI SOUICI Openlnie ror water bt orianised and have chair S75. Gold beveled 11111 aquarium, almost ~. t4'· Freedellvery. over 11100, .ell lu600. "'I ?75-8l
91 . ~itAll.?PM. r:: b/~'p~~r011l;: aOOd oral and written chandeller, new S250 new 150. Girls student John's644·1786 8a).IT72aft 7PM OLJL · -
............ 1rDel•-Tuea.-Frl. 8H·TUl communication akllla. New Casablanca lamp desk .8SJ.t'7'3 Tear 4 channel Simul-'80 103 Peuaeot Moped. v-9570
L:A Tnn11 to bomei'on L!oyd'1Nunery ExceUeaUrinaebeneflts SJOO. 16782 Robert Ln Baby Furn. playpen. sync tape recorder. 1400 m 1, excel rond ..................... ..
Balboa Island. 3:30 am Sail boat Instructor lncludln& paid dental. H.B. lHpm stroller, 1wrn1. etc. S.OO/t!tol'r.675-7870 bstotr.559 7328 '72 Dodce Tradesman
to 8 am. U50 /mo . needed ln N l Beach For apJtOintment call King.size bed $75 Twin Nothing over S75. Ship IHh&....,... van. reblt eng. nel4
54Mt41 or6"-1413 25-27• crulsln WJ>1 sail boat: Unda: 54M90t. beds S60 set. Queen sora ITOdel kits Art. 5befor1 t tot:!!C':'I ~Int cond ~-5!!!i Nu In bed SIOO. Dlnine table 646-4113 _ &p1..-..t S 9150 .77 Ford E250 windo14 n ' Weekends now, run Ume SECIEJHY rnd ~ass w /4 chairs ............................................. . ..... ~ 7 ~ I I di NI WANTED van, low mjles. man}" ~ , ·l,t summer n1c u n1 Self.motivated or· SlSO. mpsSlOea.Cof PLAYPE:N'SE'f8'139441 Gt.r.t 9010 i 4YamahaRD250 Runs xtras $3800 ~pe _1 meds. n s. week.ends.Ca IMS-7100 teetableS60. End tables __ · ••••••••••••••••••••••• wellSSOO.
6751211 ~ convat h05pl nr C.M Sales ~a:ed lndMdual, &ood SJO ea. Color TV ~m Waterbed, new malt & 13 ft Lapstrake fishing 631-2126_ _
Fair ds. 549·3061. Ramiltoo Cove/330 lux-Jt" ~ll~. Knowledge Refri&. 14ru rt. S60. Girls liner SLZO. 2 Twin beds, boat. 10 rt oars. Xlnt ,78 Hooda Hawk 4oocc A.fol W.t.d 9 590
Nunine urious condominiums eeac\'ar:.. 11· Newport ~~~i663 spd blk~ S6S com I both. 673-4417 oood. $25(). 631-6352 Runs great, $650/080 ...................... . LVU cundea. ta"l-i'ncona 11
1trluacntdlo. nJoonn ~ -El ---h • Stroller. genuine English 15"2 ft 7S2-1400X2848/~·8~ WINHI> YOUR Jn eganre. 7 pc w ate "' Pram. com pl. $45. FIBER Bc1AT GOOD USED Cill Conv. Hosp. Newport Dou1las Co . Sales SERVICE STATION AT· y~l)ow bdrm set Cost Airline dog s hipping "94-3202 71 Slmi*I RM t 2~ AnYt.hlng consicfered: , Beach. Pos. attitude & Agents are interviewing TENDANT. mature, ~OQ0~._631·6755 crate$U SSl-0618 · UiideriOllrs.~75 ,~977 thrul980
smiles needed. Xlnt tor ex P er I en c e d 6AM·lOAM shllt. part-New Singer Touch·tronac cnt wtr bd, 6 drwrs on loafs, M•t•MRU/ 714-67. J.6849 __ .-
btneflts. Call : 642-8044 salespeople to be part ol time attendant eves & 2001 Memory machine °?lm hlr $50 Tr sh S.,...ic:e · f020 Yamaha Virago 750 with
Nursing ~ ~~~fe!ear~nt~~r ~=~~16t~d.,'7n~n ~966-131~ rm,i1r. 1215. 1s2-s968. ...M:ri~~*f;j;~·ri~i;~ ... extras,
1
lik~ p,oow. only le tlJRSES AIDE Fred M c M i 11 an . Site Director to work Waterbed~ king.size. w AD & D modules & books Design/install/rep111r 4SOOm1 ~.4629 . . , .
21J.820.2S48. w/rhlldren 1-6 gradu in shelves & heater. SIOO for sale. Call J ames. al. work 549-2520
Exper all shifts. Conv. Costa Mesa afterschool Aft. 6, 631-7786 497 1321 aft t m. ._-.. u.-.c.... l'Ully chopped Triumph 1 '" hi Or-.. C-.ty H 0 P N Sit 8 h -....._ 650. Needl! work. S300 or · 2925 1~ bo. Bl d • 5
· w r · program. Eng./Spanish Green velvet sofa, SSOO 4hp loog shaft outboard. s-.1-..t .ar r 1· · ~DWARE S~LES Cheerful. de teated to ~hf.S sn.akino re~·d. Ca ll Fiowered cotton sofa. 23 nun 51·de/side rern·g ....-,....-9030 make offer SS2 397o COSTA MESA F ,,...... ... XI t · .. ~ " ~""" 8o h J'k , ~ · ••••••••••••••••••••••• eves 'til 10. u time . rown ........ p .. care. n ms. JM DATE Amy.Orange oastYM· _,.,. l 1 e new. , dblbdrmset8Jl-1230 1982 E . d l
10
,, _ 0710 • .,11:.no llardwa-. 3t07 E. Coast program. Call 642-8044 OPENINGS CA"•" 9990 pnce 642-1737 ----vinru es a " RM125 im. runs good , _i J.. '.6;illl. Hwv. '" -.,.... -Wicker day bed $95. over cost. 7.5HP S749.99 wx.CdM. OfflCE/P.-... For P /T 1readfer·~d ·Stock8oy forwareh~use, HOUSESALE Rernxsas Shutters for u HP $599.95. 2HP ~li~n:O~S.6 1145 WE PAY Host-• Posiffo.s R.E. Ol'fitt hds p/l gal. ~presentat ve~ or •n· part Ume. Mon. Wednes So<a. bed. tables & mut•h 11136 x42" & 12l48"x48" $349.99. & more. 673-1434 .""-'-'. · a~;rr.bie:Calr 1().2 dally. 5 day wk. Side.sales posihon. App· Fri. 12:30·3:30. Good llllSC Call8S7·6761 windows SSO ·Hohner MotwHo.1 Sole/ TOP DOLLAR A.T.Leo's 759•18S4 MUSTberehable.resp .. ly •n person : Pe'?· printing Tustin MOVING-Must ;ell all 12bass accord1an SS<> loafs.Power 9040 a..t/S....._:. 9160
...i ...._e manner, well nysaver. 1660 Placenua -.1..-u · If I bs & b ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... ...,.. FOR USED CARS "" .,.,..., C M ,_ ......,, this wknd Almost new ,.,en s JO r u ag W II f 26' N r •••••••••••••••••• ••••• .........,./Aide &roomed. non-smoker. Ave .. · · decorator sectional sofa. S3S Girls bicycle $20 f\ r~a l tw .~;aH"p· Rent 2 2 · I u x AUNMAGHOH over~~ fOiE!olrlyfady. CalJ Jackie or Linda for Student Jobs formal glass din set. 5 p &12·4139 e1es t~nod:m l :1 r . R 0 F: rmt.omome. sips 6. self PONTIAC/SUIARU
Weekends. No smoking. Interview btwn 9-5 daily. SALES HIY! dinette. easy chr. lit Wedding dress Never radio. bail tank , xtra cont. S29S/wk + 10"1m1 US>Hart>or Bll·d
S48-J688. ~2311
PR persons needed. IOYS-4tl~ selec.t1on of photo wom·S1ie 10 Apphqued factory fighting chrs. 64C).85&5__ COSTA ~1ESA HObsekeepers. Ptr. Part Time Girl 18-26. Magic Island is looking How would y-ou Ii e to Mtphic pnnts & mort lace pearls $250 bimini. rovers. stereo 8 RENT 26 ft motor home 549~300 5...il·ll51 The Sea cliff Motel Photoasslstant & model. for a few intelligent. at· earn 15 much 11 .oo 1 _6600 Cd~ 962·515i9 lrk. trim tabs. Im mac Slps8, rully loaded ~'717. Cindy I travel plus xlnt pay tractive & sin cere v.'eek? Do you like drive· 20 Solas oe14• S98 ea 1 ADLER SE 1000 self cor· cond. SI 1.900 /080 645··8616 WE BUY
HOUSEKEEPER SS + hr · Wk e nd s· persons lo represent Ln movies. picnics, plua loveseats. S88 ea Mat· ret.'tmg t~wnler. $650. ll39-822lor8l9·7203 i 4 Roadllner 21 ft Class CLEAN CARS M .... be reliable •. have holidays . sum mer. them in their private ... be h rtl tresses $39 957 5708 1 731 4 .. 5 r
1 ~· "' 87~rora t club in Newport Beach. pa ... es. ac pa es. __ ~xce <~ · .... __ CANVASS & PLASTIC A. r lean=-~o a r . ANDTRUCKS own trans; 5 hrs pr .day/ . . Interviews required. l>ILIS many other things? Cooch. loveseat. t'hr. ot BOUTIQUE. The biggest BRl~E ~NCLOSURE generator ~673·3826 5 4Ys pr wk. Rers req'd PAIT /TIME Caltror an aepointment. Then you would probaby toman. coffee lbl. end tbl most beautiful Fonow for 28 Sklpjack Used 641HB62~ts. · Rttepuorun: mornings. 9-6 Mon.-Fr1 .. ask for probably enjoy working & lamp. contemporary yellow tulips. 8361 Deep· on<'e, 1SO SS7·~--Trmlen, Trov.t 9170
HOUSE KE E P E R : I for optometrist. Will Mr. Halberg, 675-0900. ~~FICATIONS: ~list oft 645 9977 art view,!f.\!.nl. Bejirh. _ &OOfl .. '73b ~dkipjacTk .. 20
1
', ~;:·y~jj;;;;;~;·~;=t1;;~
Mature lady for 2 yr old train. H.B. 963.3030 Sales Representatives 1. Over 12years or age. --·---Mltkal ying n ge. raa e~ 2Sft., sleeps 4. rully self.
girl and 5 bdrm home· Part.Un secretarial, 30 Mature with direct sales 2. Neat, honest and de· Desk & chair Sl75 N &-....'--...&... 1013 St<XX> extra. 559'4306 evs · rontalned,f real con di Refs req. '90/wk . pvt .,_ k rc h · 11 ndabl fr<l6t ref~· $150 "°~"" 834-4643 wkdys "'-room wjbath. 752.7498 1u~ w lo start. . r. experience to s e Pf e. . ....................... uun.642·515
-Typlng, filing, p onesi medical emergenr,Y 3.Workaflerschooland ___ t-67SS QuilterPA+aBossEcho 5manAchillesinflatable HSl. .. (UVg.IM sm &rowing co. Ca I systems approved by Saturdays. 2 pc lHt sofa. gold / with De I 3 • ch O'I' u 5 Ii n e . w/16. h.p. Suzuki. 2 hrs '8l Prowler trailer 19'. tor fain I y w Ib a by. 131-2320Tom Vo ele U.S. Government. CALL TODAY ! green lone. soo ralanger. SSOO/bst ofr. runrung lime $1400. Eves sli-6, self cont .. great
Hunt. Harbour area. 5 hos.Pitals. do'ctors . 53'7·5836orS31·S257 900PresldioDr CM 67~7870 968-5484. oood.960-2065
day wk. Re fs req. Articles in Readers 8AMt~IOPM Wkn~ Bundy l'larinet like new Dyer 16 yacht tender '7v4 Terlry 23S37~~50. ft AtC ~5811 PAITTIME Digest. Newsweek 2 Wicker lounoe ch rs wtSumner mouthpiece, bay boat. 4 cyL diesel. ery c ean. S.9pm. Expanding youth nme Magazine called it "' B w h d '642 1989 HvGM.ist counseling rirm has "mini life saver". High w cushions. $50u Qn sz ll.'led I yr S250 559·6386 new . .. Y r. trans. ·
TuesAn4Jfefm:879·2000 opening.a for 3-5 sharp income. For interview TICHMICIAN deep pale cinnu mo n 59pm 675-0915/673-7272 AlltoSenlct,Parh
outgoing mature people call 714 /673-32JS or For £iercise & Wei~ht brwn fur bed sprd SIOO. ALTO SAX Comp! over-loafs. Sail 9060 & Acc"sorits 9400
Kennelrrson neededfor to mouvate ambitious &sl-6466. Lou Health Cllnac s:!n>ll~JIS ... ~-6047 haule'd Mar 82 Extras ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• t:.r768-l~~rs, 7-3pm. l().13yrolds.Call2·5pm. ~Y~AL Growing co with op GOLDEN OAK dininit Top cond $425 obo 19 Downeaster 38'. full y
1142-4321, ext. 343. Ask for Ii portunily for substantia1 tbl. 5 legs. 2 lvs \\ 16 pre 673-6DI loaded w1Parrley Jib. _......_...
0
.., U.URl~N Aadru. lo ee to •PP · advance~Jll.64S·7717 ssed bk rhr-s . Sl 200 ~ "'-·-.1A...--& BimMarautopiJot Xlnt ~•1a"011 " · l•-------•I cant. Mary Hinkle A&en· .., •~·Sol 't 673-3573 ..... wee"'~ cond. Owner purchased MG Nofeetoapp cant cy.640-2920 .e .... .,...,."' 1c1 in1t S--1 " S f· Eqii,_.. IOl5 new boat. S66.000. 17141 OWHllS Mary Hickle Agency PllMTIMG • We need good peoplt to ea e) .... n ltl' so a ....................... 628-84J8 17141 496.6246 TONNEA UCOVER
64().292() Plate room per son. 5ecretazy S · Rt up i~poinlmenlS in He r c u 10 n P 1a 1 d Office furniture for sale 1714>499-4754 Fits MG's. ·71 '81 r Super Exec. ec Y the evemng. from my $2501bestotr_M97328 al diS<'ount prires ~------~g~iu".r..npsoar+l l~r.t p/tlme. Mon. 2:30pm to needed for President of N.B o(fire For Holida) • Custom -~de 1•1nn1~ 641 t1763 Orr.>ga 14. sails. trailer. Never used. S75 ""'""" , .... approx 8pm 1ues. men's toiletrie$ Co. in lnns' new travel club .. T 1 U '"t; f • h'I needs sorrr work S600. Maria631·779'7 lvemsg experience in merchan-l:~m to approx 8pm. lrvine. Must have xlnl Salary + comm + •1 ~·~·~ abes. ret ene mis NStar llorizon II . quad 8Jl·l.SC9. dising produce. Call No exper. nee. Apply skills. rront office ap· bon C 11 7510404 art S45 each M atrhin ~1 dtnsity 6•K int' I ----
S48-7786. Pennysaver, 166 0 pearance & 0 years us a 'Beagle Pup. Fem AKC benches $1S each 6'&7 l'C SD Pucal I\'. O. SO ~IN G Ra cing
MAID Expenence preferred 642·3030
MAINTENA NCE
PERSON qua liried person with s trong
me chanica l bac k·
ground. to service sail floats in local charter fleet. F/time pos. incld
wtnds. 645-7100
Placentia Ave., C.M minimum recent ex· lOAM_ -I 9hot.stmo\~11100. g52en!le. all Beautiful 540 1735 nel4 "fact carton... equipped. 3 sets sails.
Profeuional lnlenor ecutive exper. Typing TRAINEE 5 "!"_l75· t.. Solid Chern Wood S3000 Call Neil.I t.rf~~-4m _
Designer needed with 90+. shorthand 110+. for wi re operator. Cocker Spaniel. malc. 1 dresser w1tli mirror I 727 0202 or Craiie Catamaran 18rt SolCat
folloWin& 714/957-1057. figure aptitude req. sw it<'hboard, ret"ep -r.!'Old Good Wi<'h1ldren. $125 631 ·0213 _ like new. w1tra1ler. <'al· ALFA ROMEO PARTS
Generous salary + car taoolst Fast. accurate [15c?!fer. ~·<Miil Call 548 0910 Xerox 3100 LOC. assume box. many xtras. All parts lo ronvrrt 101 P~e~Ts.io~::i'J/,ftiis~i =i:~o: +P::J>:ri~~: lfping necessary . Early Germ. Shepherd Pups 2 yello" 8. soras. SIOO ea bal Xerox sales con· j _PJ·91~ .Q.i:.9~1·1_07S 1600 to Velol'e. e xr
rea I estate o rr ice. In hrs. N:tflt Ctr brokerage AKC. Excel d1spos1tion Compl Maple bdrm set. tra11 at $163 23 mo. 30 loafs. Slips/ pistons. SHOO Dennis.
Sal/Sun 8:30-5 :00. Lie. ~~~ (~ffi3s4o~~37 ~· firm. M_ 1_644·2442. tt50._e_v_1·683 1190 eves dresser. 3 lamps. $495 mos, or '4800 540-5SQ5 Docb 9070 ~48 aftt'r 6µm or
preferred. 631--0213 VETllA"NS: Fr... to You 8045 Almost new matlress & txr11·l' furniture for sale ........................ ·82 VW Rabbit Nu 4 ~tk
S.ta el•y/Clillrc• Serv~your t'ountry one ....................... s P r 1 n g s · d b I & t714l 642·7781 daily 9-5, Lido Slip ror so·+ Power rims. 13 x5 11
• S 1 00 Rtc~st Ptr. exp. Xppfy: Mon· weekend each month Free lo ~ood home. non Hollywood bed Spanish Mon ~)'1 BoaL Sl0.00 per rt PP .,,.. N.u 830.
8600 P rt t. ft Fri DJ u 'ted Meth I k h correetabl $100. 642 9308 ' 67< ....,. ..,., 7408 .,..,.....,... __ :.:... a 1 a ernoons. . a-· na · p us two wee s ear vicious oving dog Nds -'-' Typewri ter Elect. port -~!.·or~··. · _ M..aaement Optometrist's ofrice. Ch. 1601 Marguerite. year in th e Arm y 1.1rd.sll·42ll9 r.-ws. 1055 \\icase Sears Smith Huntington Harbour Ba'' VWengine. t300cr.ne\\ly Corporatt'Execulive Fountain Va lley , CdM.644-0745. Reserve. Earn extra . - -. ---r Co l'rf d s1•0 , rebulll.S'lSO needs help in wholesale. Mature person. Exper money. p x and re-Darhng Mixed Beagl~ 5·6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rona. e t•on " & Rac."Quet Club Boat 495 6549 retail d'istribullon busi-preferred, but will train. s.cr.t.v lirem1nl benefits. Call yrs. Hsebrkn. obedient. 979 5299 -Slips available. Ca II
nesa. Personal interview _,983-8349:=;='-------~ga~5t,~~"d.a'lt!~i today for details. barkless. 552-7537 SWAP MEET Pets IOl7 ~~~5Ji1~ 846-7 767 · ·~~eJ~~lt~~~~h~~k~~ ~on!y!!!!!ilt.:.·.!.;71~4!..1'./964~-505=9,.__ __ , Rtteptjonist. Eltate Law Practice on 1l.mUngtonBch962·8821 ...,..., 8050 Every Sunday. 8am· ........................ . ......:----auto trans. both $100.
Manicurist with clien-Auressive Mortgage Balboa Island. Word SantaAna552·3t73 ....................... ~l~ge~t:i~~:w~o::1l 2;:a·~~l~~~~g~o~ec~!:i~s" s:o·~~t I MZ-5851
lele: rental or top com· 81.aling Firm needs re· ~r exper belprut. ~ .... /W9'"r"m * * I BUY * * inpon, Costa Mesa. Ad 536-85?4 . Mag wheels, 4 lug Fit ~~·Dazzlers Salon. =~~t :;:in:.u:: Sa~~~s~~!~·nfu~![e r::~ Y£1· M~~fdor Good used Furniture & llllSSioo free Lo buyers PERSIAN-ROLLE RS 25· side8at111e .. 1 nedar the I 111>~mpacts ~10 ea · rt -it t d urant. 1-Ne'"""'rt A~ri1·a ~es--OR I w1'll Se II e r R e 5 e " a f1 k f rf FeTTY · 5 an · 962-...,.,.,. po uru y o a vance, with a · 'ty. Shelly -~ .. -1 n, lions Info oc o 10 pe orma nre 673.1440 MEATMARKET counter salary negotiable Call 675-f62.8 Bl CM. se orSELLforYou 556_5880 blrd5.s.c.ll AlltolforS.
help, exper nee 714/T31·5M4. Secretary wanted hiirb Waitress. experienced. MASTBS AUCTION __ 642·46.Sl ~Speed & 9010 .. ••••••••••••••••••••• 64&-6775 llCB'TIOMIST typing stills. use or ore. for private country club 646-1616, lll-9625 CAPVCHIN PIGEONS _, IMPORTANT
Medical Part7tlrii."for Newport ta.phone, small 2 man CallKaren644·9550 KING INNERSPRING n.4205oan!Rd. Fancy show bird s .••••••••••••••··~··•••• NOTICE TO IKkofftceAuht.t Beacb· firm near 0.C. ftDaDCial office, location WAITRESS /WAITER EXTRA FIRM mattress pncedperquality WAN'J'.ED·Bo14 Rider 17 READERS AND
FUlHime, salary open. AltPOlt. Amwer phones. Lido Village area. w/car for wicker basket set. never iued. worth nrHoa_g HosJl..l.tall 642_4653 __ ~ro:pp~~::.~~an i ADVERTISERS
Send resllml to P.O. Box maU. lieht typing. Neat Please call 714/4113-7480. lunch serv. 9:30-1 :30pm , P,1 sac. 1248 del. Never Freezer. books. clothes. Hand Ian-rd talking ----------I The pri<'e of items 2932, Mission Viejo, Ca. appearance & personali· Mon .. Fri. Earn $15().$175 useo queen sz. worth and assor ted misc umbrella Cockatoo advertised by vehicle
1. tu mutt. Call 833-0440. Want ads--ttt.7667 wkly. Must be neat. 13119. cub only. $218 del. treasure. Sat ~/20 9-4. 347.7573 TrCNpOrtatioe deale!'S. In the vehicle
personable & energetic. Usually home, 754.7350 455 E 20t!!, Costa Mesa , --....................... classified ad~t1sing
appl. F' ~ •. o ....................... ...................... elude any applicable
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
:'" ltJrl••' IL I
' I "' ( \ \1 ~ > \
546-1200 =.o;.;;._ _____ _
HIGHIUYER Top dollars for SPorts
Cars, Bu,11s. Campers 914 's. Audi s
Ask for U C MGR
JIMMARIHO
VOUCSWAGat 18711 Beach Blvd
HUNTINGTON BEACH
. ...lil-.2.0.0.0
WANTED! Late model Toyotas and
\' o I v o s C a I J u ~
TODAY '''
Earle Ike
TOYOTA-VOLVO
1'66 H.,._tl•d.. c ........ . ,.. '46·tJOJ., i 40·'4tl
Top Dollar
Paid For ''our Car•
JOHHSOH & SOH
LiKyf':,~en:urt 2626 ar r RI\ rt'
Costa Mesa 5-IO-~
Premium pnl'eS
paid for any u~ed l'at
1fore1i:n or domes th' 1
111 g_ood cond1t ion
See Us First'
SOUTH COAST
Dodge 979-0747 a.fl. lOam for -G--S-le
1
Pl4MOI & OnJOM I090 Aircraft 911 o columns does not in·
WAREHOUSE CLERK-MUST SRL lu rhn s'. trk· n l I~ gs . Thomas electric 2 key Cessna '79 P210. I aint. for taxes. ~cense. transfer full-Ume, must be ex-Mahogany cfouble bPd c 0 hes. •s et~S 9~3° board. Excellent rond sale. Fully equip'd. fees, finan ce c~ariies. .!888 ll.11h111 111\<l
per'd bard worker, xlnt :.:!~m!i~~:~n ~eoaod~ ~fi ~'t W~yb~~dl(e: j500. 848·8123 -t714l9'79-4361 dys. :r ~~~~! :~~U~~tfg~s r0~1" "'''•' ~111 t~nn
...
Newspaper
Carriers tor l'outes
in Huntingt0n Beach,
Fountain Valley & Newport Beach
I
comfany benefits. Call board. . NB . Harbo r View or dealer documentary WE IUY
Ba boa Mar ine '500080 631-7797 aft6 Homes. preparation charges un· USED CAltS&TRUtKS '
Ha rdware 549·9671 Garage Sale. fUrnature. less otherwise specified COME IN OR
E.0.E.MtF/H baby clothes & fixtures. A""iJ"'•Aflim.lL bytheadvert~er. CALL FOR Met di• 6-IBM typewriter. books 8 'c; 1w T' .. 1orr ._.. RlH ArPRAISAL
...................... , MUST SB.~ 311S2 Ban anJ.!.v Sat 9.3 tr~~ (Z'~ 9520 Cormier·DeL1llo
........ 8005 ~~1t:>·:~ltr~~~~ )t~~: Hones 1060 L...J.,.-1 J.. ....................... 192ft'l~~~~~vu ....................... shaped i h d •••••••••••••••••••••• t,l\q '""111' MODB. ...... ! HUNTINGTON 1H:Ar11 ANTJQU&S: aolld oak re· board m rror on ea · 2 Horse trailer, dual axle. ~ i.ue ·• IJ'"'" Shay replicas: pickups
147
1..
017
_
feclory table SUS: 115000Bo 631.77973n6 S'7SO/bltol'r. ~'1"""' & coupes. 4 to choose -. ...
theatre seats set of 4 493-3307 h L-.J. from ! (0067681 tStk U -3331 ~: 2 oak library cbrs Jawetry 0\4681 Vtftilll , ADQ). Prices starting
5S?-868l 1 IUY FUIMITURE ••••••••••••••••••••••• ha/1~.? at M11oJ. ~d
ia-957-8133 01 d , 15 t r· OK Y $9,ttsi ••••••••••••• ••• ••••••• Olk Table w/leaf ffl· 4 amo n • c · 0
0 Oa .. Chair s 120. New full·slze mattr_ess Emerald rut E VSld 97 5
• tet Mft N s e USGS J appraise ••••••••••••••••••••••• AmtrtcanRocterSlSO.l ,_,. ewqueen·ii . u4,ooo·. need rash, >c:::::\ AJlalr.oo Eur. Sew Rocker SSS. $100. '00-5832 .., ~ __ ,_ ... _..... 113.900. D'5: 642·5640 ; Ytloc•Cottnrsfoll?
___,, _.. e: ""r, ·~ naug.. eves/wtods: 642·6421. All par1s to conn•rt 101
Clock SlOO; Curto cab new .. hloo, clean. 11S. Diamond
1
Brilliant 1600 lo Velore. U<'
l"1C) 'Null baain $100 (2)30 bed1, w. matt. " JJ.~ Jjj pistons. Sl400 979 27411
CloCk 1100, Curio cati foundation &: frame . Cut. ·26· p~raised at Use IWNJllf1::'r"" se rv ice !ft~~m orv.-knds •'! r:. Orient vaaea $45. linen• spreads. '75 ea. :Sii. ~lll~~.~~rCZ:3 h I . d 4.._.Drt'" tSSO ah b •• I" 1100. u1tenew.ff8.f714 rt1> ...... '""""·h-. w en pacing your a ... a IMW 97 12' ~·., ~'""'N"" 10 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PH'7t Matching couch " chair. Daily Pilot ad number will ...................... . 14eclU lnal table *250 F1otal. pert t"nd. Call ~11•1... IOIO . I 'fled d •Mew 'II ca. .. y (entry radder 'back bafore 2:30PM $150 ·~· .... •••••o••••••••• appear tn your C 8SSI a 4WlletfDft•t
dlaln ••. £Dal. oa~ ... 11 Silvertone 1 keyboard or· • we take your messages W¥ , ... ,
blllct, $150. Xlnt. Call Slnunons'6iond crib 1an.1. gOOd rond, $350. 24 h II Loadea!· t2Tisr/688''· collect, 2!1·211·3939, •lmtU dretHr/cbaqe 673-71'48alboaPenln_. OUrS a day . : , YOU Ca 177alasS$00.rebate.
11 .. •*7NwptBcb. ta1>1e.Xbitcoad.$2ooea REMINGTON In at your convenience MatMuS67'1
a.,outotbuelneu, an· . 548-7434 Dec. Typwrlttri xlnt during Office hours and get MOWd~cin,.. UQ•Olk.counten It llft Hid•·•·bed. very nice cond 130:'493-oll . · · -OOvil ,1nSli.
lteme at eost. tUZ I hardl uted. $350/bst Rowe Juhbox, stained the responses to your ad . , . NEWPO T BEACH
W "'.H.B.!!4•1. • 11mrront. w1uu.cordl this service is only $5.00 HMIH -
IOto lLce .W.·bY·•lde retrta Im; Bar type t~~, week. For more lnforma~ :r..-'"' .,,._ .. ,............ ltt maker, ••ocado ~
d!IUIA •: 1 p&1r IOld velvet tion and to plaC' your au lllRVJCI ••IV•l chlrt u u ..... Ded la"11 IDDWtr call u2·S678. • •••Ulllwtl tlT·JU\ ue c,,, .. a, 8llck•Dtcl•f1S U"'I _, ... ,...~ lMNBN ....
• C• • .._... -.._...,, ...,. llM leleetriC' "' r=f .......... w.'N..al'·
,
• ~~ Cout DAILY PfLOT/ThufldlY, Matdt 18, 1112
MOOIL$
IM ITOC.
~I .. c ...... , , •••
............... 0 • ••• tll.tllf i
... OW..IMWI• ......... ., ....
......... tla.
n. Mott bcltilt9
P.tOfYow
IMWPwct.oaeOr
L ... C..Wle
Mcl.4ntt IMW!!
a.,OrLHM
•1 ow ...... ''°"' 11141522-SUJ
CIAM&I COUHTY'S
'~ ~ I
Sales·Serv1ce-Leasinl(
• 73 3.0CS Classic. Ila~ lus. all f eature)
~all498·34~
• ATLAS CHRYSLSt~YMOUTH
2929 Herbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. Tel >46-1~ 3 blocks
south of San Diego Freeway off Harbor Blvd Complete
,bOdy atiop. Sales. Service Parts. Service Dept open
• Monday thru Friday 7:30 A.M to 5 30 P.M and 8 AM to
5 P.M. on Saturday. • IEACH IMrORTS
848 Dove Street. Newport Beach Tel 752·0900 Call us.
we're the spec1al1sts lor Alla Romeo, Peugeot SaalJ &
Maserat 1
• THEODORE ROllMS FORD
• Modern sales. service, parts. body, pamt & tire depts
Competitive rates on lease & dally rentals 2060 Harbor
Bfvd., Co1ta Mesa. 642·0010 or 54().8211.
• JOHMSOH & SOM UMCOLM MHCURY
.'Z626 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa Tel. s.40-5630. 57 Years
of friendly family service -Orange County's oldest Lin·
coln·Mercury dealership
• SOUTH COAST DODGE J 888 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa lei ~. RV service
..,.c1atl1ts. custom van corwers1ons.
MIWPOllT IMPORTS
100 W. Coast Highway, New-port Baach. Tel.
2-9405/540-1764 The F errar1 HNdQuartera.
NE
~~ ~
c.,~ ~·" z IU
"'
sw
~\, ~ '
MA'FCH THE NUMBERS ON THE
MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES • MEW,ORT DA TSUH
888 Dove Street. Newport BeAch Tel 833-1300. At the
triangle of Jamboree, MacArthur & Bristol behind Vic·
tona Station. Sales. Service. Leasing & Parts. Fleet dis-
counts to the public.
0 MAIERS CADILLAC
2600 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa Tel 540-9100 Orange
County s Larges! Cadillac dealer Sales. Servu:e Leas·
tng
• DAVID J. PHILLIPS IUICIC.flONTIAC·MAIDA
Sales • Serv1oe • Leasmg
24888 Alicia Parkway
Laguna Hiiis 837-2400
G) CHICK •VERSOH ..oRSCHl-AUDl-VW
415 E. Coast Hwy . Newport Beach. 673-0900. The only
dealership m Ora nge County with these three great
makes under one root•
• ALAH MAGMOM r<>HTIAC.SUIAIU
2480 Harbor Blvd . Cos1a ~ Tel. 549-4300. Sales.
,5'Hvlc•. Leaaln.g. • Mr Goodwrench. '
0 HOUSI OFIMPOUS
MlaCmu.llta U.1 • s.r.&u .......
6862 Mancheater Blvd • Buena Park (on Santa Ana
Fr-.way). Takt Beach Blvd. ottramp -sharp right on
Marichester ·
DIAL MER-CEDES (213 or 714) 837·2333
" .
• • IOI LONGPRE POHTIAC
13600 Beach Blvd., Weslmtnster Tel 892-6651 Orange
County's oldest and largest Ponliac dealership Sales.
Sen11ce. Parts.
• SAIL CHEVROLET
900 South Coast Highway
Laguna Beach
"ClleYy'• pt It ..... for yo.!"
SALES HOURS Mon ·Fn 9-7. Sat 9-5. Sun 10·4
494-1 t31 546-9967
COST A MESA DA TSUM
2845 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa Tel 540-6410. Serving
Orange County for 16 years. 1 Mile So. 405.
SUNSET FORD, IMC.
(Home of Willie the Whale) 5440 Garden Grove Blvd .
Westminster Tel 636-4010
• • SANTA AMA DATSUN
2001 E 17th S1ree1. Santa Ana Tel 558-7811 Your-
Qrjgmal Dedicated Datsun Dealer.
0 MIRACLE MilDA
We've moved! Our new location la 1425 Baker Street .
Costa Mesa Tel. 545-3334. Stop by & visit our brand new
showroom and see why we're the lf1 Mazda deal•r in
Southern Celifomla. Sales. SetV\09, Parts and Leasing
• AMAH8M MAZDA
"CW, o.c. ....... ~ ...
Pf'ff S..lce '-C..."
601 S. Anaheim Blvd .. Anaheim 956-1820. Just nonh ot
Santa Ana Frwy. on Anlhelm BIVd. Cell us lirall
'WE AAE HARO TO AND-4tUT WORTH ITI"
•
I SADDLllACIC IMW/SUIAAU
28402 Marguerite Pkwy., Avery Pkwy. eillt
W. otter whit no bank or lease company c.n: 1. E11pertly
Stiffed. most modern service & pwta dept; 2 Ont of the
Southland's most axparlanced NI• & luelng atlff. 3
Elimination of the mlddltm11n by '-'Ing dell• dlr8C1
831 ·2CMO Mlaalon V 495-4949
DGM LUSIMG,lHC.
730 W 19th St.. Coate Mesa 642-1944
You're In lot a surprise at DOM Leasing
0 COMMELL CHEVIOLIT
.2828 Harbor Blvd .. Cot ta Mesa. ()ler 20 years serving
Orange ¢ountyl Sales. lea1lng. service. Cell 546·1200;
special parts line; s.6-9-400, body shop line: 754-0400.
ROY CAllVH ROLLS llOYCl-IMW
1540 Jamboree Road, Newport Beach.~. Sales.
Service, Parts And Leasing
COMSIDEll IT SOLD!
Used cars are In demand and sell quickly when 8dver1158d
In clllSSlfied To place your private party ad. call Salty Laa
tlt&42-5678
I
lttllH',(J1\~ M111t1 ''I'll!' (H<ANGf C:OU N 'y C ALIFOR NIA 2S CEN rs
...
.... Orange. COast · cleans up as storm heads east
1 (
I
llY JERRY HERTENSTEIN or .... ....,,.......,
The tall end of an Alaekan-~t.ed ttarm that has pelted
the Oranp Cout with two non-
~op da t of rain and wind la
to move eastward early
day.
Oty and county cleanup ~ws
were ,kept busy today cleaning
up from mud and rock slides in
hilly leCtlona of Orange County
and from a wind storm in Co.ta
Mesa.
The fONCUt calla for tcattered-
ahowers and thundersbowen to-'
n11ht and Friday momtna with.
the chancea of rain ~ to 30 percent tonight and 10 per-
cent Friday morning, accordihg
, to a apokeawomap for the
}iJUontl Weather Service.
Skies are e><pe<:ted to be part!)'.
cloudy Friday and the weekend
forecast is for sunshine and tem-
e_era t urea near 70 degreea In
Orange Coast cities.
Emergency crews patched
I
holet In roof1 and windows of the
2000 block of Pacific Avenue
after what aome described as a
mlnl-tor"nado awept through
the block Tue.clay.-At leait five
homes were damqed when the
wind blew down trees'.
It's quite poulble Costa Mesa
wu bit by a small tornado, Don
Luat of the National .Weather
Service. said.
Luat said It would be difficult
to say whether residents along
Pacific Avenue were seeing a
small tornado or merely a squall
line.
However, Casimir Zolla,
custodian at Co.ta Mesa's Adams
School where windows were
broken and trees downed, said he
saw a funnel cloud shortly after
the 11 :40 a.m. incident. Th~un
nel was moving northeast L a
counterclockwise direction, e
said.
A cleanup effort was under
way at Adams School where
wind blew out glass and window
frames, downed one tree and
damaged others. (Related atory,
photos Page Bl).
Flooding was reported in the
Wilaon Street and Canyon Ave-
nue area of Costa Mesa thia
morning.
The weather was believed
responsible for several power
outages that left 21,000 Orange
County customers of Southern
California Edison Co. without
power at various times during
the night.
A Uihtntng atrike knocked out
a tranafonner at Barranca P~k:
way and Sand Canyon Road lrf
Irvine at 6 a .m . today and cuC
power for 30 minute. to 1,30()
customera in University Park, If
spokesman for the utility said. :
An outage of lea than a mi;
nute cut off power to 2,500
customers ln aouth Co.ta Mesa aj
6 a.m. today.
Another 1,000 residenta of
Leisure World in Laguna Hillf
were without service • .
Hopefuls
• • m1ss1ng Airport plan OK'dj
forum
New Wayne access proposal sent to judge
Suppose they gave a candi-
dates forum and a third of the
cPaUengers didn't come?
The way thing, are shaping up
for Friday night's forum, spon-
sored by Village Laguna, 'three of
the nine candidates seeking elec-
tion to the City Council April 13
won't be there.
Incumbent councilman Kelly
Boyd and candidates Ron Wil-
liams and Pat Barry said they
will be attending a grand ope-
ning of the Laguna First organi-
zation's headquarters that eve-
~ey say it's an unavoidable
conflict.
Village Laguna chairman
Norm Grossman calls it a "lack of
common courtesy.••
Boyd, Williams and Barry have
been endorsed by Laguna First
for the council election, in which
three seats are to be filled.
When contacted today, all
three candidates said they will be
attending the open house Friday,
beginning at 5 p .m . at new
headquarters at 899 South Coast
Highway. ·
The Villase ~aguna candi-
dates' forum begins at 7:30 p.m.
in City Hall. The forum will be
televised by the Laguna ·video
aub.
"It's just a (time) conflict." said
Williams, a real estate broker.
"They told us they'd like our
presence there, but I don't know
how we can fit everything into
every day.
"I've gone to all the forums
that I could so far."
Barry. director of the Boys
Club of Laguna Beach, said he
has also chosen to attend the
open house instead of the candi-
dates' forum.
"I sent them (Village Laguna)
a letter telling them I had a
meeting with my campaign vo-
lunteers that night," Barry said.
He said he also included a
five-minute statement that he
requested Village Laguna mode-
rators read to the forum audien-
ce.
"I jv.st feel my volunteers have
dedicated a lot of time to my
campaign and it's essen tia1 that I
meet with them."
Incumbent Kelly Boyd was
more direct.
"Who supports (candidates)
Bobbie Minkin, Bob Gentry and
Dan Kenney?" he asked.
Those three candidates com-
prise the second slate supported
by the Temple Hills Neighbor-
hood Association, among others.
"Village Laguna is nothing
more than a name representing
about 20 people in Laguna
Beach," Boyd said.
"Their thinking, to me, is no-
growth, non -pro~ressive, and
(See VILLAGE, Page AZ)
WORLD
0.-, .... 8tllft P'tMl4o
BUL~EYE -Fem Pirkle displays her James Watt Dart
Board, a pointed comment about tbe secretary o_f the
Interior's policies. It may prove to be a pretty sharp idea.
Pointed criticism
Coast group makes Watt dart board
By STEVE MARBLE
Of the OellJ "°' .....
Fern Pirkle is hoping James Watt gets the point.
The Corona del Mar woman and her colleagues on the
environmentally-minded Friends of the Irvine Coast have
taken aim at the controversial interior secretary with their
"James Watt Dart Board."
For $9.95 plus tax and postage, Watt critics can take
out their environmental frustrations by winging darts at a
likeness of the interior secretary.
AND J UST IN CASE any of Watt's detractors have less
than perfect aim. the package comes with six darts.
"We've already had five orders from Kentucky," says
Mrs. Pirkle, adding, "strip mining -that's what they're
upset about back there."
The dart board features Watt's smiling face in the
center and is ringed with illustrations of offshore drilling
platfonns, strip mining and the remains of a forest.
The board also has a drawing of the propo5ed national
park site south of Corona del Mar with a tiny sign warning,
"Out of Site." .
$he says there's enough on the board to appeal to even
the most marginal of environmentalists. Even Republicans
will like it, she adds.
A BULLSEYE SHOT on the board will result in nic-
king Watt in the comer of the left eye but, members of the
Friends say, an y head shot is good for a few points.
STATE
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
()("the D8't1 Hot It.ff
For the second time in seven
months, a U .S. District Court
judge will take center stage in
the issue of Orange C.Ounty gov-
ernment's attel)'"lpt to develop an
access plan to regulate commer-
cial airlines' use of John Wayne
Airport.
Admitting they have been
"agonizing" over the complex is-
-sue, county supervisors sent
Judge Terry Hatter a new pro-
Cocaine
haul niade
in Ne~wport
More. than $1 million worth of
nearly pure cocaine and $36,000
in cash has been seized from a
Spyglass Hill home in Newport
Beach following the arrest of two
alleged drug peddlers, narcotic
detectives report.
Officers said they recovered 10
pounds of cocaine from the 11
Monterey Circle home shortly
after arresting George Richard
Burgio, 30, and Dennis Larry
A.sh, 35, on drug charges.
Police report Burgjo. who they
said is on parole on a previous
drug conviction , lives at the
Spyglass Hill home and Ash is a
resident of Mammoth Lakes.
Both are being held on $500,000
bail.
Two Huntington Beach wo-
men -Charyl Lynn Beatty, 25,
and Michele Dianne Higgins, 24
-also were arrested on drug
charges when officers searched
the house. Both are being held m
lieu of $15,000 bail.
. The drug bust reportedly star-
ted on a routine note when
Newport officer Doug Parmen-
tier spotted two men parked in
front of a Jamboree business.
Parmentier reported that the
men sped off m their car when
he approached them. He said he
chased their car, finally bringjng
it to a stop in front of the New-
port police station.
Officers said they discovered
small quantities of heroin and
marijuana in the car and that one
of the men -Ash -was car-
r y ing a pistol and a large
switchblade knife .
Police said Newpott narcotic
officers and federal Drug Enfor-
ce~en t Administration agents
are still investigating the drug
seizure.
WASHING TON (AP) -The Reagan admini-
stration plans to make public early next week declas-
sified intelligence data said to document Soviet in -
volvement in the chemical warfare deaths of more
than 10,000 people, sources said today.
S tate school day shorter
NATION
Re~gan asks 6usiness backing
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Reagan today
appealed to businessmen to support hi.a widely criti-
clz.ed economic program and said that now ii not. the
time for "last-minute haggling."
Dali, Farso chronicled
Name9 in the news: A mt11eum featuring IUl'l'ft-
. u.t palntinp by artist Salvador Dall ii featured on
Pa&e 84 and linger Donna Farao tella how ahe copes
wtth MS on P~ ClO.
A study says the length of the California school
day is shorter than the national average, and some
legislators blame teachers' unions and fund cuts. Page A5.
·Big-band leader reminisces
Hank DeC.oito of Modesto was a band leader in
the swing era, and remembers it all. Page A 7.
Coast panel blasts drill
The state Coastal Commlllton bu gone on record aa.U-. propou.la to leue 172 offshore 'U'actll -11 off
Oranp County-for otl drilling. Pqe Bl.
posal Wednesday that would
allocate the 14,928 commercial jet
depaures permitted annually
among carriers now serving the
airport and carriers on the out-
side wanting in.
.fudge Hatter became the cen-
tral figure in the issue last Sep-
tember when, at the urging of
the U.S. Department of Justice
and Pacific Southwest Airlines,
he overturned the county's pre-
viously approved~ plan.
-. Attorneys for the two parties
claimed the plan was unfairly
beneficial to AirCal and Republic
Airlines, the two giants in the
Orange County market, and
contrary to tenets of the Airline
Deregulation Act of 1978.
AirCal has been authoriz.ed to
fly an average. of 23.5 flights per
day from Orange County; Repu-
blic, 11.5 flights and Frontier
Airlines, Pacific Southwest Air-
(See AIRPORT, Page A%)
Trustee may lose
school hoard post
I
I
MAY BE OUT -Huntington
Beach High School District
trustee Sherry Baum, of Seal
Beach, may be forced off the
board if Seal Beach School
District sends its students to
Los Alamitos instead of
Huntington Beach.
By PATRICK KENNEDY C)("ttMD~Notalaft
Sherry Baum, recently elected
trustee of the Huntington Beach
Union High School District. may
be forced off the school board
next year, say district offi~.
Mrs. Baum, a Seal Beach resi-
dent. would have to resign if" the
financially troubled Seal Beach
School District disbands in July
1983 and tends its students to the
Los Alamitos Unified School Di-
strict as is propoeed.
If this occurs, Seal Beach
would no longer be within the
Huntington Beact1 Union district
boundaries.
Mrs. Baum would have to
move from her Seal Beach resi-
dence to a home within the di-
strict boundaries or be foroed to
resign, according to district offi-
cials.
The state Education Code re-
quires that school board members
must reside in the district they
represent, say district officials.
Mrs. Baum, who was elected to
the four-year term last Novem-
ber, couldn't be reached for
commer1t.
Voters must approve the pro-
posed merger of the Seal Beach
and Los Alamitos districts and
(See BAUM, Paie A%)
Large condo OK'd
by council in Mesa
The largest condominium pro-
ject ever planned in the city has
been approved by the Calta Mesa
City C.Ouncil.
Developer C. Robert Langslet
plans to build the 1,155-unit
condominium development on 28
acres of lar.d owned by C .J .
Segerstrom and Sons and. the
Coast Community College Di-
strict.
Plans for the complex near the
corner of Adams Avenue and
Harbor Boulevard call for 41
units per acre, with the size of
the condominiums ranging from
427 square feet to 1,520 square
feet for a two-bedroom unit.
.
INDEX
At Your Service A4
Erma Bombeck B2
L.M. Boyd AS
Business C6-7
Herb Caen B2
California h5
Cavalcade B2
Classified 04-8
Comics C8
Cr6esword C8
Death Notices D2
F.c:U torlal AS
·Entertainment C9-10
SPORTS
The project was the first ap-·
proved under the city's new Ur-
ban Residential zoning design.a-
(See CONDOS, Page AZ)
Horoecope B2
Ann Landen B2
Movies C9-10
Mutual Fund.a C6
National News A.3
Public Noticee D2-3
Sporta Cl--4
Stock Markets C1
Television B6
'Thea ten C9-10
Weather A3
World Neww A3
China t~am on coast
The People'a Republic of China national am-
naatlcs team Will stay in Com Mta while preparbla
for a competition apnat a l!.S. team.~· Cl.
•
>' ••
H/F
CONDOS APP.ROVED .. •
tion, which allows 30 to 60 unl\a
per acre.
The project waa approved
Monday by a vote of 4-1, with
Councilman Ed McFarland ob-
ject1na to the density of the pro-
pelled complex.
''The a1J.e la teary, to av the
l'eut," McFarland laid. "Itra ba-
aically an unknown density u far
u thLI city'• concerned and I'm
juat not convlnced that thLI la the
place for th1a particular zoning."
Critica ol three and four-story
complex contended that it could spark aimilar projecta ln the city.
Former Mayor Bob Wilson
warned that allowing such den-
sities would create traffic and
service problems that the city
won't be able to cope with.
"I'm saying one thing very
definitely. You are over-
~uilding and you won't be able to
handle it," Willon la.id.
But the majority of council
memben and otben aupportina
the project contended lt will
work ind that It wlll help pro-
vlde much-needed affordable hoWlinl in the city.
"The only way to supply hou-alns today ii to raile the density,"
Councilman Hall said.
Hall and others aald that the
project could be the fJ.nt step into
the housing market for .many
young peopfe and couples.
The plan approved bv the
council. calla foe the project to be
built in two phues. with the ae-
cond half built only lf the first
581 tell.
The price of the units will
range from $61,0!50 for the
427-square-foot studio unit to
$152,000 for the two-bedroom
units.
AIRPORT ACCESS . • •.
lines and Western Airlines, two
flights each.
Under the plan approved by
supervisors following a brief pu-
blic hearing, the five carriers will
be forced to give up the.ir existing
guaranteed allocations over a
two-year period. Guaranteed al·
locations would drop 10 percent
every three months. If the plan ls approved by
Hatter, AirCal's guaranteed allo-
cation on June 1 would drop to
an average of 21.l fUghta per
day; Republic's to 10.3. and allo-
cations for Frontier, PSA and
Western to 1.8.
The four departures thus gen-
erated wou ld be placed In a
"pool" for allocation to carriers
not now eerving Orange County
on the condition they introduce
new and quieter jets, or use air-
craft making no more noise than
such je18.
For example, if two outside
carriers, Carrier A and Carrier B
wanted flights from Orange
County they would receive two
daily departures each.
BAUM LOSING POST? • • •
the ballot measure is tentatively
scheduled for this November.
Roger Lowney, superintendent
of the Seal Beach School District,
says the school board has decided
that the 700-student, two-school
district is too small to e<:onomi·
cally continue operation because
of inflation, declining enrollment
and funding cutbacks.
He says the 5,000-student Los
Alamitos District, which also has
declining enrollment, has agreed
to take ihe Seal Beach students.
If the Huntington Beach school
board approves a merger peti·
lion, the issue will go on the
ballot this November. If appro-
ved by voters. the mer,ller would be official in July 1983, school
officials said.
Huntington Beach trustees
will consider ~ issue on April
13.
Currently, 389 Sul Beach
student s attend Huntington
Beach High School. If Seal Beach
aends thoee students to Loa Ala·
mit.oe in future years, the district
would lay off 12 teachers.
Foothill
corridor
meet set
Area realdenta will aet thelr
second chance of the week to-
nlabt to volce thelr lmpre.lona
about the pro~Footbill
~~ii ICheduled
at Irvine Kiah ScboOl at 7 o'clock.
In the ff rat meetlna. held
Tue9day night ln ~Viejo,
county planners and their private
conaultanta displayed poMlble
routea for the road which ultl·
mately will become a 26-mile
link between the Riverside
Freeway (Route 91) and the Or-
tega Hlghway.
Q 0
•
The road, planned to handle
increased traffic resultlJlg from
new developments such as the
Whiting Ranch, Coto de Caza and
Rancho Mi.Dion Viejo, currently
is propoeed to run on one side or
the other of the Santa Ana
Mountains.
The question of which side of
the hills the road la constructed
on is of concern to potentially
aff~ residents, but apparen-.
tly no solution will please eve-
ryone.
HEAD-ON CRASH -Irvine police survey the
wreckage on Irvine Center Drive where three
men were injured in a head--0n collision today
near the entrance to Lion Country Safari. Po-
lice said a car driven by Frank Beckous, 34, of
o.lr .... ,.... ........ 01t ••••
Mission Viejo slammed into an auto driven 'by
David Vetter, 26, of Orange. Beckous' brother,
Mark, 23, also was injured, and all were in
stable condition at Saddleback Community
Hospital.
Residents in areaa stretching
from the Santiago Ranch to the
Northwood jlection of Irvine and
Mission Viejo are concerned
about the possibility of the road
coming near their homes.
$tate court post
for Judge Trotter
Orange County Superior Court
Judge John K . Trotter Jr .. once
Frank Allen, a representative believed to be a leading candi-
of the community group, Con-date for a position on the Cali-
~ed Area ~dents of Mission • fomia Supreme Court, has been
Vie.JO, told officials Tuellday that appointed to a seat on a stiate
his group does not want the~ appeals court.
te run .c)oeer than one-half mile Trotter's elevation to the 4th
from any existing home in the District Court of Appeal by Gov.
area. •Edmund G . Brown Jr. comes
Chuck Kenney, vice chairman only three years after the gover-
o! the Mission Viejo Municipal nor firs~ appointed the Sa~ta
Apvisory Co(Ulcil, and a repre-Ana restde~t to the Superior
sentative of the Mission Viejo Court bench m Orange County.
Company also aaded that the "I'm thrilled and I'm honored,"
groups do not want the road clo-Trotter said W~dnesday after·
ser than one-half mile horn noon, after receiving word from
existing homes. the governor's office on his se-• lection.
A1J currently planned it will be The 4th District Court of Ap·
possible to build the entire road peal's jurisdiction covers legal
without condemning any homes, matters emanating from Orange,
because the land that ru.na along San Bernardino, Riverside and
the corridor is largely undevelo--San Diego counties. The court
ped. meets primarily in San Bernar-
dino. Trotter said he would con-
tinue to live in Orange County.
The former president of the
Orange County Bar Association
replaces former appeals court
justice Stephen K. Tamura, who
resigned in January. Tamura was
a former county counsel in
Orange County.
Trotter said he would probably
·serve out his 12-year appeals
~ourt term in Santa Ana if a
branch court is ultimately esta-
blished in Orange County.
The Legislature created four
appellate judgeships in Santa
Ana last year. H o wever. a
Northern California judge de-
clared that enabling legislation
for the new judjeships was un-
constl tu tional , thus blocking
creation of the new appeals
court. The state is attempting to re-
verse that ruling.
Woman
raped,
threatened
A 28-year-old C.OSta Mesa wo-
man was released Wednesday
night after being held hostage
nearly 24 hours by a man who
repeatedly raped and threatened
to kill her, police said.
The woman told police she was
returning to her apartment at
about 9 p.m . Tuesday when she
was overpowered in the parking
lot by a man described in his
mid-20s.
The man forced her to take
him to her apartment where he
repeatedly raped her and forced
her to perform various sexual
acts, said police Lt. John Calnon.
The woman attemp.ted to
escape and failed, said Calnan.
Wednesday afternoon the su-
spect forced her 'to drive him to a
bank in Costa Mesa where she
withdrew an undisclosed sum
from her savings account.
~ VILLAGE FORUM . • • Weather lVOn 't stop SlVallolVs LB artist
Boris Buzan
dead at 67
dav. o ne-sided and I don't think I
should waste their'time or that
they should waste my time."
He said that if he thought he
could "change the minds of their
members with my moderate
thinking, then I'd attend.
r'Common courtesy would dic-
tate that they_ would have called
me and told me wh)' they are not
coming," he said. "I'm very dis-
appointed that they see fit to ig-
nore what I would consider a
very responsible group which is
concerned with the future of
Laguna Beach.
San Juan poised to welcome return Friday morning
By JEFF ADLER Of'"the Dlillr ...... ..,.
"Besides, it's more important to
me to spend my time with my
constituency that night."
Village Laguna's Grossman
said he was surprised the three
candidates will not 'appear Fri-
'The stands we have taken in
the past have not been that
doctrinaire,'' Gros.m\all said.
Bad weather apparently has
not slowed San Juan Capistrano's
swallows northern migration and
the town is poised to welcome
back its most famous residents
Friday.
Be it legend or ornithological
fact. the bells will rinR sometime
Showers decreasing
Coastal
Smell craft 1dvl1ory In effect, from Point Conception to tile M9-
JClaln border.
Winds In etternoon and tonight
weaterly 15 to 30 knoll. Pertly
efternoon ~ 1~1 •
aandbagged 11 a precautionary
meeture. F0tecut_,. Mid lhoww ectMty
at lower eNMitlona would decrM-
M lhrOUQ!I the dey elthough 901M
locelly hMvy rein -poealble. The letup In the ~ WM!hel'
WU mudl ltM IPP'f9nt In moun-tain .,.., Most of the mountain
roads In the Big BMr·Lek• Arro-
whead region remained clo•ed.
ettllougll Hlgllwey 18 wes operi to
arH realdenll. The Cejon P•••
arH ol Interstate 15 w11 open
wlthou1 cf\alna,~ Ctlalns hed U.S. summary ~g~~~~•portec1 i"" , .. t 01'
Tiie Nettonal Weather Service anow from the atonn, wltll tern~
predle1ed thunder.no-a f()( to-'-W: ::0:-..::' = ~ 2.-~·:,:.:rc:.d:,,1~1~,:~ 000 feet In tile mountains Wed-
and Ohio. neaday. H rain• Intermittently
,.. d•d ---------
Winter storm warn Inge "ere PoUnded and drluted on Southefn
poeted lor Ullll'• mountain• and Callfomla lowlands.
aoutllern H ollon•. and winter But Hlghwey 33 north of Ojai, MonrOYla 57 47 2.10 Detroit
storm wa1cllH were poated tor wt1'cll -dOMd ell dey Wed~ Mt. Wiison 30 24 3.47. Duluth
perts ol Arizona, Colorado and day, w• operi wltll ctllllnl today, N9WPOrt Beach 51 50 1. 10 El Puo Wyoming. tile U.S. F0tee1 SeMce Mtd. Ontario 54 48 Hat1ford
SklH were cloudy over tll• ----------Pelm Springe 62 52 . 17 Helena Gr9at Liii•. and CloudS encl log .,, San BemaN!lno 54 47 .98 Honolulu
alao 1tretclled from Olllo to New i_ emperatures 1 San Joee , 63 41 .50 Hoo1ton
Yoftc and P~a. Sant• Ana 58 48 1.58 lndnepb
The Natlonel w .. ther Service CAUfOl'NIA ' Santa Cruz 51 41 "'ullvllle
forec111 celled for raln1hower1 Bakersfield 53 44 43 Tahoe Velley ~6 32 K"" City
stretching from tile lower 11111 of 71 · -LU Vegu
Cllllfoml• to aoutllem AtllOna, and = NATION Uttle Roca
snow from the OrHI BHln and ~ !: :i .07 Al'--~ .. ~a: flcpf. ~ northern Arl1on1 mountain• 40 38 t.21 -·• -"' .29 ~"'''"• through'"• upper and centrel i..ncaeier Alt>uque 68 48 Mllml
LMOI Angelee 57 43 I.JI Amarillo 78 48 Mllweull .. ~=· wa1 expected from tile erywvtKe 58 45 A9hevllle 76 44 .03 Mple-StP upper Mluourl Valley to Upper Mont«ey 53 Atlante 72 58 .23 Nulwtlle Michigan. NMdM 67 Atlantic Cly 49 34 New OflMna Temperet~ etound the Nltton Oeld#ld 53 48 Blltlmore 58 41 New Yoftc
••rly tod•y r•nx•d from t7 In PlllO AoeiMe 50 42 · lllnnlngtm 75 57 .14 Norlolk
D 7 In ... ... Aed """' 154 87 .ot ~ 34 22 . 15 Okie ,. .... Minot. N. ., to ..rowiw-Redwood aty 50 44 10 aoM _,,.
Teue. a.er-to 53 43 :oe BoMon 50 34 .20 Ornlfla .... .... .1" Br_..._ 44 33 .05 Ortendo Sellnll "' .... • .............. to 71 Plllladelphle c ali ~omia ::: ~ICl9eo eo 51 2.ot Butllllo 42 29 .07 Phoenix
Woftc !.. kept •watch out 1« s.nta a.oar• ~ :! :~ =~ ~ : ~ '92 ~:='fr.
more mudetldH todey H 1u11 t"'O::-:i 42 ~NC ~ ~ Ptlend, Ont
broke through cloud• from • ~ 97 CNcego 47 35 =City doU~~ Alaakan ....,_ Uldlfl 55 Clnc:IMetl a 31 Seit Lake
front the\ C*lled po.-bleokoU1a. BerltOw 93 43 Clrteland 12 87 ~ ~= ~ampered BIO a.. 33 25 t.2• Columbul 154 37 St Louie
Th• 1torm, which 1110 IHll•d ~ 35 31 Del-Ft.Wth 13 97 8t P-TlllTIPI '-'11 .........,,. 92 ~ .71 Derwer IO 32 St Ste M"1e orenge County with trM-ng I.one 8eedl 92 51 .8' o. Molnee 40 39. .. ............. wind•, moved eut but • winter . • _ ~-
etonn wwNno remelt*' In tnlC1 T·-'--
ln Sou"*"~~ -Tll• Lot Angele• er••'• only =.igtn
--" ~ blodted nnl llRF llPllT l.• Tun• Cenyon Ao•d 20 ml ...
north of Loe A,.-. tor • time Wtdnead•y, but did no rMI d•-
fMOI, polloe Mid.
41 31
38 30 .15 n 50
38 24 29
33 22 02 82 70 .34
80 70
53 39 87 69
69 44
80 41 15
85 67
68 42
8 82 .58
79 73 41 33
38 34
82 50
87 72
38 3e .04 80 40
78 81
41 37
" 93 46 38
71 50
41 39 48 24
93 35
48 28 .29
44 29 . 12
55 36
54 34
56 45
81 91
43 32
45 30
74 N 80 82 51 43 n 52
..,..~=~= ·-:~ -... ";-e-Sun,·.moo"?~de.J
eyee on flr•-de1tve9ff";r.i.k, .. i ........ 9f.4 ..... :" • fOOAY
north ot l.oa An .... • end l•n ~1:' !!!.. ....... • ~ flfr-oood ............... ~ ....... 8 .. 7 ... Ill --........ .,..., -.. " ............. ..,,,.. : .. p.m. a.3 ner IO, 4CMf1 81. ~ .... hllr 68 &eoond IOw t 1:01 p.m. U
In Ian t«nerdlno, ,_ 1n1ei11 : l2"d 91. ~ .... '* 51 nwdelld" came down"......_ lllllM ..._ 1 poor -~ ~Y
WMr9 I IMJCW ~ tlf't .,,.... left ~ flW 2-4 900d 5f """ Not\ 4:90 Lift. 4.1
n1CW9 lllft IOO ,___ 1t ...... ~ '1rwt IOw 12:11 p.m. 0.2 ego. Tllit ............... I .. ;W (T....., 2-' 900d 56 ~ Ngfl 7:11 p.m. U ....._ ' oa.t't ,.._ M poor 61 e.ootld IOw 11:'4 e_~ 1,4
ton'9 _, ..... ·-.,.... T.-M poet M ti:::,_. l:tl a.m. l'flOtr, ..._ ·~:·:,~ii:: ... ~· .. .:=.,.... l'IMI: .. 1:81 ~ "°" 11:~"'·..: a.. .;.:S;• .... : ... '·"'· ,,, ... ,.
:. .... wttll "'" 11.....-fflftt ......... '""'Wiim. . """
• t
Friday morning, St: Joseph's
Day, (most probably between
7:30 and 9 a.m .) to herald the
return of the swallows to old
Mission San Juan Capistrano.
"The storm doesn't seem to
have delayed their arrival and
• we're all on our toes," said Ri·
chard Landy, director of tourism
for the mission.
In fact, Landy pointed out that
more than a few s wallo w
"scouts" have been sighted
around San Juan Capistrano for ·
the past week or two.
Landy said about 5,000 tourists
are expected Friday morning and
he predicted they will be greeted
by clear, dry skies. "It's shaping
up oretty good." he said. 'the swallows, according to le--
g.e n d , have returned to the
historic mission from thei.( winter
home in Goya. Argentina, on St.
Joseph's Day for the past 200
years.
Upon their arrival, they im-
mediately begin the task of re-
building their mud nests in and
around the mission.
The swallows have always re-
turned punctually, say those who
take note of such things. except
in 1935 when they were three
days late. Their tardiness is at-
tributed to heavy storms en-
countered in Central America.
The swallows' return kicks off
a week's fiesta in San Juan that
includes a full day of activities
Friday and culminates March 27
with the annual Fiesta de l las
Golondrinas parade.
Thi9 year. Friday's annual
event will be celebrated in dance
and music.
The mission will host several
musical groups that will sing.
dance afld perform mariachi
music to welcome the swallows
home. The program, which will
take place beneath the mission's
famed pepper tree, will run from
10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Also, tours of the mission are
available as well as a guided
walking tour of San Juan's
historic old town section sponso-
red by the San Juan Capistrano
Historical Society.
On Sunday, the celebration
continues when both the Maria-
chis de San Juan and the Ballet
Folklorico de Maria Luisa of Los
Angeles perform from noon until
3 o.m. __
Artist Boris Buzan, whose col·
orful stained-glass work has
graced the Laguna Beach
Christmas scene since the late
1960s, died Monday at the age of
67.
The sculptor had been a La-
guna resident since 1945, when
he came from New York with his
wife, Pauline, to find work in
Hollywood. His sculptures and
ceramic works were exhibited at
the Festival of Arts for 25 years.
Mr. Buz.an constructed his po-
pular stained glass Christmas
scene for the city in 1968 and
donated it for display that year.
Since then, the structure has
been part of the city's Main
Beach decorations every Christ-
mas season.
The artist is survived by his
wife, Pauline; father, Frank;
brother Bogdan; son , Boris;
daughters, Heddy and Ana ;
daughter-in-law. Leslie, and her
children Nicholas and Jonathan.
A memorial service will be
held this evening at 7:45 in St.
Paul's Lutheran Church in La-
guna Beach.
Introducing the Rolex Oysterquartz.
Because every minute counts.
The impressive
Ro lex
Oysterquartz,
Rolex's new
quartz watch
with accuracy
guaranteed to
one minute a
year.
Oysterquartz
Datejust in
stainless steel
with integral
bracelet:
A. $1,•n.
B. With 14 karat
yellow gold
nuted bezel
and stainless
steel and
· 14 karat
yellow gold
bracelet, $2.410
SL" VICK'S
f1ne ..... 5'ra 1tl7
Whe-rt ~bars~ bqin. . .
f-11Non ll6nl (714~ ........ """"' ~ ~a...Lea~·Slft1119'•&a .....
·rnillTirnmJ #Wffi[B[UJ .
Space ~hut tl e l andi n g mo ~ed i o N e~ Mexico;_
CAPE CANAVERAL, l'la.
(AP) -Determined to prove .. w• can laWICh on the day we
IQ," NASA be1an the count·
clinm toda1 for • Monday Uttott of the 1paee 1hunl• Columbia
paraUona toward a 1ebeduled 7
a.m. PST ll!wff. It would ht the
third of Columbia'• four teat
ru.hta.
At mldmornina. test director
'1obn T~one Jr. reported: "We
.aybe 10 da.yt or ~ W.-. to
'°\here." Talone Mid that by -.1a11nc
the launch a few daya 1D ,.. "' '
Edward• landJna, the a1encf ml&ht be ahead of. the pm.. Bu&
pad quickly, cuttiq the turna·
roulf(t time and Httln1 up a
fourth and final test fllabt tor
June 27.
Ind lbiftlcl the thlrd·fllaht lan· c:linl from a Oood9cl Mojave de-
, Mrt floo' in California to th•
white ..-ot New Mexico.
••White Sanda all the way,"
mid a NASA 1pokfllllMft.
bacluap laDdl~_1 ~lte for the
lbuttle. Today, NASA·dedded '°
1hlft landln1 and .. aaflna"
equipimftt then beca~ at hea-
vy rainwater that fell on Jtd-
warct. Air ran» a-ln c.allfcr-
n1a, the lite of Columbia'• flnt
two la6dinp.
NASA apga.nan Dk:k Youna
Mid the decillon '° "UM White
Sanda all the way .. wu made
after top management offlclala
weued the latest report.a from
Edwards and determined that
conditions there mlaht be maral·
nal to support a 1andina on
March 29.
"It would be a headache to go to
White Sands; we'd prefer Edwards."
That would be 10 daya earlier
than ortainally planned and
could move up Colwnbia'• flrat
operational fll1ht, now set for
November.
By the fifth fliaht, Columbia 11
auppoeed '° be t.andina on a con-crete runway near tne launch
pad. But NASA wants more. ex-
perience on the wide deeert run-
ways before attempting a pin-
point touchdown at the Cape.
atut the countdown. Abraham-
aon and NASA admlni1trat9r
James Be11• believe that' by aticldDI '°the launch date, they
can aaure cu1tomert paying to
hav' car10 carried on fut ure
flilt\ta that the lhuttle can ~
itl timetables. That applies etPt·
clally to communications aatel ·
lites, where delay• coet owners
m1llionl of doll.an.
The firat two shuttle laun-chinca were delay~ by techn.lcal
gremllna after the countdowns
got under way.
The clock started Ucldrur at 1
a .m. PST with teat concf uctor
Andy Browne'• announcement,
"The launch countdown ii now
in~·" Immediately, tech-
niciaq1 activated Columbia'•
computer 1y1tem1 and its
electrldty-produclng fuel celll.
While launch preparations
w,ere routine, planning for a
tint-ever landing in New Mexico
preoccupied apace agency offi-
clala.
The U.S . Army's White Sands
Miaaile Range is usually the
Earlier, oUiclala had hoped '°
designate White Sanda aa an
early abort ate while still plan-
nlng '° U1e F.dwardl for an end-
of-mimion l.and.ina.
On launch paa 39A, techni-.
clans were oblivious to an this.
They were getting the ship ready
for astronauts Jack R. Lousma
and C. Gordon Fullerton, begin-
ning four days of precise pre-
don't expect any problema. It'•
been µneventful up '° now.''
Tarone made It clear that crews
who service the ahuttle after
touchdown would prefer a lan-
ding at Edward•, where they
have better equipment and accea
'° the vehicle. But he noted that
top management people are
"very strong about wanting to
;wich on time.
"It would be a headache to go
to Whlte Sanda; we'd prefer
Edwards," he told reporters.. "It
would cost us an extra week,
Fort Wa y ne fears mOre r ain
~
Floodwaters pour through holes in dike; 9,000 flee
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) -
Floodwaters poured through
holes ln a 15-foot-high dike in
this soggy city during the night,
sending hundreds of more resi-
dents scurrying to higher ground
and leaving as many as 9,000 cut
off from their homes.
About 700 volunteers paasin1
sandbags bucket-brigade style
worked through the night to
shore up the 50-year-old diJte
breached by three-foot holes.
Firefighters hurried people out
of their homes and onto city
buses as the floodwaters surged
through the dike on the city's
northeast side. ·
"We began evacuating another
500 or so late last night," said
Mark Rozeen, the city's public
information director. "The num-
ber of persona evacuated is bet-
ween 8,000 and 9,000."
Ralph Fortriede. a city design
engineer, said today, "The dike is
holding Its own."
But, he said, if more rains
come, "I don't know what will
happen. I don't think the dike is
going to break, but it may go
over the top."
Fortriede said that during the
night, "We had three-foot noles
opening up. At that time, I
thought we were within minutes
of losing it."
Al Zirkle, director of opera-
tions for the city utilities, said,
"Our enginleen tell us the sheer
weight of the sand is the only
thing that can save the dike."
W8ter also waa filling streets
today along the Maumee River
dike in the Lakeside neighbor-
hood in the eastern part of the
city. The river, bloated from
thawing ice and days of rain, re-
mained nearly stationary today
~ Inches shy of its record level
m 1913, when a series of floods
killed 700 people in Indiana and
·Ohio.
But the National Weather
Service predicted tbunderaho·
wers for tonight and Friday.
Rivers were receding in Ohio
and Michigan, Where flOods ftave
done a total of $19 million in
damage, but the Illinnia River
was still rising and causing minor
flooding in Peoria. Damage in
Fort Wayne is estimated at $16.8
mllllon.
A tornado damaged an Atlanta
building Wednesday as thun-
derstorms hit Georgia, and the
San Francisco area was pelted
with hail, snow and rain.
The death toll from a week of
flooding £n northern Indiana,
Ohio and southern Michigan roee
to six today when Ohio police
reported a 9-year-old girl waa
killed when a car slid into a
flood-swollen ditch and sank in
10 feet of water near Dolphos.
At least three people have
been killed in Ohio, two in Mi·
chigan and one in Indiana.
"The entire dike area here is
just like mush," Zirkle said. "The
dikes are just saturated. It's not
Negative reportin'g
. slowing recovery ?
WASJIINGTON (.AP) -P re-
sident Reagan's ipok~man said
that the news media "has been
reuonably fair'' in its coverage of
the administration but that per-
sistent negative reporting can
have a psychological impact on
the economy.
David E. Gergen, Reagan's as-
sistant for communications, was
pre98ed to explain the president's
criticism of news reporting, made
in an interview Tuesday with the
Daily Oklahoman.
"A continuing emphasis on the
negative can influence public
psycholOffY with regard to the
economy,' said Gergen.
The comment echoed Reagan.
who asked in the newspaper
interview:
"la it news that some fellow
out in South Succotash 1ome-
place baa just bee~ laid off, that
he should be interviewed
nationwide? . . .
"You can't turn on evening
news without seeing that they're
going to interview eomeone else
who has lost his job or they're
outside the factory that haa laid
off workers and so forth -the
constant down-beat -that can
contribute psychologically to slo-
wing down a new ~very that
is in the offing," the president
said, according to a transcript
made available at the White
House.
The president said network
news programs. in "the battle of
the ratings," were "looking for
what's eve-catching and
spectacular.r'
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
CIHS"i.d edvertlsl1t9 7141M2·5178
All ottter deper1ment• 642-4321
Thomas P. Haley ,__C,,,..hec111 ... 01hu •
Robert N. Weed ,,_,.
"themas A. Murphine ....
L. Kay Schultz _,_
• tftd Owee!Of 04 °"" ........
Michael P. Harvey -fig°'*""' Kenneth N. Goddard Jr.
~OifeclOf
Charles H. Loos .......... ,_
. .
MAIN OFFICE
llOWHt BaySI., c-. -. CA. M.111....._: ... 1560, C•IAI-. CA.,_.
c.pyrltfll 1112 0r.,.. Coelt l'Wlhlllftl ~.
No ~11Dfte1, lllldfratl4"1,.-....1,...._ ...
WttlM.....U .. rein IMf lie ~ wftMul
9"(1.tl ~lion Of ~.vrteM _,,
water lapping over the top."
"It could break loose at any
time in the next 24 hours," Pu-
blic Safety Coordinator Anthony
Meyers said late We dnesday
night.
Police used loudspeakers and
firefighters went door-to-door
along eight blocks to evacuate an
undetermined number of people.
Five city buses were sent to help
take residents away, and eva-
cuees with nowhere else to stay
were brought to on e of-two
churches. The firefighters also
disconnected gas and electricity
to \:)revent fires.
Later, buses were standing by
in case the volunteers had to be
evacu ated, and a crane was
brought in to help dump dirt on
the earthen dike, if necessary.
"We have engineers all along
the dike and they'll give the
word if we need to get these
people out," Zirkle said, adding
there would be plenty of war-
ning lf aomethinR went wrong.
About 4,100 people left their
homes Wednesday, and sevel'
more emergency Red Cross shel-
ters were opened, bringing the
total to 11.
The three rain-swollen rivers
that join in Fort Wayne -the
Maumee, the St. Joseph and the
St. Mary's -were expected to
rise almost a foot overnight and
threatened to divide the city of
170,000 into six isolated commu-
nities. All city schools were clo-
seci. '
SINGER INJURED
Rhythm-and-blues singer
Teddy Pendergrass was in
critical condition in a Phila·
delphia hospital today after
his car slammed into two
trees, police said. An uni-
dentified woman coQ'lpanion
was not injured.
Wa rning studied
WASHING TON (AP) -Preti;'
dent Reagan said Wednesday the
· admlnistration was studying thej
implications of Moscow's war-
nlng that it will take "retaliatory.
1teps" if the United StaleS carriea
out plans to i n s t all new
medium-range mi111le1 in Eu-
rope .
.......... .., ........... We're Listening •••
What do you like ab6ut the Dau, Piiot! What don't you llke?
Call the num .. r below and your m .... ,, will be recorded,
tun1cribed and deJlvered to the appropriate .clitor.
.-then there it the rilk, he aald, of
additional rain at Edwards '¥hich
could cau.ae a longer delay.
The New Mexico de9ert lite'•
drawback la that the •J*.'e .,en-
cy has no equipment there to
quickly load the ahuttle on the
back of a jumbo jet and ship it
back to Cape Canaveral.
That means Columbia would
alt on the ground two or three
weeks, until the equipmetit could
be brought by train frbm Ed-
wards. N~A wants very much
to return the .abip t.a... the launch
The decision to atart the
countdown and attempt a launch
Monday reflects a1ency confi-
dence in the maturity of the ah~e and its ability to perform Its 11 mi11lon, even though
Fligh wu cut 1hort la1t No-
vember y a faulty fuel cell.
Gen. James A. Abrahamson,
NASA a.odate administrator for
apace transportation, directed
I.ai•D('h Director George Pap to
Monday's launch target was
set lut December. Beggs w a11 SQ
wedded to the date that two
weeks ago, with preparation•
running four days ahead' of
IChedule, he rejected a chance t..o
advance the date.
"We probably could have at>\
an earlier date, but that would
just be good public relations," he
said. "What we want to tell
shuttle users ls that we can
launch on the day we say."
BARGE LE4 VES -The largest ocean-going
barge built in the United States is nudged
around Fiddlers' Reach along the Kennebec
River... in Maine. The tul{boats are qelivering
AP Wlr.pt1o10
the 643-foot vessel from -the Bath Iron Works
to a shipyard in Chester, Pa .. where the barge
will be outfitted with its own tugboat.
Last resort for panda pair?
Artificial insemination possible after zoo encounter .
WASHING TON (AP) -It is
almost spring in Washington and
Ling-Ung and Hsing-Hsing had
at it again today. Sut today's
encoun ter on the grass at the
National Zoo, like those of years
past, held scant promise that a
baby panda would result.
The pandas attempted, once
again, to mate. But after an
hour-long hillside tryst, Dr. Ro-
bert Hc4ige, a zoo official, told
reporters, "We did not see a
proper copulation."
If within a day or so the pan-
das, childless these 10 years of
Washingtonian captivity, do not
have a mating session that holds
the promise of success, zookee-
pers said they will resort to arti-
ficial insemination.
A decision on that could be
made following another panda
rendezvous this· afternoon.
Half a dozen times, Hsing-
H sing, the male.-e mbraced
Ling-Ling in an approximation
of the proper procedure. They
whimpered.
The pandas displayed little of
the cuffiness of previous years,
when they quarreled.
Gesturing with a paw, patting
the top of her head, turning in
his direction, Ling-Ling appea-
red to be encouraging Hsing-
Hsing.
But there was no indication of
success. When the animals
showed signs of mutual grouchi·
ness, their keepers separated the
two. ·
Zoo Director Ted Reed stood
glumly outside the pandas' cage,
hands in pockets, his optimism
vanished.
"Hope springs eternal." lw
muttered.
He is determined to see thP
pandas breed -an event rare i11
zoos outside China.
This ye ar's enco unter w as
hastily arranged after Ling-Ling,
who is believed t() be 12 ~ years
old, showed signs Wednesday of
coming into heat, four or fi ve
weeks earlier than was expected.
She made the custom.arY blea ·
ting sound and she left scetlt
marl<s. Those are two of the fou r
signs female pandas make wh1 n
they· are read y to breed. T hP
other two -which Ling· Ling
did not exhibit -are a decrease
in a ppetite and a restlessness,
including a tendency to walk
backwards.
The same 24·hour answertq aervlce may be used to record let·
ters to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors muat include
their name and telephone number for verification. No clrculauon1 calls, please.
Tell ua what's on your mJnd. .. I ' 32 Fnhlon llllnd
Newport 8-ctt .~
•
-
l
HIP: I
;, The developer of a propoeed
truh indneraUna power plant ln
, .Huntington Beach 1a11 he may
i4 aak state energy ex>mrn.taaionen to
• ··approve his project, thereby
removing control from the City
... ;I• Council.
, ·' It appean. at this point, that's
''l ttre only way1the controversial
. project would be approved, be-
?' cauae it iB facing strong opposition
:-o:i from local resiClents and at least
oruve of the seven City Council
..,--'.members.
,. , But with ao much ex>mrnunity
'1• ,opposition and alternative loca-
tions available for the proPQSed
plant, it would be unfortunate if
_the Energy Cotnmission exercised
-its power and overruled local
control on this issue.
Developer Dan Ryan of
Ne~rt Beach says his proposed
• •trash and sewage sludge incine-
rator at Magnolia Street and
Hamilton Avenue would be an
efficient way to dispose of two-
thirds of the county's trash and to
generate electricity for 250,060
homes. r-He says the proposed site, a
I •
38-acre mud dump, was chosen
because it la. clos~ to Southern
California Edilon apd the oounty's
trash transfer ttation and its
sewage procelling plant.
Ryan says his plant would U1e
the trash and rubbish and sell
electricity to nearby F41aon. Ryan
says the Huntington Beach site ii
the best ln the CQunty, bu\ he allo
says he wants to work with loc81
offidals.
The mud dump ~~ is located
across the road from a school, a
park, and a housing tract. Resi-
dents say they fear air pollution
and ex>ntend that numerous trash
deliveries to the proposed plant
are inappropriate for a residential
area.
The controversy ma.kes it im-
portant that any state hearings
and discussion on the proposal
should be carried on at the local
level for the benefit of city resi-
dents, rather than at Sacramento.
The proposed plant is large
enough to merit consideration by
the state Energy Commission, but
it would be best if local officials
had authority over the plan.
f::OJd gift backfires
,·
: The Fountain Valley School school purposes," the Wardlow
: District's ongoing deliberatJons heirs can buy it back for just $50.
:, over sch ool closures took an
): interesting twist last week because 1 .of an overlooked property deed
1' recorded in 1898.
; It seems that back then,
! farmer Robert Bruce Wardlow
; · sold an acre of land to the Foun-
; · tain Valley School District for $50, ! earmarking it for the community's
: . first school.
Now, 84 years later, Fountain
. Valley Elementary School, whose
' grounds include the original
, Wardlow acre, was targeted for
closure by a district advisory
I_ conunittee. i But two members of the
I Fountain Valley Historical Socie-
i ty, who also are grandparents of a
' second grader at the school, found
1 •' that the one-acre property deed
I has an interesting stipulation: If
'. the property is no longer used "for ,,
One city official estinlated the
corner acre is worth up to
$400,000.
The school closure advisory
committee could have stuck by its
original recommendation that
Fountain Valley Elementary be
closed, thus setting the stage for a
possible court battle over the
Wardlow deed.
But the committee wisely de-
cided to change its recommenda-
tion, suggesting that another as
yet W\S~fied school be closed in
place of Fountain Valley.
In this era of tight school di-
strict budgets, it would have made
little sense to move toward a costly
court battle when an other school
could be chosen as a suitable al-
ternative in the district's closurt!
plans.
· :. Dollars not conclusive .. I
. Campaign funding for the candidates for City Council and
.. City Council election in Fountain two more for City Attorney.
Valley is light thus far, especially The three big fund raisers all
compared to larger campaign war are incumbents who also spent
chests amassed in neighboring large sums when first elected in
Huntington Beach. 1978.
For the financial period en-Councilman John Tholll8$ has
' ding Feb. 27, only four of the 10 a campaign war chest of $10,761;
Fountain Valley candidates repor-Councilman Don MacAllister re-
ted more than $1,000. ports $9,527 and Cit-y Attorney
Gail Hutton reports $9,108. There are three open seats in The formula for a campaign
the April 13 election. Candidate ought not to be a direct correlation
Betty Mignanelli has reported between money spent and votes
funding of $2,087 and Mayor Ben received. And, likewise being
Nielsen is next with $l,445. well-financed should not be a
But in neighboring Hunting-negative factor.
ton Beach, which has a race for The bottom line is to deter-
'four City Council seats and the mine where the candidates stand
City Attorney job, three candi-on issues and who will best re-
dates have reported war chests of present the voter's concerns.
1 more than $9,000 each. There are 28 candidates be-
. So far, eight candidates in tween these two cities and voters
1 'Huntington Beach have amassed should be alert to the poUtical
l more than $2,000. There are 16 . positions.
,-. . l Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex-,·~sjtessed on tnis page are those ot their authors and artists. Reader comment .,1s t!!Vll·
' ed. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. Bo. 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phon~·(7UJ
j lb42·432t. ;~\--------------------------~--------------------------. . ' !L.M. B~yd/ Left-handed,
'' Q. In the 1930s, 10 percent of the
,popu}ation was reported to be
Jeft.·handed. Now . 12 percent is. Why
'if.bis difference? · A. Those who analyze such matters
isay both parents and teachers
1~ to p p e d t r y I n g to con v e rt
t.Jeft·banders to right-handers during
'. -he last 40 years.
• · You wouldn't much care for the
•i#loUon of eatin1 a live chicken, a Uve .calf, \ live_pig, certainly not. But &
ot of l*>Ple eat a lot of live food,
hat, nonesuch comes to mind? How
bout clams and oysters? Many a
editative diner drops the lemon
ulc• on the little living muscle to see
t twitch.
TV announcers are frequently
eatd to speak of an "apparent heart
ORANGE COAST lllJPilat
attack." Curious. thls. A heart attack
is never apparent. The convulsion of
the heart is not visible. However, an
• ·evid~nt heart attack" is possible. So
say the better word mechanics.
Q . The U.S. Army had Third
Lieutenants during the War of 1812.
What did they do?
A. Nobody knows. There were 408
of them al peak strength. They
earned $23 a month, or $30 in the
~avalry, if they bought their own
horses. But what they dJ.d is a
01ystery. No detailed orders survive.
What do you think of the Mona
Lisa? The Soviet Union'• Leonid
Brubnev delivered this jud&ment:
• 'She'a a plain sensible·l6oking
woman." ·
'
New twist in lawsuit • mania
WASHINGTON -Americans have
become increasingly lawsuit--happy in
recent years. The courts, already over-
burdened=y le timate legal actions, are being swam by nuiance suits that
have no on the docket.
As an investigative reporter, fve had
my share of legal threats from corpora-
tions and individuals whose particular ox
rve gored. They rarely get beyond the
grumbling stage.
Now I've discovered a new wrinkle in
the litigiousness th.at is sw~ping the
country -the lawsuit instigated behind
the scenes by a third party· with an
interest in tbe outoome ....
SWORN STATEMENTS filed in ro'n-
nection with a recent lawsuit against
A.BC News show that the legal action was
prompted by the nation's largest seller of
cancer insurance, which had been criti-
cized on a television series by the de-
fendants. Yet the ~mpany, American Family Life Assura~e. of Columbus,
Ga., was never a party to the lawsuit.
The plaintiff was a Virginia insurance
agent whose questionable sales pitch was
clandestinely filmed and was then shown
briefly on the nationally broadcast"news
program in November 1978. It was part of
a series on the House Aging c.ommittee's
probe of so-called Medigap insurance
polides1 which auppoeedly plug the gaps
tn Medicare coverage. The investigation,
incidentally, led to corrective legislation
by Congress.
The agent's sworn depositions, and
conversations with her, make clear that
she didn't file the suit after suffering
G -J1-c1-11-1-111_1_1 -~,
financial harm, viewing the TV show
herseU or even being to~d bout it bX friends. In fact, she said in a eposition, ' I
had no idea that such a had ever
been aired." And she told my associate
Tony Capaccio that "people came up to
me after the show and talked about it, but
no one asaociated it with me."
Yet the agent sued A.BC and the House
investigators for violating her civil rights.
How did this happen? Simple enough: An
attorney representing American Family
Life in another lawsuit slipped hts busi-
ness card under the door of her boy-
friend's apartment in Alexandria, Va., in
mid-1980.
"He is the one who originally brought
this to my attention and set up the whole
-the whole case for me," the insurance
agent said in sworn testimony. •
She said the attQrney, Anthony Dili-
metin, paid for her September 1980 trip
to New York. In the presence of an
American Family Life vice president, the
attorney played a videotape of the ABC
news show for her.
1 Did Dilimetin suggest, she was asked,
"that you ought to file suit?" The insu-
r~ agent replied: "Yes."
She testified that Dilimetin helpfully
identified the House investigators who
appeared on the TV show and were iilso
~ued. "Since I had no idea who had to be
sued," she testified, ''Mr. Dilimetin was
informing me of the proi>er persons that
would be involved in the lawsuit.••
Her attorney told us that the insurance
company purchased depositions of the
House investigators and lent them to him
because his client couldn't afford the
transcripts.
DESPITE ALL THIS, the a~ent
doesn't feel she was used as a "front ' for
American Family Life. And Dilimetin
insists that "we absolutely did not have a
role in encouraging the suit; we did not
pay for legal fees."'The jury, by the way,
took just 40 minutes to decide that the
agent had no case.
.Where have all the candidates gone?
To the Editor:
Frederick Schoemehl of your staff
listed the candidates and the,offices in the
Sunday, March 14 edition. UPQn perusal
of the candidates for the primaries, it was
most interesting to note the ~ number
of unopposed candidate.s. This is a bit
MAILBOX
astonishing in view of the pointed articles
over the last few years noting the com-
plete dissatisfaction of the "public'' with
the incumbents. Have the "public'' really
given up on trying to place reliable,
honest, hard-working candidate.s into the ·electoral process? It is particularly diffi-
cult to note that two of the county
supervisors have no opposition whatao-.
ever. This is the kind of opposition a
candidate baa in Russia, not America.
IS IT POSSIBLE that no one but an
incumbent can afford to run an election
contest? Where are the business people
who should be out urging their fellow
business people to pfaoe responsible
candidates into office? Where are the
environmentalists who should be urging
their candidate.s into office? Where are
the silent majority who should be out
behind the 9Celles urging aolid citiz.ens to
step forward and place their names on
the ballot? Apparently. they are all asleep
or really don't ei~e a damn.
It is sad to see the large number of
unoppoaed candidate.s. We can only hope
and pray that the unoppoeed will not be
complacent and smug In the light of
public apathy and will try and do
somethina constructive during their co-
ming perfod in office which they proba-
bly naven't tried to do during the pre-
vious years they were in offioe. For the
others who can afford to nm and should
be out there opposing the unoppoeed,
don't let another opportunity pa11 w~
you fall to raile your voice when given
the ~.
CHARLF.s D. LARSON
Fellow suit erer
To the Editor:
Now that March 10 has~. and we ·are alhtill in Oranae County, it'• time for
me to apeak out! Hats off to Mary Jane
Sanborn, and her bepnruQf' cru1ade
thro~ Uw ftont doer of t.he DMV. of
C.O.ta 'Me.a (Ma.ltbOx, Mardi lO). 1 W'OUld
Uke to "8n up for ~ _p@lltlon of $J*I ()rpl:Uzer for the DMV., Ma. S-bani
ulld her lunch dim to ..... la ltne .. w• not IUOCW'111.
The firl't dmt, I br-.d bJ on my way
holM from wcD. W101Ur1 I walked Into a ""'of H chafh and 15-22 people .tan-~!:·~rl ~~~"i
told rny bu.band l w.. lolna to the DMV,
\he' next =· af>ollt-16 ...... before~ and that lhouJd do IL Wf'9'11! I mean they open at 8 uh,. rm an
Nrly n.er, how man1 ~ caWd be there~ When I arrtwd, at -..C !O people
were waiting, and 25 more came after me,
before the doors were opened!
My work time started at 10 a.m .• but I
figured they would have plenty of fresh
faces to help all of us. Wrong! The 36
chairs filled, and I was stanclinR. To make
a long story short, I left at 9:32 a.m. Two
windows were open, and a third lady
would wander over occasionally and help
someone.
Mary Jane, I feel we have shared an
emotional experience which unites us as
friends, so I may call you by your first
name ... I'm ready-to fight! ROBBI SCHOONOVER
TELEPHONE Y9UR
LETTER.TO THE EDITOR
See instructions below
Not our backyard
To the Editor:
Re your March 5 article on the trash
burning power plant at Huntington
Beach:
I share with Mr. Ryan his sense of
support in cutting our .dependence from
foreign oil by developing alternate
sources of energy. such as trash-burning
power plants, but I perceive the feeling
that he wants otbenr to pioneer the
all-American spirit for him.
For starts, why not propose the
trash-burning plant at Newport Beach.
After all, it baa the same environmental aeUing aa Huntington Beach does, i.e .
cloee to water, cloae to~lectric power
lines, in line with PCH, and to this date,
judainl from the same point of view and mentality of Mr. Ryan. Newport Beach
hu been "un-American" by not having
the ppportunity, aa· Huntington Beach
baa. to hoat power plants and sanitary sewage plants which benefit all people.
Thia will put Mr. Ryan's hometown,
Newport Beach, in tune With the concept
that greet ideu should beldn at home,
and not in eomebody elle'• Deck yard.
Mr. Ryan lhould be informed that his
"~ llCtlon'' and the ~·alternatives
to the IJl'<>l>C*d actaon" call for findina a
lite whkfi Will not caUM irreveni6le damaae to the envtronmeni and ita hal>-
ltat.
A TRASB·BURNINO plant at Hun.
unpin Beach or any other reaidentlal
aN8 will: lncreale 1nffic perha.. 24
boun a •r. ~cal.lie ttallic ~ ardl from h8•vy-dut1 loaded truck• llawllnl ._. ....... in Nl&dential
........ aa& ..,..._ felt that: lncr1!11e •
•
l.•Uera /f'dlri mi*r• ort welcomt TM
nf1M lo "'°"*""' """" to /U apoct or ,u,,.enott bbff it rewrwd L.tttet• of JOO
worda or leu will bf ,."" pnfff'fJtet All
lttter• mul mc:l11de 1iQllOfu,. Giid motHeg
odtlrtu but "°'"'' mo11 ~ tultltlwld on ,,. qu11t if ••Jl•et"" rtNOft It oppor••U.
PHC'J """ noC ~ publitlwd. I.dim mow b. fll•phofwd to M ·-NfJml Giid ~
1'ltnlbfr of t~ contribMtor "'"'' '-,.Wft /or Wf'tf katton J>llrJJO.-'I.
noise pollution and water co~umption;
produce toxic emissions from t.Oe burning
stocks and will produce ash and other
particulate residue fall-outs, dispersed
for miles, depending on wind currents;
last and not least will drive population
and property values down including
swruner touristic business. for people
would not want to live in a place where
the trash and garbage of the entire
county is hauled in smelly \rocks for
possibly many generations to come.
No one builds these types of plants
today in the heart. of already developed
touristic and residential areas. U the
proper location can be found, let's all
support Mr. Ryan in his noble cause.
JOHN E. PlilLLIPS
Accident solution
To the Editor:
There is a simple solution to the high
cost of automobile insurance -fewer
accidents. And the solution to fewer
accidents is changing the timing of the
stop lights. Is our time so valuable that a
few seconds would make a difference?
The timing on almost all the lights now
changes from green to red and red to
green with no hesitation. A few seconds
difference -that is, leave red on all four
liRhts for two or three 9000nds before two
of them turn green. This would mean,
especially at main intersections, fewer
fenders bent and lives lost,• Too many
drivers still cross intersections on red, and
some drivers still make rabbit starts u
the light changes green.
Please write to your city Tratfic
Commission suggesting this change if you
agree with me.
8m'Y BRISCOE
Not bis letters
To the Editor:
Three letters on general and local
political matters have appeared in the
local papers in recent weeka, includinc
the Dally Pilot, with aipatures that
suggest they were written oy me.
I did not write these letters, nor any
others to local papers.
JOHN W. JOHNSON
Ret., Newport-M8'9
Unified School Distrirt
When a rooblle home park 1uddenly
doublea 0.,lptllCe rent )'O'I qu~ the true meen1nc of fair .,..,
DJil.J. .......... -.. -= ...... -·-~·-ltl-=1~· ·-· ... ,..,"" ,.............. ~· , . .... .
. '
'
.,,. HF • Keys are one of the
0
THURSOAV. MARCH 18. 1982 oddities no one throws
away. Erma Bombeck
lists more on Page B2.
CAVALCADE
TELEVISION
82
86
!1. STEVE MARBLE Corbett aald Watt ll punutna •Deir ,... ...,. . "a pump-America-dry-lint po:
State Coaatal Comrnluioners Hey thlt, it adopted, will only
took t.urna W9Cineeday verbally mean that we're juat that much
alaahing Jamea Watt befere more dependent on foreign oil In
agreeing to oppose offshore oil the future."
drilling plans for the Southland • In the end, all 11 commiaBion
cout. memben voted to oppoee 1eu1J1C
One member called the irit.erior any of the 172 off1hore tract•
aecretary's push "insulting and under consideration to oil com-
mindlesa.'' paniea this Jun~.
Another suggested. Watt has Eleven of the tracts are off
"tolled down the gauntlet and Newport ~ach, Laguna Beach
dared the residents of California and Huntington Beach. Others
to pick it up " are off Long Beach, Santa Mo-
'Commissloner John Corbett nica and Santa Barbara.
noted, "It's very hard for us to be Commissioners, meeting in Los
reasonable when the other side Angeles, endorsed a second mo-
isn't.'' lion specifically opposing drilling
~' _,,~ Clever angles
hard to sw-allow
FOR THE BIRDS DEPT. -Journalists all across our
coastal region will no doubt be stretching and searching for
new angles to the story Friday when our birds return. You
know the ones.
Tiiis Friday is St. Joseph's Day when the swallows,
fabled in history, song and lore, return to the Jewel of the
Mis&ons at San Juan Capistrano.
As almost every school
child of our coastline
knows, flocks of the spee-
/'<a'\ , dy little forked-tail birds
TOM MORPHINE ~l/j abandon th_eir winter ,~ headquarters ~ Goya, Ar-
------------gentina, each year about
Feb. 1 and wing their way homeward to Mission San Juan
Capistrano. .
And the thousands of birds arrive precisely on St.
Joseph's Day, circling the mission and then booting other
birds out of their mud nests beneath the eaves.
Bells of the Mission peal and celebrations begin.
WRONG THINKERS OVER the years have tried to
de-bunk the legend of the swallows returning on exactly
St. Joseph's Day. Largely, they have failed in this effort.
Natives of the San Juan area have simple, easy ans-
wers for the doubters. When birds arrive early, these are
simply "scouts" in advance of the main flock. U swallows
,,,,-~
. \I -.·
-..(";.~
~. -pistrano swallow-watchers rruss the birds
arrive late, these are "stragglers" behind the main flock.
It's quite clear.
Back in 1979, one wire set"Vice dug up a couple of or-
nithologists -bird scientists to you and me -:-who blasted
the precise return of the swallows as nothing more than
pure myth.
Most people were outraged and the two scientific sa-
vants haven't been heard from since.
~ IN 1974;THERE WAS "The Lion Country Safari
Hoax" wherein a clever public relations man for the animal
place issued a press release noting that the swallows had
bypassed Capistrano and had made new homes at the Sa-
fari instead.
But Bill Smith, then public relations man for the
Mission, scoffed at the report as "a cheap publicity stunt."
Smith, himself, liked to employ specific times and
numbers in his Capistrano swallow reports to give them a
strong sense of authenticity. He used the technique well in
the Great Fog Deviation of 1969.
That year, our entire coastline disappeared under a fog
on ·St. Joseph's Day. The swallows had equally vanished.
But publicist Smith came on the radio and declared:
"THE SW ALLOWS HA VE ARRIVED at Mission San
Juan Capistrano. They're stacked up above like fogbound
airptanes. We can hear them twittering up there. We got
500 down on the ground at exactly 9:57.25 this morning
" · · · So much for precision. Smith loved to festoon bis
swallow reports with exact numbers. One year, ahead of St.
Joseph's Day, he reported, "We have 1,500 swallows
siahted 50 miles north of Guadalajara,. They're right on
ecliedule, folks!"
Still, joumallsts will try to shoot a new angle on ~e
stoey. Maybe this year the writers may fear our recent rams
will delay the fast little birds. But that's been uaed before
too. Smith blamed the rains in 193~ for making the swal-
· lows three days lat.e.
MOST FLATLAND TOURISTS who visit the Mission
Friday will eee pigeons, doves or maybe a couple of stray
rooeten and figure they've spotted the swallows. Real
swa1loww are actually very hard to eee in flight. They're 80
fatt they're just a blur.
, One year a journalist fiau,red he had a new angle when
ha. ltOry trumpeted that •'ihJa will be the 199th year the ...now. have returned to Sm Juan Oaplftrano."
You are left to wonder what the blrda did before then.
tn 35 of the off1hore tract• -
Including the' 11 off Oranae
County -lf the Department of
Interior moves forward with the
leaae ule.
'The movaa were applauded by
dozena of coastal resident.I and
civic leaden who criticized the
pending leaae sale, off.shore dril-
ling and Watt.
Laguna Mayor Sally Bellerue
deecribed her town u a unique
communltY. that depend• upon
tourism for survival. She said
offahore c:lrl1l1ng platforms would
be unsightly. Charlea Howell. a
Laguna architect, said Laguna
Beach li the "Riviera of the Pa-
d&'' and. doem't need oU rtp In iniahin.a lnto this at a frantic and Spokemnen for two oU flnna -
It. ocean. frightening pace," voiced Bar-QwvrOn and lDx:xcm -were on
La1una reeldent and artl1t bara Blake, a Sierra Club mem-band, but didn't apeak.
Beth lAJedl Mid 0 we don't want bel'. Com.m1-lon of.fk:iala .tm.ltted
to kill our ocean ju1t to make She charpd that oil companies after the hearioc that lt la hard to
James Watt happy." She •ave already have hundreds of leued know whether the OOl'DIDi8lion'a
commi8lionen a pelntlng of what ' ' off1hore tract.a around the coun-action wlll have any effect on Lacuna would look lib with oU . try that have not been tapped or Watt's ultimate declalon on
rlga off ita coaat. It waa titled, exPloredM.alibu ho d which tract1 will be offered foe "Never in Laauna Beach." One womai\ w aai •sale in June.
Leaden and reaidenta of she helped clean up after the
Newport Beach and San Cle-1969 Santa Barbara oil apUl aatd The commiaaion aaya it baa
menie alao took their 1hota at the oil firms have "a miserable veto power on offshore oil dril-offlhore dttlllng. RepreeentaUvea track record." ling and that it can reject any
of Huntington Bea•h, which "It everyone had experienced offlhore drilling plan.
hasn't opix-d off.shore drilling, trying to clean off a seagull co-But the Department of Interior
didn't apeak. vereo ln oil, they wouldn't sup-reportedly aee9 the commillion'•
"The adminiltratlon in port any of these offshore power differently and the lllue is
Waahington appears bent on tracta," she said. the subject of .everal lawa&ita.
AFTER THE SCARE -Richard Durnell of 1053 W . Wilson,
Costa Mesa, looks over sections of fence ripped apart when a
....,,.. ....... ~.,, .....
funnel cloud passed through his neighborhood in 20 aeoonds
Wednesday. Boat in background was undamaged.
Residents escape
tornado's punch
-
By STEVE TRIPOU
Of tlM Dally Piiot St.ti
Randy Chambliss had just
stepped Into his van at a west
Costa Mesa comer when he saw
the funnel cloud touch on Pacific
Avenue, about 100 yards away.
As a native of Georgia, where
tornadoes are more common, his
first impression was that it was a
"dust devil," a minor disturban-
ce.
"Then I saw that it took up the
whole s tree t , 25 or 30 feet
across," he said. "I could see the
whole thing. It had some garbage
cans, trees and boxes swirling in
it."
His first reaction was fear -
"My heart was working a little,"
he said Wednesday afternoon. a
few hours after the incident -
but then he thought of protecting
those he had just left.
He ran back into his friend
Rich Durnell's house on West
Wilson Street and told several
children to open the doors to
equalize the air pressure in.side
and outside as the funnel puled.
Then he watched as the cloud
proceeded down Pacific Avenue
for 20 seconds and disappeared.
Witnesses' accounts indicate
that the minor damages and lack
of injuries were more a fortunate
circumstance than testimony to
the cloud's punch.
In the house next to Durnell's.,
the sheet metal patio cover was
ripped apart.
About a block away, a metal
fence was ripped up anq thrown
onto the roof of a nearby house.
Thick trunks of trees were
snapped, and adjacent homes
were spared damage simply by
the way trees fell.
Further down Pacific, Sandi
Coatley had just dellvered a
bottle of wine to her iletghbors
Mark and Debby Johnston.
As the three sat aippfn& wine
and looklna out the picture wln-
dow'at 219"2 Pacific Ave., strange
things began happening on the
street
Flrat Ma. Coatley noticed a
weatherbeate.Jl 6-foot rowboat-
turned-play box in the front
yard that "came up, I 'd say,
about three feet oif the ~. then it wu juat twnblinj In the
air."
Mark Johnaton aald the boat
1wirled around in the cloud
briefly then landed 12 feet away. M~. Ulm from the roof
of Ma. Coedey'• bowie were fluna
on eNe and half-burled in the
JObnleiona' y.,s. •
''lt'a a FOd th1na no one WM
out there when thoee tblng1
were flyh\I around," Mid Mn.
Johnston. "Someone could have
been killed if one of tha&e had hit
them."
Later the three discovered a
75-pound ceramic planter out.side
the Johnstons' door had moxed
about four feet.
A few doors away. Cornell
llieseu's mother was sitting in
her son's apartment.
Ilieseu arrived later and saw
what his mother had only heard.
A 6-foot tall section of pic.ket
fence along the driveway. was
flung into the side of hi.s apart-
ment, smashing the twin win-
dows.
During the only brief sunny
interlude in an otherwise rainy
day, neighbors gathered to com-
pare damages and accounts of
what happened.
Trash cans and mailboxes tom
from their posts littered the
street. Freelance artist Jean
Hesaler's yard at 2220 Pacific was
almost covered with broken tree
branches, aome several lnchea in
diameter.
But the residents' general fee-
ling was a slight bemusement
mixed with gratitude that a little
luck had spared them from in-
jury.
MISSING CONNECTIONS -Southern California Edison
pe1"80nnel repair power lines downed by falling trees. Back-
yard fence was blown onto roof at 2230 Pacific, below.
..
.1
.
I
·I 1 ·1
<
THUMOAY, MAACH 18, 1~ I HF
Al
BUSINESS C8
Running can be
ca . a perilous exercise.
ENTERTAINMENT C9 See stwy. Page C4.
I
another idol
Fernando is ·to baseball
BY BOWARD L RANDY or--...,,.........,.--
When you are the belr-
apparent to the fortune's of
Mexico's largest bank and real
estate development venture, why
would you want to risk your life
on a h.lgh-epeed race track?
Joaele Garza, an Idol of the
Mexican populace along with the
Dodgers' Fernando Valenzuela of
baseball fame, paaaecl through
town recently on a treadmill that
i.s his usual way of life.
BE IS, perhaps, the hottest
item on the Indianapolia cham-
pionship car circuit and was roo-
kie of the year at the brickyard
last season.
But he Isn't satlafied with part
performance or resting on his
laurels. The 21 -year-old race
driver is currently under the
tutelage of Bobby Unser, himself
a multiple winner at Indy inclu-
ding last year's contested victory.
"Bobby has had a lot taken out
' of him and has developed an
ulcer," his manager, Bruce Bar-
nes, of Laguna Beach with of-
fices In Newport Beach, says.
"That's why, when Pat Patrick
suggested to him that he team up
with a younger driver and serve
as his manager, he was willing to
accept the challe nge with
Josele."
FERNANDO'S RIV AL -Josele Gana, the auto racing cir-
cuit's Rookie of the Year in 1981, is just as popular, if not
more so, in his native country of Mexico as is the Dodgers'
Fernando Valenzuela. Garza will compete in the Formula
Atlantic series in Long Beach later th.is year.
GARZA PARTED company
with Newport Beach 's David
Psache at mid-season in 1981 and
after the campaign, looked
around for another team and car
to drive. He seemlng.ly has found
it with Bobby Unser.
Hicks would like to go back • Ill • time
.
UC Irvine relief specialist is hoping to regain the form that made him almost invincible in 1980
By JOHN SEV ANO
O(tM DellJ Not .....
In 1980, Larry Hicks had one of thoee
aeuorw every athlete dreama about.
It was the kind that happens once in a
lifetime -like Roger Maria hitting 61
homers, or Wilt Chamberlain acoring 100
points in one game, o r Norm Van
Brocklin rushing for 554 yards in a re-
cord performance again.st the New York
Yanks in 1951.
ALTHOUGH EACH individual went
on to have more successful seasons -
and games -none approached the bril-
lance of their respective feats.
Hicks was one of aeveral instrumental
figures who led Orange Coast College to
the state baseball championship in 1980.
A right-handed relief pitcher, Hicks
~essed an unblemished 6-0 record
with 17 saves and a rni.ni3cule 0-99 ~-
It was Hicks, in fact, who was on the
mound for the final out as the Pirates
defeated LA Valley for the state title.
"It's something I'll always remember,"
recalled Hicks the other day. "I know it
I knew that it was going
to be tougher, but I thought
I co uld overco.me the ad-
justment. I couldn 't.
will be hard to ever top something like
that."
UNFORTUNATELY, THE cloud
Hicks was riding after 1980 became dark
and cumulus with all the fury of a tar~
nado in '81. The joy and_ exhilaration
quickly turned to despondency and de-
spair.
Not that Hicks had a horrible year as a
member of the UC Irvine baseball team
. . . but it's one he'd just as soon forget.
"It was quite a learning experience for
me," said Hicks, who finished his first
season at the major college level with a
6-1 record, seven saves. a 4.82 ERA and.a
sore arm. "What I learned is that you
can't get by in college on just two pit-·
ch es.
"I knew (in coming from OCC to Ir-
vine) that it was going to be a little
· tougher, but I thought I could overcome
the adjustment. I couldn't."
DURING BIS heyday w ith the Pi-
rates, Hicks survived on a fastball and a
wicked slider. He tried to do the same
with the Anteaters, too, but H ick s
quickly found it wasn't enou~h.
"During the miadle of the year, when
I was giving uf more hits than I should
ha'(e, I knew was in trouble," offered
Hicks. Still, the right-hander appeared
In half (27 to be exact) o f UCl's 54
games, allowing 41 hits and 20 earned
runs in 27 innings of work. It was those
numbers, however, that prompted Hicks
to return to Alaska during the summer
to work on his repertoire and seek advice
from his former pitching coach at OCC,
Tim Kelly. -
"It. f1!t helped for me to talk to him
again,• said I-licks of Kelly, who is now
the pitchirlg coach at Arizona State. "I
guess the one thing he told me that sticks
out in my mind is to always be aggres-
sive and never give In to a hitter."
Hicks took Kelly's advice and so far
this season It seems to have paid off. Of
course, it helped that Hicks developed a
(See WCKS, Page C3)
--.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Angels, Dodgers dealt losses
Henderson's hot bat carries A's; Braves stay hot
From AP clJ1patcltes
PHOENIX -Rickey Hender-
son, who reached base all six
times he batted, singled home the
winning run in the 11th inning to
give the Oakland A's a 7-6 ex-
rubition victory over the Angels
Wednesday.
A near-apacity crowd of 7,324
saw the three-hour, 50-mlnute
baseball game which was played
for the benefit of the Ken Boyer
Fund. Almost $15,000 was rai8ed
for the former St. Louia Cardi-
nals manager who is the brother
of A's coach Clete Boyer. Ken
Boyer has cancer and i.s under-
going treatment in Mexico.
Winning pitcher Jeff Jones
w orked out of a bases-loaded,
no-out jam in the top of the 11th.
Tony Phillips got a one-out aingle
in the bottom of the inning to
begin the winning rally off the An8e!s' Curt Brown.
Phillips stole second bale, went'
to third on a g:roundout by Rick
Bosetti, and scored when Hen-
denon singled to left.
Hende rson doubled in the
ninth, acoring Rob Plcc:lolo from
first base with the tying run.
R d C'h • • Earlier in the game, Henderson e 1nese coming 1:~~b:s:i~.·~~: ~i
ciolo belted a buee-«npty homer
Gymnasts wiH stay in Costa Mesa 1n :h~ ~els' batting star waa
. 'l'be People's Republic of
China national gymnaatica team,
which w111 face an American
squad March 26-27' at UCLA,
will arrive in Costa Mesa Tues-
day and will spend most of its
leilw'e time ln the Orange Coast area. ·
The 16-member Red Chinese
contmcent are due to stay at the
South Coast Plaza Hotel. The
men will work out at the Ath-
letes in Action gymnasium in
Fountain Valley while the wo-
men wlll drlll in Huntington
Beach at the :=(Southern
'California Aao ~ ) fadlity.
The men's competj !on t. set
for' Friday, March 26 at UCLA'a.
Pauley Pavilion while the wo-
men'• eventa will be held the followina day. The meet begiJll
both days .. t 7:30 p.m.
The U.S .A. team will be led by
1980 Olympic team members Ju-
lianne McNamara, Tracee Tala-
vera and UCLA standout Peter
Vidmar. The countries met in
head-to-head competition lHt
. summer in Hawaii, with the
Chinese winnin¥. In both the
men's and women 1 divisions.
Ticket prices per match are $10
for adults and $8 for children
under the age of 16 and are
available at the UCLA ticket of-
fice. Special di8cowlt ticketa at $7
for adults and $5 for children are
available at McDonald's restau-
rants throuahout Southern C.all-
fornia.
1be meet is sanctioned by the
U.S. Gymnutica Federation and
hosied by SCATS in ..x:iation
with the UCLA Department of
Athletks.
Rod Carew, who drove in four
runs with a two-run homer in
the third and a two-run single in
the eWith. Reggie Jaclclon had a
pair ol aacrifioe rues for the other
Angels' runs.
Guerrero homers
VERO BEACH -Brook Ja-
coby's run-acoring tingle in the
seventh Inning broke a 2-2 tie
and Atlanta went on to a 6-2
victory over the Dodgen Wed-
needay, the Brava' ninth victory
in 10 Grapefruit Leque 1W11.
The Braves, who" have won
three atraight, collect.ed 16 hlia
lncludlna a double by Rafael
Ramires and a triple by Ken
Smith.
Joe Alvanm, the eecond of four
pitchers. earned the victory.
Brian Holton took the lam. I
Expected amona the
US-member Cblneee contin1ent
are ToR1 Fel, 1982 men'• hlah
bar clwQp6on: LI YueJIU. WOl'ld
champion in the men'• floor
ewdle; and Ma Yanboni. 1981
ailver medal1lt lD th• women'•
W'MMID ~ tma.
Although only competina at
the international lew1since1178,
the Chinele are reawed u an
emeratna power in the •port,
havln1 placed third behind the
Ru111ai:; and Japaneee ln the
men's dlvillon and ~ behind
the 8o\ieCI in the WOIDlll'I dM-
UOD at the 1981 World Cham·
p6omhipe 1n MOIDOW.
Pedro Guerrero alu11ed hla
eecond homer of the 1pring for
Loe Ancelet, a two-run ahot in
the fourth lnn1nc of1 Alvarez.
Bob Walk 1tarted for the
Brawe aDd didn't allow a bit in
'four lnnlnp but had to leave
becaUle of a hamltrtq lnjury.
., .. usnr
IN YOUR J'AC&-Kareem Abdul..Jabbar of the Laken
1ee1111 to be livinl Utah'a Jeff WWdm a lhoYe wi\b one
hand while taklq a hook 1hot with the other durtna
Wedneeday niaht'a pme in Salt Lake City.
"He (Umer) will manaae my
team and w ill drTve for Roaer
,Penske at Indianapollt," Gana
says. "I will be driving a March
ndng machine this year and we
have been testing it at Phoenix.
"We have two cars entered at
Indianapolis and one of them will
be a brand new car for that race.
"I think this is a bette r car
than the PC-9 (Penske) I drove
last year. It had already been
pushed to ita limits. The March
car ha.I a lot more potential.
"Our baae of operations la In
Albuquerque and I will be dolna
a lot more with the new teem. l
won't be working on the engine
because that is a bit more of a
specialty. But I will work on
thesuapenaion and the aerodyna-
mics of the car.
"IT IS UP to the driver to g_et
the car set up right. You are 50
percent a race driver and 50
percent a test driver. It la so
technical these days.
"In the old days, you just had
to jump in the car and drive the
hell out of it. It didn't matter
how it waa set up. Nowadays the
driver bas to aet it up to make it
go faster."
Garza has had the dream of
winning at Indianapolis since he
was a youngster.
"I have been dreaming o f
winning at Indy and in Formula
One racing .since I was two years
oiJ." Garza says. "But right now
I am concentrating on the Indy
championship cars and when the
right time comes to move to the
Formula One cars, I will know it.
I will not favor them over the
Indy cars.''
Garza's family has been busi-
ness oriented all the way until
Josele came along. He has an
interest in the family business
but adds: "I would ilke to stay in
auto racing, even when I am
through driving. I will stay in-
volved with the family business
but I would really like to find a
balance between both of them."
Garza has an eye peeled
(See GARZA. Page Cl)
Lakers make .
Jazz play
losing tune
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar eoored 28
points and Earvin "Magic''
Johnson added 23 as the Los
Angeles Lakers handed the 'Qtah
Jazz its 12th straight defeat,
120-112, in the National Buket-
ball Association Wednesday
~~ Jazz were led by Darrell
Griffith, with 32 points and
Adrian Dantley, who had 31 be-•
fore being ejected with 1 ~ mi-
nutes left in the third period.
Dantley receiving two techni-
cal fouls after strongly objecting
to a call.
With seven minutes left, the
Jazz trailed by 100-98, but the
Lakers broke ope.n the game.
The Lakera took a 36-34 lead
at the end of an evenly played
first quarter. But Jabber aoored
10 points and Norm Nixon nine
points in the aecond period u the
Lakers jumped to a 77-59 lead at
the hall.
Utah rallied and outacored Loe
Angeles 28-15 in the third period
ana went into the final quarter
down by just five, 92-87. ·
Kings explode
for 9-4 win
INGLEWOOD (AP) -aenue
Nicholls struck for three power-
play goa.ls to lead the Lot An-
aelea Kings to a 9-4 National
Hockey l..eque victory over the
Calgary Ffames Wedneadayl
niahL ·
"Charlie Simmer aot hia flnt ·
two-~ game of the aeuoa for
Loa Anaelea, and rookie Steve
Benek abo connected for a pair of · goala. •
Nkholla, a 20-yeer-old center,
111\ited a five-goal C'Utbunt by
tlie K.lnp ln the eecond period
when he ICOl'ed a pair of -.ia..
He added hla third 1oal ol the
contest· with 8:1S2 left to play for'
h1a firlt tbra·pl a-me ln the NHL.
He now bu five aoa1a and 10
aul1t.1 1lnce belq l>roqbt up
ftom the Kln11' New Hav.ai, ~~~~T-
w:h and • .,.i~b;1 two
--fer Loe Aftlllll. ea11ary•1 rtnt-Mliod ll!all were ICONd by )ifel ... ,,.,.
and .. ...., •
I
I•
'•
.
··Kansas football
to be broadcast
Kamu Univentty'a football pines for the
1982 INilOll will be aired to Southem .... _
Callfornia, announced Roy Enale-• t '
btecht of the Englebrecht Company. ''rve alaJied a contnct with the -
University ol Kanau Athletic Department," aaya
Ea&JebrechL "It's becau.e of F.di8on.HJah School.
l'm sure there are a lot of Orange CO..t area
football fans who want to follow the Kenny
Majors and Kerwin Bella." '
There are eight former Edbon High playen
on the Kansas roster, including Frank and Troy
Seurer, Kerwin.and Dino Bell, BUl Malavaal,
Major, Dave Gerowc and Troy Rkhardlon.
BUiiett can't keep up wtth Jonee
.... , ,,... axnd 22 PCMntll ud hel)'*t
a.d a fourth-quarter aurp tNat CU'· r -
rild PhJ.i.delp61& to a 102 .. es vtctory m °"" Wllhtnatmn Wedneeday nJcbt ln
t)}e NaUonafBuketball A.llociaUon.
Tl» km marked the filth defeat for the Bulle~
in five aam.e with the '78ert . • . Elle•here,
.... ..-...... ecored 23 DCXnta .. KanlM Qty • ed&9:, Golden St.ate, 117-118 ... ClarHee W _... an ln~ PMI tnd ank a free
• throw wiih one eecond left,
~ New Jeney to a 93-90 victory over San
Antonio . . • Roa Brewer
ecored 11 of hll 31 Pointa in
ovenime, and lc91t Wedmu
and James E•war•• each
ICONd 22 pob\ta .. Cleveland
outlasted San Dleao, 113-10'7 ... KHt. MeBale
notched 25 polnta u Bc»ion -.1 built• 18-polnt fourtb-
quarter leed and survived a late rally to defeat
Atlanta, 113-109 ... KW V.,.._epe ICOl'ed
eight of his 30 points ln overtime to afve Denver
a 135-133 win In Phoenix, the Nugeta' tint win
over the Suns i n five contests this
aeaaon ... Ricky Soben poured in 14 points In
a fourth-quarter ~ that gave Chicago a 102.92 victory over Da.llaa. -
· Foater burna hi• tonner matee
l'ormer Red 0Mrl• P"ter slammed~
lint two home nuw for the New York
Meta. and Paa ZaarJ pitched llx tn-I nill8 of no-hlt ball to beat CindpnaU,
5·1Wednetday afternoon In exhibi-
tion buebeJl play. In fadna his tanner IMID a
the first-time, J'oew driUeCl a two.nan t...... Iii
th• first lnnlna and a solo blut in the
MCOnd ... Dave a ....... , hlt • th Ne-nm
homer and Gary Can.r drov 1n three runa on
two hlta.u Montnal bea& &be.
Yankeet, 6-4 ... Pat P•&·
aam'1 aecond-lnnln1 home
run ipited an 18·hlt attack ..
Texaa blasted Mlnneaota,
12-4 . . . &trt a ..... belted
a three-run homer to lead
Detrdt to a &-0 vic1«y f1Vf!t
Pblladelphla ..• The
Bolton Red Sox capttaliried on
...,.... three H.owtan enort to score
llx unearned runs and defeat
the Aatros, 8-1 ... Seeu ftompsoa'1 llnale
with two outa and the buea k>kled ln the J f th
inning helped the Cuba shade Cleveland,
10-9 ... Jack Clark homered In the finrt lnninl
and alngled home two more runs In a •ix-run
le'Veftth to lead San Frandaoo to an 8-5 win C1Ver
Milwaukee ... Ex-Golden West product Terry
Blllliq'a two-nm aiJiale keyed a lour-run rally
aa Seattle topped San Diego, 4-2 ... Two
unearned runs In the seventh helped Toronto "The director of Kanaaa Sports Network,
Tom Heddrick, is excited about this and you
should hear the Kansaa football coach. They're
all real happy about it.''
upend St. Lou la, 3-1 ... Tom -Paciorek'• Islanders show who's BosS(y) three-run homer in the eighth inning boosted the
Mlke.a011y•i56thaoalofthe ed. Whit e Sox to. a 9-5 win over
Englebrecht says a ded.aion on which spec-
ific station will carry the broadcuta, includinR all
away games as well aa h ome games, will be
reached in the near future.
~ • eeuon prov " Pittsburgh . . . Baltunore scored seven in the to be the game-winner u the New u· first inning and went on to rout Kansa Cit York lalanden added to their league-· , t l 4-S 1 Y •
leading point total with a 5-2 victory ' · · .
over COiorado Wednelday ~Un the . -. Television .. radio National Hockey League. The lslanders have 104
Quote of the day
"The only way they got him on the plane
was to tell him he wu gettl_nf an award."
-Rick Monday, acknowledging the busy
banquet schedule of Dodgers Manager
Tommy Lasorda.
points, three more than Montreal ... Elsewh~.
a goal by rookJe Bobby Carpenter with 76 se-
conds left enabled Washington to leCU1'e a 6-6 tie
with Vancouver, the Canucka' sixth straight
setback . . . Wayne Gretlky 1COred three goals
and added two assiats to set three more NHL
records as Edmonton routed P ittsburgh, 10-4.
.
TV: No events acheduled.
RADIO: Basketball -Dallas at La.kera, 7:20
p.m., KLAC (570).
WEDNESDAY'S RADIO
Philadelphia vs. Dodgers at Vero Beach,
10:10 a.m .. KA.BC (790); Oakland vs. Angela at
Palm Springs, 12:55 p.m., KMPC (710).
Area volleyball players making their marks
Orange Coast products dot rosters of Southern California college powers
By J1M McCURDIE or .. Deir "°' aw
When it comes to stocking major college volley-
ball teams with top-quality talent, the Orange C.oast
area is often the first place coaches look.
An examination of the rosters of the nine teams
in the California Intercollegiate Volleyball Associa-
tion would seem to support that claim.
That conference contains such perennial volley-
ball heavyweights as UCLA, USC, UC Santa Bar-
bara and Pepperdine and has produced the NCAA
champion 11 of the last 12 years.
There are 27 area products competing in the
conference in 1982 and it's highly likely that at least
one will be a member of the NCAA championship
team.
Based purely on 1.he numbers, Newport Harbor
High would have to be considered the primary
contributor of volleyball talent. There are 10 former
Sailors playing in the CIV A ranks. LaRUna Beach is
second with five while Estancia ancf Huntington
Beach have three alums competing and Corona del
Mar has two.
UCLA is ranked No. 1 in the nation and is the
Fountain Valley
opens with win
favorite to repeat as NCAA champion. Newport
Harbor grad Mark Slevcove is in his senior year
with the Bruins while Mark Anderson is a sopho-
more out of San Clemente. .
Across town, the Trojans of USC have five local
products, inc luding senior Steve Timmons
(Newport Harbor) who led them into last year's
NCAA championship match . Sophomore Bill
Yardley is also out of Newport Harbor while La-
guna Beach has contributed freshman Erle Clark
and junior Todd Miller to the Trojan program.
Doug Killian, a junior out of Corona del Mar, is the
other area player on the roster.
San Diego State is not considered a serious con-
tender for this year's national title but the Aztecs
have four Conner area athletes out to change that.
Kevin Droke and Bruce Caldwell, teammates on
Newport Harbor's 1980 CIF championship team, are
both key players for the Aztecs as sophomores as
are Robert Rieden (Estancia) and Terry deBos (La
Quinta and Golden West College).
~y Ratelle, a first-year coach at Cal State Long
Beach, has enough local talent to put an All...()range
C.oast team on the court. Senior Mike D' Alessandro,
a Huntington Beach ffigh graduate, transferred to
Rustlers,
OCC post
• • v1ctor1es · La Quinta High beat Ocean View while
Fountain Valley swept Huntington Beach in Sunset Orange Coast and
League volleyball openers Wednesday. Golden West colleges
La Quinta began its transition to a new l~e each scored conlerence
· with a 16-14, 15-12. 6-15, 15-12 win over host Ocean wins in community col-
View. The Aztecs have moved over to the Sunset lege women's basketball
circuit for volleyball after previously competing in action Wed.needay.
the Sea View ~e. \ In South Coast Confe-
La Quinta trailed, 6-2, in the fourth game, ~t rence play, Orange Coast
rallied from behind to cloee out the match. got out to a bi& lead and
, Fountain Valley opened league ~hwith a field on in the final m.i-
15-12, 15-9, 15-13 win over Huntlngtoo in the nut.ea to defeat San Di.e-
Oilen' gym. Baron Coach Rick Evans was able to go Mesa. 79-74. Kris
utilize· his bench as his team rebounded from a Kroyer paced the Pirates
non-league loss to Dana Hills on Tueeday. with a game-high 29
"We played everybody,'' Ev4lfll said "It was points and 12 rebounds.
just a really good team win for us." San Diego Mesa com-
Senior middle blocker John ~ led the way mined six turnovers in
with nine kills and 13 blocks while JWlior outside the first four minutes of
hitter Rob Whitehair contributed 10 killa and four the game to help Orange
1 .blocka. The Barons are now 3-2 overall. Coast take a 17-4 lead.
In non-league play, Laguna Hilla woo a tight The win puta the ·P1-
four-game match over visiting Mater Dei, 15-13, rat.ea at 3-0 in conference
7-15, 15-11, 15-12. play, 12-1 overall.
Marina tuned up for Friday's Sunset League Meanwhile, Golden
opener with Westminster with a 15-2, 16-14, l~ West rolled to an easy
win over a Viking Alumni team. .win ln Southern Califor-
.Back row specialist Mark Cox led the winners. nia Conference action,
with his puaing and strong defensive play. beating LA City on the
' In community college action, Orange Coast Cuba' bomecou.rt, 106-50.
ColletCe rolled to a three-game sweep over Santa The Rustlers (2-0,
Ana ma South Coast Conference opener at SantA 13-1) were led by Marcia
Ana. Mathews who was 10 of
The Pirates were led by back row specialist· 17 from the floor and
Jeff Cutler and outalde hitter BW Mattl.M -both had 21 po in ta and 11 ,
freahmm out of F..etanda High. Setten Greg Ovalle ateala. Kelly Harrison • and ?aul Kubis alao played well. bad 15 Ullata. · ..-------------------------------------1
Candlestick
dome studied i GROUP liOLF LESSOllS
SCO'ITSDALE, Ariz.
(AP) -Bob Lurie, pre
aident of the San Fran-
dloo Glanta. has received
a rough draft of an eco-
nomic feuibility study
~~~ ~ UWe'll releMe the fin-
dt n1• ln two to three
weelu, maybe sooner,"
Lurie aid Wednelday at
1 the Giants' 1prtn1 trat-· 1
nm, camp. "After we go
over lt, we'll take It to
• the printer and the
show It to the mayor."
Starting March 23
8 waeks for s25
Goff Ball & Instruction
lnWded,
• ' Lenon Hour11
Tue1., Wed., Thur1.,·
9 a.m. or 6 p.m.'
Sat. at 1 p.m.
.. . . . '
t
I
••• , ••• a.Al*
Titllllf 1111 ... !t• ...... ................... , ..
1111 .......... . ........ . ... , ..
•
Long Beach after one year at San Diego State.
Newport Harbor has reached out to the Long
Beach program with junior Thegn Putnam, sopho-
more Tom Bunnell (1980 CIF Co-Player of the
Year) and freshman Lane Peterson. Seniors Joe
DiPietro (Golden West College) and John Hernlan
(Edison) also play for the 49ers.
The University of Hawaii would seem to have
quite a bit to offer prospective college athletes and
the tropical paradise was enough to entice three
area players to en.roll.
Junior Tom Pestolesi came to the Rainbows as
transfer from Long Beach State. Pestolesi gradua-
ted from Huntington Beach High as did Dan
Moorhouse, who transferred to Hawaii from Golden
West College. Dan Vrebalovich (~tancia) is in his
sophomore year at Hawaii.
UC Santa Barbara, always near the top of the
NCAA rankings, has Randy Harns, a sophomore
out of Fountain Valley and Doug Parsons, a
freshman from Laguna Beach, on its roster.
Stanford has senior Kip Engen and junior Randy
Smith, both out of Laguna Beach, while Loyola has
a pair of talented sophomores in Craig Ke up
(FBtancia) and Greg Sullivan (Newport Harbor).
Ftom P1A!C2
GARZA POPULAR • • ' for other ty~ of radn1 and compete at Lona
BMch 1n Che Formula AtlaDUc ..W tbe day before
the Loni Belch Grand Prix In Aprtl. He would ai.o
like to try his hand ·behind the wheel of a stock car
befon he qwta. But that ta 1n the futun.
I m. relaUomhlp with U~ appean to be a
r llllttnrorw. -
.. That Unser, he lte:etJe me In 1hape," Gana
U)'I. "He la a 9elf"IUde .,.....,. I ooWd not be-
lieve the things he knowa and .a about a nicm,
car when he ii talldni with an .,.tneer.
"He can look at the air around the pita and he
knows exactly what to expect on the tnck.. Wbm
he ~ on a track, he jumpt In the car and .,_all out. _
"I take one lap and make---.re the tqck. 19 aU11
there. He pulled me in after one lap at Pboenlx and l uked: 'Wht are you dol.ng? You went 28 w:mda fOI'
one lap. You don't need a warmup lap.' 'nlat•a Fad
trainina· '' I
LAST YEAR, durln1 May at Indianapolis;
Garza went around and talked with various driven
to get their opinion on bow to take the different
tuma.
"Everybody had a different answer," be uya.
''One would say to back off in the middle of the
tum and another would tell me 80:!DethJna d1Ue--
rent.
"Bobby has helped me a lot but at Indy 1 want
to find a reuon for beating him. I can figure out
how 1 can beat A. J . Foyt, Rick Mean and the
others but I still haven't figured out BobbJ: yet.
Maybe I'll have to keep liomethl.ng to m)'llelf and
not tell him."
He enjoys having the crowd on bia side and
says it helps to know they are with him.
"I HA VE TO look at my performance," he aaya
as the fint Latin American to qualify at Indy and the
public really supported me in good times and in bad
times. In Mexico City, I had one of thoee weelcendl
you wouldn't believe. First the bnkee went out and
then the engine and chassis were nothing but pro-
blems .
"I was in the pits for 10 or 20 lapt and when I
came back out, the people all cheered and I really
appreciated it. And belie me, I tried very hard."
He rides motocross but onlv f.or pleaaure -and
exercise. "It's a great exercise," he aaya.
&mes. a lonR-time business 81110d.ate of Unaer~
says the disputed Indy winner had no intentions of
cutting back on his racing lllebedule.
"But he has been through an awfW lot this last
year and has developed an ulcer from the
situation.'' Barnes says. He is referring to Unser's
controversial win over Mario Andretti that is cur-
rently being contested in the higher courts. Barnes
says the purse money for both driven is still being
held up.
I
HE SAYS HE has a major oil cmompany for a
sponsor and has three or four other associate spon-
sors lined up for the Garza racing team.
But right n ow , Garza has his f eet on the
ground, the good looks to attract feminine admirers
on and off the track and the intelligence to go as far
as he cares to go in the driving world with a boost
Crom lady luck to keep him from mishaps.
His mother, Nadina, is not exactly enchanted
with his racing career.
"Mother went to every race last year and she
will go to as many as she can this year," Garza says.
"But she would like to see me doing something elae.
"Since I am already in this, however, she has
learned to accept it."
•
'
.... .... _.. , .... Pan Am takes
Braniff routes
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pan Amertcan World
Alrwaye wW take over almol't all of Braniff interna-
tional AirUnes' routa to South Amerlca tor four years
and provide'Branltf wUh an Immediate $20 million to,
eaae ha .evere caah 1horiage, the two airline• an-nounced.
Braniff, whlch hu been flirtlns with posal"le
bankruptcy, thua aeta an opportunity to shed routes
t.Nt loet $15 mlllion last year and half that amount the
year before.
Tough OPEC meet seen
VIENNA, Austria (AP) -OPEC'a emergency
meeting Friday to deal with the world oil &lut is going
to be a roush one, but the Sa~ will <ȣend the ~
benchmark price, Venezuela a energy minister aa1d
today.
"It's going to be a difficult meeting. l~'a a diffi~lt
situation. I don't believe we can make a Cinal decision
~Jdroduction level.a," said Energy Minister Humberto
eron. who was among the early arrivals for the
meeting.
Firms announce lay offs
NEW YORK (AP) -Several major companies
have announced layoffs and another postponed an
expansion program.
-Texas Instrumenrs Inc., citing a slump in sales
of computer component&, laid off 2,700 workers, or
about 3 percent of its worldwide wor~ force:
-Westinghouse Electric Corp. said it will reduce
work schedules of 3,000 employees at its electrical
products plant in Beaver, Pa., because of sagging or-
ders.
-Kennecott Minerals Co., blaming the slumping
copper market. said it will shut it.9 Tucson, Ariz.-area
mining operations, putting 1,800 employees out o(
work.
-Melbourne, Fla.·based Harris Corp. said 1t was
canceling a $20 million expansion in Poughkeepsie,
N.Y .. and instead closing its semiconductor plant there
because of sluggish sales. Most of the plant's 125
workers already have been laid off.
Tax auditing declines
WASHINGTON (AP) -An individual taxpayer's
chances of being audited by the Internal Revenue
Service will drop to a record low this year -even
though tax cheating is on the rise.
But the IRS, rejecting overzealous enforcement as
too much like "a police state," said Wednesday it is
expanding other programs intended to pick up at least
a little of the estimated $72 billion in taxes the U.S.
Treasury may be losing each year because of r'.mint-
entional errors and outright cheating.
Home loan fund aided
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) -Maryland will try to
pump some life into the slumping home building in-
dustry by invesuitg $20 million from the state pension
fund in a mortgage loan program.
The program, aet up joinUy with a savings and
loan association and the Federal National Mortgage
Associatio°' will provide funds for up to 350 home
loans.
Ford plant to reopen
DETROIT (AP)-The Ford Motor Co. said it will
reopen a suburban Oet.roit valve plant that it closed in
November.
The announcement came just 2 'h weeks after the
No. 2 automaker signed an historic 31 -month conces-
sions contract with the United Auto Workers.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
NEW VOfUCCAPJ FllWI Oaw~ •'9· ~,.... ,.,, 17.
JO Ind ~09 :r.10 ~ ~IS-~
., Tm J:M.G •• m.ss nuo. o.ss u Ull !OU2 aos !Ot.W 105.20-O.» '5 Slit N.51 SIU• SIU• J1U3-O.SI ' ,,,.. .. • .. .. • • .... .. • .. • . . • ,,1'2•,ll)O TIW\ .... •• . .. .... • . . . ... • 1,m,100 utf IS .. • • • • • • • • • • • . . .. • .. • • MA,ll)O
'5 Sh .. • .. .. • . .. • • .. • .. • • • .. '· 109,JQO
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YOltK IAPJ MM. 17
WllO. 6h 711 "' , ...
7
1(17
HEW YOltl( IAPJ Nw. 17
METALS I w.n.a.y
Copper 74~-78 c:ente a pound. U.S
deetln•tlona.
lb
Leed 28-32 oenta a pound.
ZJM a11 canta •pound daU¥efed.
Tl11 H 7888 Met111 W•ll composite
Altlmtrlum 78-77 ceot1 •pound, N.Y Menlwy 1396.00 I* ftMll.
,..tfftl.lm '305.00 troy oz., N.Y.
SILVER ,,,..,...,
H•ndy & Herman •• 7.186 per troy ounce.
-IGOLD QUOTATJONS-.-
GOl.D COINS'"
' ICr~reM. 1 ttoy 01., t31U&~ up 114.11 . ...,.. ._,, 1 troy oa , NH.H , .._
l'JI, ...._..IO peeo, 1.2 lfOy ca..'*·'°· .... , ..
~ •oo crown •. Mj)1 tror ot., AIUO, up la.ta.
loutCllC Oell( ......
1 ...... y
Lettdofl: momtno N11tng UU.40, up M40. L~ eflemoon nxino 1320.00, up 1-4.00. ,.,. &331.90, up 18.09. ~rwlkNrt: 1327.10, up &11.81.
Z..: LAta lllllng 1318.00, up 1-4.00 bid: 1322..00 Uked. •
He•41r & Her11111111 only dally quote '320.00, up 1-4.00. 1.......,.: only Clally quote '320.00.
llO 8'..00.
1
I
I
J
I
f
I I l
•
I . ,., ...........
'
LONG BEACH CLEANUP -A tractor shoves
tons of debris which was wash~ ashore rec·
ently by storm in Southern California into
piles along the strand in Long Beach.
Writer \Vorks
around palsy
MADISONVILLE, Ky. <AP) -Like many
newspaper reporters, Garth Gamblin bas trouble
with spelling.
"I spell worse than a second grader," he
admits. Other than that, he considers himself "just
another working news person."
Gamblin, a full-lime reporter for The
Messenger in Madisonville since April, covers the
court beat. Hopkins County government,
agriculture and a couple of nearby small
communities. All in all, pretty standard work for
any reporter on a small daily.
But there is something special about Gamblin.
He has suffered cerebral palsy since birth. His
speech is slurred and indistinct. He walks with a
pronounced limp, which makes it seem as if be is
struggling on a rolling ship.
He also has a quick, dry wit, boundless
curiosity and an intense love for his fellow man.
Gumblin, 42, began writing a weekly column
for The Messenger in 1964. He was not paid, but
did receive a $25 Christmas bonus that year.
With the bonus came the message that he
would begin receiving $S for each column. His
journalism career wasn't exactly off and running,
but it was moving.
By 1970, be began regular coverage of city .
council meedngs in Earlington for the paper.
During that lime, he also owned a bookstore in
Earlington.
Early in 1981, Tom Clinton, editor of The
Messenger, had a staffer on leave and needed
someone to fill in.
"There was some apprehension, both with the
st aff and myself," Clinton remembers . "We
wondered about his communication problems.
.. For the first few days, everybody was ill at
ease, including Garth." Clinton says. "But be bas
proved to me and everybody else that he would do
a good job.''
In April. Gamblin was made a full·time reporter.
Like most reporters. Gamblin has bad his
share of disputes with officials. There was the
former Earlington mayor, for instance. who tried
to bar him from cit y council meetings. -
Hopkins County officials and others with
whom he works no longer look upon Gamblin as a
special case. He receives the same treatment
accorded other reporters , which isn't always friendly.
On occasions when he does have trouble
communicating with someone, other reporters on
the staff are happy to help.
Clinton says Gamblin bu a job as long as he
wants pne. and continu~s his good work.
1.un IH•HOH
SMrTH & TUTHILL
WISTCLlff CH.Ufl
427 E 171h SI
Costa Mesa
646-937t
rt1ac1 AOTHHS
SMITHS' MOITUAaY
,627 Matn St
Hunllnoton ~acn
536-0539
'Aetlte YllW
MIMOllAL 'AlllC Cemetery Mortuary
Chaoe1.crematOfV
3500 Pac:1ftc View 011ve
Newoort Beach
644-2700
McCOIMICS MOllUAlllS
Laouna Beach
494•941 5
Laouna Hills 768..()933
San Juafl Ca1>1strano
495-1176
HAnCM LAWN-MT. OUYI
MonuatV • C.me terv
Cren9torv
1625 G.lief ·~ eo.t.Meu
640-SM4
• wn sips
freeway bill
.Death penalty eyed
LONDON (AP) -Brtu.h police have launched
an unprecedented edvertillna campeip to restore
the death penalty few mmt typlll of premeditated
murder.
''We UJ"le all dtbena who lhare ou.r view that
the time hu come to restore capital punishment for
-; .
murder, to make their reprnentativet ln Parlia·
ment aware of their opinion.'' the Police Federation
aaid Wedneaay ln ha)f.paie ada in five national
newspapers:
'Onion Field' hearing set'
SACRAMEN"ro (AP) -State parole ottidala
have ICheduled an April 27 bearing to determine 1f
they will revoke the ~uled June 18 re1eue of
Gregory Ulaa Powell, convicted of the "Onion
Field" murder of a Loi ~ polJcemm.
The rwiaion bearing will be held at the Cali·
fornia .Medical Facillty at Vacaville, said Robln.
Dez.ember, executive director of the state Board of
Prison Tenna.
The March 9, 1963, murder of Officer Ian
Campbell w• the subject of a book. "The Onion
Field," by former police Sgt. Joeeph ·Wambaugh,
and a movie.
Inf ant formula recalled
WASHINGTON (AP) -Two types of Nunoy
brand infant fonnulaa are being recalled becau.e
they do not have vitamin B6, the Food ard Drug
Administration aa)'ll.
Abeence of B6 in the diet can cause convulsions
and other health problems.
The products involved, the FDA said, are
13-ounce cans of Nursoy concentrated liquid and
32.ou.nce cans of NW'80y ready·ttrfeed.
Evacuation plan dropped
SAN RAFAEi· (AP) -Calli<t federally re-
quested plans "aen.elesa," Marin wity offidals
have abandooed any more planning for mus eva-
cuation in the event of a nucleer attack.
"We're not Png to prepare a relocation plan
for skeletons," Superviaor Gary Giacomini said af.
ter the Board of Supervbora vote.
The Federal F.mergency Manaaement Agency
last year asked counties and local 1ovemmenta
aero. the nation to begin preparing at their own
expense a preliminary plan for the evacuation of
civjlian populations in the event of an anticipated'
nuclear attack.
Fingers lost to 'bomb'
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Tammy Lockhart, 14, haa
lost two fingers of her left hand in the explosion of
a "aeal bomb" firecracker which she tound at home
and mistook for a candle, police said
A aeal bomb la a cigar-med firecracker used by
fiahennen to 8C8l'e off seals that interfere with tuna
~ Sifl_said she thought it was a candle and lit
its fuse, thinking it was a wick. Police said none of
her family knew where the device came from.
Breast I eeding ban I ought
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -A teacher who took a
forced leave of abeence after 1he wu prohibited
from breaat feeding her baby on echool _g:rounda.
•Yll ahe'll challenge a judge's ruling upholding the
ban.
But the teachers' &llOCiation which financed
her three.year legal battle against the Orange
County School Board plans to consider carefully
whether an afpeal ia feasible, the aaaoclation'•
general counae aaya.
,.
Punch ·
...... n. ~,.,_II Mii ..,.._t-------"""'l"---
-1 ."""°"' ........ 99T •HM. CL.IAHIM, latO IW· ....a IT&.,......
W ~ • .,_II, Coll.t ...._ c;.t. TM .......... ---...... ..,,......,_ ........ . lo.-'* I.'-I ... hi.II • ...._ Cll-tAl ~t Oil UJU1 Ce>
I Thie~ le~ ~ M Ill> ACCRNT OH NAIL$ ev Tl••· t191t
4IMdull. l"••ll•t It••-· La11111• N1e11•I, -----------------------'I Jee I . LM Cal...,.,a-.O,_,,. "Not the Old run;.out-of-money ltnel" T111a 11a1e1119111•••111ed w11h th• o, ... ,, s .... -Teri "· ~cw.°' o...,.. County on M9"fl l>IKll-111. ~ ..,. ..... mu
----------------------tt, IM2. ,,,_ l"er•IH, MIHMll V .. ja, Call,_,.,.
1'11"""'84 °'1ll'tf C-1 Dally PllOI. '-'?:.. _.._ .-.. .. ._ ... ~
Legionnaire bug
still baffling
ATLANTA (AP) -It's been five years since
the cause waa d11covered but a mlaalng link
remains: What other factor combines with
bacteria to produce tbe deadly Legionoaires'
disease?
''Legionella plus some 'black box' is ...
responsible for causing the disease. Now what is in
the black box, another organism, temperature . . .
other bacteria? I mean the lilt 1oes on and on,"
Marguerite Neill, medical epidemiologist at the
national Centers for Disease Control said in an
interview.
The CDC recently marked the fifth
anniversary of the discovery of Le&lonella.
Director William Foeee accepted a plaque on
behalf of the CDC from the Infectious Dlsease
Society.
And, meanwhile, researchen "are certaioly
continuinl to work on therapies, the development
of a skin test, better laboratory methods for
dia gnosis," Ms. Neill said.
The disease jolted the nation when it struck at
the Bellevue-Stratford Hotel in Philadelphia in
l976, killing 36 people, most of them members of
the American Legion and their wives. Th~ deaths
also included hotel workers.
The disease quickly was dubbed for the
veterans group, but the cause was not found and
announced for five months.
The bacteria was called Legionella and seven
strains have been discovered since. An estimated
25,000 people contracted it each year since 1978
with about 15 percent of the cases fatal, said a
CDC epidemiologist, Arthur Reingold.
The pneumonia-like illnem ii contracted from
environmental sources, rather than from people,
and can be cured wlth a common antibiotic.
erythromycin, Reingold said.
The bacterium is widely distributed in the
environment but does not always cause the
disease, Ms . Neill said, leavlng researchers
without an answer to rm in the "black box."
Ms. Neill said the CDC is not seeking a vaccine
because the disease occurs "only ln outbreaks or
sporadic c ases."
,tCT1TIOUS aUSINIU f'ICTlltOUS 8USINUS
NAM& STAllMUIT MAMIE STATIMINT
Th• foll.•wl,.9 perloll It dol119 T ... loll-lft9 ""'°"' a re dol"9
-...... ... llllslftHI n ·
GEOAGE atCtc ENTE•PRISE. D ETAILS U NLIMITED, 711
""A'-A-. ta.A. COii• ~... Pacific Coetl Hlgh••Y H1111ll1>9ton CeUtomla ta» . Gew9'1 P hell t 11 l:llOO Aclemt 8eecll, Callfonlla '2647 •
A-, .. ,._· cea~ Calllof"ftl• Tom A. Blfvwll, 711 Peclfk Coetl ._. • • Hl9llwey, H1111 ll•9lo11 1••<11.
T"ls llllllMss Is c-19'1 by 811 C.IHEOn\lak ft'47. ..;... ti 1~1 Mau
lnolv""'91 ' • "'""• , .. v ,.. o9orve P. l«k L-. H11nllng\Oft 9Nch. Cellfomle
This ~ was fllff with IN "'46. Count, Clerll of Ora.,.. county on Thi• 1>Uslne1>1 I• <ondu<led llY •
Mar<" J. 1a llmlled PWtnenlllP. ' Pltal1 Tom~
PutllllMd OrMOe Coast Dall' l'lloe, Eric Sc-Mar. 4 11 J I. u ltlZ .,..., Tiii• ........_, •• flied -"" re · · · c-l't CIH1l of 0r...-c-tv on
...,...,. --Merell), ltlL r.-... •tlK '-P11Utt 1-----------PulllltNd Or ..... Coett Delly Pll04. PtCT1'T10U9 ~ U.ITA~
March 4, It, II. u, lta '41~
TM l04lowln0 S---dolllt ---PllJC ll1ll RAST IMPAUSION ~1,_ _________ _
30~4 JoMMft. Coele M .. a. Celllornla 'ICTllUIUi aUslNIU t2621, Deva MecD011•IO HUOhH , 27H NAMISTAT8MaNT ~ Ceela ...... CAlllOMle t2t2t. Tiie lollOWl"t ""°" •• tlolllt P•l•r 01•11 Flom. J054 Joh11ao11. _._ •: •
CGIU...._Cllbnlel2Ut T .J .•1 LIOUOll, 1701
T1llll ~-~..., • llmlled .............. "-' .. " Veli..,, patlNrtllllp. Calltonlla.
• ' Oe.tc1 ~ E....i.,.. ......,, 1<912 o ... ontfllre
T 1111 1111em•11I wu 111•0 wllll Ill• Aw-. Twtlft, Celltonlla ttllO.
C<)ullty ci.to ol Or-. Covnty on Mardi Thia 111u91-Is <ondlleled by M 1e. 1112, ,._, .,.,,.....,. . •
Pulllll-OrW\09 COHI Delly PllOI, Elle!.,.. ......... ~ 11. 2', Apl t. &. ltea li7t.e2. Tiiis ......,. -flied wltll tM c-•• ~ • o..,... c-1v on _.,._ ,.,,..ryD.HIZ.
r-.... .. ,_ ~ ,,..,.
PvbllatN Or ... Coesl Dally Piiot,
"'"· "· llMf'Cll 4, 11, 11, lta '45-a.
..._ 11. "·""' '"1.1112 1-.c. .~Mc:..=.;,~·
•1CTt'1wt Mm•US
...... SlATU.WNT Tiit l .. lowl119 _.,_ II .. 1,.9 .....,_,_:
SUIMA•tNE l!NGINEl!IUNG
ASSOCIATES.* lllt Sl...t, Hew1*1
'llMcll, Callfonll• '*" L•••nao c. Miiier, tu VI•
..... Me, ~ llM<ll. CalHotllle
Tlllt ..._ It <MdlH.-11, e ... ( ....... ......
Tift A. Dutil-"' Thi•......._._,. ....... c_,., ~ .-0r.,.... CWMv •
Mar<lll.~ ,_...
Pullll.,_ Or ... C:.... o.llY ,....._
March It, I .. U , ~I I, 1e ·~
, __________ _
nc ............. ~ .... by ... PICTITIOUI IUlfN••
lndlvlclllal. MAM• STATS._.,
"-• c .• Min .... Ow,., TM following --• ••• doing
Tiiis ~ ... ltltd wUll Ille l>USlll•U ••: c-·· Clerk of Orange Couftty Oft I u c H " N A N . R I c c I &
ll'MrwlryU, 1-ASSOCIATES, 2010 <Miii. N-POl'I
P'tunJ 8H<ll, Cellfonlla""'
l"llOllatlM Or ... CO.st Dally PllM. I.Airy N. Akd, 1071 u ... .-.
ll'ft. JS, Mercft 4. It, II. 1"2 "142. LaouM N ..... Callfonlla nu1
l&IW• lt-1-. 11• E"911e
UM, N ........ 9Mcll, CallfclnMe 9*"
fl.la ~· 11 'Oftdlleted by ., un•n<O<PWalltd -iallen o-tlWNI ITATIA .. NT 0, WllllD•AWAL epennenlll11.
PllOM LMf'Y N. Ricci
l"A•TNl•IMll" Ol"altATINO ~aK.8uc......,,
UMDI• Tiiis ...meni w• flt.cl wm. .,.
PICTITIOUI eUlfNEU NAM a cou111, Clerll of <><• .... County °"
The fOlloWllll ll9f"IOll llff •II,"*•-'March J. nm,
•• • t1•"•ra1 111rtn•• from tll• ,, ....
Ptrt,.ertlllp operating und•• Ille Pllblltllecl Or"anoe CO.ti Delly Piiot.
ll<tlllovs MlfteM llMM 01 M & "" Mer.4 It II u HG MM? MAINTENANCE SERVICE al I001---·-·-·-·------
tkKllnell A-. COila ""9se, California .. ,.
Tll• llctlt10111 b1111,.u1 nem•1-----------
ll•l•meftl for tht p.ertnershlp wet 1119CI 'ICTITIOUI eull•llS
on April 12. 1'1t Ill Ille County ol NAM9 ITATIMllNT
Or...... Tiie ,.. ....... potrtofll er• dol"t
ll'ull Name and AddrHI of lh• llllslfMM•:
Per_, WltNlfewlng· LENIC WOOO ASSOCIATES. tCZJ
•obert G•••lh Ke11neoy, >00 Nl&98•• w.,, CoAa -· C.allfwlll• Bucknell R-. , .. ~ MeW, Celll0t11I• .,.,., mu LorM LeM WDod, 1m N .... ,.
IS/ A-rt Gareth K•-Y Way. C-MIM. Cellfonlle .. ..
~onell Rl<llard #. WOOd, 1422 Nlag9re
Pulllllhed Or-Coesl Delly Piiot. Way. C09U ...... Callfomle .....
Mar. 4. II, II, 25, lta ,,..., Tiiis _._, Is cONlll<IM b, a _, •• 1*1N41Hp.
l#N~W..
This .......... -"'" •"" "" County Cltfll of o...,.. c-ty on
f1CTl'TIOUS llU ... U March 10, lta. -ITA~ Fl.a ...!."-.!.-..g .,.._, ere dolfl9 DU*-Pvtlfl-Or .... CO.st Dally Pl!«.
FEOHAU'S TEXACO. 2175 ~ INT<ll II. II, U, ~I I, 1m ... Mio
...-Vero. C-e "'--Celllomle 92128
0. Ell~C!..~ll~~e F•r11 Strffl. MJC ll'1C(
97:do F•ghall, 4H F•rn SltHI. NOTICa ~ •• • Orena-. Calilomle t2M7 1"llUIST..-. -Thia ~ la conduct9d by a MnllltO Na.~
,..,_.,..., • .,.. F8QNll °" Aprll 21. 1112. 111 10'30 a.m • PACI-
Thia ll•l•"'enl wu liled with Ille FIC SENTINEL COAPORATIOff. a Ceb-
Counly c:.tc of Orena-County an March lornla <0<110<lll011 ... o..ty _.m1ec1 11 1M2 Tnnt" .,...,.. .,,., punue111 lo 0-of 0 ' '1'UIO Trvl1 r-dMI J..-I. 19110 M IMlr. No
PubllaMd 0••"99 cout oauy Pllol 14185, booll 14093. P-oe 111. ol Olllciel
Merell II, 28, Aprll U . 1112 t~ ~::;:,o:;,:•i:.:i .. "_Y~~~~-'=..:C.
-II' -r --· M lnlelcn, In Ille olllce OI IN ,.._ -·~ Counly AeoorOar ol ~County. s-1-----------ot Celllor111a. Will SELL AT PU8LIC f1CTITIOUI -ff AUCTION TO HIOHEST a10DEA FOR ..,... ITA~ CASH (payable al 1-of .... In 1-ul
The I~ i-n II Oolng ,,..._ =.o~~~o'r'"'~!.'!1~~·1=:!':
.. PHOTODOK. 1147 Pelican PllK<I. Cotporetlon, 1eoo Nofll> .. ...,...,. Sanla
Coela ..... CalllOfnle t2e28 Ma. Celi!Otnla, .. l'lgllt ... -.........
Mery MIOO.lelan CunnlnglMtm 114 7 ~ IO --Mid"'" ....... ..., P-·~-A p•~-c~1. M... Calllornta Oeed ol ft\191 In Ille ptGp9rty ---In
---· -· v• • MIO County anO SIAde --M: ~ llvslnfft 11 COftdue1.0 lly en In· ~ 7 o1 Tl.ct No. 4621. • per fNP OMdual ..cotdMI In 8-teo. P ... .., -44 ol Mary M CulWnghem ~ Mepe. In the ..... OI Ille
Thll atatem•nl wH llled •illl Iha ~ .. '!::'!:.,:..-:C,C:·-
County Clerll of Orena-eovnty on Merell o~euon. 11 any. of IM rMI pre)perty
11. 1ea. ~ -•~to 11« 2n ,,.,,. ._ "'-Coeta -. CaMorNL -ll>H 0ra.,.. Cont Oatty 1"1.101, TM ICl9ililQl.9o T.-OleclallM...,,
MetCf1 11. 25. Aprtl I, 8. 1112 1217-82 llalllllty":0t ""'I lllcorrect-ol ... Ollr-4 -----------..,.,. __ 0--dMlgMllon." .,.,.,_......,...,..,,
Said •al• will II• mad•. but wll"°"I -----------_,.Of......, ....... °'""'*"' ACTITIOU9 .,.._.. regar0i"9 11118, poslffalon. or ... cum. um ITA,._-, tit-. 10 pay tht ..........,. p<lndpW TM-,.~ la doing -...,,, ol lhe-eCal-. byaeld Deed ol -. Trust, with Int-lherean. M pr.-In
THE BLUES REMEDY. n& l~una Mid noleCI~ adv.,,._, If MY ..,_ !he
Canyon RoMS. $1udl0 8, Lagu"" Beech, termt ol taicl Deed of Trvet, ,._, cNrtM
c.111om1e 92UI .,,., .. ~ ol lhe Trwlee -el the
JOlln Charla• WHIOll. 223 A ....... truata ~ ..., ..., Oeed ol Tnoel. tar
"'--Ap1. C San a.-..~ Ille -1-*"Y ..__,IO II« 12t12. ' M7.e3U3
Tllla llUllllal 11 condueled by en In· Th• ~eflelary u110., H l<I o..d ol ~ Truet "8tetoloN --......._, John C, Wiiton 10 lht "'ld9rllgl..0 a Wf1l1ell Oed9rellan
Thie 1a1_,1 •• filed w1111 t.,. Coun or O.levll encl o.m8ll4 IOf Sale., and a
Cltfll ol Oreng• Covnl~ on Mlr~ll 10. wntl.,, Nollet ol ~ -Eleclioll to IN2 S.. TM 111•111g1..S -Mid Notlcl! . nMl1e of DINIM Md llacearl IO ... IO lie ,_
Pvllllllled <><•n:oe CoHI Dally Pilot Otcled In "" count)' -"" .... pro.
Mardi 11. 25. ,\pit 1. 8, 1112 1312-82 = ~. tM2
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
PACIFIC SENTINEL CORP,,
MMldT.-91' Siie K...,
•21 8 s.-e IMS .• ~ Angelea. Ca IOCM5 BLANCH M. CUllTIS, aka 121J111•1201 8 LAN ca E cu RT Is. a Ii. Publlahecl Or&119& Cotll Daii Pllol
BLANCHE MARIE CURTIS .... 11• 21• ,\fir. 1• 1* -.a
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aa•e• CN•'l'Y IVP••tot
flkTITtOWH.,..... MM ClllNT TO~ ff MAY COHmllN: UM8 l'l'AT9MallT C.-......
... ~~~ ... ~· Tllo lellowlfle HrMll 11 •11111 ... I.AIM~ .. ~~= W•IM, • llO'l'ICW•'l'•unart ...... .,. ..._ • IHO ... Tt-MIMM•. tM>alllT C.. LUNMGOe• .. KAI ._Cllmlr ......... C-. .._ ... ___ ,. :::,::ir.,=il:~_.::~ CONOO• ·~INHIUNO, 1t9 KOINllA• .................. P.O....... 1, o ... .:v~c:lfY -~ °' ................. lflatollllllk Wm 1(-11•, Or ...... C•O .. r111a ..... .......,. .._,CA.,, .,......T .......... .......
................... "Jot.WAID mtf, Dlf'INOANTS: LIAION fl P'-AIN'rlPPI Wf'-Lll CL••• -.er-.. .... fl hit *'LL SILL-------------~ T......,_ .._ ..._... TIIHdwe 0.... llall. GaMll #41 POMl"OY AUOCIATH, INC e .l'LU ........ lllC. • e • _ .. ~ •r-le tflU l.Ml~ood. ltvllle, TraW<e Tract, P.O. ao.,a.1, Tr~ ,.,..., ..... ~·· TINTUlllN W Dlf'l•IMUtTi MA'-90ITTUtl• AT .. u LIC AUCTION TO • H• ~ .. ,_ c.i.c,oeo.--....... Colllnlla. Cofl'r'tfl,Callfwlll•.... Wit.LA TINTUIUH JACIC A. LOMG ... IUTMIOSnoe•• .... .......,, HIOHllT 11001• .. o .. CASH
,IC'Ttnout •ut11t•• llAMlllTATSMllNT
Tiie lollawl111 "'"" It ••••• ....... ..:
THIE WOOD DOCTO", 104 ~lo. Catil.o Meta, CA "'27.
o"eo ALLAN .... v. '"~ .,._... .. , tedt.a Mota, CA...,,,
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C-h Clwtl .. Or..... COUlllY 911 MMcfll,ttll.
fltCTIT1CIUI IW'NHI
MAMalTAT9MllNT
Tiie feftowlllt ,0.--1 •rw 4e!t11
INll-•: THE CX>llNl!lt$TONE G\FE, -l t11tol S1rM. C14te N1eM. Cal 1'°""8 m21. 1111.om1111on11 """"'<atlan1 Inc .• o O•l•••rt cerporollon USS Notre 0.-!load. CC4 .. ~ tallforllle ttlit. ,........ o. a.r-11. ms Notl'I
OltN "-· C.ta-.... callfwtlle --. Tllh llUll-t 11 <OftCllKted by a
corpor•tlofl. lt1torNll'-1 PlltllkatloM, Inc.
~0 ....... 11.
Vice PresldlNlt
Tllll ............ -· llled wlll\ llw C04111lY Clerlt of ~ ..... C04111tr .it
""° ,,....,_. .... .,....,.,..II... Tllll ....i-. ,, cOftdlKtod ~ 811 MAtilOAlllT WoOD H1t.ST1Nol' • • • • , • , • I "A .. 0" • • ,,..,a .................... ...._,,
lad•tMOtAilalal'WtrW\','-""9._, 1'"'1•19\lfol INCOMI ~"TY AllOCIATIS• DIVIL.OPM•NT, ... DO•t I _.,-~,..... ..... )all rltllt, °="°""'°· .... °'~ T,......to-lde!ft1 lll'A•OA••T HO)#I ••••Y v' .................. • ....... __ (_.,.. • ...,_
•A• "Oil!!1!.!!...dMor!•,lllf'M'al Tiiis .. .._, w .. lllef wltll tN WllNITOCIC, ltL,Mlll l'01t ', IUMlllOMI ~~ .. NlllOeMOfTNMM •.,...:---~~~-· ~·y Cler k .. Ora119t CtuMy ... WISTHltMir" & COMPANY • C.U.NUM991l"1n>a t ... ,..,.._. •• ~ • ..,..,-.c,..-•
.,:,-IOOll ..;-Of"";"*Y ~ ..... Marc111, 1•. 1•11•r•I """•rtlllp, "· lllllLL, NOTICll ., .. .._ ........ Tiiie "'"uno.1 ICAtMM MUMICAT,
_.._ •AUllOHllLI CUANlM .. , .... CALlf'OllNIA •ttAL llTAT• C-' _y...._ ----..._. Mlllll'llMY'tall,,... ... 8'141_....,ttltaAlol9Pltlnllir "9-Pul>ll"*IOrallllCOUCOallyl"li.t, INV•tTMeNT T•UST 1 Wt.I-a.,_ ............... _,....... llN•fl tC IA,.Y : OAON 111no .... C-1r of Or.nee• 81ale of ,._rd", 11, 1e.n, 1• -,.a. Ti' II It • VALL E y I 0 IL ....... *"°' .......... r'u ~=~ATION, .a Oelaware
o.llorlllA. llNOltllllllNG CO•I"., llHAIL & ...... -~on.. •. t• ......... .
TM ilo* nNlllt .... M ---.0 -· -M • 0 I CAL C 0 LL IC T I 0 N If yev Wllll to iNll llW ~~·Of 811 Na • ...,, M .... t•ll, .... tlU ..
Of\ ar lfter .,. ... dal' °'""" 1812, -~ .. lllK ASSOCIATION INC. e CM'll«Mleft attofMV ""Wt INttor, ¥"' ...... • Offlcl I "-* "" ._ f/ff ....
e1e1 .... ,...,.,.111M.1W!Lll,AllGO ••• ALLSTATE ·,.,NANCIAL w ''0"'-''' '° ,,.., vo11r wru-1tec~o10r.,.c.-v:':...-... ::"i.:'.~~~~:; NS.fHO ll"VICH, LTO., O.C. IUVICH Z:~'--~~-SI ol lr1111det<t'lb .. 1111 l•llowl11• =~=·:=:,:'°'•CounlY NOTICE 0, DEATB OF ~~",.':"tTiC:us"~"~~~i;~:~~ ...._., _.. .i.r c..,o u.. all! ,.,._.,.~, oescatfllTION
All .... _., be,.,.,...,,,,,. Id-v Ill G (NI A c A ft R 0 LL IA•eAaA JUOV, .... IAlllAllA ......... -... u.. ......... l"A .. CIL 1: .... ''"'•'• tltl• .. -!1¥'110ltllci.yofAj)(M.1M2,1.WeM MBJUUM.AN,.UVIRGINJAP. L.•I JUDY, O•IOllAM M . ...., .......... L.Htel~ ... C.,.domlnh1m Unit Ne. no ltll•
lllO Ullllt--eieolnc:ludMIMll.,_ MERRIMAN AND OP PETI· CAT•ICONI, s .. J. DAVIS. Ml•IT ......... "U111t '0 ), u ,,. .... upall Ille ollquorllo1Ne.ln....,,c:-.o.11*"'t TJON TO AOMINlSTER ES· CONST•UCTION COMl"AN Y, SIUtl9d ... ldlcttar1U••.IOCll c ..... 111111111111 Pl ... Co11tlt1•• ll'llltl ff r~ ~ lo .... dtto °" LLOYO'l llANI< Ofl CALl~NIA 1 1111 .......... ff4lt -'-• d9tlwie '"~""'91 ..... for I.at 1 of Tract Wllldl 1111...-.__II ~11¥ TATE NO. A·llHU. c•rper atto11• GUAllANT EE llecerlo l~l•tame11to, de ute .... ttW .. l,c:a..nty .. OralllO.S.-ef the Oepett-1 of Alc:O/lolle a.v.,... To all helro, beneflctarlea. c OL L llCT ION COM'l"AN Y •• IMMfO, ... r ......... _,,,, .. 118' Callfwlllo c .. "l"IM"), ,_... ...
Conll1ll. credhora and contJnaent credi· car-atleft, M a M llEl"O•TtNO aleuM. PYldl-,...,.r_ •ttemoo. July 11. im. n o.c-Na. ""'· ~. iu-.,:::, .--. ... con of VlRGrNIA CIJUlOLL ANO ll•FE••AL SE•V•Cll, INC., 1. TO THE OIFENOANT: A <Ml In HK llZM, ...... 7Uo 1U lllC!ltt.lft, ~T-.. .... -..::=...°I MERRIMAN aka VIRGlNIAP dbl McCa111oy a MANNING, co111plel"111a1 Mo" fll•• llytlle Qlflclel lltcorll1, of talll OrM ..
dlfletarit ·-IM ~Allee> C::... • · C L I N • · I UC I( N I ll , I N C.. a plol .... lff attilllt 'l'M'· II you •ltfl 10 (tu"IY, wNcll P1011 ...,...M to "'8t
--. 2MOI Alcll ~ ~.... MERRlMA?i end peraono who (.,..,. ..... ~DWELL. IANICl!ll.. ...,81141 .. taMUlt. -1111.111, wlWll property...,.... "' Trad .... 1°"7, CA: Allto CrMt One·Hour ?:l••n•tt, may be otherwbe lnt.erested ln c 0 M p A N v , s A MM v L I I!. • • ., • ...., Wt .....,_ II IMWd rKordecl ........ .-. ....... I ....... 271132 Le Par Rd .. Log11n41 Niguel, C,41· the wW and/Olt estate: "OSALINO LI• aftd MllS. lllCHAltO .., you, fllo wltll Wt _.. o -ttt ... MllUll-~. 111 ... olfk e ..
., •• Ploi:a Cl••n .• ,.. 409 A_c, .. ecl A ~Oon hu bee:n filed by CMAOAWA, ORANGI COUNTY TAlC ,..,...,,. lo"" complalnt. Uftln1 -'"' c-.. ,,_.rofaalCICOllf!IY. !load, 8'w. ~ 0-~ 66M C 0 \.LI CT 0", ST AT I 0 F do M , '°" .,_," wCll lie ..... ,.... aft PAllCl!L 2: All .-1.,ldM MJlt 8.itll Ma Callyon Ad., Anallellll. OA: TIM PAUL MERRIMAN CALI FOllNIA IEMPLOYMl!NT ~lcatloft of ... plaMCltt, aftd Wt pen:..,t k1t1antt 1., eoldtatlle C-
H ........ 'a aoa1 C...ter, 2117 8 Ml!ft. In the Superior Court ot Onnait OIVILO•MENT OEPAltTMINT court _., .,..., • I.....,_. ........ Ar••• .. .,_,.. ............ WI ... a...u. AM. CA: Hwrleoll'• MOriM. ~· County requeatlq that TIM-AN 0 ALL OTHE It ... llSONS , ... .., -,... ... *"*""" '" .... Pleft.
2$27 & ..... ,.....Ana.CA;*'"'°"• O'l'HY PAUL M!!RRIMAN UNICNOWNCUUMINOANY "IGHT umplalnl, wlllcll could res111t Ill UCCIEPTTHEllEflROMallall, ... , Merine, Inc., dbe ~an 01010 Merine be T t TL I , IE ST ATE, LI I! N 0 ti t•r"lttl-nl ef waoe1, 1•111"9 of "'lt1ereli 81141 otMr llydrocerN,.11 C...ter, 3~ 11 8Pof1• Artfl• a1 .. d., San oppolnted H per90nal rep re -1 NT 1 "Es T J N TH e It 1 a L -Y ..-,.,...,.,,., ..-oc,,., .retlef 11e1o9 •..,..et,. ... t. w~t -~;:.=El~~~ sentatJve to admlni.ater I.be•· l"llOl"IEllTY OESCllllEO IN THE ,...... ........ C4!mtll...... rltltt .. _._ ~-M ......... Ill ;:;0r..-er-.r..-~o.. late of VIROINlA CARROLL COM l"LAllU AO VE •se:, TO DATE0-" 11. '"'· INlrllfNM! .. rwMd. a.ii~. CA:"""~°*'*' MERRIMAN Cotta Meta CA l"LAINTlf'fl'S OWHElllHIP Olt ~L.."111""· l"AllCILI: A" ac1us1 ... rtoM..., 24322~.EIToro.CA;!lonacreelt ( d h lnde' ......ta ' ANY CLOUO UPON l"UUNTl,.fl'S °'PlltY eaMllll"' .. llto the t>el<ClftY arw, oi.ar...4*..,,...,tH""P'",nlM. un t'rt e ............ ntAdml· TITLE THl!ltETO ANO OOl!S 1 ..OWNM.MITCM•u.P.0.90X42tt, detltll89d8-2'00fttlle Pletl •tbe ....
F.W.ry It, ltll. CA: r .. bueo Claanere. 25431 Trebl.leo nl1tration of !ltatee Act). The THltOUGH "·INCLUSIVE. VIMlla. CAtllDt. CJll),..,.... 8"111rtafWlttotlle Ufllt.
,.,_ lld .. Suite 8, El Toro, CA; VuteoeOne~ petition 11 set for hearing In IUMMOMI ,....,.,...Or..,.. eoa. O.lly Pllot1 PAllCl!I. 4: Aft 11Klllllw rltllt -
-...... 1~ ar-,._ ..... ~.., p-.... CIMnara, 15435 Jtllltflf Ad . IMM. CA: Dept No 3 •t 700 Ovk c:enter c.a .... ,.,.. Fett. U, Matdl •• 11, ... lta "2.C •-llllfll '° .-.,,. """" ...-c• r...,. ---._ ....... ...., ....., w-. ci-w.. 4TZZ a-anca. Ir· 0
• NOTICE! You hew i..., -. Tiie det'9 etM IN ...... l"wtl"'9 ,.,.._ FW. u , Mar0•, 11, tt. HG wi.c. .in.. CA. Drive West, Son ta Ana, CA court,....,, dlclda ....,_..,_without PlalC llTIC( '"'" °" u
PWlbMllOra11t1eout Delly Pltot, _.,. -Oo1'Tm~tta. 92701 on April 7, 1982 at 9:30 your Mini llaord 11111e1e .,_ ,.._... ir11~.;~~i.u. N-1 ._,11,
Morell•. 11• 11. ~· lta '44-1!· ~ •lllK T...,...,_ a.m. w""lfl • *°"' It ...... '"'°""et'°" NOTIC• INYITtNO llDS. Calllornle ..._.. ;;c:;;;L._.. P11oll1hed OraftgeCoH10allyPllot. IF YOU OBJECT to t h e -:::Sol uw.o lldo Nouo 11 llOfelly given 111et ,.,. ft'4J MOnc:.TOCMDITOllO
...... aTATW Merell 11, 1N2 131G-U . grantln& of the petition, you El Trlllvlal 11'11*,,. deCICllr~::;:•.1:· loant "' T......, o1 IN HllM"""°" "Cll • tCfMI. eddrHI °' com...... OI' MIU TllMll'IEll ...!:9-IOllowlne .,.,_...,.doing-. -• ..._ , should either op pear at the sin 111dle,.cle • me"oa 4111 ud: •= ~~&.~~,.:.1~;:~~ :.St:: !1:~~~~1:~" 1 ~· :r::: !:O~!· 1~: Not~';:-~!;"!.'!, ~~;i?c111oru1
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINHS
NAMI ITAHM•NT
lelNl!Wf'OllTHOMl!lOAN '297;(b) • ~ ••llK ~earln& and state your objec-~ ..,.,o cit ao dlea. l.H •• ... 11v1 not,...., t11an t:oo p.m . ..,.,. <omt»lotaMMorcorrectneu)." 1ne ""''*' _...., 1rarialaron 111e1 •.,....
NIWl'ORf HOME LOAN hoe: (c;) HEW· ------....---....... -.,,.... Ilona or {lie written objectiono lftfof'maclotl ... ""'°· l....w, ttllrd IDrdl c1ay of Mardi 1ta The llenlllclery IHldtr aald Oetct of ,,_.., 1a -to be -on~
Tiie rollowlng perso" I• dolrit
IMKIMtAM:
l'OtlT HOlff LOAH lttl; (d) NEWPORT AM64U with the court before the hu-1. TO THE Ol!l"t!:N .. hT: A <1¥11 lw ttle sMt .. -m 9"ly 20' •• ar T .... 1. "'raotllft Ol • IWH<ll ........ " P<-'Y -· deec:rlbed HOM!lON412IO:lelNEWPOfl'THOM£ T..&.NO.IMn •~n y beln co,..pltlnl llet "°" lllell by Ille T"AILER Slly!IMC:-I" Wit~ t«llrecl tllen...,, Tlle.__ __ eddr91ol1M
DAVID GARLAND MUSIC, W
nr..t $tr-. C-. Metal CA t2W.
LOAN t211;111 NEWllOftT HOME l.OAH lllOTIC•OI' .v ... ourappeerancemay plellltlff ....... rou. csae ........ ·1 ..... .-blddH'I _,,~Ille ... ....._ HKUfild -........... to ........,.. ".....,°" .... Jill SUZAHHE
12112: tatNeWl"O«T~ lOAH nn: TIWS'r9•1'1A&.• pt'nOn Of' by your attorney. •. II 'l'OUWl9ll to.....,tlll1 lewwlt, affn 11 ................... n~11111 IM llildll ....... wrmo.. D•daratlotl 81 .. 0N and ROBIN ANNE GOODE ·
DAVID 8ENTON GAllLANO,
No •• , McwMpetller, Newport heel\, CA.ftMO.
~~OllT HOME LOAN '214. 17 o.. ~ t. ~t II:• a.rn. I' I a ST IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR you 111.,... W1t111ft • '°'' .,.., lflla Strwt, ~ INCi\, tallfoml•. of Oefoult _. ~ tar Sate. -~H 08A. GOOOEHOUOti NATURAL -~-~...,,,.CA12910. AMElllCAM TITLE INSUltANCI! or a continaent creditor of the --II_.....°".,.... Ille wltll lld forms--"kat .... ,..., ... wrltten~ofWNdla .... ofelec'Uofl flleloutlon ln calllomleofllled>iel NEWPORT HOME LOAN. INC .. t COMPANY, • CMlforflll ,.,,.,_,..., dtteaaed you mu1t file your 111'-court a w..tllen plealllnt 1" olltalned fro'" tlle P11rcllul"t to <..,to .... ,.., .,.,.,. .. •" ...,. uai:utM Olftce or prirtClptl .,._ ol-
Tllla ""*--11 coMu<Md 0y °" lt'tdlvldual.
Calltornla corportllon. 17 Corporate .. Tl"\dWe. • *-T.,,._. er c1a1m with the I rHPO"to 10 Ill• cornplal"1· Cll • Oeperlmo"t, ot 7U-14tll SlrHt PreoertY to Ylld\t Mid OblltatllM. floe ol lfla lnlended ,,......,.,,. la. SAME "'-~ ._,,, CA t2tl0. SllMl"lltad TNNo, of tllat <ort•lft court or preoent t J ... tk • c-t, -"""' Ille wltll Ille Hi.11111 ........ 9Mdl, Collfotftla. • .... tMfMftM .. II_...,_ c•-AS ABOVE.
Oevld8.GarlaM TNt .,.._ 11 -11¥ • ooryio. Oeff ef Tf"•I exoc11te11 by JOHN 14> the personal representative <wrt • Wfltlltft ,....,.,. er ~ .., Sealed *' -.i1 lie received "' Ille aald nottc. of"'-" -of el«tlotl to An other ""91noae MIMI -ecld•-
ta11on. MICHAEL SIMl"SON, •....,... ,....,, appointed by the court wlthln .,., PIMlll"9 lo be •"'•••d '" tlle P11rc11u1n1 ouerlmtftl of tbe lie rocoNlll N_...ber u. tM1 11 -••••ll•ytne1n1.-1t.,....0t-Tiiis -..it waa flied wllh Ille Couftty Clark of Oranoe COi.iniy on NNport HomeL.owt. ltlG •IWI rocorded F~y u. '"' •• four mooth1 from the date of ditcut). u"'--•90.Yaw•111111 H11fttl.....,.9-ttC1ty5cMo10ltlr1<1, lflltr. Na.1111.s1 .. .._ 1..0,Hta .. 1. lt>f• r-t let!.,..,..,,., .. "-10
Cortl(JC)ke.""911d8"1 ,,.,,,.,_ -2'1in, 111.._ 1Jtff, flrstlllluance fl te _,. wllllleefNf'9d\lllOfl-91Utlonotllle 7~14ttt StAet H.,..ll......,8Mc.ll Cl ofaaldOM<loillec-. tnelntlfldedtr_..,•.,.·NOflE.
fltlMl6 K.a4l1laon HM!>. • ... IM2, Of Ofllclel ,.ecorllt of o et rs OI ., .... ,. plelntlff, • Wt ClOlll1 ......, ~ • ,,.._ °"., •• t ·oo •.m °" ~ Said Mio wlll 119 rnecll, -wlttloul The,_,. -----o1 the PllblllMd ClrMOt c-oau, PllOt, -·l \llce ~ Ora"•• c.u .. ty, ce111er111a, '"' ded In SectJon 700 of the Pro-Jlldt"'tftt atalftlt .,_ tor .,. relief u. 1"2. at~ 1~ ~ p1ace -cove"•"' or worr.,.tr. Hlllf'•H ., lfllended "......,....,. ~E LEE
Flb.22, 1"2.
.... <11 •• 11, 11. u.1-9--T1111 •t•temen1 •H lll•d •1111 tlle '"'w..,t • tllet cortelt't Notice ot bale Code of Collfomla. The demo..,. '" I .. complelflt, wt11c11 bid• wlll 11e--. kll-'1111 __.....__ uue .... _ That the Pf09W'r ~1'-1 lleroto 11
..._ • -,.,._ CownfyClerllol°""OICownfyon.i...tdl Default a"ll Electloll te Sell ... __ ..____..~.. _,:11~-:."-v· ... --r-=-.,·~ deac:r101<1 l119enere111.SANOWICH • time for fllln1 daJma will DOl cw ............ _.w.---... w..,.. "°"''°.,.eeldl1 offef'ell"•sls'"-...... __ _., ... -· ... ~ .... SHOP-•-• 106 ....,.~
PIU l91ll tS. 11112• ,__ l.llere11.....,. nte--.......,,. .. , JO, ~pire prior to four months f9m ........ fl~ ... pr-"f ., ....... _,.. , .... -.. ._ .. of T""'"9 !lf'IM!pet -ol ... "*l•l IK-...... . . .-. CA 92911
• P\lbllallM Or•llfO c-1 Dell)' Piiot. "" • '-"""'*" M ... ,, Ill ..... the da f ....... _ _._ft -~•--' relief........., Ill"-~ ,._. U. •ltM to ace• '* rwJ«t W aald 0.. ef TNll. wlttt ,,...,... .. Tiie 11va1-.._ uNCI by tlle Mid
------------..... II, 21 ....... 1 .. Illa 1211-82 ''*· ..... "'· .. OMdol ·--.. te 0 ........... u ..... ..._. II. II ........... te --... ad'tko ..... y or all bid•. to w•I•• ... , ............................. -...... Y. ,,.,.-..,, ., -locet!Oft le: GOOOE· ITATbMllT0CWAIANOC*MaNT a . Mid c.......,, wilt....., -__ , obove. .it·~ ..... "'9ttw, _ .._ ... lllfonnellty or,,.,.......,,..,, -to t.lt ......, ~-otYld l>Mdof TNtt, HOUGH NATUAAL FOOD
OflUlllCWfltCTITtOYI Ml& Illa to talll o.e of TNtt to11 .c '"*le YOU MAY EXAMINE the• ao..,.,...., • tllM -wrttfefl 0Mect .. -)lld9toft11e rnent-t•es, <llal'I" ....... _of 111e ThetMldl>llllv.......,1a...-1ot1e llUltN•UIUMa avctlott for Ullll, lawful,,_, of N file kepl by the court U you a.re retf*llO, " ..... rnoybefl ...... llme. 4.,.llfj<.wtloM of llW bl-... ly order TruatM 8"11 of Ille trusts crH'811 lrY ~Clfttum1noled el tNt ottlee DI: ElCECIJ.
Tiie fOllowtl,. ...,_ llao .... fldOj.... ---... Uftltecl t4RI"' Amwlce, ot tN malt1 intet'elJted In the esta.:e vou moy O~: ~ J, ·-Of Ill• aoa.rd of TrllllHI ot lll• Mid°""°' Trult. TIUE PARK ESCROW. INC. 172IO .... IMUto .. tlleflctltteutlMalftHlnome: NOne9TOC191'TOlltl ... tra .. ce ta .. ,,., Amor•<•" Tiii• ., LaeA.'"-'CIM1l H1111tl"9'0ft9Mdl Seid .... Wiii be....., ... flrlcley, wllopeSlrMl.8"119 .,_,_ ..... v-, ..
ACCENT ON NAILS, 27112 ,..,,.. Ofl llUUl ~ 111111r•tK• '-"Y ... " •I 11• file • ~Ul!llt with the court to M.wtty• ........ ~ ly: ............. C19c11 Apr II 2, 1'12 •• 2:00 p.m .• , Ille Celit°""9 92700 on or ...., Aptll I. IN2. "••d, Suite O, Lat11na Nl11111, 1a-.oi.t .. "7U.C.C.) East "lftftSINot. "'tlle city of~ l'eC.'eive apaelal notice of the In· 1. SUMMONS: 'rlW...,,. elltlt ... Of .. 0--.~DNtri<t Cll-..n811A--ence•tt1ec1v1c ....!~n1~m1rC.::-,,,:c~'°,c;:'.:;
CelNar..i. "'17. ' AM, Ce!HwNa. oll lflat rltflt. tltl• aftd ventory of e.taw -u and of acu.i ~"*• -"' ""9ctlnt raol Or .... ewoty, CIMlnN Ce<1ter 14.ttldlt'tt. • Ed CNipmM 1100 Tiie Flctltloul lllllMU N•rne -lallereby ...... lo~or•Of l"'°'"t~toaftd--br tt th tJtJ uand ~......, ....... _,41CW MIH'Clll,1m AH"UO. I" Ille City of Ora"tl. n..-ende4dt ... of tMperw ...t.Hr•to...,. -f"-' lfl 0r..., lllewllllln:::!,P•r1.::~1 • bu9' ""••r .. , .. Deed of Tr111t In ,,,. e ~~~ llCCOUllln "'~-1200re;: ell~•.,.., 111 ._Or..., PllC>lllllad ar.,.. C-Dall' Piiot, CelNorftle. wltll •"om cleJma mar be flleo ii ES· C-'V Oft .... ,..., M. 1W1. Fiie .,......, II IO °" .... ~ l*6litecl lft Mid County -ports .__.u.~ ,~..._., N COllftfy s.arter C.Vr1 .. , Sl-.r .i-erct111, 11. 1tl2 llJl.C At tlle tll!leof-lftlllal pullllcatl8" CROW HO 203tbll, EXECUTIVE PARK Ne.F-.10. ~i'~~.':~':":'s~l.~ StatoWtutl>elles: oftheCalifomlai>w>beteC.ode. Wein, llMert c. 1..--...r. Kai · ll#lllltllllla .... toc.91-..... UCAOWNfC ,1T210--SlS..-. TerHa Pa1111t1e. UJ Nertll N'T-Lot 1 of Tract Ne. "'9H-m• Jamee A. Stearmu, Attol'IMJ 1<•1""8 a e:.c-. .... ·-.. PmJC l9l1Cf ll"l'ald tNlatKo el tlle obllgatloft •7, Founttln Velley. CA 12101. BETTY s~.u.~.CalltwMe. TMnlfMl•)eneleddr ... oft,,._ ,...,...., ......... paenMOftlll.S at Law UM N Ban.r Bl•• M-M . .....,,....,. .... , ... b ttcuret111Yt11e..,,.dHc11tled_.. .. KELLER.cse.o &cr-omo..-tne
ThlS .....,... was <ellOll<tod by ell -office Of tne "-*Oft•> .,., lncllltlwe ef '"'•<ell•"""' Meo1, Selte dt F.Uertoa CA t!Ui": l"l•lntlftt CGf'iteftd lllat tllelr tltlo '' N,. ,._ lrvsl ..-r ell!Mated COits, ·-· INt d•t '°' 1111119 c:1a1m1 b~ ltflt Oy .nr IMMdllal. CORPORATE OFFICE (NAME AND racorchofOr ..... c......,,c.11tomle. • • • eupef'ler .... , ......,,., -_,to .,,....,_,.., •Madv-l•SI0.142.47. c:redltD< ahallbeAP<M I . 1982.wNClllallle T.,....Pam.tle ADDAl!881: l!CONO LUllE INC'., 011 Tiie tlrHt lddrn1 or othe r Tel {714) 17t·l5t1. quiet Ullo .. to all-.~. Tiie NOTICE OF DEATH OF Te *'8m\lne.,,. ocienlftg blcl,....., bullnMt dtt bel0<1 tile conaummatlon
Tiiis utecNnt was fllod wltll Ille 81•cll St .. 11100. Newporl 8Hc:h1 .CA coml!IOft ...,..... of Mid property actloft <Ofl<etM,.... Pi'OCIWtY altuatod C H A R L ES M I LT 0 N ,..., <1" 17MI W41M. cltte apec:llled ebo.e CO<lllt' Clartl of Or ..... eou..ty °"' UHOt PRINCIPAL PLACE O, 8uSI· 11 ~to M : JtS S-1• C\r<le, P11bll1lled Orange Cout Dally Piiot. In Oraft91 c-ty, Callfof'"le, eftll T E R Oeto: Mw<ll •, lta De-MAACti 10. 1982 Marclll,tm. HE.SS:to1w.eon-....im.F.-ton. c..taMna,Clllfomle. MMcnll,lt,2$.IN2 l29t-e2 lloKrlMd .......... : w AL s . aka T.O.SIEllVICECOMl"ANY :::..,~ ..........
l"uell...,ar..,..COlltOlllyl"llOt, CA"'32. Seid tale Wiii be mede wlllloul "l.OtOM111t lt't 810cktMof'Lake CHARLES M . WALTERS nMlllTl\lltM 119--1 ~rc1111, 11. is, ~11. 1~ . .1~· Tiie nlft4(tl _, eddlW o1 ""' -con"•"' or war~•"'' oprns or W •net rract. ~ llMm.' 111 tfW City-' ANO OF PET I Tl ON TO 8y· VkklJ A""'111te .._..... ...... 1aet-111o. "-"" ded ~II -PATRICK H.. Mil-lmpll ... es lo tltle, ,:0.MlllCIOI or Newpor1 IMdt. C-ty .. ~...... ~-~ry ' fnlt ........ ..,_ LEJt-llEftHIOA C.t.lll.l.ER.2028W etK11"'"'-te Mtltfy.,. -Id MN-IOl63 sttte ol ea111or .. 1a. n por M•o ADMINISTER ESTATE 0nec11ya-,,_wm. ..,....,7 c...,,.:,~=·~:,a:>'..-.,0 ta bala"ce...,. °".Ille ""• or "°'" NOTICE OF DEATH OF recorded 111 80011 4, "•oe u. 01 NO. A·110016 0r .... u..,,... ,__,.,._,,CA-
dMctloecl In gener9I ... Mei-. ~ IKllrM 11¥ ..... Deed ol Trust, lo wit: ltul'--· lft Ille office of T 0 a I I h e I r s 171•1 mG9 It-......... ITATWJITOt'wtTMIHlAWAL plea,--.... ~--'°" ..,.,us ... .-....... ._.... ........... WILLIAM F . LEWIS aka llle COllfttyllecordwofwldC-"Y·" b f". I d 't • l"lllllllMdOr.,..CoellOellyPMot_ Publl1llec!Ore11g.Cou1DallyPllot. fl.oMPAll~ .... 11' -M: '°' w. eom.noo-. ,,...,. ca.11, ·-.,,.adv-et tM BUD LEWIS AND OF The c-....._of t11e _.,. ene 1c1ar es, ere ' ors Mar.11,11.is.1ta 1101.c MM:11 1t.1• 1~
ONMTO•• u•M• ion. CA~ ume of ._ lftlttet Plllllic.tlorl of 11111 p E T 1 T 1 0 N T 0 detcrllled pnporty ts: a1Ja"" JIJ.Jflll and contingent creditors of -----------
f'KTt'TtOUI '"'81Mlllblllctr......,111nllfldedtobe Nottc.e et .... :$.7,211.to str .. t,.._,eaad\,Callfwllla. Charles Miiton Walters, _.,. M91IH _.,. -c ..,........... __,.tttleolllceofHERITAGE OATI0:"*'-?26.lta ADMINISTER ESTATE COlt,CASTU&NICNOUON k Ch I M w It r-..-... IK ..._ ... IK
Tll .......... __ .... _" __ COMPANY cac11ow SERVICES. INC. .. .... $TAMCElllCANTITLE NO A112505 .,:~T.... a a ares . a ers a-•• • ,1,..,0, ,..,1,..r fro'" 1111 41111lifdtSl . ..,,..102. ,._. .,_,,_ •HSURAHCE COMPANY T 1•1 h 1 r..~,...... and persons who may be -per1,.ert111p •porot1111 11-r ,... CA t2MO, °"or 8'ler April 1tt. '982· • CatHorW• c._., .... · 0 a e r s ' ... ..._ otherwise Interested in the ~ M TMI! AMtUM. aTATDllWT
11cuueus -.1 .... -.-$UKO ~':"'a!::.:...~10 .,.pro-~~-beneficiaries. cred itors ... c::.e.ry,..,.... w ill and/or estate : Ofl c"•ATIVI OISIONS af IHI lllr'Odalftlelnlltla __ ............ and c6ntlngent c reditors of Lat-......ca...u CAVAUVI IN8lJRAHCE CORPOAATIOH. 300 Sl ....... .._. ---
....... om. ......... aaadl. CA 11~:Ti.~t12. -"'~"""'"'"' William F . L~wls and 'cmun.an Apetltion hasbeenfiled Matyletld2l20l Yw1MectDuu•1111,1111 '*'· ao tar • 1e tnOWll 10 ..... 1""8ndeel ..,....._ea. ttm ..........,. ar... caatt oa11, "''"' by Charles Mark Watte rs Tot.1 ..,,,,,...., ....., 111.112.231 .~:.·:.11.:.:i.:.:::..~~= ~...:.. ~....._. 1"1111111~) :.:! COHt 0.11, ~t~~~!rs! l~~~s~ rn t~: Man ti II, ... !$,""' 1· ttll lnMt. In the Superior Court of Tole! l.Jablll... • .(). $4,$43,"'4 .., ,,..,_.. 11104 c.-cy"' ~ ...... _..,Nd,_W1t11t11 11tot11r 11atMar.tt,t1.is.1ta .1os.a w lll and/or estate : PWlJC Illa Orange County requesting =~-IY
FtLE No.,,.,..., ,_.. 1111 fllal: NOH1 -• _, A petition has been flied that Charles Mark Walters C-9\tlOStetutO<y Otpoe1t •.eoo.ooo
"""Na-a1141 A4*111 of the DATfD'..:;:"~~· ,._ ... IK b W illi G Il l NOTICENS-OHPtD4tEATB OF be appointed as personal ~pelcMn...::c'<==i ... _,,... 2::~~:~: ,..r'°"Wl"'*aWl"':to:0 "0!.!;1 a.MdlC.....,. Y am u ermo representative to=:',,.,~~· 33.111.• GAULO•NG, Jll., "' . 1..1 •-••tT,...,,_ NS-HNI Lew is In the S uperior WALTER DOUGLAS ENGEL-administer the estate o f -'°'tnel'M' 12.oos.111 It-. •ltl.LeM*a.~-:-· Publt ...... Ot ..... Co••t Delly Piiot. NOTICE OF DEATH OF Court of Oranoe County llAADT, aka WALTER D. l'!N· ~lorllM,..., 21,4-41.m ....... ~~i,.r;., .... lolerd\1&.11112 -1307.C VERONICA ALLGAIER requestino that Wiiiiam GELBARDTANDOP'PETI· C harles Milton Walters , We .... odlylttelttle ___ .,,.._ __ """""',.,,,.,.
Fatt.U,..-..0.4,11,11,"91 :':I -· -O'BBOlN AND OP PETITION G Y i I lermo Lew is be TION TO ADMINISTER •s. Costa Mesa, CA (under the ._ '°' ... ,.. etlded ~ 31' '"'· ...... to .... .,__ .._ .. ,llK TO ADMINISTER ESTATE NO. "' I n d e p e n d e n t °"'"'•1 • °'~c.9::.:-~~'0 ._ MOTICITOcoerrMCTOM AllUll appointed as personal TATENO.J..11%5'1. Administration of Estates \llcePnialdem -..C 19111 CALL.9IO l'OtO _. • • r e p r e s e n t a t i v e t o To all helre. beneflclarte1. Act). The petition Is set for ~~~~
1'1C11T10Unu11H11 =.°'o.9-'=-°=..8=":"::! ~.!:.! ~~::;!~~·~~: administer the estate of =l!r'w-:t.~Rtl~~'c~~ hearing In Dept. No. 3 at ...,'*'*' ar;;:~-~91.o.. Mere1111, 11. 11, 20, 21. ieoa 116M2 MNMITATSMSNT -. . torsofVEBONICAALLGAIER Wiiiiam F . Lewis (under 700 Civic Center Drive -• -,.._. ___ • _____ ...;....;;...;
Tll• 1011ow1 .. , perM" 11 dolnt =~·1=.0-e.m.o1i11e .. 1t O'BEIRN and penon1 who may the 1 n de Pendent r.~~~ _.=ALpe!: West, Senta Ana, CA 92701 P9tJC 1111( PHlX 19Ta
11Misl11e•n•: l'lac• ot lid 11oca1~rano• co""'' be otherwt.e Interested In the Administration of E states on Marc h 31, 1982 at 9:30 _..,... ________ _
o " A N o e J u L • E °""'· o1 ~ion. 213e. 1300 a. will Ind/bl' state: Act). The petition Is set tor ~~ ~ar .. ~wWot~~ .. ~Olt'~'!~~-r-".M . . CHAll-I UllGEll, Uto Ha rltor OrwlclA ............ CA hea i I n....pt N 3 t ---... '4-....., ___ , ,.. . a~.__,
.... 1e ... r11. Colto Meaa, Celllernle ~ :: • ••a I ...,_ ...._... A petltion haa been filed by r ng n ..,.., . o. a A JMtition haa bee_tl filed b'i IF YOU OBJECT to the ~
t2121. ci-oom awUdlllf•· Por1ttld• EMm. ROBERT K . SALL I n tht' 700 Civic Center Drive, RAYMOND W . &NOEL· granting of the petition SYNOPSIS OF THE ANNUAL STATEMENT .
J-"· -.i. • Nartti .. .....,, ---. 121&1 8. Yorlle St... Orlnea. CA Superior Court of Oran~e Wttst, in the City of Santa HARDT tn the Superior Court yqu should either appea; OF °'I::·~~ .... ...,.,. :::,.~_:.:.=n~~....:=; Coun ty reque1tln1 thet R • A198na2• Ca91130fornla on Aprlt 7, of Oranae County NqUMtlna at the hearlnQ and state SELECT f~,!_U1 RANCE COMPANY
tlWIMdt.tal. ._,._ CA(71•1l7M3DO. BERT K. SALL be appolnied as at : a .m . that BA YMOND W. ENGEL· your objec tions or file .. 3015 C.Ur _.. ngs, Detlas, TX 7521' ..._ llMC NOTICE 111 HlllHY GIVEN tllet 111e penonal repre.entatJve to •d· IF YOU OBJECT to the HARM be a......a-ted 11 _..__ YNr Ended DecemlMt' 31, 1te1 -19 ~ 11...... "" .,. 1111°'• ........ D11Mt1c1 of arange c:-iiy, 1 b f VERO ..,...... ..-·-written objections with the '" ___,. -.... w CelllClnlll , lleralfl•fler r•i.ttM to •• min at.er t e fftote 0 • orantlno of the petition, n•l rtpreaentatlve to odml· Total admitted assets $47,479,552 ~-:C~ •. ~~ of °'.,. COl.llltY °" "'018TMlT.''..., ,..,. ~to,""'"°' MICA ALLGAIER O'BElRN. you Should either appear nlnlW the wtate ot WALTER cyo0urrt a~~er..'nhcee heaarlnbeg. Total llabllltles 35,m ,9SS
fltaan ...., "*'.,.. .._. --1""'......, lrvlne CA (W\der the Indepen· at the hearing and state DOUGLAS ENGELHARDT, u ........ .. m Y Special s urplus funds o
Pu111lll4dar..,..c ... oa11,,.1tot. :,.'c:,:;:.--do1a-111rt11e dentAdml.niatratlonofE.tatn your o b jections or file OaetaK-.CA(Wldertheln· I n p erson or by your Capltalpald·up/Guaranty •
Marcll 4, tt, 11. as, t• 1001•. 1141 "'°" 11e r••lved 1n tit• i>1oc• Act). The petition 11 Ht for written objections with the dependeJftt AdmlnhtraUon of attorney· Capltal/Statutor-1 Deposit 1,S00,000
----------. ~ ~~ "':. ~ heartn1 In Dept. No. 3 •l 700 court before the hearln". l'lltat. Ad). Tbe petidan te aet I F Y 0 U A R E A G ross ,..Id-In and f1a1 .. · ;;;;n,·;;o.. -at ~ Center Drive West. Santa • fw beettnc ln Dept. No. 3 at 700 C R E 0 I T 0 R o r a t lt>Yted I 4 80S 23t
---:"ICTl--T1-CllUI--..,...--.-.. --, ":.0:.~·..'...'°:0--:'':"'"' ~CA 12101 on April 7, 19'2 fnou;e~~r:~ceb~a/o~ aw e.mw Drtve w-. s.n .. contingent creditor of the u~:~sfgned fu~r;> us ' '
llAMUTA.,._ .. , £":.:ti::.~'::"~~ •tIF y(ft O BJECT to the attorney. Ana.CA9270lcmApri1 7, 1982 deceased, yoo mus t file <surplus) Sl443.58
™ ,..lowtftl ,...._. .,.. ,..,.. ""addltlOlllll ~tor FM 1rantln1 of the petition, you I F Y 0 U AR E A ~I~ll!'y~ mUECT t o the ~~urp~l:~~n";'trt t~ c~~~ S1 urplusfas regards pollc yholde.; ' 12,149,597 .... ::'.~in • ..,. MOllLI WAIN, Oollar9 (111.00)-~Ille.,. 1hould either appear at t he c R e D I T 0 R 0 r a 1renUn1 of U~J..eethlon, you 'personal representative 0"1c obume or thetsyfeart .. -29,990,617
•7 9ffdl ...... .,... "'· ~ ~ r::::,':;., olld .,. , ... hear1n1 Hd at.aw your ob)ec· contingent t redltor• of the lhould etth.raJpear a\ the 1 t d b th 0 t s rsemen or ,,.. year 26 479 a
1eoc11, ~--,.._ .... _._ ~ uo... or fU. written obJectiono deceased, you must file heerlnl and ttai. your=· :J:fh~n n f:Ur ~t~ cfr~ We hereby certify that the above lt•ms 'ant ln .. .-Mdller.•u ..... 0r.,..., f.81111 llld.,... .. -llPll• ~ w1th the CIDlll'\ bef!ltt tlM *· your c laim with the court done°" toe wrtn.en ob the date of first lssuanc-accordance with the Annu.1 Sta~t for the year c.=~ •sava11erv. :r.:=;-.:.;:i=::.-dos-Your.,,..,...maybetn or present It to the w1tb the court betcn hM· of letten 81 provided •1.; ended December 31, 1911, made to the Insurance
INI• c:.ae.ntNmts. • " --L peraoc w by youunomey. personal re presentative ttnc. Your appwmcumy be Ill Section 100 of the Probat. Commissioner of the State of Callfornla, PUrsuant to
1 ,;.....,,_, •• ..,....,v .... _Ttta,,,,,~..::':!:..~-.,;: IJ' YOU AU A CRl:DrroR appointed by the court ~«b7,wranom.y. C d f C llf 1 1 ... law.
l'Yf"' ~'*'"" ,_ -.. or • eoaan,.nt creditor of the within four months from 11' YOU All A CRJ:DlTO o e 0 • orn a . '"'
T111e ........ 1• ~ ..... , a C"'~ 11
•1 • 111 ""*'.,111 dft'eued, 1ou ,..uat fll• your the date of first lssu.nce or a c:ondQPnt creditor o1 the •time for filing c .. lms wlll '°""'81 "'.::':.., ""' 11iar 11ao ot11t111M .,.. "" claim whh thl ~Cit tr-t It of letters as QrCWkMd In d-Md. you muet me your not expl re prior to fo.._r
Tiiis ......._. -.. .., .,. .. =::.=,:=:,."':::to the penou1 tep'"9ntadve Section 700 of the Probat• c1almWhhthe00W1.orpn11ntU months from the date of
c.-iy e1wt1 « °""'91 c-ty"" ................ ....,111w111a11t1111 appolat.d 1t1 t.h• coun wlt.htn Code of Callfornla. The to th• .,..._i repNMntaUve the heerlna no«rced above.
,..,_.,.,,.., -"•to111e(111'11en111ftereaallll'llll0t fot.armonlhafromthedat.e of tlmeforflllngclalmswlll appotni.dbythe«IUrtwlthln YOU MAY EXAMINE
,....... or.., c.ec Oii:::'.: =.:.~,::. '°...-=: ::: tint i.uanc. ot lltten • ptO\'t· not expire prior to four four montho from th• date of the flle kfllt by the court •
R.C . Fetherston
Vlc•presldent
R.C. Fetherston
Secretary
Published Orange Coast Delly Piiot, March 16 17 18, 19, 22, 1992 12.il.G
............. ,.11 • ._... .... 09TNCT ... ....,. ,. .. ...., cW an 8eeUoD 700 of the Pro-months from the deM qf arwt ......... ot i.tws • provt. If you aN Interested In ttte ~._:.CA.a..~ bl .. Code of C.Ufomla. The the hMrlngnQJlced above ded Ill 8ec1lon '100 of the Pro-estate you may fllt a ta& 1111( ta& 1911( ... .a = ............ ~ .... · .. time tor flllq clalme wUJ no• YOU MAY EXAMINE bet.e Code of Callfomi•. The request with the court to•------------------. . "=~-.... "__._co-, ~:=:.~m!': the flle kept by the court. ~-~~ ~u,,:: receive spec\al notice to --"~ T•ACTOtll to II ...... tlle -llMt ,, .aiorv. --If rou •re Jnt.rnted In the ;;.-ct";.:;~ :. man "°**' the lnventoty of Htate t• ...... .. ~.~:Z:------...._ ~-:,:o:.::.:'::::t9:: yo'u MAY EXAMINE th• es ate you may flle a lboY9. hwtnf es"tsandoftheS*ltlons, ~._.,._~~~ .• ,...,. MOe1u *••Mo"~ ................. .,, ftlelwptbythtOOW't.U'°'un requfti with me court to YOU MAY IXAMl'NS the accounts and reports .._ ___ _
AM11uu6 '':...,... o. .... , ,.i;.:,-:;-.,.:::=:--•• w..u 1uit~u..-•1 ,oy111A1 receive speclal ..-tee of aJelrieplbyU.coun.llJDUare :S:~~1f1~o;:,!::~ ;=:---~--;"',...fl~.,=...., ..... 1111 a,..._ wttb u. mun'° the Inventory of estete ....,..._._.....,JDU_., Coc:t. • .:::=.,...
.,..., 11 1 •• -... "1~-..zt _. • .,.,...... ... ......._ .p.w-*-ol Ibo In· atsets and of the petitions, • ....-wtth Che..., to ~ .. TT•N PAITH ' ' _..,_....._ • ., °""" .... .., .... ,.....,..,._..., ..,_,. ot ..... _..and oC accounts end reports .-.a noCkll °' dla-. .. =..":::..t.:..:. a.a.---..---. ......_,......._.._ ... _ thl,.Udiila.MICCIUfttaliDd,.... described In Section 1200 Clf---wlof AIA""'"1'fllD ...:,:::t::S-a t ~
.... " ........ CMllrllle ..... -......... r ,._ ............... u ., the c.111om1. Probett -. ..... _...... .... ,.. .,! wa11ern •· ...-= ·~----..... ~-....... ~ ..... ,._~J ...... Clf .. Olllllrda...._eo.AL Code dwalw41aleetlonl A.._:r .. Lew •= ......... • ' • ... m • ....-...... 1111u •----UU.lllDlllT,l• ,.,._, L:el ... y a L.awH• dl9Nf ......... o.t.. NIW ...... 1181.ct. u. C' .. ,., --• -if?:...,;-., &f;t ·~= tr.;1~-t•J:;.~'Cle ~r.;:•t.~~fl' .. 'J'.: .~:~:,~.\'::.':'left ftt:)='9f~"n ·-='~~i.~R:."'a-::O=t, ....... -. .._ =·--If..._ a.Ir• :::::... 1111 IA~•tlla, CA 111111 Lei .._..., CA ._,! ............ Publllhed Or-. c.out r..f -~ ........ ._
,._ fl ....,. '.,.. <'I•) -.... (1111 ..-.-.' ' Ill. (tM) • DaUy Pflot March '1, 12, *'--=-
.,_.._ .. ...,..., ........ 0.-0., .......... ~OWllDlllll ...... ~or..Olll.,..._~ ......... ~c..io. .... tl,1912 SIC' , --"-· .. ~··· ............. , ' ........... !"--~ .... ..,.,,,ft. ... t I 19tit .............. ·---,,,,.. ---........ -,, ....... 1\.
....
~15:'.,l..8!.fTENsmN
The iall end of an Ala1kan-
~ted It.Orm that hu pelted the Onnp Cout with two non-
~op da 1 of raln and wind 11
to move eastward early
y.
Qty and county cleanup crewa
were kept buay ~cleaning
up from mud and alldee in
billy 8eC'tiona of Oranae County
and from a wind storm in Coat.a
Men.
~ forecut calla for acatw.cs.
al\bwen and thundenhowen to-'
~ht apd Friday mornlnl with
chancet of ~ to percent to~t and 10 ~F·
cent Friday mo&"fliJ11, llCClOl"CliAc
to a 1poke1woman for the
N~lionll \'leather Service.
Skies are expected to be partl'-
cloudy Friday and the weekenCf
forecast la for IUn8h.lne and tmn·
eeraturea near 70 degrees ln
CJrange Cout dties.
Emergency crewa patched
~ 1n roofa and WtndoWa of the amall tornado or merely a 1qu.ll
2000 block of Pacific Avenue '·line.
afwr what eome d-=rlbed u a However, CHlmtr Zolla,
mlnl·tornado 1wept throu1h custodian at Calta Meu'a Adami
tbe b1oc:k n...ctay; At )Mil tlw School where window• were
hornet were darnlpd when the broken and treea downed, aid he
wtnd blew down treee.. · uw a funnel cloud ahortly after
It'• quite (N*ible CO.ta Mesa the 11:40 a.m. 1ncldent. 'lbe fun.
WM hit by a lmA1l tornado. Don nel wu moving northeut in a
Luat of the Nat.lonal Weather counterclockwise dlr,ectlon, he
Service, laid. ~·
Lust laid it.would be difficult A cleanup effort waa under
to aay whether reeidentl alona way at Adami School where
Pacific Avenue were aeeln1 a wind blew out elua and window
framea. downed one trH and damaced othen. (Belated atoey,
photoa Pap Bl).
Floodtnc wu reporte4i lJl' the
WO.On Street and Canyon Ave-
nue area of Coata Meaa thla
momlng.
The weather Wal believed
re1ponaible for several _rwer
outacee that left 21,000 OranCe
County cuatomen of Southern
California Edlaon Co. without
power at variou1 tlmea durina
the night.
A llchtnihl atrlke )gwkect out
a tnnlformer at BarTanca ~
,'Way and Sand Canl'on Road in
Irvine at e a.m. toCiay and cut
power for 80 mlnutea to 1,300
cuatomen in Univenity Park, a
apokmnan for the utility u.ld. •
An outa1e of leu than a ml·
nute cut off power to 2,500
customen in aouth a.ta Me.. at
6 a.m. today.
Another 1,000 reaidenta of
Leiaure World in Laguna Hilla
were without 1erv1ce
Ajrpol-t plan 0 K' d . ~ ~ .
Hopefuls·
• • missing
forum
New Wayne access proposal sent to judge
Suppose they gave a candi-
dates forum and a . third of the
challengers didn't come! ·
The way things are shaping up
for Friday night's forum, spon-
aored by Villaie Laguna, three of
the nine candidates seeking elec-
tion to the City Council April 13
won't be there.
Incumbent councilman Kelly
Boyd and candidates Ron Wil-
liama and Pat Barry said they
will be 'attending a grand ope-
ning of the Laguna First organi-
zation's headqu.arters that eve-
~ey say it's an unavoidable
conflict.
Village Laguna chairman
Norm Grossman calls It a "lack of
common courtesy.''
Boyd, Williams and Barry have
been endorsed by Laguna First
for the council election, in which
three seats are to be filled.
When contacted today, all
three candidates said they will be
attending the open house Friday,
beginning at 5 p .m . at new
headquarters at 899 South Coast
Highway.
The Village L. aguna candi-
dates' forum begins at 7:30 p.m.
in Oty Hall. The forum will be
televised by the Laguna "Video
Club.
''It's just a (time) conflict," said
Williams, a real estate broker.
"They told us they'd like our
presence there, but I don't know
how we can fit everything into
every day.
"I've gone to all the forums
that I could so far."
Barr7• director of the Boys
Club o Laguna Beach, said he
has also chosen to attend the
open hol.llle instead of the candi-
dates' forum. :: · · "I sent them (Village Laguna)
a letter telling them I had a
: ~: meeting with m_y campaign vo-
lunteers that night,'' Barry said. ~: He said he alao Included a ·.· five-minute statement that he
requested Village Laguna mode-
rators read to the forum audien-
ce.
"I jW9t feel my volunteers have
dedicated a lot of time to my
campaign and it's essential that I
meet with them."
Incumbent Kelly Boyd was
, more direct.
I · "Who supports (candidates)
: · Bobbie Minkin, Bob Gentry and
Dan Kenney?" he asked.
Those three candidates com-
prise the second slate supported
by the Temple Hills Neighbor·
hood As9ociation, among others.
"Village Laguna is nothing
more than a name representing
about 20 people In Laguna
Beach,'' Boyd said.
"Their thinking, to me, ls no-
growth, non-proj{ressive, and
(See VILLAGE, ~~ge AZ)
o.IJ ..............
BULLSEYE -Fern Pirkle displays her James Watt Dart
Board, a pointed comment about tbe secretary o_f the
Interior's policies. It may prove to be a pretty s~ idea.
Pointed criticism
Coast group makes Watt dart board ·
By STEVE MARBLE
Of ltte Delly ll'llot .....
Fern Pirkle is hoping James Watt gets the point.
The Corona del Mar woman and her colleagues on the
environmentally-minded Friends of the Irvine Coast have
taken aim at the controversial interior secretary with their
"James Watt Dart Board."
For $9.95 ·plus tax and postage, Watt. critics can take
out their environmental frustrations by winging darts at a
likeness of the interior secretary.
AND JUST IN CASE any of Watt's detractors have less
than perfect aim, the package comes with six darts.
"We've already had five orders from Kentucky," says
Mrs. Pirkle, adding, "strip mining -that's what they're
upset about back there."
The dart board features Watt's smiling face in the
center and is ringed with illustrations of offshore drilling
platfonns, strip mining and the remains of a forest.
The board also has a drawing of the proposed national
park site south of Corona del Mar with a tiny sign warning,
"Out of Site."
She says there's enough on the board to appeal to even
the most marginal of environmentalists. Even Republicans
will like it, she adds.
A BULLSEYE SHOT on the board will result in nic-
king Watt in the corner of the left eye but, members of the
Friends say, any head shot is good for a few points.
By FREDERICK SCROEMEHL O(tlleDlllJPlelltalf
For the second time in seven
mon\ha, a U.S . Dl1trict Court
judge will take center ata1e in
the illue of Orange County gov-
ernment'• attempt to develop an
acceu plan to resulate commer-
cial airlines' uae of John Wayne
Airport.
Admitting they have been
"agonizina'' over the complex ia-
aue,. county 1upervisor1 aent Ju~e Terry Hatter a new pro-
Cocaine
haul niade
in NewpoJ:*t
More than $1 million worth of
nearly pure cocaine and $36,000
in cub baa been seized from a
Spyalua Hill home in Newport Beacn following the: arrest of two
alleged drug peddlers, narcotic
detectives report.
Officera uid they recovered 10
pounda of cocaine from the 11
Monterey Circle home shortly
after arresting George Richard
Burgio, 30, and Dennis Larry
Ash, 35, on drug charges.
Police report Burgio, who they
said la on parole on a previous
drug conviction, liv~ at the
Spyglass Hill home and :Ash is a
resident of Mammoth Lakes.
Both are being held on $500,000
bail.
'J:wo Huntington Beach wo-
men -Charyl Lynn Beatty, 25,
and Michele Dianne Higgins, 24
-alao were arrested on ~rug
charges when officers searched
the house. Both are being held in
lieu of $15,000 bail.
.. The drug bust reportedly star-
ted on a routine note when
Newport officer Doug Parmen-
tier spotted two men parked in
front of a Jamboree business.
Parmentier reported that the
men sped off in their car when
he approached them. He said he
chaaed their car, finally bringing
it to a stop in front of the New-
port police station.
Officers said they discovered
small quantities of heroin and
marijuana in the car and that one
of the men -Ash -was car-
rying a pistol and a large
switchblade knife.
Police said Newport narcotic
officers and federal Drug Enfor-
cement Administration agents
are still investigating the drug aet.zure.
poaal Wedne1day \hat would
allocate the 14,928 commercial jet
depaurea permitted annually
among carriera now serving the
airport and carriers on the out-
alde wanting in.
Judge Hatter became the cen-
tral figure in the ilaue Jut Sep-
tember when, at the ur1tnc of
the U.S. Department of Juatice
and Pacific Southwest Airlines, he OYerturned the county'• pre-
vioualy approved aoceea plan.
AttOmeya for the two parties
claimed the pla_!l was unfairly
beneflclal to AirCal and Republic
Airlines, the two gia.nta in the
Orange County market, and
contrary to tenets of the Airline Deregulati~ Act of 1978.
AlrCal has been authorized to
fly an average of 23.5 flights per
day from orange County; Repu-
blic, 11.5 flights and Frontier
Airllnea, Pacific Southwest Air-
(See AIRPORT. Page AZ )
Trustee may lose
school board post
MAY BE OUT -Huntington
Beach High School District
trustee Sherry Baum, of Seal
Beach, may be forced off the
board if Seal Beach School
District sends its students to
Los Alamitos instead of
Huntington Beach.
' By PATRICK KENNEDY
O(theDlllJPlelatalf
Sherry Baum, recently elected
t.ruatee of the Huntington Beach
Union Htah School Dl.ttrict, may
be forced off the school board
next year, say district officials.
Mn. Baum, a Seal Beach resi-
dent, would have to resign if the
fln,ancl.Uy troubled Seal Beach
School Diatrict disbanda in July
1983 and .ends its students to the
Los Alamitos Unified School Di-
strict u ls proposed.
If this occurs, Seal Beach
would no longer be within th~
Huntington Beach Union dis1rict
boundaries.
Mra. Baum would have to
move from her Seal Beach resi-
dence to a home within the di-
strict boundaries or be forced to
resign, according to district offi-
cials.
The state F.ducation Code re-
quires that school board members
must reside in the district they
represent, say district officials.
Mrs. Baum. who was elected to
the four-year term last Novem-
ber, couldn't be reached for
comment.
Voters muat approve the pro-
poled merger of the Seal Beach
and Loa Alamitos districts and
(See BAUM. Pa.ce A!)
Large condo OK'd
by council in Mesa
The largest condominium pro-
ject ever planned in the city has
been approved by the Costa Mesa
City Council.
Developer C. Robert Langslet
plans to build the 1,156-unit
condominium development on 28
acres of lar.d owned by C.J .
Segerstrom and Sons and. the
Coast Community College Di-
strict.
.Plans for the complex near the
corner of Adams A venue and
Harbor Boulevard call for 41
units per acre, with the size of
the co.ndominiuma ranging from
427 square feet to 1,520 iquare
feet for a two-bedroom unit.
The project waa the first ap-
proved under the city's new Ur-,.
ban Reaidentlal zoning designa-
(See CONDOS. Page A!)
--------------------..-;.;;.---------------------------------------------------~-------------,~ I
.. ..
WORLD
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Reagan admini-
stration plans to make public early next week declu-
sified intelligence data said to document Soviet in-
volvement in the chemical warfare deaths of more
than 10.000 people, eources said today.
NATION
Re~gan asks &~iness Lacking
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presidept Reagan today
appealed .to bUlinemnen to support hia widely crttf-
ciz.ed economic program and sai~ that now is not..the time for "last-minute hagling ...
Dali, Fargo clironicled
Namm In the news: A mUleUDl feeturtna ....Na-
lllt ~Unp by arti8t Salvador n.ll ii feiiund on
Paa JM and llnaer Danna Farao telll how lhe mi-wtih MS on Pa,e ClO.
STATE
State school day shorter
'A study says the 1enath of the California .:hool
day ia shorter than the .national averagd and some
l~ton blame tA!achen' unions and fun cuts. Page
A.
Big-band leader reminisces
· Hank DeCo~ of Modato wu a band leader in
the awing era, remembers it all. Pap A 7.
COUNTY
INDEX
At Your Service . A4 ~ 82 Erma Bombeck 82 82 L.M. Boyd A8 MOYlel C9-10 ~ OJ-7 Mutual J\ancM C6 B2 National News A3 Callf omia .\& Public Notioea 02-3 Cavalcade 82 ~=Marketa Cl-f 0-Uied OM C'1 Comics C8 TeJevWon B6 era.wont C8 ~= C9-10 ·Death Noticel ~m A3 lditorlal M \)'odd N9W1 A3
lntlll1alnment C»-10
SPORTS
,.
.. ,
0
L
Laguna Beach's succe11ful
court fight to force a boutique
owner to change the color-o1 her
shop was lauded by city officials as
a victory for Laguna.
But was it really?
:.o At iuue was a lawsuit filed
:_.. by the city against Druacllla Ty-
11 sen, operator of the Strawberry
Shortcake boutique on So,uth
Coast Highway. ·
~ · The city claimed the woman
· igno~ the city's ·Design Revi,ew
Board in painting the trim of her
, bu.ilding ~ pale lavender color.
1 City officials said a summary
judginent handed down last week
by Orange County Superior Cou.rt
Judge Robert H. Green .. upholds
the design review process as a
valid exercise of the city's police
power."
In this case, 'perhaps, the city
wielded its police power too hea-
vily. .
At issue it the city's decilion
to pW'lue a costly lawsuit through
tbe courts in a controversy over a
pint of paint.
The city argues the iasue is
much larser than that. Officials
say the town'• destgn review pro-
cess la at stake.
Non9ense. What is at stake is
the individuality of Laf{una's ar-
chitecture and people -some-
thing the town has long prided
itself in maintaining.
A light lavender shade of
paint on the winctow trim of a
shop is not going to set Laguna
Beach on its ear. ' It's the individuality of those
very shops that make ,;Laguna at7
tractive to its residents and out-
of-town visitors.
Gift for gardeners
A portion of Saddleback Col-
lege's Irvine Campus on Jeffre~
, Road at Irvine Center Drive will
soon be the site of about 100
' "victory gardens" under a prog-
ram sponsored by the Off ice of
Community Services.
The unused land, located be-
hind the new library building, is
to be rototilled within the next
few weeks to make it ready for
planting.
Interested persons in the
' community will have the oppor-
tunity to rent an eight by 10-foot
plot at a nominal cost to plant ve-
1 getables.
H~ntal fees will be u sed to
pay for water service to the area,
' security fencing and patrolling of
the area by the campus security
officer. Victory gardeners will pay
only enough to cover the college's
costs, with no financial profit for
Saddle back. •
College officials say their vic-
tory garden program is modeled
on similar projects in Los Angeles
County, which have been spon-
sored by such public agencies as
Caltrans and local municipalities.
The decision to offer the va-
cant campus land for gardens
came after overwhelming support
was received on a survey of local
residents.
Recent rains have delayed
work on the garden site, but offi-
cials say they will have it ready
for spring planting.
The idea of offering unused
public lands to residents under a
program such as this is a good one.
The staff of Saddleback's Irvine
Campus Community Services Of-
fice deserves a pat on the back for
their effor:ts.
B ea ch p ark un.der way
State park commissioners
have approved a multi-million
dolJar development plan for newly
created Crystal Cove State Park.
The three-phase plan includes
the creation of hiking and eque-
strian trails, campsites and more
thaD 1,800 parking spots off Paci-
fic Coast Highway.
Work is expected to begin
·next November with most of the
early effort to be directed at car-
ving out park(ng lots and access
paths to the park's more th-.n
three miles of beach. Development
of the park is expected to extend
until the end of the century.
The state park is situated
midway between Corona del Mar
and Laguna Beach and also takes
in canyons, ridges and creeks on
the inland side of Pacific Coast
Highway.
Most of the pa rk land was
purchased from the Irvine Com-
pany for $82 million in 1979.
State officials estimate that on
peak days, the park may attract up
to 15,000 daily guests and at other
times average half that figu.re. •
t'or the most part, the various
special interest groups dedicated to
preserving the expansive Irvine
Coast area appear satisfied by the
park plan.
In fact. the major complaints
were directed at the Irvine Com-
pany which is Cleveloping sur-
rounding acreage with estate-type
homes, offices and hotels. Some
feel the company project will do
little to complement the state
park.
While we can understand
their concern, one must remember
that there was a time when the
entire Irvine Coast was slated for
development . Muc h has been
gained and the Irvine Company
has contributed much.
The stat.e's development plans
seem good. It is right that parking
spots be provided early in the
work project. Parking last summer
was chaotic when the state's new
beach property was first opened.
Now we all will hope that the
money source for all these needed
improvements doesn't ·dry up
down the road.
Opinions expressed in thllll'Dace above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex-
pressed on tnis page are ~ose ot their authors clnO artists. ReclOer comment .,s en111t
eo. Address The Dclily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92o2o. Phone ·<71 41
·64'.l-4321.
• I L.M. Boyd/ Left-handed
Q. In the 1930s, 10 percent or the
population was reported to be
left-handed. Now, 12 ·percenl is. Why
this difference? ·
A. Those who analyze such matters
say both pMenls and teachers
slopped trying t o convert
left-handers to righl·handers during
the last 40 years.
Q . In a i r line lingo, what 's
"PAWOB"? fd Passen~er Arriving Without .
Baggage. ·
Wb•t do you lhinll of the Mona
Lisa? The Soviet Unioh's Leonid
Brezhnev delivered lhla judgment:
.. She's a plain senslble·lookint
woman."
You wouldn't much care for the
l'lolion of eating e live chlcken, 1 llv•
call, • Uve pig, certalaly not. BUt a aot or people eat a lot of live '-·
~ uch ~met lo mind? How
about clams and oysters? Many a
meditative diner drops the lemon
juice on the little living muscle to see
it twitch.
Q . The U.S. Army had Third
Lieutenants during the War of 1812.
Whal did they do?
A. Nobody knows. There were 408
of them at peak strength. They
earned $23 a month, or $30 in the
cavalry, if they boucht their own
horses. But what the~ did is a
mystery. No detailed orders survive.
TV announcers a'°e frequently
heard to speak of an "apparent hea.rt
attack." Curlou1. this. A heart attack
ia never appareht The cpnvulaion of
the heart. ti Mt vblble. However. an
"evident beart attack'· is poeaibl•. So
say the beUer word mechanics.
I gather th lad)' didn't much Uke
the q~~ "tfow Md ..,. JOU!"
She replied: •• J'• ~ C.Uha."
New twist in lawsuit . ~ man1a 1
WASHINGTON -Americans have
become increasingly lawsuit-happy in
recent years. The courts, already over-
b\lfdened by legitimate legal actions, are
being swamped by nuisance suits that
have no business on the docket.
As an investigative reporter, I've had
my share of legal threats from corpora-
tions and individuals whose particular ox
I've gored. They rarely get beyond the
grumbling st.age.
Now I've discovered a new wrinkle in
the litigiousness that is sweeping the
country -the lawsuit instigated behind
the scenes by a third party with an
interest in the outcome.
SWORN STATEMENTS filed in con-
nection with a recent lawsuit against
ABC News show that the legal action was
prompted by the nation's largest seller of
cancer insurance. which had been criti-
cized on a television series by the de-
fendants .. Yet the company, American
Family Life Assurance, of C-olumbus.
Ga .. was never a party to the lawsuit.
The plaintiff was a Virginia insurance
agent wl'}ose questionable sales pitch was
clandestinely filmed and was then shown
briefly on the nationally broadcast news
program in November 1978. It was part of
a series on the House Aging Committee's
probe of so-called Medi93p insurance
palicies, whkh suppose(ily ~lug the gaps
m Medicare coverage. The investigation.
incidentally. led to corrective legislation
by Congress.
The agent'• sworn depositions, and
conversations with her, make clear that
she didn't file the suit after suffering
\ G. -JAl:_l _Al-D-111_1_1 -~
financial harm, viewing the TV show
herself or even being told about it by
friends. In fact, she said in a deposition, "J
had no idea~that' such a thing had ever
been' aired." And she told my associate
Tony Capaccio that ''people came up to
me after the show and talked about it, but
no one associated it with me."
Yet the agent sued ABC and the House
investigators for violating her civil rights.
How did this happen? Simple enough: An
attorney representing American Fam.Uy
Life in anoVier lawsuit slipped his busi-
ness card under the door of her boy-
friend's apartment in Alexandria. Va .. in
mid-1980.
''He is the one who originally brought
;
this to my attention and set up the who~
-the whole case for me," the insurance
agent said in sworn testimony.
She said the attorney. Anthony Dili-
metin, paid for her September 1980 trip
to New York. In the presence of an
American Family Life vice president, the
attorney played a videotape of the ABd
news show for her. · t
Did Dilimetin suggest, she was asked,
''that you ought to file suit?" The insu-
rance agent replied: ''Yes." .
She testified that Dilimetin helpfullJ
identified the House investigators who
appeared on the TV show and were ~
sued. "Since I had no idea who had to be
sued," she testified, "Mr. Dilimetin w~
informing me of the proper persons that
would be involved in the lawsuit."
Her attorney told us that the insur~
company purchased depositions of thfj
House investigators and lent them to hinf
because his client couldn't afford the
transcripts.
DESPITE ALL THIS, the a~ent
doesn't feel she was used as a "front· for
American Family Life. And Dilimetin
insists that "we absolutely did not have~
role in encouraging the suit; we did no~
pay for legal fees." The jury, by the way,
took just 40 minutes to decide that the
agent had no case.
~ l
\Vhere have all the can didates gone ?.
To the Editor: ,
· Frederick Schoemehl of yotlr stalf
listed the candidates and the offices in the
Sunday, March 14 edition. Upon perusal
of the candidates for the primaries, it was
most interesting to note the ~e number
of unopposed candidates. This is a bit
MAILBOX
astonishing in view of the pointed articles
over the last few ye.ars noting the com-
plete dissatisfaction of the "public" with
the incumbents. Have the "public" really
given up on trying to place reliable,
honest, hard-working candidates into the
elect.oral process? It is particularly diffi-
cult to note that two of the county
supervisors have no opposition whatso-
ever. This is the kind of opposition a
candidate has in Russia, not America.
IS IT POSSIBLE that no one but an
incumbent can afford to run an election
contest? Where are the business people
who should be out urging their fellow
business people to place responsible
candidates into office? Where are the
environmentalis1s who should be urging
their candidates into office? Where are
the silent majority who should be out
behind the scenes urging solid citizens to
step forward and place their names on
the ballot? Apparently, they are all asleep
or really don't give a damn.
It is sad to see the large number of
unopposed candidates. We can only hope
and pray that the unoppoeed will not be
complacent and smug in the light of
public apathy and will try and do
something constructive during their co-
ming period in office which they proba-
bly haven't tried to do during the pre-
vious years they were in office. For the
others who can afford to run and should
be out there op~ the unoppoeed,
don't let another opportunity pua where
you fail to raiae your voice when givet;l
the chance.
CHARLF.S D. LARSON
Feliow sufferer
To the F.c:Utor: •
Now that March 10 hu paseed, and we
are all still in Oranae Courity, It's time for
me to speak out! Hata off to Mary Jane
Sanl>orn, and her beainnln1 cruaade
th.rouah the front door of the DMV, ol
Costa l.teu (Mailbox, March 10).1 woWd
like to lip up fa. the .Dlllldon ol. &.-.
Otpn1W foi the OMV. Ma. Sanborn
u.ed her lunch timt to stand in au. ~ waanot~ful.
'Ille tint dmt, l br...s by OD IV way home from work. Wl'OIW! I Walbd tftto a
row of 36 chain and 15'-22 people llM·
ding. Of ClOU.rM, 1 fil'Ured eve~ e•
w11 stopping off alter work. Wrote I
• , told my hutband l wuaotna to the DMV.
the next rnomJn1. a&ouf 1~ mlnutM
befor'e lhey opened and '&hat thoWd do lL
W~! I mean \hey open at 8 aim., rm an
tltl'})' ri9el.\ how many people could be '
there? When I arrived, at least 50 people
were waiting. and 25 more came after me.
before the doors were opened!
My wofk time started at 10 a.m., butl
figured ~ey "'-ould have plenty of fresh
faces to help lll of us. Wrong! The 36
chairs filled, and I was standing. To make
a lon~tory short. I left at 9:32 a.m. Two wind s were open. and a third lady
wou1 wander over occasionally and help
someone.
Mary Jane, I feel we have shared an
emotional experience which unites us as
friends, so I may call you by your first
name . . . I'm ready to f~ght!
ROBBI SCHOONOVER
Sen d regrets
To the Edit.or:
Subject: Sec. Watt's proposal lo sell
federal oil leases. ·
J have just sent my regrets to
President Reagan's request that I join
the Republican Task Force with $150
donation and my regrets also to the
Republican National Committee citing
my outrage at the policy of Interior
Secretary Watt. • I urge all money be channeled only to
those Republicans who promise to fight
the oil lease sales , with all
compromises out. Money talks. let the
adplinistration know we are prepared to
rigbt this in the most effective way
possible.
DIANE WATSON
Chance for city
To the Editor:
The City of Irvine is struggling to
bring its dream for a performing arts
center to reality and th e
Winston-Salem, North Carolina School
of Arts. a working part or the University
of North Carolina, ls, ln the opinion of
actress Helen Hayes, ..the foundation for
aspirint and talented youhg people
training for a career in ~he performing
arts.
La1una Beach citi1ens are confronted
with a dilemma concernlnc its parkland
deeded to tbe city for cultural and
recreatldDaf purposes t9'at. hu, over the
yeau. become t he Art Colony's
grandda4dr summer art show. The
FeaUvat .fl Art.a and Pa1eant of the
Matt.a:
Wltll Che Festival be>ard threatening
the ciW-to mnMe, clU1ene and City CoatJdl .-, ~ aa unreuonable frenzy
tllat ... llllO•l deduetlclft 1riU reveal
11 wan• ~Pl,..,.
,~~~•Au. U.. praent Festival · fN~ll.JJ ... ,'. .. ---.. namely the Md r.nam Theater and
illlatra•loD faellltlea, tre
• 1..•l•rt ,,.., '~' ••• ... <-. Tiie '""' "<"""'91 let• t•" .. Iii 9Mt tr t!llft!Mlt llMI It t-\fM. Lelltrt 9' -
...... ., .... 9111 .. ·-'"""·-·· All ..._ _. !ft. ti.,._ ,..,_.._ -INlllfll ...,_.. 111111 -· !NY M •lftlllefftll ~II wlflcltftt '"""'It...,_. ...,_, will ...e .,.,.....,_. l.etttn -•"' .................. . ........... ~ ..... ,........, ........ _ ..
~·"'9f191.--..
owned by the city, Laguna has the
makings for a unique complement to its
image as an Art Colony that Irvine city
is begging to become.
By converting the architectural
potential of Laguna's sewage plant to be
availabl e for alternative use as a
community center. gutting the Forum
Theater and designing it for better
application to and production of theater
arts. extending the stage over the
orchestra pit and bubbletopping the
Irvine Bowl for year-round use, Laguna
has a viable performing arts complex, a,
365·day-available convention center and
a literal showplace that will be the
self-endowing e nvy of Southern
California culture.
Let the Festival board go where it.
wants. s ign up Moulton's director
Douglas Rowe, former Pageant
producers and theatrical greats Don
Williamson and Vic Schoen to
administer it and the Art Colony will
have become of age, profitably,
aesthetically, professionally, for
everyone.
BRUCE S. HOPPING
'Patriotism' hurts
To the Editor:
Perhaps Laguna's Forest Avenue
merchants should ask that the city pull(
an ordinance requiring taxpayers -i.e
the city -"invest" 49 percent of it,(
capital funds in our businesaes. .
Forty-nine percent because1.any moM
voting control would bankrupt us fat. sure! -c
The city of Laguna Beach voted us our
beautiful "window by the sea" but took
away our parking. ~
ALMOST EVERY year we .are .. duC
up" for one reason or another.
The city offers ua Oood.ina when lt
rains, blocked off streets whenever ,
parade, art "festival" or marathon ~
strikes its fancy.
Ah,· the marathon run. Health~
with it the city brought us sh~p
frustration and a total gross of $46. . 1 Which is okay because a . net lam or
some $250 makes us look patriotic, S.~
ganwise. •
· RON ARMSTRON
..
storm heads east
BY JBDY HERTENSTEIN °' ............... The &all end o( an Alaakan-
oftalnattld Morn\ that hM pelted
the Oranae Cout with two non-
~op da a of rain and wind ii
e to move eastward early y.
City and county cleanup crewa
were kept busy today cleaning
up from mud and rock alidee in
hilly ll!Ctiona of Orange County
and from a wind storm ln Costa
Mesa.
The forecut calla for -u.acs.
ahowen and thundenhowwa •· nilbt and Friday inomi"I with
the cbancea of nln decrr 1q co
30 percent tonl1ht and 10 ~-,
cent Friday momina, accordmc
to a 1poke1woman for the N.JtionU W~ther Service. Sides are expected to be par11Y,
cloudy Friday and the weekenO
forecut is for sunshine and tem-
eeratures near 70 deareea In oranse Cout dtiea.
Emergency crews patched
ho1M In ft>of:a and windowl qt the
2000 block of Pactflc Avenue
after what aome de.cribed • a mini-tornado 1wept throush
the block Tumday: At Jeul five
hOCI* were damiipd when U..
'Ajnd blew down treea.
It's quite pcmlble Cotta. Mesa
WM hit by a anall torMdo, Don
Lu1t of the National Weather
Service, Mid.
Lust Mid It would be d1f1kult
to say whether reeidentl afou1
Pacific Avenue were 1eeln1 a
small tornado or merely a aquall line .•
However, Caahnir Zolla,
CUltodian at c.o.ta M-'• Adanw School where window• were
broken and treee downed, said he
MW a tunnel cloud abortly after
the 11:40 a.m. incident. 11le fun·
nel wa1 moving northeut In a
counterclockwise direction, he
aaid.
A cleanup effort waa under
way at Adams School where
wind blew out g1ala and window
f ramea~ downed one tree and ~ other9. (Related story,
photaa Pace Bl).
~ WU reported in the
Wlllon Street 111d Canyon Ave-
nue area of Costa Mesa tbi1
morning.
The weather WH believed
responsible for aeveral power
outa1ea that left 21,000 Oranp
County cu•tomen of Southem
California Edison Co. without
power at various times during
the night.
A Uihtnlnc ltrike knocked out
a tranlformW at Barranca P~k
way and Sand Canyon Road ln
Irvine at 6 a.m. today and cut
power for 30 minutea to 1,300
cuatomen in Unlvenity Park, a
spokesman for the utility Mid.
An outaae of leu than a mi·
nute c ut off power to 2,500
cuatomen in 1e>uth Carta Meaa at
6 a.m. today.
Another 1,000 resident• of
Lelaure World in Laguna Hills
were withoutaervloe
Hopefuls
• • m1ss1ng Airport plan OK'd
forum
New Wayne access proposal sent to judge
Suppose they gave a candi-
dates' forum and a third of the
challengers didn't come?
The way things are shaping up
for Friday night's forum, spon-
sored by Village Laguna, three of
the nine candidates seeking elec-
tion to the City Council April 13
won't be there.
Incumbent councilman Kelly
Boyd and candidates Ron Wil-
liams and Pat Barry said they
will be attending a grand ope-
ning of the Laguna First organi-
zation's headquarters that eve-
~ey say it's an unavoidable
conflict.
Village.Laguna chairman
Norm Grosilman calls it a "lack of
common courtesy.''
Boyd, Williams and Barry have
been endorsed by Laguna First
for th~ council election, in which
three aeata are to be filled.
When contacted ,tpday, all
three candidates said U\ey will be
attending the open house Friday,
beginning at 5 p.m. at new
he~uarters at 899 South Coast
HiRhway.
'f'he Village Laguna candi-
dates' forum -begins at 7:30 p.m.
in City Hall. The forum will be
televised by the Laguna "Video
Club.
"It's just a (time) conflict," said
Williams, a real estate broker.
"They told us they'd like our
presence there, but I don't know
how we can fit everything into
every day.
"I've gone to all the forums
that I could so far."
, Barr7. director of the Boys
Club o Laguna Beach, said he
has also chosen to attend the
open house instead of the candi-
dates' forum.
"I sent them .(Village Laguna)
a letter telling them I had a
meeting with my c.ampaign vo-
lunteers that night," Barry said.
He said be also included a
five-minut.e statement that he
requested Village Laguna mode-
ratons read to the forum audien-
ce.
"I jwat feel my volunteers have
dedicated a lot of time to my
. campaign and it's essential that I
· meet with them."
Incumbent Kelly Boyd was
. , more direct.
"Wh~ _supports (candidates)
Bobbie Minkin, Bob Gentry and
Dan Kenney?" he asked.
Those three candidates com-
prise the second slate supported
by the Temple Hills Neighbor-
hood Association, among others.
"Village Laguna is nothing
more than a name representing
about 20 people in Laguna
Beach," Boyd said.
"Their thinking, to me, is no-
growth, non-pro~ressive, and
(See VU.LAGE, ~~ge A%)
WORLD
.,.., ................
BULLSEYE -Fern Pirkle displays her James Watt Dart
Board, a pointed comment about tb e secretary o_f the
Interior's policies. It may prove to be a pretty s~ idea.
Pointed criticism
Coast group makes Watt dart board
By STEVE MARBLE Of .... .,.., ,... ,..,, •
Fem Pirkle is hoping James Watt gets the point.
The Corona del Mar woman and her colleagues on the
environ.mentally-minded Friends of the Irvine Coast have
taken aim at the controversial interior secretary with their
"James Watt Dart Board."
For $9.95 plus tax and postage, Watt critics can take
out their environmental frustrations by winging darts at a
liken~ of the interior secretary.
AND JUST IN CASE any of Watt's detractors have less
than perfect aim, the package comes with six darts.
"We've already had five orders from K entucky," says
Mrs. Pirkle, adding, "strip mining -that's what they're
upset about back there."
The dart board features Watt's smiling face in the
center and is ringed with illustrations of offshore drilling
platforms, strip mining and the remains of a forest.
The board also has a drawing of the proposed national
park site south of Corona del Mar with a tiny sign warning,
''Out of Site."
She says there's enough on the board to appeal to even
the most marginal of environme ntalists. Even Re.Publicans
will like it, she adds.
A B'UL~EYE SHOT on the board will result in nic-
king Watt in the corner of the left eye but, members of the
Friends say, any head shot is good for a few points.
STATE
...
By FREDERICK SCBOEMEHL O(tM Deir ,... ,...,
For the second time in seven
months, a U.S. Diatrict Court
judge will take center stage in
the issue of Orange County gov-
ernment'• attempt to develep an
acceu plan to regulate commer-
cial airlines' use of John Wayne
Airport.
Admitting they have been
"a,onizing" over the complex ia-
1 ue, cpunty s upervisors sent
Judge Terry Hatter a new pro-
....,,. . ~
Cocaine
haul niade
in Newport
More than $1 million worth of
nearly pure cocaine and $36,000
in e&1h has been seized from a
Spyglus Hill home ln Newport
BNcl1 following the arrest Qf two
alleged dru1 peddlen, naniotk
detectiva report.
Of.ficen Mid they recovered 10
pounds of cocaine from the 11
Monterey Circle home shortly
after arresting George Richard
Bur1io, 30, and Dennis Larry
Ash, 35, on drug charges.
Police report Burgio, who they
said la on parole on a previous
drug conviction, lives at the
Spyglue Hill home and A.ah ii a
reside nt of Mammoth Lakes.
Both are being held on $500.000
bell.
Two Huntington Beach wo-
men -Charyl Lynn Beatty, 25,
and Michele Diarine Higgins. 24
-al10 were arrested on drug
Charlft when officers aearehed
the lfotite. Both are being held in
lieu of $15,000 bail.
. Tbe drui bust reportedly star-
ted on a routine note when
Newport officer Doug Parmen-
tier spotted two men parked in
front of a Jamboree business.
Parmentier reported that the
men aped off in their car when
he approached them. He said he
chaaed their car, finally brin&ina
It to a atop in front of the_ New:
port police station.
Of flcera aald they discovered
small quantities of h eroin and
marijuana in the car and that one
of the men -Ash -was car-
rying a p istol and a large
switchblade knife.
Police aaid Newport narcotic
officen and federal Drug Enfor-
cement Administration agents
are still investigating the drug
ae!zure.
4 journalists die State school day shorter
MEXICO CITY (AP) -Four Dutch joumalim
have been killed in fighting in El Salvador, a spoke-
sman for the Dutch Embassy here said this afternoon.
NATION
Re~gan· asks Lusiness Lacking
WASHING TON (AP) -Premdent Reeaan today
appe.aled to buatnemnen to support hia widely criti-
cized economic procram and laid that now ia not the
time for 11lut-mlnute hauling." -
Dali, Fargo chronicled
Namet1 in the news: A mU8eUID featuring IW'l'eia-.
l.iat palnUnp by artt.t Salvador Dali ia feetu.red on Pue B4 and lln(tel' Donna Fargo ten. how lhe copee
wtih MS on Pap ClO.
·A study aaya the lenath of the California 1ehool
day is shorter than the national average, and aome
~ton blame teachen' uniona ~ fund cuts. Page
Bis-band leader ·reminisces
Hank Deee>&~ of Moclmt.o ••• band lMder in
the awinl era, remellliben it all P• A7.
COUNTY
eo •• , panel bl .. ,, drill pllUU
The state c.o.iaJ CanuDlllMJn hll ~ on tecord ~ propoma to a-172 off9hcn .,._.. -11 oft 0ranae CoUnty -fm oil ~ Pale Bl.
poaal Wednesday that would
allqcate the 14,928 commercial jet
departures permitted annually
among carriers now servfnl the
airport and carriers on the out-
side wanting in.
Judge Hatter became the cen-
tral figure in the issue last Sep-
tember when, at the urging of
the U.S. Department of Justice
and Pacific Southwest Airlines,
he overturned the county's pre-
viously approved access plan.
AttOmeys for the two parties
claimed t he plan was unfairly
beneftdal to AirCal and Republic
. Airlines, the two gianll in the
Orange County market, and
oontrary to teneta of the Airline
Deregulation Act of 1978.
AirCa1 has been authorized to
fly an average of 23.5 flighta per
day from Orange County; Repu-
blic, 11.5 flights and Frontier
Airlines, Pacif.ic Southwest Air-
(See AIRPORT, Page At)
Trustee may lose
school hoard post
MAY BE OUT -Huntington
Beach High School District
trustee Sherry Baum, of Seal
Beach, may be forced oU the
board if Seal Beach School
District sends its stvdents to
Los Ala mi to1 ln1tead of
Huntinpm Beach.
By PATRICK KENNEDY or .. .,..,,.......,
Sherry Baum, recently elected
truslee of the Huntington Beach
Union Hiih School IMctrlct, may 'be forced off the school board
next year, say district officlala.
Mri. Baum, a ~al Beach resi-
dent. would have to resign if the
financially troubled Seal ~ach
School District disbands in July
1983 and aenda ita studenta to the
Loe Alamitos Unified School Di-
strict aa is propoeed.
If this occurs, Seal Beac h
would no longer be within the
Huntington Beach Union district
. boundaries.
Mrs. Baum would have to
move from her Seal Beach resi •
dence to a home within the di-
strict boundaries or be forced to
re.ip, according to district of~i
ciall.
The state :Education Code re-
quires that school board members
must reside in the district they
represent, say district officials.
Mrs. Baum, who was elected to
the four-year term last Novem-
ber, couldn't be reached for
comment.
Voters must approve the pro-
poeed merger of the Seal Beach
and Loa Alamitos districll and
(See BAUM, Pa•e A%)
Large condo 01(.'d
I
by council in Mesa
The largest condominium pro-
ject ever planned in the dty has
been approved by the Costa Me.a
Cit Council. ~eloper C. Robert Lanp\et
plans to build the 1,155-unit
condominium development on 28
acres of lar.d owned by C.J .
Segeratrom and Sona and.the
Coast Community College Di-
strict.
Plana foe the complex near the
corner of Adams Avenue and
Harbor Boulevard call for 41
unill per acre, with the size of
the condominiWDI ranging from
427 square feet to 1,520 iquare
feet for a two-bedroom unit.
INDEX
At Y ou.r Service A4
Erma Dombeck B2
L.M. Boyd AS
Bualnell C6-7 Herb Caen B2
California A$
Cavalcade B2 Opfied 04-8
Oxnlca ca c.ro.wont C8 ·Death Notkel 02
ldltortal Al
l'fttstainment ct-10
SPORTS
The project waa the first ap-
proved under the city's new Ur-
ban Residential zoning designa-
(See CONDOS, Page A!)
Horoecope , B2
Ann Landen B2
Movie C9-10
Mutual Funds C6
Natlonal News A3
Public Notices 02~
~=-Marketa Cl-4
C7
TeleYilkln "' B6 Thea ten C9-10
W..iblr A3
·World News A3
Cbina team on eo11s1
I
I,
•
l .
· State 'can intervene
hospital planning
It 11 lnt~resttna to note that
although a recent aurv~y from the
Orange County Health Planning
1• Council 1how1 that atate approval
1 for a hospital in Irvine will be
hard to get, local organizers re
. still puahing their plans. ,. The council IUl'VeY polnted to ~: an ovenupi>lY of hospital beds al-
lowed ln licenaed hoepltals around
Irvine. Th.is suggests that allowing ~rmore beds would be wasteful and,
, thua, costly to health care consu-
mers ..
•• Before the state authorizes an
.. Irvine hoepital, founders probably
' would have to acquire entitle-
ments to beds already allowed at
under-used hbspitala. Indications
-are that "buying .. those beds
would be costly. Some sources say
the price may be as much as
$200,000 per bed.
Some good reasons exist fot
building a hospital in Irvine. For
one thing, a central location would
cut down on response time to
transport emergency patients, who
now are taken outside the city.
And vi1itatlona would be easier
with a facllity in the center of
town.
But commun'?f.t leaders still
need to take an ob live look at
the costs and rew of a holpltal
before they become too caught up
in the oompetltion to build one.
Issues aach as the role of UC
Irvine should be studied further,
although news that the university
plans to build an outpatient clinic
on campus doesn't necessarily
mean a hospital will spring up
there.
Above all, community leaders
must be on guard against authori-
%ing hospital development prima-
rily out of a sense of community
pride. A cost-efficient, vibrant
hospital would be a great impro-
vement in Irvine, but an over-
priced, under-utili7.ed civic monu-
ment would be something else.
The next step is to be sure a
hospital can ~ one that does ad-
dress the community's real health
care needs.
1-Gift for gardeners
I..
A portion of Saddleback Col-
lege's lrvine Campus on Jeffrey
Road at Irvine Center Drive will
soon be the site of about 100
"victory gardens" under a prog-
ram sponsored by the Office of
Community Services.
The unused land, located be-
hind the new library building, is
to be rototilled within the next
few weeks to make it ready for
planting.
Interested p e rsons in the
community wilJ have the oppor-
, tunity to rent an eight by 10-foot
plot at a nominaJ cost to plant ve-
getables.
.Ken tal fees will be used to
, pay for water service to the area,
security fencing and patrolling of
the. area by the campus security
' officer. Victory gardeners will pay
only enough to cover the college's
costs, with no financial profit for
Saddleback.
College officials say their vic-
tory garden program is modeled
on similar projects in Los Angeles
County, which have been spon-
sored by such public agencies as
Caltrans and local municipalities.
The decision to offer the va-
cant campus land for gardens
came after overwhelming support
was· received on a survey of local
residents.
Recent rains have delayed
work on the garden site, but of fi-
cials say they will have it ready
for spring planting.
The idea Qf offering unused
public lands to residents under a
program such as this is a good one.
The staff of Saddleback's Irvine
Campus Community Services Of-
fice deserves a pat on the back for
their efforts.
:Beach park under way
I
State park commissioners
• have approved a multi-million
dollar development plan for newly
created Crystal Cove St.ate Park.
The three-phase plan includes
the creation of hiking and eque-
strian trails, campsites and more
: than 1,800 parking spots off Paci-
. fie Coast Highway.
: Work is expect ed to begin .
next November with most of the
early effort to be directed at car-
ving out parking lots and access
paths to the park's more than
three miles of beach. Development
of the park is expected to extend
until the end of the century.
The state park is situated
midway between Corona del Mar
and Laguna Beach and also takes
in canyons, ridges and creeks on
the inland side of Pacific Coast
Highway. if
Most of the park land was
purchased from the Irvine Com-
pany for $32 million in 1979.
St.ate officials estimate that on
peak days, the park may attract up
to 15,000 daily guests and at other
times average half that figure.
•
1''or the moet part, the various
special interest group dedicated to
preserving the expansive Irvine
Coast area appear satisfied by the
park plan.
In fact, the major complaints
were directed at the Irvine Com-
pany which is developing s ur-
rounding acreage with est.ate-type
homes, offices and hotels. Some
feel the company project will do
little to complement the state park. -
While we can understand
their concern, one must remember
that there was a time when the
entire Irvine Coast was slated for
development. Much has been
gained and the Irvine Company \
has contributed much.
The state's development plans
seem good. It is naht that parking
spots be provided early in the
work project. Parking last summer
was chaotic when the state's new
beach property was first opened.
Now we all will hope that the
money source for all these needed
improvements does n't .dry up
down the road.
• Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Daily Piiot. Other views ex-pressed on tnls page are tnose ot their authon and artists. ReaClef comment11s mv1t
ed. Address T.he i:>aily Pilot, P.O. Box 1~. Costa M eS<l, CA 9262'>. Phone (7U )
• 64:.1-4321.
!L.M. Boy.di Left-handed
Q. In the 1930s, 10 percent or the
population was reported to be
left-banded. Now, 12 percent ls. Why
this difference?
A. 'Ibole who analyie such matters
say both parents and teachers
stopped trying to co nvert
lelt·banders to right-handers dur1ne
' the last 40 years. •
'I
Q . In airline llb10. what's
"PAWOB"?
'-· Pauenger Arrf vln1 Wj_thout
B•11a•e· •
You wouldn't much c•re for Ute
notio.n ol eatin1 a live chicken, a Uve
calf, a Uvc pig. ~ertalnly not. But a
ORANGE COAST
llllJ Piiat
lot of people eat a lot of Uve rood.
Whal. nonesuch comes to mind! How
about clama and oy~len? Many a
m editative diner drops the lemon
juice on the little living muscle to see
it twitch.
I gather the lady didn't much tlke
the question: "How old are you!"
She replied: ''I'm 15 -Celsius.''
TV announcers are frequently
heard to speak ot an "apparent be•rt
attack." Curtoua, this. A beart aUack
)1 never • ..._,... The convullk>n of
01e heart ii Mt vtatble. Howe.er, an
"evtdeftl taem.attaa'' ts pcJllMble. So
uy the betttr won.I tnedlamc:.. . \
New twist in lawsuit . '
·• mania
WASHINGTON -Americans have
become increasingly lawsuit-happy in
recent years. The courts, already over-
burdened by legitimate legal ~ns. are
being swamped by nuisance luits that
have no business on the docket.
Aa an investigative reporter. I've had
my share of legal threats from corpora-
tions and individuals whose particular ox
I've gored. They rarely get beyond the
grumbling stage.
Now I've discovered a new wrinkle in
the litigiousness that is sweeping the
country -the lawsuit instigated behjnd
the scenes by a third party with an
interest in the outcome.
SWORN STATEMENTS filed in con-
nection with a reeent lawsuit against
A.BC News show that the legal action was
prompted by the nation's largest seller of
cancer insurance. which had been criti-
cized on a television series by the de-
fendants. Yet the company, American
Family Life Assurance. of Columbus,
Ga., was never a party to the lawsuit.
The plaintiff was a Virginia insurance
agent whoee questionable sales pit.ch was
clandestinely filmed and was then shown
briefly on the nationally broadcast news
program in November 1978. lt was part of
a series on the House Aging Committee's
probe of so-called Medigap insuranoe
policies, which suppoeedly plug the gaps
an Medicare coverage. The investigation,
incidentally, led to corrective legislation
by Congrea.
The a~nt'a sworn depositions, and
conversations with her, make clear that
she didn't file the suit after sulfering
JICI 11111111
financial harm, viewing the TV show
herself or even being told about it by
friends. In fact, she said in a deposition. "I
had no idea that such a thing had ever
been aired." And she told my associate
Tony Capacclo that "people came up to
me after the show and talked about it, but
no one aMOCiat.ed it with me.\o
Yet the agent sued A.BC and the House
investittators for violating her civil rights.
How did this happen? Simple enough: An
attorney representing American Family
Life in another lawsuit slipped his butli-
ness card under the door of her boy-
friend's apartment in Alexandria, Va .. in
mid-1980.
"He is the one who orig!nally brought
this to my attention and set up the whole
-the whole case for me," the insurance
agent said in sworn testimony.
She said the attorney. Anthony Dili-
metm, paid for her September 1980 trip
to New York. In the presence of an American Family Life vice president, the
attorney played a videotape of the ABC
news show for her.
Did Dihmeun suggest, she was asked,
"that you ought "°-lite suit?" The insu-
rance agent replied: "Yes."
She testified that Dilimetin helpfully
identified the .House investigatoni who
appeared on the TV show and were al.so
sued. "Since I had no idea who had to be
sued," s he testified, "Mr. Dilimetin was
informing me of the proper persons that
would be involved in the lawsuit."
Her attorney told us that the insurance
company purchased depositions of the
House investigators and lent them to him
because his client couldn't afford the
transcripts.
DESPITE ALL THIS, the a~ent
doesn't feel she was used as a "front ' for
American Family Life. And Dilimetin
insists that "we absolutely did not have a
role in encouraging the suit; we did not
pay for legal fees." The jury, by the way,
took just 40 minutes to decide that the
agent had no case.
Where have all the candidates gone?
To the Editor:
Frederick Schoemehl of your staff
listed the candidates and the offices in the
Sunday, March 14 edition. Upon perusal
of the candidates for the primaries, it was
most Interesting to note the large number
of unopposed· candidates. This is a bit
MAILBOX
astonishing in view of the pointed articles
over the last few years noting the com-
plete dissatisfaction of the "public" with
the incumbents. Have the "public'' really
given up on ~ to place reliable.
honest, hard-woi:_~ candida~into the
electoral process? It 1S particularly diffi-
cult to note that two of the county
supervisors have no opposition whatao-
ever. This is the kind of opposition a
candidate has in Russia, not America.
JS IT POSSIBLE that no one but an
incumbent can afford to run an election
contest? Where are the businell people
who ahould be out urging their fellow
business people to place reaponsible
candidates into office? Where are the
environmentalists who should be urging
their candidates into office? Where are
the silent majority who should be out
behind the scenes Urging solid citizens to
step forward and place their names on
the ballot? Apparently, they are all asleep
or really don't give a damn.
It is sad to ~ the large number of
unoppoeed canc!iraie.. We can only hope
and pray that the unoppoeed will not be
complacent and smug in the light of
public apathy and will try and do
aomethi.ng constructive during their co-
ming period in office which they proba-
bly haven't tried to do during the pre-
vious years they were in office. For the
othen who can afford to run and should
be out there oppoling the unoppoeed,
don't let another opportunity pus where
you fail to ra1le your voice when lfven
the chance.
CHARLES D. LARSON
Fellow sufferer
To the Editor:
Now that March 10 hall puled, and we
are all atU1 tn Oran29 County, it's tbne for
me to 1peak <>Ut! Hata off to Mary Jane
Sanborn, and her bealnnin& cruaade
thtouah the f1'0llt doGf of &hi OMV, of CON ldeu (Mallb9JI, March 10). 1 woW«t
Uke to qn up for tM l*ldoo of 81*9
Ori..._ for the ~.fM8. S.bom
u9'd '* luncb u... to~ In line .....
WM not succemtW. The ftnt tJme, I bn,..d by on my way
homl from work. Wl'Ollll! I Walked into a row ol 38 chain and l!-U ..,,._ .._.
=:·~~offl ~~rona!~
told my h~ I was aoinl to \he DMV,
the ne"Xt morn.Ina, about1 u mlnu*
befcn they opened and that sho\&ld do tt.
Wron,! 1 mean they open It 8 a.m., I'm an eerly n.r. how many people~ be
! WbM l arrtwd. at least 50 .-.-
were waiting, and25 more came after me.
before the doors were opehed!
My work time started at 10 a.m ., but I
figured they woul8 have plenty of fresh
faces to help all of us. Wrong! The 36
chairs filled, and I was stan~. To make
a long story short, I left at 9:32 a.m. Two
windows were open, and a third lady
would wander over occasionally and help
someone.
Mary Jane, 1 feel we have shared an
emotional experience which unites us as
friends, ao I may call you by your first
name . . . l'm ready to fight! ROBBI SCHOONOVER
Accident solution
To the EdUor:
There hi a 9'mple eolution to th~ high
rost of aw.iomobile imurance --fewer
accidents. And the solution to fewer
acciderfts ls chaftging the timing of the
stop lights. Is our time so valuable that a
few second.a would make a difference?
The &in)lnl on almost all the lights now
chanaes ttWn green to red and red to
green With ao hesitation. A few seconds
difference -that is, leave red on all four
lights f« two or three seconds before two
ol them tum green. This would mean,
especlally at main intersections, fewer
fendera bent and lives lost. Too many
drivers still cross intenections on red, and
some drivers still make rabbit starts as
the light changes green.
Pleaae ·write to your "City Traffic ComriUlltcn suuestinl this change if you
&8Jft with me. B~BRISCOE
Roof regulations
Southland fire hazards are not to be
taken lighlly. Sensational hillside fire ·
tragedies leave vivid memories of the
destructive power of unchecked forest
and brush fires, particularly in areas with
poor fire-safety services, or inadequate
water and street systems. But such !ires
have ravaged homes without reeard to
their roof roverings.
THE MAJORITY o f Irvine Is well
removed from wildlands. or heavily
brush-covered hills. Moat of the unde-
veloped foothill areas are in well-
managed grazing lands or in irrigated
acreage. Irvine Ranch agriculture ~ple
have compiled an enviable rerord of
meticulous fire safety through brush and
weed control and carefully-limited accetS
to properties. Our water supply system is
strong. And our fire department and
street system are top notch, too, giving us
an extra margin of safety.
State lawmakers have prescribed care-
ful condiuons under which local officiala
can amend uniform building codes. Such
changes must be related to specific local~
climatic, and topographical conditions.
We support those code prescriptions.
And we support limited fire-resistive
roof applications too, in designated areaa.
But to once again deny consumers the
choice of what they can have in a houae,
and to push for excessive cqntrols ev-
erywhere, just drives up housing 008tl
one more notch .
We hope the City Council asks the
Planning Commission to re-think ttm
one .
PHILIP BETTENOOURT
Executive Diredm',
Orange County Chapter,
Building Industry Asln.
Not his letters
To the Editor:
Three letters on general and local
political matters have ~ In tht
local _papers in recent weeb, ~
the Daily Pilot, with lignatune thli
suggest they were written by IM.
I-did not write these letten, nor ""'!
others to local papen. '
JOHN W. JOHNSON
Bet., Ne~-M.a
Unified Schoiol Dlatrict
Several of you thou1bt that the
--WU satirical; that I WU Wllnl JI;• poke fun at the v1deo-1ame crue,
•• • llOt MN tolfre Mn. We don't like • '.h• vldeo-1ame column '!'•• ;!Nlft!Mllltely true, and to back It up,
1 1 another one.
... THE U.S. NAVY hu just announced
toprecruiterforthelutyear.Sbeia 1 le.I Petty Officer Julie Reed, ahe 11 %7
ears old, and lut year she signed up 83
avy enlistees. Sbe was judged the best flif the Navy's 3,500 recruiters.
Aadbow dld she do it?
Her favorite ploy was to 10 to a
video-came arcade, check out the young
men plunking their quarters into the
slots, challenge them to a game -and
~iRU·FFELL ·~ ~
: . • Cl.PHOLmlY ·~" .... -.-lira ... ~ '.
'-'. .. . --~
. • ltJJ HAHOl ll YD.
£OITA MISA-14 .. 11 "'
REDWOOD
2X 6-36 LIN FT
775-1491
16808 S. HARBOR
DECKING
A 1RADIT10lt
Flll 60 YEARS ,,. MltlJ,,
1 A.M.
• • ..
-
Or*-P COMt DAILY PILOT~. MarClh 18, 1982
game arcades a ferlile field . ·
ttien....,. tbem for tbe Navy. Reed won btr Nav1 uDlfonn on all of the aald. "Mor. often, 1'll ft.nd someone c;1 .. '. J.-tel~I proeS*U to talk
''It kl.lld of •tan.cl u a s-sonal her areldtt Yialtl, to it wun't Iona wbo fMll more P,Owertul when be'• to tMm or to follow up~
addictSon on my part," R8ed u64. "I before ':JuarTJ realised tbat 1bl wu behind that button. ' males wtU not han1 up on a woman.
juat aov. PM-Jlao. If l IO OD a aa., l'U aot • J '= bouM•U• with Sbe reall1H that one criUclam of Tbe1 just won't do lt. If I were a man,
uk my da&e to take .. to u areaae ao rom .... • IMr . youn1 mllitary men la that many ot they mlab1. tell me to '° to bell OD tbe
we can pl•J Pac·Man." · ., , them use drup durln1 their alf houri. phone but because I'm a woman tlaey While at tlae arcachl 1be beau to Al WE PIA YEO the same, I d •tart The arcades are neither a plus nor a wan't l. .
reaU1e t.bat• the other ;..... then -ukiq them wbat their plans were,~r minus in that area, ahe aaid. • Re~ iaJd tbal when 1he ii playlq a
youna men in their late t.tem and early blab school · · · thlna• like that, lbe "la the kid in an arcade lolnl to be proepedlve recruit in an arcade the
1ald. "Then I'd polat out ~at tbe Navy any more atoned than a kid on the 1treet will uaually try her best. "They llk1e tht!
wa1 a blibly electronic orsanllaUoa. I corner?" ahe aald. "I think not . .If ldea that this woman bas enough iuta to
knew they'd be into .~at, because they anytbln1. tbe arcade should be a just walk up to them and challenee
were Into the 1amea. deterrent to drug use, becauae you can't tbem," ahe aaid. "It helps 1et tt>e
From that po1Jlt, Reed would try to be any tood at Asteroids or Space conversation 1oin1."
talk the YOUllC men lnto takinc a teat to Invaders if you're atoned out of YO\ll' But sometimes she pretends to be a 1ee if they quallfled for the Navy. "If I bead
get them teated, I seldom lose them," ·.·Ii I'm talkinl to a potential recruit worse player than she really ~.if ~
20s -were preclaely tbe cateaory llbe •be Hid. wbo baa alcohol on bis breath, or whose young man seems clo~e to aaytn1 yes
was soppoaed to be recrultln1 for the She aald that she Ukea the kind of eyes show he's stoned I back away to her recruiting pitch. Navy. recruits that come from the game raat .. ' ''When it's a close game, and it looks
"So I started 1otn1 into tbe arcades at arcades: Reed s&id that uain1 the video-game like they're coming close to saying
about 2 o'cloclt in the afternoon," ahe "Tbey look on tbe 1ame1 as a arcades la just a new application or an they'll take the Navy test ... bey, I'm
said. "At a or 1:30 die places would challenge," she aaid. "They're not old maxim. not going to ruin their egos."
start to fill up, and by 4 tbey would be banaing nound the street corners; "You do best when you go where the As for her own spare time, when she's
packed. they're challenging themselves with kids are," she said. "Every recruiter not recruiting potential Navy men, she
"I'd look around for someone who these games." knows that. And today, the kids are at still is hooked on the Pac.Man machine.
wasn't too much overweight or didn't She said, in looking for a potential the video arcades." She is not sure how to ex plain why.
have an obvious physie!al 4llabWty. Navy recruit, sbe was not necessarily in "I don't know," she said. "I just llke
Then I'd walk up, offer to buy blm a the market for perfect pbylieal SHE SAID sl\e thinks it is to her to make that little thing gobble up other
Coke and challeue him to a game. I'd &pecim·ens. ''When I go into lbe arcade, a dvantage that she is a female little things, and then lose the other
offer to pay for the eame, ae usually he I'm not on the lookout for someone who recruiter: little things off ils tail .... "
would aay yes." is capable of beating someone else up,". "Part or recruiting ia making cold That's what she said, all right. ....;_~~~~~~~~~~~;;...;..=;.;.;.;;.....;;....;..;;...._;_.;...-:..~~~~~..:..:...~~~~~~~~---'=--~~---'=--~~~~~~~~~---'-~---'=--~~~
111111111 .
0· 0· ,<i-· ~ ~~ .~OJ <f 4-~· b· 'ltlj b>' fJ• ~v· t ~ fl) ~ 0" ·~' ~0 o'-IJJ'I> ~q & ~0 ro· '1>~ (f ~~ ~ ~n;, ~· o~ ~\: ~" . 'l>(j v0 ~CJ \~ ~'ti i ~'ti ~~ .~<o' n;,
~~ b \: !>..'ti !>.."' ·~~ ~ l ~o ~o ~~ ~ II rf ·~~ " ~o ~~ ·~ q b~ vO ~<o !o..<o ·fJ' ~'I> ~" .§' ~ ~~ ~ .. §' ~o ~~ ,~"' ~ ~\'ti ~0~ o~ '?-q_v ,~
F A s H I 0 N G A L L E R y
r
t
l
DOWNEY SAVINGS AND LOAN
has
FAST CASH
FOR H01\1E LOANS
(l'p to four unit,)
$10,000 to $1,000,000
Purcha~ monev second~.
equiry. and 'iw~ng loans
OPE."1
SATURDAYS
Call Jim Nevison
(714) 5~9270
-AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
(no loan
hrnk~,.....
pll!Wk'I
@
3100 BtNol S<. (Soldl ~ l'b.ta). Co5u ~
THE
6tb
ANNUAL
collar 'n cuff
TIE
IWPBING
Just gather up old
worn-out ties and for
every one you bring
In we ' II gtve you
$4.50 towards each
new one you pur-
chase.
collar 'n cun
3311.· 11• St.
Costa~ ... ®O
0NM MOM.: ... M. Jt:l.1AT. 1CM:OO .,.., .. ................... , .......
You ca11 help your newspaper
carrier collect at time• conv•
nlent lo you by having •your
c:heCk or money order ready so
the catrlef won't h•v• to call
back. a.cauH thl• young
...,n le In l>Ull"991 for hlmHlf
or ,_..If, plHM be r11dy -
n.-ch that big amll• which
~"~r*you."
Join,.,.,.,,"''°"""' ehowlnfl of the Perry Ellis Sprlno collect/on. In our South C~•t Pim store, Friday, March 19.
From noon to 3 p.m. Perry Em. ls In our South Coast Plus store,only . ..
•
---
(lH/\Nl.f (<HIN I 'f 1 Al H OH N IA /',I f N T',
Oi-ange Coast cleans ~P as
lb JBUY HERTENSTEIN or._...,,...._
The tall end of an Alaakan-ortalnated •tonn thf t hu pelted
the Oranp Cout with two non-~op da 1 of rain and wind ia
e to move eutward early y.
Qty and county cleanup crews
were kept busy today cleaning
up from mud and rock alldea in
hilly eectiona of Orange County an4 from a wind aiorm in Cotta
Mesa. · .
The forecut calla for -tf.ered..
abowen and thundenhowen to-'
nl&ht and Friday momina with
the chancel of rain ~ to'
30 percent ton11ht and lO~r
CleJ'\t Friday mom.t.na, acco ·
to a spokeswoman for t~ ~tionel Weather SerW:e.
Skies are expected to be ~
cloudy Friday and the weekenC!
forecast it for sunahlne and tem-
e_era tures near 70 degreee in
Orange Coast cities.
Emergency crews patched
holet In iooft and window. Of the
2000 block of Pacific Avenue
after what 10me deacribed u a
mini-tornado swept throush
the block Tueeday: At 1eUt five
homea were damqed when the
~ blew down trees.
It'a quite poalble Cotta Mesa
WU hit by a ernall tornado, Don
Luat of the National Weather
Service. said.
Lust Mid it would be difficult
U> aay whether reaidentl alone
Pacific Avenue were seeing a
amall tornado or merely a 11qu.all
line.
However, Casimir Zolla,
custodian ai C.oeta Mea'a Ad.amt
School where wlndowa were
broken and trees downed, aald he
aaw a funnel cloud shortly after
the 11:40 a.m. lnddent. The fun-
nel wu moving northeast in a
counterclockwise direction, he
said.
A cleanup effort was under
way at Adams School where
wind blew out glus and window
framee, downed one tree and
dama1ed others. (Related story,
photot Pace Bl).
Flooding WU reported in the
Wilaon Strfft and Canyon Ave-
nue area of Costa Mesa thla
morning.
The weather WH believed
responsible for several power
outaeea that left 21,000 Orange
County customers of Southern
California Edison Co. without
power at various times durin1
the night.
A Ujhtnlna 1trike knocked out
a transformer at Barranca Park-
'way and Sand Canyon ~d ln
irvine at 6 a.m. today and cut
power for 30 minutes to 1,300
cuatomera in Univenlty Park, a
apokesman for the utility said.
An out.age of lea than a mJ.
nute cut off power to 2,500
cuatomtta in IOUth Calta Mesa at
6 a.m. today.
Another 1,000 residents of
Leisure World in Laguna Hills
we.re without aervioe
•
Hopefuls
• • m1ss1ng
Airport plan OK'd
forum
New Wayne ·access proposal sent to judge
Suppose they gave a candi-
dates forum and a third of the
challengers didn't come?
The way things are shaping up
for Friday night's forum, spon-
sored by v~ Laguna, three of
the nine candidates seeking elec-
tion to the City Council April 13
won't be there.
Incumbent councilman Kelly
Boyd and candidates Ron Wil-
liams and Pat Barry said they
will be attending a grand ope-
ning of the Laguna First organi-
zation's headquarters that eve-
ning.
They say it's an unavoidable
conflict.
Village Laguna c hairman
Norm Grossman calls it a "lack of
common courtesy."
Boyd, Williams and Barry have
been endorsed by Laguna First
for the council election, in which
three seats are to be filled.
When contacted today, all
three candidates said they will be
attending the open house Friday,
beginning at 5 p .m . at new
hudquarters at 899 South Cout
H.iahway.
The Village Laguna candi-
dates' forum begins at 7:30 p.m.
in City Han. The forum will be
televised b~ the Laguna -Video
Club. "It's Just a (time) conflict," said
Williams, a real estate broker.
"They told ua they'd like our
presence there, but I don't know
how we can flt everything into
eve~ day.
"l ve gone to all the forums
that I could ao far."
. Barr7, director of the Boys
Club o Laguna Beach, said he
has also chosen to attend the
Qpen house instead of the candt-
dates' forum.
. "I sent them (Village Laguna)
·· a letter telling theni I had a
:-meeting with my campaign vo-
lunteers that night," Barry said.
He said he also included a
· five-minute statement that be
requested Villaae Laguna mode-
rators read to tlie forum audien-
ce. •
"I jwst feel my volunteers have
dedicated a lot of time to my
campaign and it's essential that I
meet with them."
Incumbent Kelly Boyd was
more direct.
"Who support;' (candidates)
:: Bobbie Minkin, 1'ab Gentry and
Dan Kenney?" he asked.
Those three candidates com-
prise the second slate supported
by the Temple Hilla Neighbor-
hood Association, among others.
"Village Laguna is nothing
more than a name representing
about .20 people in Laguna
Beach," Boyd said.
"Their thinking, to me, is no-
growth, non-pro~ressive, and
(See VILLAGE, ~~ge A2)
WORLD
.,.., .... ....,,....
BULLSEYE -Fern Pirkle displays her James Watt Dart
Board, a pointed comment about tbe secretary o.f the
Interior's policies. It may prove to be a pretty sh~ id_ea.
Pointed criticism
Coast group makes Watt dart board
By STEVE MARBLE
Of the Delly Not St.ft
Fern Pirkle is hoping James Watt gets the point.
The Corona del Mar woman and he r colleagues on the
environmentally-minded Friends of the Irvine ~t have
taken aim at the controversial interior secretary With their
"James Watt Dart Board.''
For $9.95 plus tax and postage, Watt critics carnake
out their environmental frustrations by winging~ at a
likeness of the interior secretary.
AND JUST IN CASE any of Watt's detractors have less
than perfect aim, the package comes with six darts.
"We've already had five orders from Kentucky," says
Mrs. Pirkle, adding, "strip mining -that's what they're
upset about back there."
The dart board features Watt's smiling face in the
center and is ringed with illustrations of offshore drilling
platforms, strip mining and the remains of a forest.
The board also has a drawing of the proposed national
park site south of Corona del Mar with a tiny sign warning,
"Out of Site."
She says there's enough on the board to appeal to even
the most marginal of environmentalists. Even Republicans
will like it, she adds.
A B.ULLSEYE SHOT on the board will result in nic-
king Watt in the comer of the left eye ~ut, members of the
Friends say, any head shot is good for a few points.
STATE
By FRE DERICK SCHOEMEHL Of the .,.., ,.... .....
For the second time in seven
months, a U.S . District Court
judge will take center stage in
the i...ue of Orange County gov-
ernment's attempt to develop an
acceu plan to regulate commer -
cial airlines' uae of John Wayne
Airport.
Admitting they have been
"agonizing" over the complex is-
s ue, county supervisors sent
Judge Terry Hatter a new pro-
Cocaine
haul made
in Newport
More than $1 million worth of
nearly pure cocaine and $36,000
in cash has been seized from a
Spyglass Hill home in Newphrt
Beach following the arrest of two
alleged drug peddlers, narcotic
detectives report.
Officers said they recovered 10
pounds of cocaine from the 11
Monterey Circle home shortly
after arresting George Richard
Burgio, 30, and Dennis Larry
Ash, 35, on drug charges.
Police repon Burgio, who they
said la on parole on a previous
drug conviction , lives at t he
Spygl.ua Hill home and Aah it a
resident of Mammoth Lakes.
Both are being held on $500,000
ball.
Two Huntington Beach wo-
men - Charyl Lynn Beatty. 25.
and Michele Dianne Higgins, 24
-alao were arrested on ~rug
charae& when officers searched
the house. Both are being held in
lieu of $15,000 bail.
. The drug bust reportedly star-
ted on a routine note when
Newport officer Doug Parmen-
tier spotted two men parked in
front of a Jamboree business.
Parmentier reported that the
men sped off in thelr car when
he approached them. He said he
chaaed thelr car, finally bringing
it to a stop in front of the ?few-:.
port police station.
Officers said they discovered
small quantities of heroin and
marijuana in the car and that one
of the men -Ash -was car-
rying a pistol and a large
switchblade knife.
Police said Newport narcotic
officers and tederal Drug Enfor-
cement Administration agents
are still investigating the drug
aeizure.
4 journalists die State school da y shorter
MEXICO CITY (AP) -Four Dutch joumalista
have been killed in fighting in El Salvador, a spoke-
sman for the Dutch Embassy here said this afternoon.
NATION
Reagan asks &usiness Lacking . ...
W ASlilNGTON (AP) -President Reaaan today
appealed fo buainellmen to support his wiclely criti-
cif.ed eiconomlc prosram and ukl that now II not the
time for "last-minute ~." •
A study says the lencth of the Calilomia echool
day is shorter than the n ational average, and some
ler-iaton blame teacben' unions and fund cuta. Page
A .
Bis-band leader reminisces
Hank DeC.oi~ of Mode.to WM a band leader in
the swing era, remembera it all. Page A 7.
COUNTY
Dali, Fargo chronicled
Namm in the newa: A mUlleUID feeturtnc IW'l"fia. Coa~I panel blur. drill plans
Ult palnUftll by artWt Salvador Dall ii featured on Pue B4 amid *'lel' Donna Fqo tells bow lhe copea
wtth MS on Paae ClO.
The state ec.ta1 CommJlllon hM FM on ttCOrd
~ propoula to -.. 172 of&hon 'tncta -11 off or.nee CoUnty -for oil• driWnc· Ptfit Bl.
(
poaal Wednesday that would
allocate the 14,928 commercial jet
departures permitted annually
among carriers now serving the
airport and carriers on the out-
side wanting in.
Judge Hatter became the cen-
tral figure in the issue last Sep-
tember when, at the urging of
the U.S. Department of Juatice
and Pacific Southwest Airlines,
he overturned the county'• pre-
viously approved access plan.
Attemeya for the two pa.r1Jes
claimed the plan was unfairly
beneficial to AirCal and Republic
Airlines, the two giants in the
Orange County market, and
contrary to tenets of the Airline
Deregulation Act of 1978.
AirCal has been authorized to
fly an average of 23.5 flights per
day from Orange County; RepuJ
blic. 11.5 flights and Frontier
Airlines, Pacific Southwest Air-
(See AIRPORT, Page AZ)
Trustee may lose
school hoard post
MAY BE OUT -Huntington
Bea.ch High School District
trustee Sherry Baum, of Seal
Beach, may be forced off the
board if Seal Beach School
District sends its students to
Los Alamitos instead of
Huntinp>n Beach.
By PATRICK KENNEDY
OflM DellJNoelwt
Sherry Baum, recently elected
trua~ of the Huntington Beach
Union High School District, may
be forced off the school board
next year, say district officials.
Mrs. Baum, a Seal Beach resi-
dent, would have to resign if the
financially troubled Seal Beach
School Diatrict disbands in July
1983 and sends its students to the
Los Alamitos Unified School Di-
strict as is proposed.
lf this occurs, Seal Beach
would no longer be within the •
Huntington Beach Union district
boundaries.
Mrs. Baum would have to
move from her Seal Beach resi-
dence to a home within the di-
strict boundaries or be forced to
reaign, according to district offi.
cials.
The state Education Code re-
quires that school board members
must reside in the district they
represent, say district officials.
Mrs. Baum, who was elected to
the four-year term last Novem-
ber, couldn't be reached for
comment.
Voters must approve the pro-
poeed merger of the Seal Beach
and Los AlamiU>s districts and
(See BAUM, Paae A%)
Large condo OK'd
by council in Mesa
The largest condominium pro-
ject ever planned in the city has
been approved by the Costa Mesa
City Council.
Developer C. Robert Langalet
plans to build the l , 155-unit
condominium development on 28
acres of lar.d owned by C.J .
Segerstrom and Sons and. the
Coast Community College Di-
strict.
Plans for the complex near the
corner of Adams Avenue and
Harbor Boulevard call for 41
uniu per acre, with the size of
the condominiums ranging from
427 square feet to 1,520 square
feet for a two-bedroom unit.
INDEX
At Your Service A4
Enna Dombeck B2
L .M. Boyd A8
Busine9I C6-7
Herb Caen B2
c.aJ.if omia M Cavalcade B2
Claalified Df-8
Comics C8
ere.word a
·Death Notices D2 l'.clitorial Al
J-ntertatnment C9-10
SPORTS
The project was the first ap-
proved under the city's new Ur-
ban Residential zoning designa-
(See CONDOS, Page AZ)
HOl'OIOOpe B2
Ann Landen B2
Movies C9-10
Mutual Funda C6
National News A3
Public Notices 02-3
SporU Cl-4
Stock Markets C7
Televi8ion B6
The.ten C94 10
W•ther A3
·Workl New. A3
CL
China team on coa•t
, The P.ople'a Republic of diina naUonal am-
. DMtb i.m wtD my ln c.o.ta M-whll9 ~
for a ~tion ~a v.s. i.m. ~Cl .. ,
••
-seniors.
And for the kids in the
neighborhood, there's a branch of
the Boys and Girls Club of the
Harbor Area.
The city is leasing the M,000
square feet of building space for
$110,000 a year and then turning
Referendum fever
For the second time in six
months, Newport Beach residents
are seeking to overturn a major
development project through a
voter referendum.
The latest push is aimed at
the 75-acre Banning Ranch pro-.
ject, which was approved last
Friday ~ the Newport City
Council.
The development site, now
covered with shrubs and oil wells,
· J is located inland of Pacific Coast
Highway and west of Superior
Avenue. It bumps up against the
· . Costa Mesa city limits.
The council voted to let de-
veloper Hancock "Bill" Banning
build 379 homes and a maximum
of 400,000 square feet of office and
industrial •pace.
The allowed development
was both less than what Banning
' had asked for and more than
residents of West Newport want-ed. -·t
The council also increased the
. amount of road construction Ban-
:' ning must ·coIT\plete as a condition
1 ; to the project and agreed the city
1 will flt>lore purchasing park land
' to answer West Newport's request
for a park.
,It appears the council majo-
rity1 went a long way in paying
attention to the residents' concern
about traffic and permitted uses
on the 75-acre parcel.
But it apparently wasn't en-
ough to satisfy some of the West
Newport residents.
Billing themse lves as tae
Newport Legislative AllianC'e,
they have decided to copy last
year's referendum drive against
the Irvine Company's Newport
Center expansion project. That
drive was one major factor leading
to council repeal of the project
approval.
We are disappointed to see
this proposed course of action. A
"my way or else" approach to
community aUairs aays that the
old-fashioned values of reasoning
together, compromise and give
and take considered essential for
good ongoing community
functioning are not that meaning-
ful any more.
The proposed referendum is a
negative approach which seems
likely to b~ more divisiveness.
'Newport Beach should not
follow a course of being a hoµse
divided against itself.
Den'sily views change
Could a city still smarting
over a five-year-old court battle
over the density of a controversial
residential development, go ahead
and af prove a project even more
deme.
' The answer is yes .. The Costa
I Mesa City Council recently appro-
ved the highest density project
ever ptopoeed in the city. I Develbpment of some 650
J homee and apartment units on 88
I acres of land owned by Arnel I Develeprnent Co. and South Coast
, Plaza was approved by the council
I 11
in 1917. But strone objections by
adjacent homeowners aver density
and increased traffic resulted in a
referendum and court battles.
By contrast, the council this
week approved the construction of
1 1,155 condominium units on only
• I 28 acres of land and there was
I I hardly a note of protest.
Very simply the times are
I different -along with the cir-
1 cumstances and the location. .. I Now the availability of I •· mocterate-cost housing bas become 1
1
. a very much more eerious public
concern.
The series of community
meetings sponsored by the lan-
downers, C .J. Segerstrom and
Sons and Coast Community Col-
lege District, to di.scuss the pro-
poeed development at the col'l)er
of Adami Avenue Ind Pinecreek
Drive was a factor in defusing
protest.
And this pr~ ia located in a
cliff erent part of the city from the
North Colt& Mna site 'Which had
broueht a major homeowners as-
soct.tion into the di.9cuslion.
· But probably most impor-
tantly, tlrttes ·and thinking have
changed. The condominiums will
be built at a density of 41 units per
acre under a new Urban Center
residential zoning that allows up
to 50 units per acre.
Although that sounds like a
tight squeeze, the developer con-
tended that it is the only way to
financially meet the growing need
for housing.
For people trying to find a
home in a city with leas than
one-half a percent vacancy, 41
units to an acre may aound like a
dream. I . . . . • . . .
; Opinions expre$sed in the space above are those of the Oalty Piiot. Other views ex· • pressed on tnis page are those ot their a14thors and artists. Reader ~ommen.t.1s lt\V•t· l ed. Address The Oailv Pilot, P.O. BoK 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone« tH>
I ( •642·4321.
l ! .
i 1 L.M. Boyd/ Left-handed
I I I Ir Q. ln the 1930s, 10 percent of the
I ! population was reported to be
1 left·banded. Now, 12 percent. is. Wby
th•a differenct? \
A. Those who analyae such malten
ay both parents and teachers
topped tryin1 to convert
• lefl-bllDden to riaht·handen durln1
•\he lut40 years. -y.,.. ..uuldn't mueb car~ IOI" U..
~ of eatin1 a live chicken, 1 Uve
OR~ECOAST .. .,.
calf, a Uve pig, certainly not. But a
lot of people eat a lot of llve food.
What, nonesuch comes to mind? How
about clams at1d oysters? M1ny a
meditative diper drops the l~mOI'\
juice oo the Uth IMn1 muac:le to aee
it twitch. ~ .
llnao, whit's
-
New twist in lawsuit • mania
WASHINGTON -::-. Americans have
become increasingly lawsuit-happy in
recent years. The courts, already over-
burdened PY legitimate legal actions, are
being swamped by n~ suits that
have no business on the docket
AB an investigative reporter, I've had
my share of legal threats from corpora-
tions and individuals whose particular ox
I've gored. They rarely get beyond the
grumbling stage.
.Now I've discovered a new wrinkle in
the litigiousness that is sweeping the
country -the lawsuit instigated behind
the scenes by a third party with an
interest in the outcome.
SWORN STATEMENTS filed in con-
nection with a recent lawsuit against
ABC News show that the legal action was
prompted by the nation's largest seller of
cancer insurance, which had been criti-
cized on a television series by the de-
fendants. Yet the company, American
Family Life Assurance, of Columbus,
Ga., was never a party to the lawsuit.
The plaintiff was a Virginia insurance
agent whose questionable sales pitch was
~d~· ely filmed and was then shown
briefly the nationally broadcast news
program ovember 1978. It, was part of
a series on the House Aging Committee's
probe of so-called Medigap insurance
policies, which supposedly plug the gaps
in Medicare coverage. The investigation,
incidentally, led to corrective legislation
by Congress.
The agent'' sworn depositions, and
conversations with her, make clear that
she didn't file the suit after suffering
JACI AIDlllDI
financial harm, viewing the TV show
herself or even being told about it by
friends. In fact, she said in a deposition, "I
had no idea that such a thing had ever
been aired." And she told my associate
Tony Capacdo that "people came up to
me after the show and talked about it, but
no one associated it with me."
Yet the agent sued ABC and the House
investigators for violating her civil rights.
How did this happen? Simple enough: An
attorney representing American Family
Life in another lawsuit slipped his busi-
ness card under the door of her boy-
friend's apartment in Alexandria, Va., in
mid-1980.
"He is the one who originally brought
this to my attention and set up the whole
-the whole case for me," the insurance
agent said in sworn testimony.
She said the attorney, Anthony Dili-
metin, paid for her September 1980 trip
to New York. In the presence of an
American Family Life vice president, the
attorney played a videQtape of the ABC
news show for her.
Did Dilimetin suggest, she was asked, ·
"that you ought to file suit?" The insu-
rance agent replied: "Yes."
She testified that Dilimetin helpfully
identified the House investigators who
appeared on the TV show and were also
sued. "Since I had no idea who had to be
sued," she testified, "Mr. Dilimetin was
informing me of the proper persons that
would be involved in the lawsuit."
Her attorney told us that the insurance
company purchased depositions of the
House investigators and lent them to him
because his client couldn't afford the
transcripts.
DESPITE ALL THIS, the agent
doesn't feel :;he was used as a "front" for
American Family Life. And Dilimetin
insists that "we absolutely did not have a
role in encouraging the suit; we did not
pay for legal fees." The jury, by the way,
took just 40 minutes to decide that the
agent had no case.
Where have all the candidates gone?
To the F.ditor:
Frederick Schoemehl of ydtu staff
listed the candidates and the offices in the
Sunday, March 14 edition. Upon perusal
of the candidates for the primaries, it was
m<l8t interesting to note the large number
of unopposed candidates. This is a bit
MAILBOX
astonishing in view of the pointed articles
over the last few years noting the oom-
plete dissatisfaction of the "public'' with
the incumbents. Have the "public" really
given up on ~· to place reliable,
nones\., hard-wor . candida..tes into the
electoral procees? It particWa.rly diffi-
cult to note that twt> of the ·county
auperviaors have no opposition whatso-
ever. This is the kind of opposition a ,
candidate has in Ruasi.a, not America.
IS IT POSSIBLE that no one but an
incumbent can afford to run an election
contest? Where are the business people
who should be out urging their fellow
business people to place responsible
candidates into office? Where are the
environmentalists who should be urging
their candidates into office? Where are
the silenf majority who should be out
behind the tcenes urging solid citiz.ens to
step forward and place their names on
the ballot? Apparently, they are all asleep
or really don't give a damn.
It is sad to see the large number of
unoppoee.d candidates. We can only hope
and pray that the unopposed will not be
complacent and smug in the light of
public apathy and will try and do
something constructive during their co-
l'Pini period in office which they proba-
bly 'haven't tried to do during the pre-
vious years they were in office. For the
others who can afford to run and should
be out there opposing the unoppoeed,
don't let another opportunity pus where
you fall to rai9e your voice when pven
the chance.
CHARLES D. LARSON
Fellow suit erer
To the F.ditor: _
Now that March 10 has passed, and we
are all still in Orange C.Ounty, it's time for
me to tpeak out! Hata off to Mary Jane
Sanbotn, and her t)eJlnning crusade
th!UUlh the front door of the DMV, of Costa 'Miu (Mailbox, March 10). ( would ~e to 8'p up for Jh• Polldcia ~ SJ)IKle otpnt.r for the DMV. Ma. Sanborn
Ullid her luncb UrDe IO ttMd ln Jim IDd W• not ...,.._fu).
• The fin\ time, I 111w.e-..iled!1111 by on ft'1 way
hCOI trom work. Wtonal I walked ln10 a row of ae chain and 15'-22 people 11an-dina· Of coune, I ~ everyone elle w• stoPDiNI off af'ter work. Wrona! I
\old my n..aiand l wea aoiJW to the DMV,
lhe rwxt =· al>ouf 16 mln"1e9 before &My and \ha\ should do it.
Wt'Onll I meen they open 1\ 8 a.m .. I'm an
arty riler, bow many peopl9 could be
theft? W1M11J l'al'!'Md. at ie.t 00 DIODil
j
were waiting, and 25 more came after me,
before the doors were opened!
My ·work ti.me started at 10 a.m., but I
figured they would have plenty of fresh
faces to help all of us. Wrong! The 36
chairs filled, and I was standing. To make
a long story short, I left at 9:32 a.m. Two
windows' were open, and a third· lady
would wander over occasionally and help
someone.
Mary Jane, I feel we have shared an
emotional ~rience which unites us as
friends, so I may call you by your first
name ... I'm ready to fight!
ROBBI SCHOONOVER
TELEPHONE YOUR
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
S.. instructions below
Their responsibility
To the Editor:
Now rumors of another referendum
and a possible recall fill the
newspapers. It appears that Newport
Beach is moving forward government
through petition rather than by our
elected officials.
I have no quarrel with the petition
process. It is a right of the citizens and
a part of the democratic process. My
concern lies with whether those
participating in the petition process are
willing to accept the inherent
responsibilities of that process.
IT IS INCUMBENT upon the
petitioners, in securing signatures, to
present the issues of the petition
honestly, accurately and factually -
not resorting to catchall fear phrases
such es "will increase rent", "will
increase traffic," "are selling out ~o
developers". Sell-righteous zeal should
not support the end justifying the
means. Even the unassailable approach
of "let's put it to a vote of the people"
loses its validity unless t.hoee signing
the petltloo assume their responsibility
in the petition process.
By lip1na a peUdom, the llgnaton
must accept the reaponaibillty that they
know and underst.nd wbat it is they are
signln1. and tb1t the act la not a
symp1thetic response to the request of
an ernoUonaUy·cba"*ed Mlahbor. We
should Nfuae to lilh a petition unless
the pettUoner can calmly present the raou on the subject and Al)lwer all
~eallou to our utisfadion. Upon
1fplnc tM petition, we tbm accent the • ttUtrs /'IO'Wi mldcr• ort wtlcomt. TIM rlf"1 10 ~ Net~• to /U IJ*f or
tlfnih•o•t Mirl ., rtNrwd. Ltttrr• o/ JOO
U>orda or t.11 vllU be giVfft (M/trnce. All
lttltrs "'"" iftc,_ ,.._..,. and maflitg
addrtJI bul nomt1 moy bf wUMeld on rt·
qut1t •I sulflc1tnl rto1on la appcartnr.
Potlfll UAU not be pubhthtd. Ltttn1 mar Of
leltphOMd to 642-fil>#. Namt and phone
number o/ tlw contn~lor mual bt gulf'ft for
1>trff tcol""' P"TPO~•
responsibility of going to the polls and
making an educated decision. If we
want to participate in the democratic
process, we must be prepared to
assume its innate responsibilities.
While Newport Beach•citizens expend
their energies and resources in
divisive actions to curtail planned
growth and the asso~iated road
improvements, the cities surrounding
Newport Beach merrily continue their
expansion plans and send their traffic
crisscrosiiing our community. lf you see
this traffic stopping in Newport Beach,
folks -it's doubtful they are stopping
to patronize our local merchants -
they're probably just stuck on our
congested streets!
CAROL SOUTH
I
Accident solution
To the Editor:
There is a simple solution to the high
cost of automobile insurance -fewer
accidents. And the solution to fewer
accidents is changing the timing of the
stop lights. Is our time so valuable that a
few seconds would make a difference?
The timing on almost all the Ughts now
changes from green to red and red to
green with no hesitation. A few seconds
difference -that is, leave red on all four
lights for two or three seconds before two
of them tum green. This would mean,
especially at main intersections, fewer
fenders bent and lives lost. Too many
drivers still cross intersections on red, and
some drivers still make rabbit starts aa
the light changes green. ·
Please write to your city Traffic
Commission suggesting this change if you
agree with me.
BE'ITY BRISCOE
Not his letters ·
To the F.ditor:
Three letters on general and local
political matters have appeared in the
local J>apers in recent weeks, including
the Daily Pilot, with signatures that
suggest they were written by me.
I did not write these letters, nor any
othlmJ to local papers.
JOHN W. JOHNSON
Ret., Newport~Meea
Unified SchOol District
Tt\e current front p_,. newa really
wakea ~Central America ·<So.n't me.n Nebr and Iowa. · B.C. =-:::-:----......... .-.. ••• ..... -=·-·' ......... ,..... ... ""' \
Y••'rt fri1k' lltU• crlttn1. h•I..,_ JW .. 't NMlte net Mr. GntDI t.elll ,_You WU tbat. Mr. 0..-.. ii trJlnl '9 PlllJ your ..... ae.....-tU& eolaama ID wldcb I
~that UM Arm, WU .... to ue .W-1a&ne1 to train toldlenT I 1ald ~at A.atero.-. Space lavaden, Oort and the oth•r 1amea ·were 10 popular wlUt youna people tbat the milltU'y waa
=:.,~Yert the 1ame1 into tralnlnl
Several of you tbQU&ht that the
ciolanua. waa aaUrtc-1; that I waa uainc
U to poke fun at the vldeo·1ame crue.
W• • ftOC"" IGtire Ian•. We don't like ;.t. The. vldeo~1ame column waa ••lutely true, and to back lt up, )ten'• another one.
TRI: U.S. NA VY has just announced
kl top recruiter for the lut year. Sbe is
Chief Petty Offlcer Julie Beed, abe la 21 1•ars old, and laat year she siped up 83
Navy enlistees. She was judged the best
of the Navy's 3,500 recruiters.
And bow did she do it?
Her favorite ploy was to 10 to a
vid~same arcade, cbeck out the young
men plunltin1 their quarters into the
slots, challenge them to a game -and
th•n reenait them for th• Navy.
"It klnd of •tarted aa a penonal
adcllcUon on my part," Beed 1ald. "l
Just love Pac·Man. II 1 10 on a date, I'll
ask my date to take me to an areade so
we can p,lay Pac·llu ...
Willie at tbe arcades, 1he be1aa to
reall1e that the otlMr people there -~ouna men tn their late tffnl aed early
\
111111111
20s -were ptecllely the cateaory 1be
was supposed to be recrutttn1 for the
Navy.
•'So I started 1oing lnto tht arcades at
about 2 o'clock in the afterDOOD," she
said. ''At 3 or 3:30 the places would
start to fill up, and by' they would be
packed.
"I'd look around for someone who
wasn't too mucb overweipt or clkln't
have an obvious physical di.aabUity.
Then I'd walk up, offer to buy him a
Coke and challenge him to a 1ame. I'd
offer to pay for the game, so usually be
would say yes."
. "WE.CARE"
foa ALL OI Ye>oa
HWTHMEEDS
~
REDWOOD t:OO ~t:OO f'M •
u.uoMAIU flllS
2 X 6-36 LIN FT.
775-1491
16808 S. HARBOR
DECKING
A TIADITIOll
FOR 60 YEARS
F,. M«tJ Tl
l A.M.
DOWNEY SAVINGS AND LOAN
hac;
FAST CASH
~ FOR HOME LOANS
(l 'p lo four unit~)
$10,000 to $1,000,000
PurchaS4: money seconds,
cqui~: and s'' in~ loans
C:.ilhnur ~lfhood Branc:h I~
OPl"-'I: ~n:ttl>A'S
(714) 642-7422
-ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION
360 E. 17th Street. Coslll Mesa.
THE
6tb
ANNUAL
collar 'n cuff
lE
IWPBING
Just gather up old
worn-out ties and for
every one you bring
In we 'll give you
$4.5Q towards each
new one you pur-
chue.
Inn loan
hrol..""'·
plcaw>
CIN
collar 'n cuff
=·~:,St. ®O
OflM MOM; .. flL J:':l.IAT. 1CM:OO ..., . ................. , ......
You can help your newspaper
c.rier collect at times conv~.
nlent to you by having your
cf'** or money order ready eo
the cerrler won't have to call
back. BecauH this young
l*10n 11 In bUlineM for hlmaalf or h«M", pie ... b• ready -
~..__., th.t big smile which
...-''Thank you:·
F A
...
• . .
: Or1191 Cout DAILY PILOT/ThW'9dey. tMfoh 18, 1882 C/N
Reid ~ bet Navy unllmm OD all of
ber arcade vttlll, '° ll WUll't lon1
before ber ctUUfY Nallaed that 1be wu
not a lonelJ youna bouaewlfe wltb
romance oa ber mlnd.
"AS WE PLAYED the 1ame, I'd 1tart
aaklnl them what their plana were .tter
blab school . . . thln11 lllte that,.. •be
uld. "Then I'd point out that the Navy
~as a hiably electronic oraanbatSon. I
knew they'd be into that, because they
were into the 1amea."
From that point, Reed would try to
talk the young men into takln& a test to
see tr they qualified for the Navy. "If I
aet them tested, I seldom loee them,"
abe tald.
Sbe said that she likes the kind or
recruits that come Crom the game
arcades: "They look on the 1amea as a
challenge," she said. "They're not
hanging around the st1eet corners;
they're challengine themselves with
these games."
Sbe said, in looklnl for a potenUal
Navy recruit, she was not necessarily in
the market for perfect physical
specimens. "When I go into the arcade,
l 'm oot oo the lookout for someone who
is capable of beating someoof else up,"
s H , . 0 N
she 1aid. "More often, I'll flnd aomeooe
who feels . more f.OWerf\al wbea he's
behind that button. ' She realise• that one crtUcllm of
youn1 mllltary men la that many of
them me drul• clurillC their off boun.
The arcadel are neither a plua nor a
mlnua ln that area, 1be said.
"I• the kid ln aa arcade tolna to be
any more atoned than a kfd Oil the •treet
corner?" she said. "I think not. If
anything, the arcade abould be a
deterrent to drug use, because you can't
be any good at Asteroids or Space
Invaders if you're atoned out ol your
head.
"If I'm talking to a pc)tenUal recruit
who hu alcohol on bll breath, or whose
eyes show he's stoned, I back away
fast." . Reed said that using the video·game
arcades is just a new appllcaUon of an
old maxim.
"You do best wben you go where the
kids are," she said. "Every recruiter
knows that. And today, the kids are at
the video arcades."
SHE SAID she thinks it is to her
advantage that s he ls a female
recruiter:
"Part of recruiting is making cold
G A L
..
ealla. Just telepbonin1 protpeetl to talk
to tbem or to follow up. ADd YOUDI
males wUl not bani up on a woman.
They Just woo't do lt. If I were a man,
they IDilbt tell JDe to 10 to bell on tbe I
phoae, but beeaUH I'm a woman they
won't."
Reed said that wbeo abe la playin& a
prot]Jfdive recruit ln ao areade, abe
wlll uauallytry her beat. '"I'bey lite tbe
idea that this woman baa enou&h 1uu to
just walk up to them and challenae
them," she said. "It helps get the
converaaUon goln1."
But sometim~s she pretends to be a
worse player than she really la lf a
youna man seems close to aayin1 "yes" 1
to her recruiting pltcb :
"When it's a close game, and lt looks
like they're coming close to saying
they'll take the Navy test .. , bey, I'm
not going to ruin their egos."
As for her own spare lime, when she's
not recruiting potential Navy men, she
still ls hooked on the Pac-Man machine.
She is not sure how to explain why.
"I don't know," she said. "I just like
to make that little thing gobble up other
Uttle things, and then lose the other
little things off its tail. , .. "
That's wbat she said, all right.
I
L E R y
' I t I
b
•
lttURSOAY M.trch 1B 1qH;.> OHANGE \.OUN TY C ALIFORNIA :l5 CENTS
6range Coast Cleans up as storm heads east
T .
BJ JERRY HERTENSTEIN or .. DllJ,... ...,,
The tall end of an Alaskan-
originated storm that bu pelted
the Orange Cout with two non-
t d a of rain and wind is
to move eastward early
day.
Qty and county cleanup crews
were kept busy today clea.ning
up from mud and rock aUdes ln
hilly aections of Orange County
and from a wind storm in Costa M~a. .
The forecast caUt for 1eattered· holee ln roofs and wlndowa of the
showers and thundenhowel'I to-' 2000 bloek of Pacific Avenue
nJ1ht and Friday moJ'lllq with after what 10me deecrlbed u a
the chances of rain~ to mini-tornado awept through
30 percent tonl&ht and 10 ~r-the block Tueeday: At lelli five
cent Friday momin1, according home. were ~ when the
to a apokeawo man for the "'.ind blew down trees.
?Dtionel Weather Service. It'a quite poealble Coe1a Mesa
Skies an! expected to be partl1-waa hit by a small tornado, Don
cloudy Friday and the weekena Luat of the National Weather
forecast is for. aunahine and tem-Service, aaid.
e_eratures near 70 degree• ln Lust said it would be difficult ~ Coaat dties. '' to say whether realdenta alone Emergency crews patched Pacific Avenue were seeing a
small tornado or merely a aquall
line.
However, Casimir Zolla,
ci<odian at CA.ta Meea'1 Adams
School where windows were
broken and tI'ft9 downed, aid he
uw a funnel cloud shortly after
the 11:40 a.m . lnddent. The fun-
nel was moving norttieaat in a
counterclockwise direction, he
aid.
A cleanup effort was under
way at Adams School where
wind blew out glass and window
frames, downed one tree and
dama1ed others. (Related 1tory,
photos Page Bl).
Flooding wu reported in the
Wilaon Street and Canyon Ave-
nue area of Cotta Mesa thil
rooming.
The weather WH believed
responaible for several power
outages that left 21,000 Orange
County customers of Southern
California Edison Co. without
power at various times during
the night.
A Uihtnina 1trike knocked out
a transformer at Berranca Park-
way and Sand Canyon Road I.fl
Irvine at 6 a.m. today and cui
power for SO minutea to l ,SOO
cuatomen in Univentty Park, a
1pokesman for the utility aaid.
An outage of leas than a mi·
nute cut off power to 2 .~00
cuatomera in 10uth Costa Mesa at
6 a.m. today. .
Another 1,000 re1ident1 of
Leisure World in Laguna Hilla
were without eervice
Airport plan OK'd Hopefuls
• • m1ss1ng
forum
New Wayne access proposal sent to judge
Suppose they gave a candi-
dates' forum and a third of the
challengers didn't come?
The way.things are shaping up
for Friday night's forum, spon-
sored by Village Laguna, three of
the nine candidates seeking elec-
tion to the City C.Ouncil April 13
won't be there.
Incumbent councilman Kelly
Boyd and candidates Ron Wil-
liams and Pat Barry said they
will be attending a grand ope-
ning~of the Laguna First organi-
zation's headquarters that eve-
nin~ey say it's an unavoidable
conflict. r
Village Laguna chairman
Norm Grossman calls it a "lack of
common courtesy."
Boyd, Williams and Barry have
been endorsed by Laguna First
for the council election, in which
three seats are to be filled.
When contacted today, all
three candidates said they will be
attending the open house Friday,
beginning at 5 p .m. at new
headquarters at 899 South Coast
HiRhway.
The Village Laguna candi-
dates' forum begins at 7:30 p.m_
in City Hall. The forum will be
televised by the Laguna -Video
Club.
"It's just a (time) conflict," said
Williams, a real estate broker.
"They told us they'd like our
presence there, but I don't know
how we can fit everything into
every day.
"I've gone to all the forums
that I could so far."
Barry, director of the Boys
Club of Laguna Beach, said he
has also chosen to attend the
open house instead of the candi-
dates' forum.
"I sent them (Village Laguna)
a letter telling them I had a
meeting with my campaign vo-
lunteers that night," Barry said.
He said he also included a
five-minute statement that he
requested Village Laguna mode-
raton read to the forut(l audien-
ce.
"I jwst fee\ my volunteers have
dedicated a lot of time to my
campaign and it's essential that I
meet with them."
Incumbent Kelly Boyd was
more direct.
"Who supports (candidates)
Bobbie Minkin, Bob Gentry and
Dan Kenney?" he asked.
Those three candidates com-
prise the second slate supported
by the Temple Hills Neighbor-
hood Association, among others.
"Village Laguna is nothing
more than a name representing
about 20 people in Laguna
Beach," Boyd said.
";I'heir thinking, to me, is no-
growth, non-pro~ressive, and
(See VILLAGE, ~~ge A!)
WORLD
DelyNotatllff,.....
BULLSEYE -Fern Pirkle displays her James Watt Dart
Board, a pointed comment about tbe secretary o.f the
Interior's policies. It may prove to be a pretty sharp idea.
Pointed criticism
Coast group makes Watt dart board •
By STEVE MARBLE OftMDely ...... ...,
Fern Pirkle is hoping James Watt gets the point.
The Corona del Mar woman and her colleagues on the
environmentally-minded Friends of the Irvine Coast have
taken aim at the controversial interior secretary with their
"James Watt Dart Board ...
For $9.95 plus tax and postage, Watt critics can take
out their environmental frustrations by winging darts at a
likeness of the interior secretary.
AND JUST IN CASE any of Watt's detractors have less
than perfect aim, the package comes with six darts.
"We've already had five orders from Kentucky," says
Mrs. Pirkle, adding, "strip mining -that's what they're
upset about back there."
The dart board features Watt's smiling face in the
center and is ringed with illustrations of offshore drilling
platforms, strip mining and the remains of a forest.
The board al.so has a drawing of the proposed national
park site south of Corona del Mar with a tiny sign warning,
"Out of Site."
She says there's enough on the board to appeal to even
the most marginal of environmentalists. Even Republicans
will like it, she adds.
A B'ULLSEYE SHOT on the board will result in nic-
king Watt in the comer of the left eye but, members of the
Friends say, any head shot is good for a few points.
STATE
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL ortite o.-, ,.... ate1t
For the second time in seven
months, a U.S . District Court
judge will take center stage in
the issue of Oratige County gov-
ernment's attempt to develop an
access plan to regulate commer-
cial airlines' use of John Wayne
Airport.
Admitting they have been
"agonizing" over the complex is-
sue, county supervisors sent
Judge Terry Hatter a new pro-
Cocaine
haul niade
in Newport
More than $1 million worth of
nearly pure cocaine and $36,000
In cash has been seized from a
Spyglass Hill' home in Newport
Beach following the arrest of two
alleged drug peddlers, narcotic
detectives report.
Officers said they recovered 10
pounds of cocaine from the 11
Monterey Circle home shortly
after arresting George Richard
Burgio, 30, and Dennis Larry
Ash, 35, on drug charges.
Police report Burgio. who they
said is on parole on a previous
drug conviction, lives at the
Spyglass Hill home and Ash is a
resident of Mammoth Lakes.
Both are being held on $500,000
bail.
Two Huntington Beach wo-
men -Charyl Lynn Beatty, 25,
and Michele Dianne Higgins, 24
-also were arrested on ~rug
charges when officers searched
the house. Both a.re being held in
lieu of $15,000 bail.
. The drug bust reportedly star-
ted on a routine note when
Newport officer Doug Parmen-
tier spotted two. men parked in
front of a Jamboree business.
Parmentier reported that the
men sped off in their car when
he approached them. He said he
chased their car, finally bringing
it to a stop in front of the New-
port police station.
Officers said they discovered
small quantities of heroin and
marijuana in the car and that one
of the men -Ash -was car-
rying a pistol and a large
switchblade knife.
Police said Newport narcotic
officers and federal Drug Enfor-
cement Administration agents
are still investigating the drug
eeizure.
4 journalists die State school day shorter
MEXIOO CITY (AP) -Four Dutch jou.malists
have been killed ln fighting in El Salvador, a spoke-
sman for the Dut.ch Embassy here said this afternoon.
NATION
Reagan asks Lusiness Lacking
W ASlllNGTON (AP) -President Reuan totsay
appealed to buainemmen to support hJa ~aely criti·
dzed economic program and said that now bl not the
time for '11.Mt-minute hagltng." •
Dali, Falgo chronicled
Namee In the news: A m~ feetunna IW't"tia-u.t ~tinp by ardlt Salvador Dali bl f•tured cm Pmae IM and llncer' Donna Farao te1la how lhe oo,p19 wtih MS cm ~ ClO.
·A study says the length of tlie California school
day is shorter than the national average, and some
~ton blame teachers' unions and fund cuts. Page
~ig-band. leader reminisces
Hank DeCo~ of Modesto wu a band leader ln
the swing era, rememben it all. Pap A 7.
COUNTY
Coast panel blaats drill plans
The mte CoMtal Commilltoll hm ~ on ftcord ~ propoMla to --172 offlban '1nda -11 off Qranp CoUnty -for oil dr11lh\a. Pac-Bl.
posal Wednesday that would
allocate the 14,928 commercial jet
departures permitted annually
among carriers now serving the
airport and carriers on the out-
side wanting in.
Judge Hatter became the cen-
tral figure in the issue last Sep-
tember when, at the urging of
the U.S. Department of Justice
and Pacific Southwest Airlines,
he overturned the county's pre·
viously approved access plan.
AttOmeys for the two parties
claimed the plan was unfairly
beneficial to AirCal and Republic_
Airlines, the two giants in the
Orange County market, and
contrary to tenets of the Airlihe
Deregulation Act of 1978.
AirCal has been authorized to
fly an average of 23.5 flights per
day from Orange County; Repu-
blic, 11.5 flights and Frontier
Airlines, Pacific Southwest Air-
(See AIRPORT, Page AZ)
Trustee may lose
school hoard post
MAY BE OUT -Huntington
Beach High School District
trustee Sherry Baum, of Seal
Beach, may be forced off the
board if Seal Beach School
District sends its students to
Los Alamitos instead of
Huntington Beach.
By PATRICK KENNEDY
ol'IM DllllJ "'4 ttafl
Sherry Baum, recently elected
trustee of the Huntington Beach
Union High School District, may
be forced" off the school board
next year, say district officials.
Mrs. ~um, a Seal Beach resi-
dent, would have to resign if the
financially troubled Seal Beach
School District disbands in July
1983 and aenda its students to the
Los Alamitos Unified School Di-
strict as is proposed.
If this occurs, Seal Beach
would no longer be within the
Huntington Beach Union district
boundaries.
Mrs. Baum would have to
move from her Seal Beach resi-
dence to a home within the di·
strict boundaries or be forced to
resign, according to district offi-
cials .
The state Education Code re-
quires that school board members
must reside in the district they
represent, say district officials ..
Mrs. Baum, who was elected to
the four-year term last Novem-
ber, couldn't be reached for
comment.
Voters must approve the pro-
posed merger of the Seal Beach
and Los Alamitos districts and
(See BAUM, Pa.ce A!)
Large condo OK'd
by council in Mesa
The largest condominium pro-
ject ever planned in the city has
been approved by the Costa Mesa
Cit Council.
&veloper C. Robert Langslet
pJans to build the l , 155-\mit
condominium development on 28
acres of lar.d owned by C .J .
Segerstrom and Sona and. the
Coast Community College Di-
strict .
Plans for the complex near the
corner of Adams Avenue and
Harbor Boulevard call for 41
units per acre, with the aiu of
the condominiums ranging from
427 square feet to 1,520 square
feet for a two-bedroom unit.
.
INDEX
At Your Service . A4
Enna Bombeck B2
L .M. Boyd AS
Bualneea C6-7
Herb Caen B2
Calltomia 45
Cavalcade B2
Clusifled 04-8
C.bmicl C8
Cra.word C8
·Deeth Notice. D2
Editorial A8
Entert.llnment C9-10 .
SPORTS
The project was the first ap·
proved under the city's new Ur-
ban Residential zoning des(gna-
(See CONDOS, Page A!)
HOrollCOpe B2
Ann Landen B2
Movies C9-10
Mutual Funda C6
National New. A3
Public Notla!tl 02-3
Sporta Cl-4
Stock Marke111 C7
Ttlevilion 86
Tbeateri C9-10
Weather ~
World Newa ~
Clllna team on coast
I The People'• Republic of China national am· ~ 1Mm will ltay ID Com M-while ~ '~-'•'·Competition..-a v.s. ~-~CF' ~ •. :: . .
U N
Relerendum mov.:e can
.. have negative e f fect
1•
For the second time in alx ~ montha. Newport Beach reeidenta
• are seeking to overturn a major
r. development project through a
'· voter referendum.
The latest puah is aimed at
11 , the 75-acre Banning Ranch pro-
s ject. whl~h was approved laat
r: ~by ttie Newport Cit.Y
.. The development site, now
.. cowred with ahruba and oil wells,
· · ii located inland of Padfic Coast
Highway and west of Superior
Avenue. lt bumps up against the
1' Costa Mesa city limita.
The council voted to let de-
veloper Hancock "BUl" Banning
build 379 homes and a maximum
-of 400,000 square feet of office and
industrial ~pace.
The ntewed development
was both less than what Banning
had asked for and more than
residenui of West Newport want-
ed.
. .
I [
The council also increased the
amount of road construction Ban-
ning must complete as a condition
to the project and agreed the city
will explore purchasing park land
to answer West Newport's request
for a park.
lt appean the council majo-
rity went a long way In paying
attention to the residents' concern
about traffic and permitted uses
on the 75~ parcel. ' ,,
But it apparently wasn't en-
ough t.o satisfy some of the West
Newport residenta.
Billing them1elve1 aa the
Newport Leglalative Alliance,
they have decided to copy laat
year's referendum drive against
the Irvine Company's Newport
Center expansion project. That
drive was one major factor leading
to council repeal of the project
approval. .
We are disappointed to see
this propoeed course of action. A
"my way or else" approach to
community affairs says that the
old-fashioned values of reasoning
together, corppromise and give
and take considered essential for
good ongoing community
functioning are not that meaning-
ful any more.
The proposed referendum is a
negative approach which seems
likely to breed more divisiveness.
Newport Beach should not
follow a course of being a house
divided against itself.
:·
i· Vacant school busy
There's something for every-
one at the new Rea Community
Center in Costa Mesa.
The city took over the former
school on the west side of town
last Septe mber and it is now
bustling with half a dozen com-
munity organizations.
There's the Transportation,
Lunch and Counseling program,
that serves hot lunches to seniors
every day. There's also High
Hopes, a group that helps brain
damaged adults.
Share Our Selves provides
emergency assistance for families
and individuals. Harbor Area
Adult Care offers all day care for
seniors.
And for the kids in the
neighborhood, there's a branch of
the Boys and Girls Club of the
Harbor Area.
The city is leasing the 54,000
square feet of building space for
$110,000 a year and then turning
around and subleasing it to non-
profit organizations.
So far it has been a huge
success. Assistant ci ty manager
Allan Roeder said most of the
former classrooms should be filled
up in the ~ext few months.
That's good news for a part of
town that has had tOo few facili-
ties for a long time.
As Dave Flores, a counselor at
the Boys and Girls Club ex-
plained, "All they used to be able
to do was hang out and get busted
for smoking. There were no prog-
rams available for these kids."
About 200 boys and girls have
joined the club since the doors
opened Feb. l at 661 Hamilton
Street.
And that's only one example
of how the new community center
hu affected the neighborhood. A
congratula~ry handshake goes '°
the city a'nd to the non-profit
groups which have moved in to
make the whole thing work.
Beach park under wa y
State park commissioners
have approved a 11\Ulti-million
dollar development plan for newly
created Crystal Cove State Park.
· The three-phase plan includes
the creatlon of hiking and eque-
strian trails, campsites and more thaD 1,800 parking spots off Paci-
fic Coast Highway.
Work is expected td begin
next November with most of the
early effort to be directed at car-
ving out parking lots and access
paths to the park's more than
three miles of beach. Development
of the park is expected to extend
until the end of the century.
The state park is situated
midway between Corona del Mar
and Laguna Beach and also takes
in canyons, ridges and creeks on
the inland side of Pacific Coast
Highway. .
Moat of the park land was
purchued from the Irvine Com-! pany for $32 million in 1979.
r. State officiall estimate that on
I peak days. the park may attract up
~ to 15,000 daily guests and at other
, times average half that figure. •
1''or the most part, the various
special interest groups dedicated to
preserving the expansive Irvine
Coast area appear satisfied by the
park plan.
In fact, the major complaints
were directed at the Irvine Com-
pany which is d eveloping sur-
rounding acreage with estate-type
homes, offices and hotels. Some
feel the company project will do
little to complement the state
park.
While we can understand
their concern, one mu.st remember
that there was a time when the
entire Irvine Coast was slated for
development. Much has been
gained and the Irvine Company
has contributed much.
The state•s ~eveloprnent plans
seem good. It is right that parking
spots be provided early in the
work project. Parking last summer
was chaotic when the state's new
beach property was firlt opened.
Now we all will hope that the
money source for all these needed
improvements doesn't dry up
down the road.
Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views ex-
pressed on tnis page are tnose ot their authors an<l artists. Reader comment ~s 1nv11
ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1~. Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Pnone -(71'1
·6,2-4321.
· L.M. Boyd/ L eft-handed
Q. In the 1930s. 10 percent of the
population was reported to be ,I left-handed. Now. 12 percent ls. Why l this dlffereace? ·
t A. Thole who analyie 1uch mall.en
' uy both parents and teachera
stopp ed trying 'o coov•rl
lef\-Unden to rl1ht-handera durinc
Ute l•t 40 years.
You wouldn't much care for tile
not.Ion ol eatlnl a Ute ~btcken, a llve
ORANGE COAST ....
cal(, a Uve pig, certainly not. But a
lot of people eat a Jot or live food . What, nonesuch comes to mind? How
about clams and oyaters? Many a
meditative dln'er drops the lemon
Julee on the llUle Jiving muscle lo see
ll twitch.
Q . In alrllne lingo, what's
"PAWOB"? •
A. Passenger Arrlvlns Without B•U•·
New twist in lawsuit • mania
WASHINGTON -Americana have
become increasingly lawsuit-happy in
recent years. The courts, already over-
burdened by leSitimate legal actions, are
being swamped by nillsance suits that
have no business on the docket.
AB an investigative reporter, I've had
my share of legal $reats from corpora-
tions and individuals-whose particular ox
I've gored. They rarely get beyond the
grumbling stage.
Now I've discovered a new wrinkle in
the litigiousn~ that is sweeping the
country -the lawsuit instigated behind
the scenes by a third party with an
interest in the outcome.
SWORN STATEMENTS filed in con-
nection with a recent lawsuit against
A.BC News show that the legal action was
prompted by the nation's largest seller of
cancer insurance, which had.been criti-
cized on a television series by the de-
fendants. Yet the companl, American
Family Life Assurance, o Columbus,
Ga., was never a party to the lawswt.
The plaintiff was a Virginia insurance
agent whose questionable sales pitch was
clandestinely filmed and was then shown
briefly on the nationally broadcast news
program in November 1978. It was part of
a series on the House Aging Committee's
probe of so-called Medigap insurance
1
policies, which supposedly plug the gaps
in Medicare coverage. The investigation,
incidentally, led to corrective legislation
by Congress.
The agent's sworn deposit.ions, and
conversations with her, make clear that
she didn't file the suit after suffering
Q
-JA-Cl-Al_D_IR-ID-1 -~
financial harm, viewing the TV show
herself or even being told about it by
friends. In fact, she said in a deposition, "l
had no idea that such a thing had ever
been aired." And she told my associate
Tony Capaccio that "people came up to
me after the show and talked about it, but
no one associated it with me."
Yet the agent sued ABC and the House
investigators for vio'latµtg her civil rights.
How did this happen? Simple enough: An
attorney representing American Family
Life in another lawsuit slipped hls busi-
ness card under the door of her boy-
friend's apartment in Alexandria, Va., in
mid-1980.
"He is the one who originAlly brought
this to my attention and set up the whole
-the whole case for roe," the insurance
agent said in sworn testimony.
She said the attorney, Anthony Dili-
metin, pajd for her September 1980 trip
to New York. In the presence of an
.American Family Life vice president, the
attorney played a videotape of the A.BC
news show for her. •
Did Dilimet.in suggest, she was asked,
"that you ought to file suit?" The insu-
rance agent replied: "Yes."
She testified that Dilimetin helpfully
identified the House investigators who
appeared on the TV show and were also
sued. "Since I had no idea who had to be
sued." she testified, "Mr. Dilimetin was
informing me of the proper persons that
would be involved in the lawsuit."
Her attorney told'us that the insurance
company purchased depositions of the
House investigators and lent them to him
because his client couUn't afford the
transcripts.
DESPITE ALL THIS, the af.ent
doesn't feel she was used as a "front' for
American Farruly Life. And Dilimetin
insists that "we absolutely did not have a
role in encouraging the suit; we did not
pay for legal fees."-The jury, by the way.
took just 40 minutes to decide that the
agent had no case.
Where have all the candidates gone?
To the Editor: .
Frederick Scboemehl of your staff
listed the candidates and the offices in the
Sunday, March 14 edition. Upon perusal
of the candidates for the primaries, it was
most interesting to note the large number
of unopposed candidates. Th.is is a bit
MAILBOX
astonishing in view of the pointed articles
over the last few years noting the com-
ph;te dissatisfac1ion of the "public" with
the incumbents. Have the "~lie" really
given up on trying to p reliable,
honest, hard-working candidates into the
electoral procesa? It is particularly diffi-
cult to note that two of the county
supervisors have no opposition whatso-
ever. This is the kind of opposition a
candidate has in RU!l&a. not America.
IS JT POSSIBLE that no one but an
incumbent can afford to run an election
contest? Where are the business people
who should be out urging tl)eir fellow
business people to place responsible
candidates into office? Whe~ are .the
environmentalists who should be urging
their candidates into office? Where are
the silent majority who should be out
behind the scenes urging solid citlz.ens to
step forward and place their names on
the ballot? Apparently. they are all asleep
or really don't give a damn.
It is sad to see the large number of
unoppoeed candidates. We can only hope
and pray that the unoppoeed will not be
complacent and smug in the light of
public apathy and will try and do
10mething constructive during their co-
ming periOd in office which they proba-
bly haven't tried to do during the pre-
vious years they were in office. For the
others who can afford to run and should
be out there opposing the unoppoeed,
don't let another opportunity pus where
you fail to raise your voice when given
the chance.
CHARLF.S D. LARSON
Fellow sufferer
To the F.c:Utor: . .
Now that March 10 has pueed, and we
are all sUD in Orange County, it'• time for
me to speek out! Hata dU to Mary J~e
Sanborn, and her beginning crusade
throual\ the front door o( the DMV, of
C.O.ta 'Mna (Mailbox, March 10). I would
like to alin up for the l>09ltion ~f Spta Or~r for the OMV. Ma.. Senbom
..... her lunch .... to "8nd In Une ad w.in:'~~ by on my WIY
home bun work. W~ I walbd an~ a row Qf. 38 cha1m llMl 11-D people l&Ml· dine· Of coune, I fUEured ~ 0t
w.. ltiDPPIJw off .Cter work. W~_I
told my h~ I Wal aolna to tbe D.-V.
the mKt momma. a6out-15 mmu• before~ Ol*wd and that lhould do it.
Wl'Oftl! I mean &hey open at 8 a.~an ~·' rillt', bow m.ny people be uwte1 ~ I arrived. at Mil 60 PilOPle
were waiting, and 25 more came after me,
before the doors were opened!
My work time started at 10 a .m., but I
figured they would have plenty of fresh
faces to help all of us. Wrong! The 36
chairs filled, and I was Standing. To make
a Jong story short, I left at 9:32 a.m. Two
windows w.ere open, and a third lady
would wander over occasionally and help
someone.
Mary Jane, I feel we have shared an
emotional experience which unites us as
friends, so I may call you by your first
name . . . I'm ready to fight! ROBBI SCHOONOVER
T E L E PHONE YOUR
LETTER TO THE E DITOR
See instructions below
Their responsibility
To the Editor:
Now rumors of another referendum
and a possible recalJ rilJ the
newspapers. It appears that Newport
Beach is moving forward government
through petition rather than by our
elected officials.
I have no quarrel with the petition
process. It is a right of the citizens and
a part of the democratic process. My
concern lies with whether those
participating in the petition process are
willing to accept the inherent
responsibilities of that process.
IT IS INCUMBENT upon the
petiti'oners, lo securing signatures. to
present the issues of the petition
honestly, accurately and factually -
not resorting to catchall fear phrases
such QS "will increase rent", "wiJJ
increase traffic,•: 11ar~ selling out to
developers". Self-right~us seal should
not support the end justifying the
means . Even the unassailable approach
of~et's put it to a vote of the people" loses validity unlesa those slping
the peU on assume their responsibiUty
in the .,etlUolf'Jfrocess.
By alpine a peUUons, the algnaton
must accept the respotlliMllty that they
know and undentud wbat lt ls tbey are
si11nin1, and Ulat the act ta .not a
sympatMtlc respoue to the ,equ.t of
an emodonaUy-charted netpbor. We
should reru.e to sip a petlUO. ...ae..
the petitioner can· calmly present the
faau on the subject and answer all
ClU•IUOQI '° our HU.I actlon. Upaa •
1lPIDI tlW ....... we th• accent the • .,, .. utra ~ r•*" art i.otleonit. Thi
'""" to ~ fdttft 'J!J Jtl lpGCW Of '"'""'°'": lilfhlf, ~•nwd' IAltn• of 300
u.-orda or !«II .....,, bf. ~"" prt/tttttet All
,,,,,,. mUlf 8'cflldf ~'""and rnot&og
addr~u but 110rnt1 ......,. w tUllhlwld Oft r•·
qutst •t '"/11can1 rNIO" ta °"°'~ Po.frJI au nor bf~ Lftt1" ,,... k l•lt~ to Ba·-Nonw _,, pMllf
ftumMr t>t thi cOfllnblicor "'*" bt ~tor
ttmftcaltOfl ~-·
responsibility of going to the polls and
l]laking an educated decision. If we
W::int to participate in the democratic
process, we must be prepared to
assume its innate responsibilities.
While Newport Beacl) citizens expend
their energies and resources in
divisive actions to curtail planned
g rowth and the associated road
Improvements. the cities1 surrounding
Newport Beach merrily continue their
expansion plans and send their traffic
crisscrossing our community. lf you see
this traffic stopping in Newport Beach,
folks it's doubtful they are stopping
to patronize our local merchants -
they're probably just, stuck on our
congested streets!
CAROL SOUTH
Accident solution
To the Editor:
There is a simple solution to the high
cost of automobile insurance -fewer
accidents. And the solution to fewer
accidents is changing the timing of the
stop lights. Is our time so valuable that a
few seconds would make a difference?
The timing on almost all the lights now
changes from green to red and red to
green with no hesitation. A few seconds
difference -that is, leave red on all four
lights for two or three seconds before two
of them turn green. This would mean.
especially at ma.in intersections, fewer
fenders bent and lives lost. Too many
drivers still cross intersections on red, and
some drivers stilJ make rabbit starts aa
the light changes green.
Please write to your city Traffic
Commission suggesting this change lf)'ou
agree with me.
BETTY BRISCOE
Not his letters
To the Editor:
Three letters on general and lOcal
political matters haw appeared in the
local papers in recent weeks. includi.QI
the Daily Pilot, with signatutts that
suggest they were written by me.
. I did not write thete letters, nor any
others to local papera. JOHN W. JOHNSON
Ret.1 Newport·Meta
Uoifiea School District
• •
Of'Mge CoMt OAILV PILOT/Thun.day, M.roh' 18, 1M2
NYSE COMPOSITE .TRANSACTIGN
OWOHY ..... l•fLUH TIAMIO•T .. I .. IW} .. &. Ml .. HT,•ACtPIC,•lw, eot't'O#,OIHOJT &•I CllfCllUIAfl tYOC• IAU!A .. H Allii ll"Ollfll I '/ ftl .. ,uo .... l•ITl•aY
Braniff routes
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pan American World
Airways will take over almost all of Braniff interna-
tional Airlines' routes to South America tor fQUr years
and provide Braniff with an immediate $20 million to.
ease Its severe cash shortage, the two airlines 11n-
nounced.
Branlft, which has been flirting with possible
bankruptcy. thus gets an opportunity to shed routes
that lost $15 million last year and hall that amount thf
year before.
Tough OPEC meet seen
VIENNA. Austria (AP) -OPEC's emergency
meeting Friday to deal with the world oil gltit is going
to be a rough one, but the Saudis will defend the $34
benchmark price, Venezuela's energy minister said
today.
"It's going to be a difficult meeting. It's a difficult
situation. I don't believe we can make a final decision
of production levels," said Energy Minister Humberto
Calderon, who was among the early arrivals for the
meeting.
Firms announce layoffs
NEW YORK (AP) -Several ·major companies
have announced layoffs and anothe r postponed an
expansion program.
-TeJ91S Instruments lnc .. citing a slump in sales
of compufer components. laid off 2,700 workers. or
about 3 percent of its worldwide work force.
-Westinghouse Electric Corp. said it will reduce
work schedules of 3,000 employees at its electrical
products plant in Beaver, Pa .. because of sagging or-
ders.
-Kennecott Minerals Co., blaming the slumping
copper market, said it will shut its Tucson, Arlz.-area
mining operations, putting 1,800 employees out of
work.
-Melbourne, Fla.-based Harris Corp. said it was
canceling a $20 million expansion in Poughkeepsie,
N.Y., and instead closing its ~miconductor plant there
because o f sluggish sales. 'Most of the plant's 125
workers already have been laid off.
Deficits discounted
WASHINGTON (AP) -A Nobel prize-winning
economist thinks Congress is making too much of
federal budget deficits, but says the preoccupation at
least is keeping Congress from attempting spending
increases that would fuel inflation as they stimulate
the economy.
"All this talk about deficits, all thlS concentration
about comrromise and so on is a sign of the absolute
triumph o President Reagan's economic policy," Mil-
ton Friedman said Wednesday.
Tax auditing declines
WASHINGTON (AP) -An mdividual taxpayer's
chances of being audited by the Internal Revenue
Service will drop to a record low this year -even
though tax cheating is on the rise.
But the IRS, rejecting overzealous enforcement as
too much" like "a police state," said Wednesday it is
expanding other programs intended to pick up at least
a little of the estimated $72 billion in taxes the U.S .
Treasury may be losing each year because of unint-
entional errors and outright cheating.
UPS AND DOWNS
e..,., 74"-78 cent• • pOunCS, us.
deatlnatlonl.
Leed 26-32 cants • pound.
Zinc 39 cents • PoUnd. dell'Hreci. Tin le 7888 Mel.Ills Week comc><>.ite
lb. AklmtnUfll 76-77 cents a pound, NY MerowJ 1395,00 per nat11.
Plllttnum $306.00 troy oz .. N.Y.
SILVER
Handy & Human, t r 185 per troy
OUfl08 ,.
GOLD QUOTAtlONS
· London~ mo1nln9 flxlnG 1322.40, up se . .o. Lendoft: altemocMI ll•ln9 1320.001 up
t-4.00. hfte! 1331.80 up l&.09.
'1'9MMt: 132f,80, up lfU 1 ~ Lat• ... $319.00, up U.00
bid· SS22.00 Mked.
Hafldf a MenMfl: only dlllly q-.Ote
1320.00. up 14.00. ..... I~ only dally quote 1320.w. l.IPI~ «'It dally quota fa_brlc9.CS
N38:l>O, up 14.20.
SYMBOLS
I . '