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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-07-17 - Orange Coast PilotSTARTING TODAY 'HILL STREET BLUES' Actress tells why her role is so vulnerable In Pilot TV Log OUNGI COAST FRIDAY . JULY 11 1981 ., SINGING GYMNAST Will listeners flip over Cathy Rigby's pop records? In Weekender TICKE:'f' FOR SUCCESS Gre"'summer movies create box office boom Plus film, movie reviews * * * * • • . Ylll HllRDll DlllY PAPIR ORANGE COUNTY C AL I FOR NIA 25 CENTS . . Son ~s letters still haunt grieving fa th er. HE BEUEVED IN AMERICA Musing GI Grantham 'I feel that I will make· it hoine', he wrote from Vietnam By JODI CADENHEAD Of Ille D .. IJ ~lel $1aH Dear Mom· I 1omed the ·Army becau&e I believe m Amenca The Army tned to put me m clerk school, but I told them I wanted to be m them· fanlry. I thought I was really dmng something for my country I will tell you. this being with your friend alive one minute and dead the nexl tala!s allthe gung ho-nes.s out of a person - Your loving son. Boti For most Americans the Viet nam War came to an end six years ago. But for Huntington Beach resident Preston Grantham. tht' wa r continues privately. quiet ly in the back or his mind. when• memories of his ·oldest son still live. The now retired Los Angclt>s . police officer tril'd to stop hjs 17 year-old son from joining the Army. But there was no stoppin~ Robert Eu~ene in the fall of 1969 Only .i rcw months before Bob hud chosen to stay in Los An~eles with his father , whi le hi s mother . Ma rJorie Pi ck ett. moved to Whittier He was ada· mant abou t continuing at l-'a1rfax lligh School where he was second in command of the school's ROTC program. He was proud, his father re· called Proud he was second. If he stayt·d one more year he would be fir!>f .h('toldhisdad. Butnext year did notc·ome. Instead, the youth walked into h1~ local recruiting offi ce and s1gned~p His bel>t friend was alread~ an Vietnam And besides. 1l would be a way for him to earn e nough money to marry his girfriend. he argued. Now . so manv a vears later. her name escapes his father 's memory neor Mom '\Jfy new 1ob 1f you want 111 know I did volunteer for. Someone hos to do 11 I am the hunter of a hunter killer team. I ride in or pitol a very small helicopter at the top level until the enemy fires at u&. I feel I am doing something for the war effort, and maybe hurting some of these people that have hurt my friends. Love, Bob. "I gave him every argument in the world," recalled his father ." I wanted him lo go to college. He told me if he signed up now he could be home for Christmas ." He came home that Christmas and the next, spending about 90 per- cent o f the time with his girlfriend, Grantham chuckled. The certificates from infantry s chool. the military medals are all pasted carefully in a red, white and blue colored scrapbook. The face that stares back from a photo. s miling from the open helicopter door, seems fresh. young. He's the one grinning, the only happy face in a sea of serious expressions. Feb. 16-Dear Mom: I feel that I wm make it home. I only have a few months of flying left. ,Mom, 1f the army ever cornea to tell you J 'm mut- ing in action, it only mean& one thmg. I'm dead-they can't find my body. I'll do my best to stay alive. but I'm not afraid to die. If I die I 'll be doing it for my COU11try. /riend& and famaly ao that my brother or fnends never have to come over here to see what I've .teen -1 've seen so much dying. Right now, I have a /eeling of empti· neu like-I've never had before without purpo.1e and feel I need somethmg but I don't know what that aomethmg 1$. In other words. I'm o very mi.zed up lad. Your loving son , Bob Waste, is the word Gr antham uses over and over again, when he talks about Vietnam. He is a man given lo quiclt laughter and pre- fers nottod'1°ell on the past. "During World War II we <Se GI, Page A.2> .; o.11, ~ .... ,_ ,_ GRIEVING FATHER HB's Preston Grantham 1. Israelis sniasli PLO ·nest in Beirut I S.... ...... llyLH....,_ WHALETAKESWAONGTURN· -Boaters in Newport Harbor eye ~-foot gray whale that took a wrong turn Thursday morning at harbor entNUlce. The whale glided up harbor to turning basin at the arches bridge where it appropriately made a turn and swam back out of the harbor. SPokesmen for the sheriff's Harbor Patrol said the giant mammal caused no problems and stayed within the harbor's 5 mph speed limit. Kias p,roteSt plans to kill camp bear Medlfy • spraying goes on LOS GATOS <AP> As five heli copters sprayed pesticides over 10 medfly infested com· munilics this morning, Gov. Ed· mund G Brown Jr said the aerial assault had covered half the target area a nd predicted the who le 175 square miles would be s prayed in two to three days Arown also appealed for federal cooperation in the effort to combat the fast-spreading Mediterrane an fruit fl y , SP.ecifically asking Pres ident Reagan to let the helicopters use Moffett f'ield. an air base near San J ose The use of the field already had been approved, a Moffett spokesman said. The choppers were spraying a stic~y. pe~ticide-laced bait over Moun~ew, Los Altos, Sun- nyprrc. Cup~tino. Los Gatos, San J ose. Campbell , Santa C l a r a , Monta Vista and Saratoga today, the fourth day of spraying. "We believe we're going to control this pest,'' Brown said today on ABC's "Good Morning America." With five choppers airborne toda y , "we've covered just about half the area to be sprayed ... and with any kind of luck at all we'll be able to finis h this in two lo three days. . . Give us until Sunday night," Brown said. Jn the first three days of spraying, when less than 30 square mlle,s were covered. the (See MEDFLV, Page A2) First pull hits iackpot 8 E N 0 <Al» -Armed wtt.h '500 in wiMln11 f'N>m •notMr s lot macblne , Fr•neh Archibald, 48 , of Vmncounr. Brlli1h Columbia, plaafted •to spend MVeral houri plaJtna for another win . • But her tint puU of U..1bUdle on the dollar =r"IY• Ila& at the MGM Gt ... •• 1111 ahe nMcted u tt flD.,I .. a Jatilpot ol •• • • • •· veaiment. Mrs. Attblbald Nkl ltMt lili M ,. •• for -...., ...... to keeP'Olt irJI untlJ . .a. ... . Renoo. y. I N DEEPEST SYMPATHY })))))))))))))(((((((((-((((( • . th€ BOAQO o~ SupeQ\llSOQS this Oay ao1ou12neo · 10 memoQy o~ ._., ___ _ -.-......... _. ............ W4WWWMMW4t IWLIWWf e ........... Orange County's memorial certifica1es -costing the taxpayers more than ~ each time superoisors adjourn in memoriam. SuperVisor says certificates costly By FREDERICK SCHOEMERL 'Ol .. Delty ............ Rarely a meeting pasaea that the Orange County Board of Supervlsors doesn't adjourn in memory of some civic leader or other noteworthy individual who has died. And the practice of send1n1 a certlficate notln1 the board's ac· lion to the family of the de· ceased ls coslin1 Oran1e County 1overnmerlt a small fortune, Superviaor Roger Stanton aaid durln1 bearln&s Thursday on the county bud1et. Stanton Hid hi• omce I.I belnl billed more than '80 by the COUil· ty'1 ln·houle reproduCillon and 1raphlcs department eacb time lhe aame ol tbe deceUed penoa 11 added to the pre·priated certlllcates. "Tbe top price I paid wa1 '85.81.~u..r. ..... __. lettea la U.. aame," •--said WIYtV. "09'• JI w 're _..., Ike lbat, wMt --~ .._ oo9t1 ~, .. ~ .. ...,. .• ~.·e:· ................ 11• ,_. a.t It ._. mbi..._ tor M ope_rallr t.Ml t111 t7pe on a ''41al·a·~ mae.,.,.." ao mlilu._ to tM 9'e· ., JO ml.Autel ,.. , nam e to be printed on the certificate. Said Stanton , "That's 33 minutes -or 25 percent of the two hours (of lime) I've been geUlng charged for.'' Stanton said that, when he questioned the' additlo na <Ste COSTS, Page "2) He's burned by·~oast' · TUNJS, Tunisia CAP) -The French cit.rector of a Club Med vacaUon resort in thla MC>lllem North Afl'tea COQDtry baa been eapelled for w1ahln1 "a loq life to tbe Zionist 1t1te," 1ovem· meat IOUl'cea aald. Sourcea ln Ult Tlml8San Interior Mlnlltry am• dlll IDddent oc:cured dUJ'tnt a ...... Da1 celebration mark· · IQ ~·· national bolklay at 1 CIU-lldtei'ranee reaon ln the atlwn city Korba. The ~lub'• dltector led the p11t1 tn, .,...,. tile utlonal utMmi ol ....,.. aatlonl, bi· cludlg lar .. l'i, Ula aourcft aal(, 'l'lleY aatd at U.. ... ol the laraeU son1, the dlrfftor H · prft1'7d hli 1upport for ZAontlm. fft .. Hpelled the f~ ..,. r Terrorist camp ruined? BEIRUT . Le banon I AP> Is rael pounded Palestinian str onghold s in Beirut and southern Lebanon from the air and sea today in the heaviest an· ti-gueri'illa action s ince its 1978 in vasion or the southern border area Police said more than 50 people were killed, but a radio station said the death toll was over 100. Is rael said its warplanes des troyed the headquarters of two Palestinian guerrilla move- ments in Beirut. and that a ll the jets returned safely to base after the first raid on the capital in more than three years. The Palestinians disputed the claim that headquarters wer~ destroyed and said one lsraeli jet was downed Is rael said its planes attacked in at least two separate actions in the morning and afternoon and blew up three bridges on the Litani and Zahrani rivers -the Delphi, Arab As lim and the Zahrani. On Thursday, Israeli planes destroyed five bridgea over the rivers with the aim of cutting the guerrillas Crom arms supplied 1n the north. The wall or ambulance sirena echoed In the streets of Beirut u police reported more than 35 deaths In the capital and 15 in the port city of Sidon and the neighboring oil terminal area of <See MIDEAST, Page A.2) 2 die in pileup SACRAMENTO <AP) -Two persona died when aeveh can, their drivers blinded 'by amote from a grass fire, piled Into each other near S a cra mento Metropolitan Airport late Thurs· .day. 1111111:• 1111111 Fair lhroup Saturday, . but some low cloud1 early Saturday mornln1. H11bl 70 to 74. Lows lOnlCht M to 70. 11111 IMYe;.:r-:e .... --E .. 5.1 1 .. WIFE'S FAITH -Diane Coburn smiles at her husband Johnny, who has been in a coma in a Norfolk, Va., hospital since a truck accident .. June 4. Mrs. Coburn visits her husband near- ........... ly every day and believes be'U recover even though the doctors treating him think his brain damage is irreversible. t from P~ge A 1 Gl'S VIE TN AM LETTERS .. "fought for somethinJt," says the 'former Marine, his voice trailing into a quiet whisper. "I feel the ., politicians used Vietnam and stabbed Americans in the back." 1 March I-Dear Mom: I have 13SdaJ16 Left be/are you see me walk through the door. My time i& getting ahort. I haven't much to say. I love you all and 1 miuyou vttymuch. Love, Bob. "' The next message was a yellow, "DOW wrinkled, Western Union ·telegram, dated March 8, 1971. The Sttreta'71 of the Army ho.I '•asked me to inform you that your'°"· l Corporal R.obnt E. Grantham, has t.t>een ~ed musing in action in · Vietnamlince8Marchl911. '· Grantham and his former wife ,, p .,From age A1 later received wor<l that Wit- nesses had seen their son's helicopter crash and explode. As a bitter irony Mrs . Pick'ett had to protest before the army would agree to pay Social Securi· ty benefits. Without a body they said, there was no proof he was dead. Asked if he thinks his son is still alive , Grantham says, "I don't think,Ytere's any chance. It's nice to UOnlt about, but I'm a realist. "I'll tell you something, though, if he hadn't been killed, he'd be an officer today. He had that much dedication. Everything he ever did he worked hard at. He had a dream to be the best." POW horwrs set Satur~ay The South e rn Ca lifornia c h apter of American Ex- Prisoners of Wa r will host a patriotic program honoring war prisoners at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Los Alamitos Armed Forces Reserve Center. Congressman Bob Badham (Newport Beach) will be the . featured speaker , along with Susan Moreno, national direc;tor of Americans for Return of Serviceman from Vietnam. President Ronald Reagan pro- claimed today "Prisoner of War and Missing In Action Day of Recognition" to honor aU war prisoners and their families. ~MEDFLY SPRAY AREA SPREADS • • • 0 helicopters failed to "work as 0 well as we wanted," he said. But two helicopter companies aire .. now l ackllne the mechanical 'problems, that slowed aerial ~.spraying, ne added. # Brown on Wednesday asked the president to declare three in- fested counties federal disaster areas. In Washington. deputy ·White House press secretary .. Larry Speakes said today the re-. .,quest ''has finally been received ,,after being missent" lo the San bFrancisco regional office of the Federal Emergency Manage- ment Agency and "is under con- sideration." "This has to' be a slate, local ~and a federal effort . . . and I -From Page A 1 appeal to the president" to let medfly workers use federal facilities in the area, Brown said. The use of the Navy's Moffett Field as staging area for helicopter spraying operations was authorized Thursday by Defense Sec;retary Caspar Wein- berger, acoording to a Moffett spokesman . John Shackleton, public af- fairs officer at Moffett, said the staging area, now at a secret location in the Los Altos hills and at the San Jose municipal airport, probably would not be moved to Moffett before Mon· day. MIDEAST FIGHTING • • • Zahrani, 25 miles south of Beirut. It was the fifth Israeli air strike in Lebanon in a week. But the Christian Voice of LebahOll radio station said more than 100 people in the teeming nelghbOrhoods around guerrilla leader Vasser Arafat's com- mand headquarters in the Sabra camp and the neighboring ~haUlla camp were killed and more than350 injured. • · Arafat's Palestine Liberation eOrganiaation said Israeli jeta -also blasted the guerrilla-held fishing towns of Damour and Saadiyat \rith repeated bomblnt and strafing runs that caused heavy destruct.ion and casualties ln the two targets. Damour ii 12 miles soutb of Beirut, and Saadiyat 1.s ~ miles aouth of the capital. A communique from the Israeli military command saJd Its planes destroyed the central headquarters of Al Falah, the lar1est gueniJla organization in the PLO sniUtary command, and of the Popular Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine. the 1uenilla troup closest to the Soviet Union. A PLO epokes~an said the Israeli ~ommuniqu, "exa1· gerated. '' Re said two 1part- ment buildinas near the Al FataJt_fec;"rlty headqu1rtera wer•-att. but not 'tbe bead- quart .. taelf. Priv.Wy owned rHio atat.iona ln S.lrut aaid fires broke out in the Chalilla and Sabra refugee camps on the southern flank or Beirut ln the city's predominant· ly Moslem district and reported that the Kuwaiti Embassy fac· lng the ChaUlla camp was hit by the Israeli bombs. Reporters watching from roof· tops counted six m ed lum- altitude runs by the jets. The guerrillas put up a screen or an- ti-aircraft Cire, dotting the clear blue Mediterranean skY. over the Lebanese capital with while smoke puffs. Several shoulder-fired SAM· 7 Strella m issiles were seen streaking through the sky and exploding below the raldinj( jeta. PLO Chairman Arafat" ap- pealed to Arab heads of state for help in the rapidly escalating battle with Israel. "I want your swords, not your bleasinp,'' Arafat aald ln iden- tical messages to Ar1b kines and presidents, accordln1 to the PLO news agency WAF A. Oil drilling set HYANNIS, Mau. (AP) After years of court battles and • controversy, exploratory drill· tn1 for oU finally wW belln to- day or Saturday In th• ricb flab. lat ~ of Geor1" Bank, an oil company 1ay1. Despite the governor 's op· timism, the fruit Oy, which at- tacks 200 varieties of fruita and vegetables, has moved to within 20 miles of San Francisco and within 40 miles of the rich farmlands of the San Joaquin Valley, officials said. The ,area considered heavily infested with maggots rose to 175 square miles Thursday, and critics charged that lackluster performance by helicopters spraying the pesticide malathion was pushing California and its $14 billion agricultural industry to lbe brink of disaster. In the first three days or spraying, 25 square miles were sprayed. From Page A1 BEAR ••• The alternative to ldllinl the 22-year-old bear and teatlnt It for rabies ls 1Mng the Fairview Hel1hta boy a aeries M rablee shots. Rabies expert.a con1ulted in tbe use aald lt •at unlikely that the bear bad rablet, but the only way to find out wu kUliq tbe animal IO that ill brain U... coald be tested. Offldall HJ the bear'• bMd will be taken to an Jlllnols Public Heattla labor1torJ ln Cea· tralla Ind NIUlta of the rabi• tetll wlll be known Friday after· noon. Scott, tbe cbUd who wu blt*- lut week, aald o&bert alto W petted tbe bear Without .,.. bluen. Spills, blowouts, pipeline problems dog offshore project SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -OU exploration aJ001 the California coaat and el1e•bere poaea pot.nUaJ buardl from oU apUla, blowouta and pipeline problems, accordlni to a study by the Na· tlonal Academy of Sciences. The detrimental effecta ol oll spills and potential hazards from oll rl1• have been documented1 the atudy aatd, but the ext.at or the damu1e and tbe ioa1~tenn effetll on the .-nvlron· ment are dtaputed by scientilta. The Academy of Sciences re- port, sou1ht by the U.S. Geoloeical Survey, was pre- ' From Page A1 COSTS • • • amount of billed lime, he was told it Involved overhead ex- pensea of the print sbop. If that's the case , be told fellow s upervisors , the overhead charge ii excessive. The Fountain Valley supervisor didn't let the matter drop with discussion of the in- memory certificates. When two cardboard direction signs were needed to direct a group of visiting scholars to the county Hall of Administration, Stanton's staff called the county print shop. Two signs were de- Ii vered So was a bill -for $93.10, Stanton said. Al Stanton's urging, the board ordered a study or printing costs by the cou,nty Administrativ~ Of. flee and General Services Agency. Mexicans eyed in car the/ ts SAN DIEGO (AP> -U.S. authorities were pressing Mex· tco today to arrest 14 men ac- cused or stealiniz at least 4,000 expensive American cars worth $30 million. Alejandro Rosas Romandia, Baja California attorney general, has said his offi ce in- • tends to help investigate the charJtes. ·pared by 18 expert.a repreaentlq research iulitutea, major oil companlel§, and envlroomen\a.l 1roup1. The chairman waa Geor1e F. Mecblin, a Weat- ln 1bouae Electric Corp. pbyslcltt. The rep0rt conructa wlth ln· terlor Secretary James Watt's coiilenUoo that offshore oU de· velopment pc>ees no environmen- tal threat. Over t,F next five yeara, Watt Intends to offer leasn for more than a billion aCTet aklo& much of lhe U.S. coattline. Wall's plan to lease nearly 700,000 acrea alon1 the California coaaWne baa aroused oppoalUon from government of- fl el ala amt environmental eroups. A court order haa been obtained to prevent drUUne in tracts already leased off Santa Barbara. SclenUsta a1ree, the atudy concluded, that lnajor oil apilta and routine heavy diacbarps <1 petrOleum, drill cutlln11, drill· ln1 muds and other pollut.anta from oU rip can have an "ad· verse effect" on ocean or- ganisms. They dlaa1ree on whether smaller concentrations of these etnuents can produce "significant damage ," the study said. Also, both government reiuta· lion and oil company ne1U1ence create problems, the academy committee said. Three a1enciea govern offshore drllllne in federal "°at~rs. and regulations sometimes conflict and are generally complex. Some <>ii companies 1ive workers Inadequate training, the committee added, which in- creases the possibility of acci- dents and oil spills. Catalina Airlines suspension ordered LOS ANGELES (AP) -An . administrative law judge has or- dered a seven-month suspension of Catalina Airlines' passenger operations because of several violations of air safety regula- tions. Judge J<>bn E. Faulk aJso sus- pended for four months the re· pair s tation certificate or Cat a lina's sist e r company, Briles Wing & Helicopter, Inc., a helicopter operating and main-tenance firm. The airline, which shuttled people between Catalina Island and San Pedro, was grounded April 10 by the FAA after the Briles-owned "Chopper 2" used by Los Angeles television station KNXT crashed s hortly after ta keoff from Santa Monica Airport. Less than two mon~hs before th<st crash, in. which the pilot was injured, a Catalina Airlines helicopter crashed Into the sea off Avalon, Catalina Island, kill· ing two passengers and injuring six other people. .Catalina and Brilea, both owned by Paul R. Qrilea, Inc. of Gardena, were found guilty of violating three Federal Aviation Administration air worthiness directives and 15 federal air regulations. However Faulk said he did not find any pattern of "contempt or disregard" for air safety regula- tions lbat would justify complete revocation o( the airline's car- r ier certificate. Both the FAA and represen- tatives or the air carriers said they are considering whether to appeal Faulk's decision to the National Transportation and Safety Board. Faulk found that among other irregularities, a fuel filter had been improperly installed on Chopper 2. and that Catalina's c hie f pilot, Capt. Walter Pinkerton, was trying to fly a partially crippled helicopter in October 1980 when it crashed in the water. ALL PLANTS IN OUR NURSERY 20%0 • I J l I j ,i I t I \ ,, ·~•I,.... Astronaut Bonnie Dunbar, left, talks with actress Danielle Brisebois, 12, seated atop a 14-ton meteorite in a "IJXlCe suit" in New York's Hayden Planetarium during space-related pro· gram. Fly bmae• Begl.n acceptarwe T here was a fly In the 1nolntment when Israeli Presldenl Yltallak Navoa ' conferred on Prime Minister Meaacllem Bella the task of forming Is rael's next govern· ment. As Begin was making an acceptance s peech in the cavernous reception hall of the presidential mansion, an i ntrepi d fl y set ll e d som e where between his shoulder and his ear. Navon, standing next to hl.m , w atch e d th e fly nervously, then reached to flick It away. "This doesn't come under my presidential authority,'' deadpanned Navon as TV cameras recorded the event, "but 1 was afraid the fly was bothering you." Begin graciously thanked the president. London's biggest outdoor jazz festival, scheduled for * 'the next two weekends, has been canceled because of riots in the capital. the or- ganizers announced. Oluy Gilles pie, Ella FltzgeraJd, Herbie Hancock and Sarah Vaughan were among the artists scheduled to appear on Clapham Com· mon, in south London. But the organizers said they were worried the event could lead to trouble. Kevin Herman got a plum of a plane trip for peanuts. Fifty of ·em. To promote its service from Cleveland . Texas In- ternational Airlines offered SO free pairs of round·trip tickets on any of the airline's flights. The airline bf'..~~n flights to Mexico City. r!r' Orleans and Houston. The tickets were offered to the first SO people who pre· sented 50 of any of a number of items. including Cleveland plums. Cleveland Browns ticket stubs, or Texas yellow roses. .~ .. ,..,.. .. Al the head of the line was llerman. 11 junior at Kent State University. who ar· r ived with SO peanuts. 50 hot peppers and a 50·foot chail) of paper clips. Dame Margot Fonteyn, left, gets a hug from Carla Fracci at a dinner in New York. following their appearance with the La Scala Opera Ballet in its North American debut. Great Plains get relief Cold front spawns storms, temperatures drop to 90s U.S. summary A cold front spa wned lnun· ditrstorm1 In Htbutlla .,.., ~ulh O.llota °" ~-Y H ttfftperatvrn W....,..S In IN _,. .. rn GrHI Pl•lnl 8'>d cit., w.1 .. were r-t.O over tlle ltoclll ... TIM 1out11ern Gruf Plains ta· 11trlt nctd lln1noer111oWtn, wMrt flfl'\ptnl"'" ~t Nd -l\lfher ~ 1"40 U. _,. II wa1 per11y cl-y In lht Hor11wall, et1d wnny .c:rou u. Aoc•ln -IN PlettMI Fot •"" d<lult 11,.,..d .,.,., much ol 1'lt Wftl C:O.tl Mlclaf ... .-ltmperahKH rttl9t0 from 5e In HOQUllllTI and Whldbey 111•""· w.,,., to 103 In l l'(IN and Palm Sprlnvs, ~Ill Other rtpOrll: ~nny M<I" were rorec•1t •cr,.1 mo11 or IN nellan today, wilt\ 1ut· ltnd t-r11orms u pec:l..S over 1111 northern Aockltl •lld High Pla ln1 Wldt lY 1t•ll•r•d lhun· der11\owtr1 wtrt l"t ly over 11\t IOUlhtrn third of u. nellan. Tiit nor1t!el'n hall of Ille country •H upect..S to.,.,.. hlgtts In llW IOI, wllllt 1.._ .. urnwerttorHcn lhe .0. In IN Soulh Mid the t~ In u.. Soulllwut-.,b Coastal forecast Llg lll varlellle winds through t .. 19'11 H <IOI -lltrly wl"°~ 10 lo i. "'°" In ., ... noon Ont to IWO ·-.. utllwtsltrl" ,...,, -tly •unny Frlcleyattar- California Southern ~lllornlt wlll be lelr t1Vou911 Sttunley u <"" t•ltn•lvt nl9hl •net morning tow <lovdlN u near IN ~•. Dtttru wlll warm lllfllltly. H lfllll tOHf e11• Saturday In Orange CollMy wlll ,.,ge lrom IN -10. 9t U. llfee.,.. to •-and mid IOI lnltllCI. Lows In 119 tOa. Inland Wiii~ CM tJqleCI lllgn1 In t,,. IOI tl)CI '°" lows In IN .0.. Mounteln _. wlll ha\19 lllgtts In 1"' IOI, 1_, SS te '5. I HortNrn da«1I wlll have nlflllt " . I\:~~ :J to IDe, IDWS U lo H Southern Oltser1 nlg/15 Wiii ,.,..Ot lrom 10. lo 112, IOWI U tolS. Hortlltrn and Canlr•I Calllor11l1 wlll be fair ltw"ClllQI\ S.IUnNY u cecit coall•I tow ctoucll IP<Hdlng lnlo <>Hl•I ••119Y' 111(1111 -mornings with local log and ••ult clearlng In Ille e ltt.._. Cooling lrtnd lnl-. A ltw efltrnoon clolld1 o .. r llW Slt rre Ht\l.ot MIUlll of I.AU Ta-. Tempe ratures 97 13 IO • as 12 12 .. 71 79 " 92 17 79 1S M 17 .. 12 97 .. 102 .. tO ... 97 • " ~ ,. IO 97 .. " IO " • ., IS •S .. ., u '° .. 10 M M 1J u ,. .. se n se 5' " IO .. IO S2 11 " 76 14 12 f1 '2 ,. 76 11 .. '7 15 " n PhlleO.lpflla P-nl1 PlltlbUrvfl Portland, Mt PortlMld,On Aepld City Rtno ~llmond S..llLeltt Steltlt St Louh SI Peul·T-SISl•-lt SOOll•nt Tulu Wa11\lngl.., Wl<llllt CALIN>ltlflA Apt)ft \lell.,, Ba-er11i.io B•rt•-8Nutn- BlgBNr BlllloP Blythe Ct lellne CulvH City EureO l'rt1no Lelle Arrowtwecl LtnCH ltr Long BMCll Los Altflll• Mtrytvllle . - 13 100 '' 13 15 71 9S ,. fl IO IS .. 7• IJ 101 " " .. tOJ !OS " IO 100 110 7t 11 " t02 71 .. t1 .. t2 -rovl• -·-•lo MOflle,.Y Ml. Wllaon HMdltf Htw-l 8Nc.I\ Oalllet1d Ontario P•lm Sc>rtr>QS P•UO.N PHO AOCln AlvtnlOlt Atd Blu" Atdw-Clty Atno S.cramtnlo S..llnu S.n 8trN<dlno S.n OltQO S..n Fr•ncl«o S..n Jott S.nttAne S•nlt B«b.wt S.nle Crur Stnl•Mtrla M S.nta MonlUI 71 $IO<ll1Dfl •2 Te~ Vall.-, » Tntrmat 5e Torrance '1 Yuma so '7 .. u n •• » u t1 .. ,, M n 7S '° .. ., ., .. Edmonton MonlrH I 011••• Toronlo V811COU ..... Winnipeg Ac•P11lco Bermuda logol• Curecao "'"-1 Gu-loupe H•w•n• l(l1191lon • Mon1t90 Bay -•lco CllV CANADA ~-.. - " " y ,, llM 77 " .. 110 90 " 9S 100 13 9S " .:i 97 11 S6 ,, ... 15 14 .. 14 0 Ill "' 11 '°' 10 11 11 II 73 7) II IJ M ,, ,, to • ., • ,. .:i SI SI " II •1 5S u ,. ts S2 M u S6 so s.. S2 M n SI SS 6S 6) S6 SS u SS H 16 63 IJ SS SS St n S7 St n ,. ,. IO IO n 77 1• IS SS ~ Sun, moon, tides 70 l9 TDOAY 7S 1"1'91 low 4!Jte.m. .0,,, " l'lr11 111g11 11 :De e.m. J t 70 Second•-3:41 p.m. 2:3 ,. Stcond lllQh t:se p.m. •.2 BURf RIPORT ... ..... 2 ' J J ... ~ 12 II u , . ·' .. ............... ....... ow t 2 ~sw 1 J ""SW • 1 2 SW I 2 SW Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, July 17, 1.981 s . Airport Oellf ...... , .. " ....... CASUAL CRUISE Four-year-old K athy Case of Santa Ana seems very relaxed near 18th Street Beach in Newport Beach, on he r raft with chair. If her craft proves un- seaworthy, her fathe r is close at hand. Accused cop slayer sent to Atascadero A former mental patient who was found innocent by reason of ins anitv IO the murder or a San Clemente policeman has been committed to AtaS<'adero St ate Mental Hospital Judge frees • suspect 1n pl~nt blaze SANTA FE SPRINGS (AP) A La Mirada man suspected of setting a fire in a chemical plant that sent toxins seeping through waterways down to Seal Beach has been ordered released pend· ing further investigation. George Dobozy. 23. was ar- rested after witnesses placed him near the scene of the Friday night fire in a s torage lot he re. where steel drums containing chemicals exploded from the heat. But no charges were filed against him within the 48·hour maximum holding period. and the Los Angeles County D1stnct Attorney's offi ce ordered tum released while the 1nvest1,1ation contmues. a spokesman sa1Cl Chemical residue from the blaze.seeped i nto the San Gabriel River. and down to Sqal Beach. where the shoreline \!fas partially closed after the fire. Superior Court Judge Everett Dickey ordered James Richard Hoffer committed nearly three years after Ri chard Steed was shot to death as the officer was responding to Hoffer's call for medical attention. Hoffer, 26. will be entitled to an annual review of his sanity to determine if he should be r e· leased . However. Dickey set the maximum com m itment for Hoffer at life, and county pro- secutors are predicting he will spend many years at the state facility. Hoffer. who was charged with. and plead ed guilty to. first- degree murder. was granted the insanity plea by Dickey earlier this month in exchange for his indefinite comm itm e nt in a state mental hospital. 1'he arrangement wa6 agreed to after two psychiatrists testified that Hoffer had suffered from severe mental illness for the past 16 years. Hoffer. who was j udged unfit to stand trial in 1978, has s pent much of his time s ince then at Patton State Hospita l outside San Bernardino. Hoffer was well-known in San Clemente and was nicknamed "The Rocker" for his habit of rocking back and forth on his heels while standing on various street comers in the city. study planned A s pecial com mlttee h scheduled to meet later this month to examine poulble lites tor a new ceneral aviation airport, and Oranae County Supervisor HarrleU Wieder wants it to torcet about Loi Alamitos air bue. Mr s . Wi e der and Concreasman Dan Lundrren .la· sued a statement recently con· tainlng a n opinion from the Departme nt of the Army that civilian -m ilitary uae at IU airfield won't work. Mrs. Wieder's 2nd District constituents who live near the airport have been opposed to iU expanded use. She said allowtn1 private planes would dama1e a re lations hip where neighbors and the miUtary curreoUy co- exist. • · 1 believe this finally lays to rest a ny ideas of usine the military base for a general avia- tion airport," Mrs. Wieder said. She may not get the same opin· ions from the county's General Aviation Site Selection Commit· tee which is seeking a new place for private planes. According to pre liminary studies, the county is interested in using an 8,400·foot runway, one of several at Los Alamit.os, for private planes. The Army currently operates a bout 100 helicopters at Loa Ala mitos. , Lundgren a nd Mr.a. Wieder ar e basing their recommenda- tions on a letter from Paul Johnson. deputy for installations and housing for the Army de· partment. "We have evaluated the joint m ilitary-c ivilian use of the airfield and find that civilian use \~ not compatible with military requirements," he wrote. The site selection committee is scheduled to meet July 30 to consider criteria such as wind and weather conditions, obstruc· · lions and hazards, development costs a nd air space availal>ility. The committee is expe~ to issue its recommendations to the county Board of Supervisors• by late summer. Besides Los Alamitos, five sites under consideration are: Santiago Canyon. San J u an Creek northeast of the San Dieto Freeway, the Prima Deshecha landfill off the Ortega Highway and Bell Canyon and Plano Trabuco in eastern Orance County Hearing d enie d SAN FRANCISCO CAP) Fresno's plea to the State Supreme Court to force the st.ate t o complete three freeways there under agreements reached in the 1960s ran into a stone wall The court denied without com- ment a hearing on a Court of Ap- peal decision that upheld a rul- ing for t h e Ca lifornia Transportation Commission. I Toy soldier We're List~ning ••• brings $245 LONDON (AP> A 15th cen· tury toy soldier on a charger ha~ brought a world record $245 in a sale of toy soldiers at Phillips auction house The price was a record for a single lead model figure. The previous record, also at Phillips. was $168 paid in November 1979 for a model of a village curate. Whal do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call the nitmber below and your message will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24·hour answering service may be used to record let- ters to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors must include their name and telephone. number for verification. No circulation calls. please. Tell us what's on your mtnd 642•6086 ONCl•A•YIAR SALll ·· HAMMOND ORIAllS SAVI 9200 to '3000 WHILE ·THE~_ ~~ST OPEN SUNDA y ~L-. -· I 2 to 5 SAVE 5695 RK. '16tl.OO MOW 599'9" ~ SAVE '1295 IM. 'J7tl.OO MOW$2199" I I J s Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, July 11, 1981 OOIT~OO~ . ~ftssle raging : . . pn unm1g ....... ~·ants ~ l WASHINGTON CAP> -A dla· j>ute within the Reaean ad· . ministration over admitting up to a million mostly low-wage 'foreign workers Into the United tStates e.dl year Is holdln1 up a •new immlgraUon policy. After two unsuccessful meet· •lngs on immigration, the Cabinet was t.o try again Thurs· $lay t.o resolve the 1ueat worker f problem, as well as quesUons of ssuinl national work cards and relocatlns Cuban refu1ees. • White House deputy press •ecretary Larry Speakes told re· ~rters, however: .. Don't loot r any decision out of the abinet meetlng. ·· t! Administration sources who feq uest,ed anony m lty said askinc Congress to enact clvll penalties, but this raised the queati0rt of how employers could dlatlngulah Illegal workers rrom tbose entitled to work. To facilitate identity, the wk force recommended that all peo- ple enUUed to work, regardless of citizenship, obtain and show employen a new type of Social Security card that would be dff. flcuJt or lmpoalble to force. However, the sourC'cs said, Anderson and Health and Human Services Secretary Richard S. Schweiker objected, aaylna this was tantamount t.o a national Identity card inconsis- tent wlth President Reaean's campalen promise to make gov- ernment leas intrusive. Taping ·brings apology WASHINGTON (AP) -The State Department ha• apologized to the Senate ForeJp Relatlons Committee after an aide to Secretary of State Alex· ander M. Haig Jr. tape-recorded Halg's cloeed·door m~eting with the panel without Its knowledge and against Its rules. · , Richard Fairbanks, asaiJtant secretary of stale for con- gressional affairs. sald Thurs• day that the aide, Keltb Schuette, had made no effort t.o conceal the tape recorder clurinl the meeting last week and bad been unaware of the commit· 1tee's rules against recordina ex- ecutive sessions. The committee protested the use of the tape recorder after a staff aide discovered a tape cassette of the first half of Haig's testimony that Schuette apparently had left behind inad· vertently. :Agriculture Secretary John f~_lock and White Ho~se aide ~)Martin Anderson are advocalina f 1l bu1e pro1ram to 1rant rtom jliOe,()()C)...lo 1 mllllon temporary lMtorking )>ermlts annually up from the current 30,000. l· The Labor Department op· t!P<>ses the expanded proaram on t:1,rounds that guest workers may l~ecide to stay and compett for Andenon favors intensifying Border Patrol efforts to halt II· leaal lmmlgrollon. according to the sources. He refused to 1pt1ciry his position. One source said the ad· mlnlstrutlon may simply let Congress decide what type of employer sanctions and Identity card lo establish: WET LANDING -Dressed in medieval cos- tumes, two participants of a traditional ''fisherman's stabbing" festival topple each .......... other from boats in Ulm, West Germany. The winner is the only one who remains standing the longest. Fairbanks said that after the committee protested, the tapes of the rest of the hearing were destroyed and a fprmal apology was sent to the -panel with the pledge that "it won't happen again." .. . j o b s a g a i n s t I o w · s" I II «' d • Americans, the sources said. An administration task forN> t recommended last month that 1 President Reagan ask Congress t..lo approve a pilot program lo al· low 50,000 guest workers. prin- .A third major problem has been what to do with nearly 900 C'u bar\ refugees still at Fort Chaffee. Ark .. and about l,ID> with criminal records being held in federal prisons. Indexing amendment passes Schuette was unavailable for comment and his office directed all questions to the press office. Haig appeared before the committee on Wednesday last week to discuss his recent trip lo the Far East. Speakes said. however. that the Fort Chaffee issue was not on the agenda for the Cabinet discussion. Measure would.adjust tax rates in line with inflation The .committee permits only the concept -bas been endorsed its own stenographer to record by more than half the members testimony at executive sessions cipally Mexicans. into the coun· try each year. Block and Anderson are say- ing it "is futile lo erect strict legal barriers against a desire by American employers to hire willing aliens for menial jobs that U.S. citizens won 't take, ac· cording lo sources. E~ployers. who complain that current rules are too cum· bersome and restrictive. are lob- bying hard for more guest workers, the sources said. Anderson said report's that he is pushing for an expanded pro- gram are "not very accurate." He declined t.o discuss his pro- posals beyond saying.. "I'm try- ing t.o present a wide range of options to the president. It's a very complicated Issue ... Part of the Cabinet debate concerns penalties for empl<J$ters who hire illegal aliens and how to enforce .the penalties. The task force recommended The administration has prom- ised to find a new location for the Fort Chaffee group. And in what could set a precedent, the U.S. Court of Appeals in Denver has ruled that the others cannot be jailed indefinitely. The administration has looked at about 10 different sites. primarily at military bases. to house Cubans and serve as a re· ception center for any future refugees. No selection has been made because of the cost of re· habilitating some sites and op· position from residents of the areas around the sites. -"' Exhibit .protested LOS ANGELES CAP> -A grOIUJ of demonstrators paraded in front of the Lbs Angeles Coun· ty Muse um of Art to protest a modem art exhibit by all while, all male a-1.ists. WASHINGTON <AP > - Senate Republicans overcame opposition from their party's president and Democrats across the aisle to approve a formula for automatic tax cuts in future years to offset inflation. Sen. William Armstrong. R· Colo .. sought to add the amend· ment. which was endorsed by the Finance Committee, to President Reagan's plan for a 25 percent. three-year, across-the- board cut in personal income tax rates. He succeeded on a 57.40 vote. Although Reagan, supports in· dexing, he does not want it tacked onto his tax-cut plan. But Armstrong's amendment is popular In both parties and the concept has been backed by a majority of the House. Sen. Ted Stevens. R-Alaska. a ssistant GOP Senate leader. said Republican se nators had analyzed White House opposition and found it lacking. Under Armstrong's proposal, personal tax rates. the Sl,000· per-person exemption and the standard deduction would be ad· justed in step with inflation as meas ured by the Consumer Price Index. starting in 1985. For example. if the index rose by 10 percent in 1984, the follow· ing year the Sl,000 exemption would rise to $1.100, the stan· dard deduction for a couple would rise to about $3.750, and rates would be reduced across the board by 10 percent. If the amendment becomes law, it would cut taxes by an estimated $37 .4 billion in the first year it is effective. In the House. meanwhile, the Ways and Means Committee neared the end of its first round of voting on a substitute tax-cut plan that Includes perrqanent re· ductions in only two years but has a greater share of relief for those with incomes less than $50,000 a year. Armstrong's indexing ame.nd· ment is popular in both arties; of the House. and the transcripts are closely Although~ opponents assail in· guarded to reduce the chance of dexmg as a surrender to infla· their being leaked. said Ed.San· lion. Armstrong said it will have ders, committee staff dirertor. the opposite effect. Under index· Sanders said the senators are ing, he said, "the federal gov-sensitive about control over the ernment will no longer profit transcripts beca"se .. they want ft-0m the inflation it creates. to ask candid questions and they Second. indexing will enable don't want to read those candid workers to moderate their wage questions in the papers the next demands , because they will not day ." need raises in the cost of living Sanders said the tape- just to keep up with taxes.·· r ecording incident occurred By cutting government rev-after the committee had reject· enues. Armstrong said, index· ed a request from Slate Depart· ing would force Congress "lo ment officials to permit one of choose between cutting-spending their own stenographers to be or explicitly increasing taxes. or pre sent to record Haig's borrowing from the public to testimony. finance spending." But Sanders said he accepta Sen. Russell B. Long. D·La.. the department's description of warned that it was a similar in· the incident as an accident and dexing of Social Security conceded that the State Depart· benefits that has driven the re-ment has a legitimate need for tirement system to the edge of transcripts of the secretary's bankruptcy. _________ t_e_st_i_m_o_n_y_. -------- Money 'clutters' transit office SPfCT ACULAR MID-SUMMER INSURANCE CLAIM IN COURT SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES CASE #284340 CHICAGO CAP> -The room looked like "the dice tables in an old World War II movie" -hun- dreds of thousands of uncounted dollars scattered on tables, near garbage cans and all over the floor. But the setting was th.e counting room of the Chicago Transit Authority, which has been down to Its last dollars in recent days. And officials of the financially struggling agency say up t.o $1 million may have been lying unrecorded in the office. "It was just a security disaster," said Jim Maurer, director of the Mayor's Office of Municipal Investigation. The p)les of money were found during two in· spectiong conducted by Maurer, CTA board member Howard Medley and other lnvestigat.ors. Medley had complained that commuters were choking subway and bus fare boxes with dollar bills. rather than tokens. More commuters have been using the bills since the baslc fare and transfer was boosted lo $1 on July 6 in an effort to provide more money for the system. Maurer sald he was "astounded" by what they found. · Dollar bills, he said, "were in the comers, un- der machines. where people walk. There were even shredded billJ In the parking area . . . lt looked like the dice tablet in an old World War II movie." Maurer said be was not accu1in1 any employees of stealing but he aaJd, "You could eaai· ly pasa money out of a second·noor window It you want. The opportunity/• Juiit glarln1." Jfe said in one o the two vl•it~. he walked through an unlocked door and w~a not stopped by anyone. A Cf~ spokesman, Blll Baxa, said that the agency has lts own security at the bulldlng and prot.ecUon ls adequate. He declined further com· ment. Since the visit, the police department tem· porarily has assl1ned two otflcen to auard the facility on the outside, but Maurer said that wlll not help lnlide. ln addition, he said, worken in the countin1 room didn't know how much money wu ·tn the facility. "U tbe)' bad a Ore there, they'd have no Idea what Uley lolt." Maurer aald. Both Medley and Maurer have atlmated the uncounted money at 9500,000 to 11 million. Several stacks of uncounted bUh were mark9d JulJ 2. Maurer -wbole a1ency bM no JurladicUon ever the crA -aald counUna room trort ... ap· i rently •eren't counUn1butabout112,500 1 day. HleJ utd the C'J:A hu hired the Seaway Na· onal IMk to betp• count at 1 fH of 115 fOf' eaclt 11.000 eomMed. ' 1:be t.ra.nalt 1y1t.m Hl'V• about TW,000 dally rlden. Oftlctall .. umate tM. 111tesn. part of the Rellaaal 'tranaportaUon AUtborlty. ..... a MO •Ulan deftclt. . The RTA ta S10I ,...._II Miit 19 II eUlien Md auppUen met b• ............... flr8I to ....... Writ. ..... ii# All thru the wth of July SAVINGS FROM 50°/o to 70°/o or IWCM'e. .......... ~ted ,,,_ ,...,... ttoc.k, ......... I• lillt4 at.ck. ..._, tt-... lllMte4 or .,... of • kW. Te .._.. "9 ' .. ,. •.ted NIK.._. of .... ..._ lt'1 ........ te .wt - •·~•,_....._tc ... .._ •. . . ELECTRIC and LllHTllll m Victoria Street, Costa Mesa CAO'ON.,_.._ .. jimd ............,,. Phone 646-3737 /646-8194 FORCED PUBLIC AUCTION A1 the .,,.,,,...., of the fOO'dt kav9 ""°' Y9't r••r1ecl ~tMH\ hom tM tntwt..-.ot CIOffttMl't'Y. they .,..,. b-.n to,oN to re~ merc:hand• .. to ,.,.. tfllOlloeV to ••Y cndttO"- f HANDMADE ORIENTAL RUGS lndudtid "' ,.,._ aUC1H»A will b• rv" tn 111 "'" end Qu .. k~ from rnGfl '"' •M'f'0'4 covrnnet AH ruet h, fWrlllC't condition A C~1f.c:at1 of AwlMfttNtlV' •tll M ..., .. tor •ac:h Pfolf'Ch ... FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE, THE AUCTION Will TAKE PLACE: . SATURDAY. JULY 18 AUCTION: 2 P.M. MARRIOTT INN 900 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH RUGS MAY BE VIEWED ONE HOUR PRIOR TO AUCTION • Term1: Cllh/C~ A, A • A llquidetor•AuctioMw1 I· I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday. July 17, 1981 s ·~ITillU~ . . Co ·do _ tax law ·upheld One-time charge of $1,000 per unit ruled v alid . SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Santa Monica's condominium tax law, which Impose• a one- time charge or $1,000 per unit, has been upheld by the California Supreme Court. The unanimous decision Thursday by Justice Frank Newmao reversed a Los Angeles County Superior Court rullng that held the tax was lnvalld because subdivision develop· ment and construction are mat- ters or statewide concern and preempted by the Subdivision Map Act. Eight condominium de· velopers had challenged validity of the tax and sought refunds of $138,~ in taxes paid plus in· tereat. The tax money eoes to the clty'e eeoeral fund. It applies to each new condo or condo- conversloo unit but not to pre· vlously sold unit.I. The high court said revenue taxes aren't prohibited by the act and it containa nothing to preempt local tax powers. Thus, it said, there is no cluh between the act and the or· dinance. ·'The taxation power is vital and granted to charter cities by the constitution," said the court. "Their ability to impose revenue taxes can be curtailed only by the charter itself or when in direct and immediate conruct with a elate statute 9r statutory 1cbeme. 'lbat the state hu pre- empted a field of statewide COil· cem for purposes of regulatiOCl does not Itself prevent local tax~ alion of the persons or activities regulated." The justices said local taxes generally do not confllct with state regulatory laws. "Because the tax power Is so fundamental, state intent to pre· empt it must be clear," they added. "We should not lnler that, because the Legl1lature when lt re-enacted a com- prehensive statute On 1974) failed to address this specific topic, it intended to pre-empt local subdivision taxes." SF Bay sewq,ge cleanup eyed Wat er agen cy told shrimp har vest still belo w norm al OAKLAND <AP) -Marine life in southern portions of San Francisco Bay still isn't back to normal. a biologist told a water agency. It then voted that San Jose should pay as much as $300,000 in civil fines for a billion-gallon sewage spill. "We are seeing recovery down there, but the shrimp harvest still hasn't returned lo pre-1979 levels," biologist Michael Rugg told the Regional Water Quality Control Board this week. Rugg, who works for the state Department of Fish and Game, said the spill or partially treated sewage followed a similar spill in September 1979 that "serious- ly affected" marine life in south bay sloughs where the sewage was dumped. The fines would apply to an 11-day 1980 spill at a sewage treatment plant owned jointly by San Jose and Santa Clara. The water control ag_ency vol· ed Wednesday to ask the state attorne~ general to pursue the penalties. The state is seeking penalties· of $375,000 from San Jose and Santa Clara in a suit filed after the 1979 spill. The plant is operated by San Jose, which owns 80 percent of it and conlribu.tes the majority or the flow into it. Phony stamps ·deliver letter BISHOP (AP) -A Sishop man lost a $2 bet when he received a letter from a friend in South Africa that bore phony postage stamps from the extinct nation of Latvia. , The water board ordered re- pairs to the plant after the 1979 spill. And although Anthony C. Bennetti, San Jose's senior dep- uty city attorney, admitted the city was lagging in making the repairs he said the city has cooperated. Three sent enced SAN DIEGO <AP l -A federal judg-e has sentenced three men convicted of plotting to bomb power transformers at National ~eel and Shipbuilding Co. to six months in jail and three years probation. MEDFL Y MERCHANDISE Richard Dudgeon of Mountain View Clop) sells protective masks for $1 ea ch during aerial spraying in ·Santa Clara Valley , while Wo l(ga ng .~ ........... Niesielski (bottom) shows his latest fashion for s praying scare. The s hirts are selling at $5 each. The letter look six months to get froi;n Mick Kerford of Johannesburg, to Rocky Bayless of Bishop. But it didn't cost any money to send, just lots of bard w.ork to make the envelope look autheo~c. . ''TH• WORLD'S LARGEST SPA DEALER'' -The bet was made last year when Bayless and Kerford were selling IBM com~uters in South Africa. Before Bayless left for the United States, Kerford bet him he could send a letter with phony t>ostage stamps from Latvia, which was occupied by the Soviet Union in 1945 and no longer prints its own stamps. ~ Kerford made. the phony slam~ with the perforated paper that borders a sheet of stamps. He used felt pen to draw a face on one stamp that resembled Benjamin Franklin with green skin. Boldly imprinted on the stamp was it's value, 55 zloty, which is Polish currency. Re made another stamp that resembled a nag, and put its value at 8 zuba, a currency he made up. " "Latvia" was printed in dark type across the top or the stamps. and Kerford used an IBM typewriter to create the appearance of post office cancellation or the stamps. He simulated a postmark with a dull red felt pen, blurring the let- ters to make them illegible. And for good measure, he placed an official looking "Use your post- codes" message near the postmark. He placed a fictional return address in Latvia on the envelope and a non-existent London address for Bayles~ on the front. 'l'hen he ctossed that out and..wrote a "forwarding actdress," a phony one or course, in South Africa. He crossed that out, and in different handwriting, finally put Bayless' correct address in Bishop. The letter looked like it had gone from Latvia to London, to South Africa. and finally to the Unit· ed States, when it actually traveled only from South Africa to Bishop. Just to be consistent, Kerford included a phony letter to Bayless from a fictitious Latvian relative, noting that his elderly uncle "sWl thlnp the Russians mean well, in spite of his tom muscles and the blood running down his face." J uary's an Nail Worlcs .a. s,.cw~ '40" • New I« o19aiipt·Uf9C1 -Noocr)'loe--<IO ~II Z4ff w. c.... ""'"""' Wt. A, ..... 645-J411 "11 ....... .............. 11 Le 111"47 ~----.. .,-o-•C•Stor•-"-"'' .. ' C09TA ...141•1211 , . .._. .... .......... -0401 -c.-.c..--ca... .... ,.,.,. .. ....,,..,., 9_, Auto & Homeown&rs ;rJ--• Ouotes By Ptlone r-.s .._ .. 14 .. 1114 .. 1Ji-J4JJ• ............ c .......... Cell 142-1171 • Put a f .. word• to work tor u. You can help yc>ur M~ carrier collect at time• conYeNenl to ~u ~Y t.tng vour money rHdY to the c:arrt« won't hew to call._., Becll• thlt wouno P9fSOtl 11 In bul6MM fOf hlmHU or '*"'"· .,.._. be ready -Ind W9ICtt .... big ll!'lle .tlic:h ._. .. Thet*)IOU.· SPECIALS GOOD ALL LOCATIONS r-' \. .. ,. ,r ...• , ...... _. ·~··:,r-. - bo,' • f 1 fil I , I •1 , a!.,, I \ ~.-~, • ~; : . : 4t :~ : t r -ti· I . . al.. I 4 tJ' { ' t ALL SPAS COME COMPLETEI CYPIEll 4710UNCOlN 11111411.1• 714 117. 7717 ,, ........ ,... .... FEATUnlNG Take your choice from 0 PORTABLES BUY T ODAY -USE TONITE O.A.C. ~ I Orange Coal1 DAILY PILOT/Friday, JYly 17, 1981 \ OC budget depends . on federal trimmings A pall of uncertainty is han1· ing4 over Orange County govern· ment's current hearings on its proposed $780 million budget for the fiscal year 1981. ' This uncertainty comes from 'Washington, D.C., where mem· bers of Congress, anxious to stay on the good side of President "X'1 and the electorate that put m in office, are making •drastic reductions in the federal budget , reducl\ons that, deeplte the thousands of miles involved, 'will hit locally. And with con· 'siderable force. Orange County budget analysts believe the county will lose about $3.S million in federal subventions for health, welfare and social services programs. 1The federal government will tighten the flow of money to the state which, in tum. will tighten the flow-to the county. Analysts cannot make ac· curate predictions. of course. because the exact type and size of cuts still must be acted on by both houses of Congress. But the county's legislative advocates in Washington have made it clear that the House and Senate versions of the budget are similar, and . closely reflect the presi4ent's initial proposals. · Cuts are on the horizon, no mat- ter who wins. What concerns county of· ficials is whether the I ederal and state governments will reduce the county's many mandated responsibilities (such u provid· ing medical care to indl1ents) at the same time the flow of dollars is slowed. Or.an1e County -and coun· ties throuahout the state and Uie nation -could end up wlth millions in extra costs if the man- dates are not lifted. Locally generated revenues would then have to be applied to programs that once were funded by money from distant sources. All of this bodes ill for the county. which, as budget hear- in'-s opened, was looking at a $14 million deficit. It may be able to erase that deficit before the hear- ings oonclude late next week. But that will only be the end or round one. This fall. when the federal budget figures are known, Orange County may likely find itself much deeper in red ink. :Tur~around typical Gov . Brown ·s political switch-around in the current con- troversy over the spraying of .malathion in an effort to rid I ·California agriculture or the Mediterranean fruit fly is rather reminiscent of his earlier abilities in reverse-posturing. Brown has gone at it on the fruit fly poison issue about the same as he did when Proposition 13, the Howard Jarvis property tax cutting initiative, was placed before California voters. . Many voters will remember .when Proposition 13's campaign opened, Brown was dead against it. He predicted dark and dire consequences if it was passed in- to law. He actually stumped around the state. urging its de- feat. Then some public polls came out that suggested Proposition 13 was headed for approval by the voters. Pretty soon, the governor was saying he was really neutral, and willing to abide by the will of the people on the issue. And by the time Proposition 13 swept to heavy victory at the polls. Gov . Brown was hailing it as a great victory ror the people. .By now, he sounded like a sup· porter all along. For people who remember all or that, Gov . Brown certainly sounds like the same Gov. Brown today. First, he addressed the Med- fly issue by seeing grave dangers in aerial spraying of the poison malathion on \he sticky·footed lit- tle blue-eyed flies . Then on July 8 he ordered a ban against aerial spraying in the Santa Clara Valley. Next, the U.S. Department of Agriculture declared it would quarantine 200 different kinds of fruit and vegetables from California unless ~aerial spr aying was used to eradicate the Medfly. Brown angrily denounced the federal government for in- terference in California a!f airs and "holding a gun to our heads." On July 10, the governor re- versed himself and ordered the aerial spraying. And where does Gov. Brown stand today? Now, he's asking the federal government for aid in fighting the fruit fly invasion and demanding that President Reagan declare three or our northern counties disaster areas. Thus our governor executes another of his dizzying 1~-degree flip.flops, going from denouncing the federal government for in- terference to now demanding emergency rederal aid to help pay for his bungling. The Daring Young Man on the Political Trapeze isn't exact- ly what you'd call a class act these days, folks. Robbins victory empt y Most Callf omians can prob·" ably understand the sense of re- lief that came to State Senator Alan Robbins when he was ac- quitted of all nine felony charges of sexual misconduct involving teen-aged girls. His smiling victory coun- tenance appeared on television screens and newspaper pa~es • following the jury verdict. While the process of justice may have been fairly served, at considerable expense to the tax- payers, it was far from a high point in California political his- tory. And the entire episode hardly leaves Senator Robbins a hero in his own time. Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Otner views ex- pressed on tn1 s page are those ol their authors and artists. Reader comment is sn1t1t· ed. Address The Da11v PHot, P.O. Box IS60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 64:1-4321. L.M. Boy d I Lone Ranget Maybe you didn't realir.e that the Lone Ranger and bis true friend Ton· lo durina th'\ir flnt year toeether 1lway1 rode double on one bone. Swift aa the wind they raced, the Ranier bent devoutly toward bi1 purpoee, faithful Tonto pa1ted oa bla back, cheek aia.Wt •b9ulder blade, arml around wa11t. 1'beo what wttb the Rancer's bone 1ettin1 tired and public oplalon and all, t.Mt thln1 cblnged, • all Udnca do, and Tonto cot bis own bone, Seoul. Q. You utd Mark Twain wu the flnt profeaiOul Wflt.T to 1ubmJt to a publl1her a typewritten manUIC!rlpt. How mucb did Twain ORANGE COAST MPilat ......... _,.., .. "" , .. , .. -...... , ..... c.------· <91''~· .... . 1•C:...~Uo- pay for hia typewriter? A. The sir.able sum then of $12S. Am now advised further it was the first typewriter ever sold, too. A Remington Model I. · Q. How much d~s world-famous heart sur1eon Christiaan Barnard of South Africa charge for a tramplant operaUon7. A: No cbar1e by him. He'• salaried by his holpital. The boepU.al bWI the patient about saoo. Writer Truman Capote i1 10 persnickety about accuracy ln b.ia man~riptf that he refUHI to let a tecretary type even hit final drafta. TflOtNI p. Ha le y PUbllsher s ¥ ' a ERA not just for women On the same day that President Reagan appointed a woman to the Supreme Court, the Wall Street Journal raa a page one story on how few women he has appointed to hllh places. Sandra O'Connor, the conservative lady from Arizona, will be the 42nd woman appointed to a position requir· ing Senate confirmation -about l /lOth of such appointees. Even as the appointment was being announ~~ municipal workers in San Jose were out on strike for equal pay for women doing comparable work as men. The term comparable is a bit misty but the overall fact is that women earn 59 cents for every dollar men make. The woman mayor or San Jose has re- peatedly said she sympathizes, but short of culling the men's wages. something the union is not striking for, where is the money to come from? WHILE ALL THIS is going on. the an· ll ·reminist women , the Phyllis Schlaflys, ue crowing that they've killed the Equal Rights Amendment. Given that there are but 11 months left lo gel three more states lo ratify. ERA's enemies may be right to have begun their back slapping self· congratulations or however it is that women in print dresses and brooches felicitate lhemsel ves. What will it be like when ERA of· ficially goes down, probably not to be re·enact.ed for the next 20 or 30 years? Will the strikers in San Jose have to stack their picket signs? Will we have seen the first and last woman on the Supreme Court? Belly Friedan, who can justly lay claim to being the rounding mother of the modem feminul movement. pre· diets that: ··Many women whose own power in the executive suite or political arena arose from the women's movement for equality in a sense that they have forgotten or never acknowledged in their own careers will most assuredly lose that power. Women who were ~' • • 1Af ,... --~ VOii HOHMAN ~ persuaded that the ERA was against the family, and that aJl they needed was a man lo take car e of them for the rest or their lives. will have reason to fear financial disaster in divorce." The recent decisions of the Supreme Court suggest that women may not have to wait a year for the great roll·back to begin. The court has ruled that wives or ex-servicemen are not entitled to any of husbands' pension money in the event of a divorce IT IS ASTOUNDING that ERA hasn't long since sailed through to ratification. Friedan attributes the failure to a "sex· ual politics" which has fostered "lhe false polarization between feminism and the family." The majority of women understand that ERA isn't anti·family. They un - derstand it well enough so that less than 50 percent or women voters chose Ronald Reagan to Carter or Anderson because or the ERA issue. But a very large minority or women have been badly frightened by the sex- ual politics that Friedan talks about: "The se'xual politics that distorted the sense of priorities of the women's move· ment during the 1970s made 1t easy for the so·called Moral M ajorily to Jump ERA with homosexual rights and abor- tion into one explosive package of licen· tious, family threatening sex." Friedan couldn't be more right. If ERA is to be saved it must be separated out in the public mind from the abortion fight so that people come quickly to see that there is notlting anomalous about being pro·ERA and anti-abortion. MORE DAMAGING YET, since a ma- jority in the country do ravor some sort of access to abortion, is the absurd con- nection between ERA-and the homosex· ual clamor. To the degree that lh~ homosexualists have been able to vamp and exploit the women's movement, it has been a political disaster The thought of women failing to gam a fundamental guarantee of equal treat- ment particularly in the work place/is frightening. Unlike what happened )n 1918 and again in 1930 and 1945 when the labor shortages evaporated, women can't be sent home. There is no home to send them to half the time. where there 1s a wage.earning husband he seldom makes enough to support both or them, and lastly. what the deuce would women do once they got back home? Check the size of the fast·food industry. Women haven't been taught the distaff arts. They don't hav.e their grandmothers' s kills. If you chained 'em to a stove they wouldn't know how lo use the contraption. A word processor, now that's a different matter. For weal or woe. the modern family is part time. full time. shared lime or flex time a two-wage earner family. We might think of passing ERA as a way lo strengthen it Tourist digestS a little culture too PARIS -Americans are always curious about bow the U.S. stacks up with other countries. France is ahead of us in bread, art, prices and fashion. • It's behind us in telephones, hardware stores , housing and giving up cigarettes. . WHEN OUR FRIENDS heard we were taking a trip to France, they want· ed to know what we were going to do there. l was evasive. I hedged. I even ,lied a little. I made up places we were goin1 lo see and cultural eventa we hoped lo attend. Q The truth of the matter is that when I come to France, r come to eat. Any museums I walk through or cathedrals I'm draaged into are stricUy extra. When I do any sight-seeing, I'm really just whiling away the hours until It's time lo eat again. David Schoenbrun, a network television correspondent in France for many years, once said, "ln the United States, It's bard to find a good restaurant. In France, it's hard lo find a bad one." The French have a different attitude toward food than we do. They don't wolf down a hamburger or a peanut butter sandwich to slay ~ve; they stop every- thing else they're doing and pay 100 percent attention lo preparing and en· joying a rµeal. ' NO AMOUNT OF recipe reading in our newspapers and no amount of por· I~'' -.1-DYJl_B_Bll-IY _ ...... ~ Ing over a library filled with cookbooks seems to produce anything like the same results for Americans . The French are so good with food and we are so bad with it that we ought to be ashamed of ourselves. Cooking seems to come to the French as easily and as naturally as their language. We've been here just two days now. We've eaten five meals and each seemed incredibly better than the last. The French honor each ripe tomato, each strawberry. They don't slide them toward you over a counter, they present them. They take obvious pleasure in putting something good to eat that they have prepared in their kitchen in front of you. They put it down and smile with pride. We had breakfast in our hotel room this morning. A good breakfast in a nice hotel room is the ultimate in civilized luxury. You can stay in your pajamas until after your third cup of coffee and then go about doing all the things you have to do to get ready to go out and face the world. Not facing the world before breakfast is a quiet joy. In most American hotels. breakfast in the room is a thing of the past. They can 't handle it, and if they do. you can't eat it. A bad breakfast for two can cost Sl2, and you're lucky if it comes before lunch. TODAY AT NOON we ate at a table with linen on it outside a cafe on the other side of the river. I thought eating in what Gertrude Stein, Ezra Pound. Ernest Hemingway and those other ex- patriate American writers called The Left Ban.le might give my writing some class. After I finish the column, I'm going to the Louvre for a while. There's nothing like a little culture between meals. Facts. not always as factual as they seeni Can a statement be true and decep· and put more aspirin in It. There ls tlve at the same time? Of coune. nothing ''stronger" about lt in any 'ropoeltion1 are not true or falte ln meaningful sense; what is important is how much you are paying for the- medicatlon per ounce, as compared wltb others. ,._ Tbis important information ls rarely lyl.ly I.I.II ~·::::.,Hailable. For Instance, the hllbly eap,cted N1w England Journal of ______________ ...__ Medfdlw recenUy ran a compariloo teat • on 30 antacJd brands, findinc that their themselves, but Ollly In relation to lbe!J' value varied mv.rHlJI with COit. context.. "John 11 a tall boy" may be Somethln1 called Ampbo1el which true ln Korea, but not In Kanau. coat nearly 8 cents per 10 miih1ram1, Too much advertlatsac tans advan· neutralbed only hol/ 11 mucb stomach tac• ol tbia loophole in lope. One o1 tbe acid u did 5 mlllilfams of Mealox moet common and naarant examplet II eo1Un1 lea than J'AI cent.I. ' the 1t.atemeat that a certain beadacbe How la the consumer auppoeed to remedy "c.'OlltalN the lniredleot moet blow Wt"' Generally we Ulume that doctors recommend." t.he more ~1lve brand ia more effec· TRIS I NGaEDIENT 'it simpl e 11plrln, wblcb aJmoet all heedacbe rem· edlH contain. But the Inference 11 that mott doctors recommend Uil1 particular Pl'OllrietarY ,ctrq, wtdcb La not tnae. Dodon clOe't can ntch brand 10U baPPID to bQ. AaoUMr nme4J ._..... k La '1moN paweribl" btHUM ICcoataim -ln· 'lttad of 800 mtlllcram1. But •~l auutacturer can make a ....._ pW Uve, or at least provides. eome plus value. But when 10 much of the COit of • dru1 soea into promotion and packalinl ud advertlalnc, t.here 11 no suarantee ol thla. W8SN YOU BUY AN SI Doredo CadWec, you a.re 1ett1n1 pritt1 mada tbe ume bale car 11 the purcUllr ol an OldllnOblle Toronado or a Buick Rlvtua. but an NYIU t.bautandl of dollara ~olu-y for a· few eo1- I metic remodelings and, of course. the Cadillac marque. Many people have thought they were getting a "better" en1lne, whatever that means; but it was revealed a couple of years ago that Ueneral Motors en11nes were intercbanaeable. A "fact'' is not as factual u we tb.lnk it Is, and truth in advertising depends on a 1Qod blt more than statirr1 a fact in laolation. In a two·car race between Amerlcl04 and Russians, Pravda once reported: "The Ru11l1n1 came In second, whlle the Americana were next to last." True -and deceptive. lllllYlll J otd Richard Nl"oa hawt 1ecret inform•· Uon about San OnofreJo uuae hJ m to move tbounncb of mllea away? R.S. ---· ----~------- Orange Cout OAILY PILOT/Frida)', Juty 11, 1981 Mayan sites threatened Looters motivated by high price paid for artifacts WASHINGTON (AP) -lh'1Y prhed arcbeoloelcal sites of lbe Mayan Ind.lam are beiq destroyed by looters motlvat«I by the blah prices paid for artifacts here and elsewhere, experts say. The problem is particularly critical in Guatemala -the heart of what wu once the freat Mayan civillution -where the present pace of lootln& could det~y ewl')'thlna of arcbeoloetcal value in leis than 20 years, they said. "It's a race between scholarship and thievery," said George E. Stuart, an archeologtat . with the National Geographic Society, which sponlOl'ed Thursday's briefin&. Stuart said .the looters often are winning the race, deatroyin& some sites before archeologists have a cbance to study them or authorities learn that the sites have even been found. Half the knowledge that could have been ob· tained about the mysterious civilization from Guatemalan artifacts, such as sculptures, pottery and wall carvtnas, may already have been lost forever, Stuart said. ''Guatemala bas become the most seriously endangered archeological area in the Western Hemisphere," added Clemency Cogeina, a Mayan scholar from Harvard University. "The scale of depredation there is appalling, .. she said, even when compared with looting in countries like Peru, Mexico, Ecuador, Colombia and Belize. _ The Mayan empire stretched through that area a thousand years ago, reaching its zenith between 250 and 900 A.D. The civilizatic;>n, ad- vanced in astronomy and mat.l)emalics, built huge cities and developed tne most complex writing .,. Firm's rocket draws interest HOUSTON (AP> -Officials of a Texas com- pany planning to launch it.a first test rocket this month are scrambling to accommodate a flood of media interest, which has taken them somewhat by surprise. "The engineers would really like to go to the launch stand very quietly," said Walter Pennino: spokesman for the Houston-based Space Services Inc. 11 But I convinced them that there was really no way to sneak up on the launch stand and fire this baby." • I 'fhe launch. tentatively set July 31, will be a crucial step in the company's attempt to become the first U.S. company to put satellites in orbit. Company President David Hannah Jr. said in May that he would prefer to work in private. But he said he was warned that investors would become suspicloWJ if it appeared that the company "(.IS being secretive. Access to the Matagorda Island launch site on the Gulf Coast will be limited because of transportation and safety problems, Pennino said. He said no more than about two dozen reporters would be allowed on the island. The reporters and broadcasters will join a herd of caWe, billions of mosquitoes and one al· ligat.or. The launch site is hardly Cape Canaveral. It is a sandy stretch of an island rancb owned by Sp~ce Services investor Todd E. Wynne, about 20 miles from Rockport, Texas. Reporters will watch the sunrise lift-off of the sub-orbital flight from a tent about two miles from the launch pad and from a boat offshore, said Pen- nino. who spent 11 years as director of public af. fairs for the National Aeronautics and Space Ad· ministration. Cattle .will watch from about lfte same dis- tance, kept at bay by cowboys carrying walkie-talkies and riding hones and four-wheel- drive vehicles. And unless someone takes action in the mean- time, an alligator will watch from a cow pond close by the 53-foot rocket. Ex-broker begins fraud case· ternt SAN FRANCISCO (AP > -A former milHonaire commodities broker, his dteam of becomin& a billionaire arms dealer shattered in a tangle of s~n<lles, was in federal prison at Lom- poc, commencing a three-year sentence. Richard Thomas W agS<>Der, 34, who was also convicted of state fraud charges, had been convict- ed in federal court with conspiracy \o commit mail fraud and wire fraud in the fleecing of 600 East Coast investon ol more than $3 million. Together, the state and federal authorities ac- cused Waggoner with bilking 1,a>O investors who poured $5 million into two swindles involving foreign currency and oil. Waggoner was sentenced to four years in state prison, to run concurrently with' the federal term. The state sentenc\ also reqUired l)im to make $50,000 restitution. State prosecutors sai{I the grand theft and securities fraud charaea aaainat Wagaoner grew from a ac:heme fnvolving a web of companies that had· promlaed inveaton astronomical returns for buyln& foreip currencies. Trial tesUmoay abowed no aucb currenc:y was ever purcbued. The testimony showed Wa11oner intended to me the proceeds ol the scam to finance production of machine IUDS for police .. encie. and foreip tovemmenta. Waqoner ned the country for 15 months before turniq himself In last February. Iranians only .. system in (tM New World before lt myateriou. ly vanJshed\ The experts said the core of the lootin1 problem is the high price fetched by artifacts ln the inflated international art market. Prime items, such as vases and bowls painted more than 1,000 years ago, go to art dealers, private collectors and museums in the United States who pay as rnuch as $50,000 each. Buyers often ask few quesUons. No U.S. laws ban import of such artifacts. But the experts said the best hope of slowi.ng the illicit art traffic-is a bill pending in the Senate Finance Committee, based on a United Nations' convention banning illegal commerce in cultural property. The measure is opposed by the American As- sociation of Dealers in Ancient, Oriental and Primitive Art, and others, who say each country should be responsible for protecting its own artworks. Researchers disagree, saying many de- veloping countries do not have the resources to protec.t their archeological sites adequately. Dr. Francis Polo Sifontes, the Guatemalan of- ficial charged with protecting bis country's sites, said in a statement that he has only 120 guards and lnSpectors to protect more than 1,000 sites. ............ "That is not enough," said Sifontes, general director of Guatemala's Institute of Anthropology and Hi.story. ",To stop this unfortunate traffic, we would need the whole Guatemalan army.'' Large done Maya monument was ~maged by looters who cut it up to tty to smuggle it /rom Guatemala. There are 3 -waYs s to sail with Chextra for free. 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TODA YI I Ask for Fleet Manager. * .. ,.. .. ,.. ,.. ,.. ,.. ,.. ,.. ,.. ,.. ,.. * * ,.. ,.. ,.. ,.. ,.. * * ,.. ,.. * ,.. * ,.. ,.. * * ,.. ,.. ,.. * * * * ,.. * * * * * ·* * * * ,.. ,.. * ,.. * * * .. .. * * .. * .. .. * * * ,.. if .. . ~ ; llllJPilld FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1981 FEATURES COMICS -..._..._ __________________ _.. ______ ....,. ____ .._~~ ............. Actor Laurence Olivier says 'he's fit as a fiddle .. 85 British· .people still cling loy;ftll y t o monarc~y LONDON (AP) -"Klnp," declared James I, "are JusUy called 1odl." Although attitudes have chanted since James ruled in the early 17th century, the bond betw~en monarch and subject remains secure ln modern-day Britain. Bereft of powers to rule, mem· bera of the royal family sUll command the admiration of the masses as they go about their chores u cutters of ribbons and launchers oJ ships. As recently as UMM, 30 percent of those questioned in a poll said they believed the queen was destined by God for her role, ac· cording to a survey of the monarchy's popularity. "Crown & People" by Philip Ziegler. ' As interest In the royal family peaks with the approach ol the July 29 weddinc of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer, antl-monarcblsts are a scarce breed. But they are not extinct. The socialist-led Greater Lon· don Council, whlcb administers the city and surrouncliP1 area, turned down its four tkkets to tl~e wedding at St. Paul's Cathedral. "I can't find a thine to wear," snipped the council's leader, Ken Livin1stone, who favors scrappl~g the monarchy. The parish of Clay Cross in Derbyshire announced It would celebrate "Republican Day" on July 29 with a theater production showing •'the other side of the monarchy." Horses, carriag e s r -ready for b ig day LONDON (AP) -The bride will ride Cinderella-like in a glass coach. Her prince will be drawn in an open state landau by four gray horses. A horse and carriage pro· cession from out of a storybook has been meticulously prepared for the July 29 wedding of Prince Cb.arles and Lady Diana Spencer. Eleven stately carriages, led by 32 ornately harnessed horses, will lake the royal wedding par· ty through the streets of Loudon to Sir Christopher Wren's renaissance St. Paul's Cathedral. Queen Eliubeth ll and her husband Prince Philip, as well as dukes and duchesses, t\arls and family members, the Master ol the Horse and the Mis- tress of the Robes, will be taken by horse-drawn cartta1e from Buckingham Palace and nearby Clarence Houae to St. Paul's, two miles away. Huge crowds are expected alon1 the route past Trafalgar Square, u the 32-year-old heir to the throne and his bride, wbo wiU bavejust turned 20, pus by. The crown equerry Sir John Miller. Is responsible for prepar· inl the 'bones and coacbeS at lb• RO)'al Mews and is moet worried about rain. ''I can't say there will be no problems," he said. "If it's a thundery day, we will wait as long as one can before starting. The queen will decide." An elaborate contingency plan is ready s hould a downpour make It necessary to convey the royal party in covered car· riages. "If it's wet, the reins slide through your hands and it can be difficult controlling the horses," said coachman Richard Boland, who will be dri vlng Lady Diana's glass coach, built in 1910. The same coach wu used to take the queen to her wedding in 1947 and for the wedding of her daughter, Princess Anne1 lo • 1973. bl:o~din wr:e s;:~:: ::e!:t;z years ago, will be setting up early to prepare Lady Penelope and Kestrel, the bay horses that will pull the coach. "We'll probably start around 4 a .m. that morning exerclsinl the horses and then feedlnt them about 5 a.m .," he 1ald. This will be the fourth royal weddin1 for the lrl•h·born coachman. He took part 1n tbe weddings of Princess llar1aret, the queen's sister; Prlnce11 Anne, and the Duchess of Keat. He will we~ an outllt ol Sold• buckled black shoes, white allk stoekln1s, scarlet pluab knee breeches, a starlet and 1olcl frock coat, a 1ray wl1 aDd trlcorne bat '°Pped with Olt.rlelt featben. When it's ewer. there wW bit a reward for tlae coaelamea, footnJen and otbera wllo ta. part. "We alw.,1, let a 11 .. Of ebam,.,...·• * _. ol 1"d· dla1 cake," ... .,,, IOI. . • • Royal baiter Willie Hamilton, a Labor Party member of Parllament, recently called the queen's divorced sister, Prin· cess Margaret, "the roya-1 floozle" and charged that she and her niece, Princess Anne, were ''probably the most useless women in Britain." . But such reaction runs counter to the flood ol public opinion favoring the weddin1 ex· trava1ania and the idea of royalty u the nation's link with bygone empire and symbol of continuity. Reporting Hamilton's tirade, even the Labor-supporting Daily Mirror commented : "Mr. Hamilton, why don't you just get lost." Opinion polls show support for 60 million pounds ( aoout $120 Britain's constitutional million). monarchy has been stable over This year the government set the past three decades. Since aside 4.25 million pounds ($8.5 1953 , according to author million) for maintaining royal Ziegler, the number of re· palaces and staff, but the Queen publlcans -people who want to and Prince Charles both con- chuck the monarchy altogether tribute substantial sums to the -has never gone over 11 per· national Treasury from their cent for any significant length of personal fortunes . time. A poll by the London Last month the Sunday Mirror newspaper News of the World surveyed 26,189 readers with found 77 percent in favor of the similar results: 89 percent said Queen's state purse alth~u'h they did not want the monarchy support was weaker for subs1d1z· abolished. _Ing other membe r s of her ram ii)'. Detractors complain mostly of putting taxpayer money into the royal coffers· in view of Queen Elizabeth ll's lax-free inherited wealth, conservatively valued at Although the Queen reicns but does not rule she has important Constitutional functions -she summons and dissolves ParUa- m en t, for example But * * * Bobbies . appeal/or crowd aid LONDON CAP> -Scotland Yard wants people in the crowd at the royal wedding to help the. cop on the corner spot suspicious characters, or. as one officer put it, "Adopt a bobby." "You've got a policeman there. Get to kno.w him," said Deputy Assistant Commissioner John Radley. "And most impor- tant, don't hesitate to tell the policeman immediate!>; about anything unusual.•' Radley briefed reporters on police plans for the July 29 wed· din1 ol Britai.n's Prince C.harles and Lady Diana Spencer. and said ·it wiU be ·'th' biggest security ooeratlon we've ever mounted.'r · There will be police dogs and bellcopters, closed-circuit television, building searches and some 8,000 police barriers. Bobbies will be stationed four to six yards apart along the two· mile route the royal couple will take from Buckingham Pal!ice to St. Paul'sCathedral. Radley said some or the of· ficers would dress in uniforms with medals and white gloves, while others would be in pJain clothes. He. would not-say exact- ly how many will be. on duty, but reports have said reportedly there will be more than 3,000. · Radley said some pfficers would be armed, and an will be watching the spectators. not the procession. "We are going to ask thetn to be disrespectful and to face the crowd," he said. But in view of the June 13 inci· dent, when a man fired blank shots near Queen Elizabeth U as s he rode in an official birthday procession. "it is a necessary precaution.'' Charles and Diana will rtde to St. Paul's in traditional open, horse-drawn carriages shortly after 10 a. m. Following the ceremony, t.l>e couple will ride back to Buckingham Palace and are expected to appear briefly at a balcony to greet the crowd. which most estimate will top one million. ScoUand Yard said it expects people to begin camping out for the best viewing spots as early as the weekend before the Wednesday ceremony. ''It will be a field day (or pickpockets,'' Kadner said. Asked whether all the aec.rlty wiU serve Its purpose and p:o- tect the royal family ud VIP 1ue1l1, Radley replied, "Im· possible to answer." . * ( * * popularity has no constitutional guarantee and recent monarchs have felt the sting of public dis· approval. Edward VIII, on6e highly ad· mired for eschewing the trap- pings of royalty, became the least popular monarch of the century after he abdicated in 1936 lo marry Ame ri can divorcee Wallis Simpson. EI i za beth · s gr arid fat her, George V. was said to have reached the height or his populari· ly during his Silver Jubilee of 1935. '"I "d no idea they felt that way a bout me," a teary-eyed George s aid al the lime. ''I'm beginning to think they like me for myself." PLAYING CROQUET AS GIRL Lady Diana-in 1970 Royal pair • • given tips • on marriage LONDON <AP ) .-The Archbishop of Canterbury said that he had given Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer advice on marriage, sex and family life. "Our discussion was not con- fined to the arrangements for the service," Archbishop Robert Runcle, head of the Church of England, said at a news c6il- f erence. The head of the Anglican Church, which has 65 million members worldwide including Episcopalians in the United States, said he had taken the un- usual measure of calling a news conference because of a flood of requests for interviews on bis meetinl with the royal couple. He jokingly told reporters he felt "uneasily poised between the cllcbe an<t. indiscretion." The archbishop added his voice to a chorus of advice from other church leaders. who have urged Prince Charles and Lady Diana to do everything from making love frequently to settl· lng r(>WS before going to bed. * * * Don't send RSVP ' tO this i·----ita tio n ADDI~:· Ill. <APl -otara. a., a 44·)'tar.-S pun1t• who peddled ean1 of Cble .. o snow In tbe 1971 bliaallfll. is 1enclln1 out ell· lf•ad eardl to JOO frieadl tbat read: · ~ Md,_ DMe of Edatbltrph. \'Ott ,,,. -iftvfftd to otlftld any of the en~• cu p GY-o commmtn!' ... . . , I ...-~~--....----------""T"'!'""""<-.ro~~-~.._...._,.....__-----*...--~--~·-----------._,~----..,.. .... _...,. • ...,....., ....... _..,...~, ............... ~ ........ s1111910~0 .......... ,~s ... ~0~1 ....... ,., ... , .. J .......... ROW oav IT 18 •.• It waa absolutely a01alin1 to plck up the paper only yesterday and learn that one al our brleht, informed and veteran cit)' of. ficiala here alone the eout la actually seeking another elective otQce. The person involved la Norina Hertq, two-term Colta Mesa c 1 COUil· cilwoman, first woman to ever have served on the Mesatown council and the city's first fem ale mayor. Ear~r, she bad an- nounced that this second term will be her last on the municipal body politic upon the Mesa. Now, however, we NHnoe learn from ·news dispatches that Mn. Hertzog has aspirations for lower office. She wants to get herself seated on a water board. Do you know what directon do on water boar<ls ? WELL, THEY SIT ABOUND in meetings and take one of the wettest ~ T-ll_l_U_RP-111-l~r, subjects there is and turn it into something so dry it could crack. You labor through a water board meeting for about six houn and after the first 3> minutes, your mouth feels tike you've been chewing on cardboard. Water board meetings are so dull that you can sit there and.drift off into the Land of Nod faster than Samuel I. Hayakawa. Directors at these meetings drone on about capacities in acre feet, linear re- quirements for pipelines, rates per 1,000 gatlons, bond surcharges and good heavens, that's all the exciting stuff. JUST WAIT UNTIL they get down to the routine matters, like reading the minutes of the last hoer and hummer. It develops, however, that the Mesa Consolidated Water District currently bas .a vacancy upon its Board of Direc· tors. This was created when the presi· dent of the board, Eugene Bergeron. re- signed at the first of thia month to fake a post with another 1f&ter outfit in the San Joaquin Valley. Bergeron obviously likes water sub- jects. . . County's interest, $132 nrillion ~ Orange County Tax Collector-Treuurer Robert.'.. Citron had some Interesting ficures for the county· board o( supervisors. In his annual report to the board, Citron, tile man in char1e of inveatine the billioaa that now through the county treasury, aald um week that more than $132.7 million in ioterest earnlnp were realized durinl tbe rtacal year that ndld June 30. The averate yield on funds beld bf eounty IOV· ernment and the 170 other tu1q a1encles (cities, school district.a, etc.) that me the treuury wu 15.09 percent, more than two percentap J>91D.b bl&her than the previou.a year, and four~ bitht!r than that realized by state aovenuneat:' "' Citron said interest accrued duriq ftlcal um was about $33 million more tUn accrued m ftacat ' 1979. I Citron said about $19 billlon flowed tbroiap Che treasury in fiscal 1980, about '2 blllloa mon than . the previous year. • Citron said the treasury worked witb 11 lft1U'ttJ dealers, 21 banU and aeven aavtnp ud loaa U• soclations in makine investment.a. Citron noted that, by awapplne certain MCUrltles before their maturity dates, about t5 sni1J'°'9 more in interest was realized tban woulcl have beeD ti the 1wape w~e not made. Fly detection in· Oregon low-key. But ..._ the top mu ,,......_t ol your water ~d leavH town, that ou1ht to ll•• 100 some kind al clue. CDTAJN oBsE&VEU ol Harbor Area poUticu affain mflbt 1uapeet Mn. Hertq .. matlvated to Mek appoint· ment to the water dlltrict poll beeauae she once advocated · comolldatin1 the water ouUlt with city aovemment. But she aaya this la now a dead iaue. It mipt be mentioned that a water dl1trtct board member eeu paid 50 bucks per meetin1. But I'm sure that's not what motivates lln. ffertZ91 either. That's like saytna you're willln& to take $50 to endure four houn of the Chinese water torture. There's that word water .:f:1· I Norma wants the job for the good ~ the community. 'lbat hu to be it. That MUST be it. Water district directors la\>Or away without applauae. Few people know they exist and fewer people appreciate the lon1 hours and tedious duties they perform so we can all shave, shower or do the dishes. THE ONLY 'nME moat of ua even think about a water district is when a gusher appean outside in the sidewalk Of When we crank OD the tap and the stuff that comes out looks yellowish and smells kind of fwmy. · Pardon m.e now, but I think I've eot to 10. My mouth feels like cotton and my lip's are starting to crack. FoW -., Altl.r'• &Ill featuring a com~ adjustable and foldable 24 x 30• laminated butcher block tM*l by Hnh. The sturdy saeel base has a brown baked enamcJ finish. Reg. 44.95 IS4.18. Ollllic folding chK In maleh· Ing brown and ott. colors too. R.g. 12.95 19.11. Artist's flex lamp also In brown 8'ld odwr cobs. t .. n program.hacked County approves $13 million output for improvements 8y •a&DEalC& 8CHOSMEHL ........... A $2.1 mllllon project for de- 1l1n ot a new, much.en1ar1ed pa1aen1er terminal beada the lilt of John Wayne Airport buqet Items authorized by the Oran1e County Board of Superviaon. The board, without debate, 1ave tentative approval Tbura· day to a $13.3 million spendin1 pro1ram that will finance airport aclivitlet durin1 the fta. cal year that be1an July 1. Aa proposed in the recently approved airport master plan, tbe new t.ermlnaJ would consist of about 213,000 square feet and would be spacious enoueb to handle 6.1 million passen1ers by 1990. The existing terminal, about one-sixth tbe size of the pro· posed facility, ls conaldered ex- tremely overcrowded by con- temporary airport standards. It was desisned to accommodate about ~.ooo passengen annual- ly. About 2.5 million paasengen UJed the airport durtne 1980. In all, the board 1ave ap- provaJ to $6.8 million ln desisn and construction work. Included was a $1.5 million project to in- stall a new airfield drainage system that will be part ol • lareer project to extend the airport's jet runway 737 feet to tbe north. The runway ls now 5, 700 feet Jone. Extemlon of the runway will permit jell to lift off at a distance farther from homes toutb ol tbe alrport, and tbUI, help reduce noise impact.a, ac- cordlnl to airport officlala. The board authorized $128,000 for dealsn of the runway ex- tension; $81,000 for deaitn of 1tren1thenin1 the runway <• project neceultated by the ID· trodoction ol Ule new, le11 nolly but heavier OC-9 Super 80 Janie Arnold on county women panel Janie Arnold of Newport Beach, a eivic activist and mother of four, has been named to the Orange County Com- mission on the Status of Women. Mrs. Arnold was appointed by Supervisor Thomas Riley as 5th District representative to the group. She replaces Vivian Clecak ol Laeuna Beach, who recently resigned. An U -year reside nt of Newport Beach, Mrs. Amo!d has for the past two years served as executive director of New Direc- tions, a residential facility in Costa Mesa for care of female alcoholics. The Commission on the Status of Women is a county-sponsored organization that examines women's issues in Orange Coun· ty and recommends policies to the boa.rd of supervisors. Jetliners); $213,000 for deatp of new pa.rkin& facllltiea in the so-called .. clear zone" north ot the runway and the San Dluo Freeway; '295,000 for dealp of • new tralflc circulation system surroundinl the airport; $115.000 fpr deal1n of taxiway• and private aircraft tiedowm that would be iqcated on the airport's west side, and other deslsn ex-penditures for related, but rel- atively minor, proJectl. According to budget docu- ments, about $6.8 million of the $13.3 millloo in expenditures will be offset by fees the countJ. col- lects from commercial air car- riers and concessioa'aires at the airport. The board also approved addi- tl on of one positibn to ~be airport's existing 25-meO)ber staff. The airport operations s upervisor will work with private pilots, fixed base operators who provide repair service and pilots' schooling, and the commercial airlines. The budget. for fiscal 19'lJ ls about $1 million less than' the $14.3 million that was authorized for fiscal 1980, according lo budget documents. Hospital to pay STANFORD CAP) -Follow- ing a federal audit \hat lound overcharges and double billings, Stanford University Medical Center has agreed to repay $1.5 million in Medicare fees. it was revealed Wednesday. C. AD Pwpoee Table Set . 0 Staning a laminated butcher bkxk. table by Wallace C measuring 24 x 32• Use ii for drafting . crafting or o use It as an easel The table Is supponed by a contem- 0 poraJY chrome base Reg. 54 95 S38.88 Folding -~~~~~~:l!lil~:!!·~~Ll~~:._JC chair. Reg. 12.95 19.88. Compl.ete the cast with 4 () an artist's flex lamp. Reg 28.95 112.88. T()(al package. Reg 96.85 0 A.on Brothen Futured Speda.I $58.88. '~~OJJJJ~~~JO~~~~~. (.. (.. (.. (.I (.. ·-_,_, ...... _ -. . --;-· .. I ••• ... • f' I .... 119 • '4 .... --ils on p a~s county tlllk " ~ O. C. HUSTINGS .. o.tty,.... ..... .. . 11 • San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson, who seems to " •be spending a lot of lime In 9ran1e County lately, '• WUI be ln Newport Beach again Wednesday. 11 The gubernatorial contender will speak on the "V~esent and future needs of California during a "' own Hall meeting at the Newporter Inn. For "' servations, caU (213) 628-8141. ,, .. , ... 1 1 CONGRESSMAN BARRY Goldwater Jr. ~ilJ "'add ress the Laguna Beach chapter of the California Republican Assembly on Saturday dur· !i "tdg a reception beginning at 5 p.m. at the home of il:ff8rry Lawrence, 2345 South Coast Highway. ·;·" ; Assemblywoman Marian Ber1eson.r. state At· "'t6Tney General Deukemejian and ;:,en. John 1~3chm1tz will also attend the fund-raiser. r 1 ' Tickets are $30. For reservations call 494 -4602. ••• • t>bi· LOIS LUNDBERG, chairman of the Oran1e 11 .tounty Republican Central Committee, bas '~\?co me a m ember of th~ Newport Harbor HC°'ftlepublican Assembly, a un\f, of the statewide '1California Republican Assembl>'. ~J.C, •. • t1·q•, THE ORANGE COUNTY Chamber of Com· vj!dter ce is hosting a reception Tuesday from 5:30 to 7. 'p.m . .All the South Coast Plaza Hotel to honor ~1ttiem bers of the John Wayne Airport Commission and Airport Management. J'\"• Tickets are H . For reservations call 634-2900. 'J• ., ••• J ASSEMBLYWOMAN MARJAN Bergeson will I . l f be speaking Monday at a 7:30 breakfast with members of the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce.. The gathering will be at c hamber of· ' Vices. '111 ' She'll talk July 23 during an 8 o'clock \~reakfast with the Laguna Beach Board of ,r!<ealtors at the Hotel Laguna. 1 • And Mrs. Bergeson will speak to Costa Mesa ~ ''Rbtarians at noon July 29 at the Mesa Verde Coun· ti:y Club. ••• POUTICAL CANDIDACY and community In· ...lLOlvement will be the topic or a conference Aug. 8 .. from 8 a.m . to 4:30 p.m . at the Registry Hotel in ~vine. :r.. Speakers at the Orange County, National ")'(.omen's Political Caucus event will include -M arian Bergeson, Margaret Grier and Karen ..Peters, former NOW stale coordinator. j , Pre-registration is $20 or $2S at the door. Por ormation. call 776·2343 . . .) I • 'Connor clwice ighly popular I' l~ I :j :"> NEW YURK <AP> ._ By better tbao a 10·1 I rgin, Americans approve or President ~ agan's choice of Sandra D. O'Connorrto be the ~ii st female justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, an : t sociat.ed Press-NBC News Poll says. • . 1 t Even majorities or the Americans who oppose .1 rtlon and those who oppose the Equal Rights I j. endment approve of tbe thoice of the Arizona 'ppeals court judge, a sharp contrast to the op-1 ~sition s he faces from the leaders of conservative groups that are anti-abortion and a.nti·ERA. J Nearly two-thirds of those questioned -65 Jtercent -sald they approved or Reagan's choice of Mrs. ·O'Connor to fill the vacancy on the nation 's highest court created by the retirement o r forme r Ju s tice Potter Stewart". Only 6 percent said they opposed the nomination. Twenty-nine percent or the 1,599 adults interviewed nationwide by telephone Monday and Tues· I . ~ were not sure. , Mrs. O'Connor's nomina · f'CONMO• lion must be passed on by the I Senate. with the hearings expected in September. I • Support for Mrs. O'Connor was strong in every 91ajor g r6up, a lthough Democrats and con- ' ;~rvatives gave slightly lower levels of approval I l)an the public as a whole. · In Washington, support for the nomination has j ikewise been widespread, with the only major op· I foSition coming from the leade~of conservative (fiOups that oppose abortion o . the ERA. The llteaders of those groups say Mrs O'Connor's rec- !iord in tbe Arizona state Legis ture shows sbe '1supports abortion on demand and the ERA. Mrs. :,o :connor has not officiaJly stated Her views on '11eilher issue since he r nomination. ' . ~1 ew West' name i.,hange planne·d~ I LOS ANGELES <AP Y -New West !magazine's decision to chanae its name to !California Magazine, effective with the October is· sue, is part of an "evolutionary development" 1begun six years a10 when it was a New York :magazine look-allke, a spokesman said. ! New West, owned by New York ma1azlne lwhen it was launched in 1975, wu sold last Aufuat lto Mediatex Communications Corp., which also ~lishes Texas Monthly and ls involved In book bliahing. New West wem from bl-monthly publication to nthly this year. About the same ~me it took on subtiUe, "The Ma1aztne ol Call!ornla," and ~Ian puttln1 out one edltioa for the entire •\ate stead of separate Northern California and utbern California edit.ions, said the ma1uJne'1 bllcity manager, Gici Vaill. The name chan1e announcement was mack by e ma1utne'i edttor-ln-cblef, WUllam Broylet ''" I • Slnce the switch to monthly publlcatioa, New est'• pald circulation bu dropped to 280,0IO I*' ue compared to 290,000 u a bl·mont.bly, VaW ~ d. .. • "' • f •• • •••••••• ON DUTY Secretary of the Navy John Lehman will put in two weeks of naval reserve duty this month. He's a li e uten a nt co m - mander in the re- serve on "non-pay" status since becom- ing the Navy's top civilian. Irvine woman wins grant \ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, July 17, 1981 ' .. lb-the fll'St time in history ... Sinclairs famous paints at these low prices. t ( c ! The f1nest ~..,_you can hl\Y ... cboice ~tbe ~ .,.._,. h tid)'W'fl ... aowat lpedal price9 iw)'OUt HUGE viALLPAPER DISCOUNIS! PAINT SUNDRIES SAVE 20°/o Save now on Sindain entire lb1e ~famous J>Bir!ts at this Spectacu.1ar 400> Off Retail Sale! SALE:. NOW THROUGH JULY 28th WESTMINSTER-NOW OPEN SUNDAYS·: 9 AM-5 PM 15152 Golden West Street ' (n4 ) 8~4-4433 LAKEWOOD COSTA MESA SANTA ANA WHITTIER 3832 Lakewood Blvd. 1901 Harbor Blvd. 31)1 East 17th Street 16333 E. Wh1tt1er Blvd. (21'3)925·2241 (714)642-9912 (714)547-5585 (213)691-1791 (714)523-0200 STORE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:00 am-5:30 prn . SATURDAY 7:30 am-5:30 pm Susanna Chan, 17, of ~======================~~==========::c:=====================:!================================!!!.. Irvine , has been award ed a $1 ,000 schotvship for winning first prize in the annual essay contest o f the Ora nge County chapter of M e n sa , an organization for those in the top 2 percent of the population in terms of intelligence . Victoria Bane or Costa Me sa w o n a $2 00 scholarship and Nancy Fox of Mission Viejo a SlOO scholarship . EARN AND LEARN! Deliver the Daily Pilat Boy's and girl s 10 or older Ca ll 642-4321 and appJy t oda y . I Dai'y Pilai I I 'I • I • ' I ' • • . . ' Otano. CoMt DAILY PILOT/Friday, July 17, ,., rbed W 1; ... ;,, memor:ns ~-:.:=.: =:.=:: PUIWCNOTICS PV•::mCE •• "'~ ~ WIMHTAT11MUT .... tTAftM .. f l'ICTlhWHUl .. •M ..cmCllOllllAU TM ........ --.. .... ,.,. ........ --.. ... .... Tiie •• ~-::::a:i:....... ... ........ . apanese seek reparations for WWII imprisonment 1 -rN:~ .. ov•. &.TD., 1•• "Tu':u.., v.c•T•o-. ••T ...... ~~ ,,u...... .....:-::-::r":":!:' ..-=---~..,...,•twit :a.:=...~=w•= .,,...., •. •ttt. ~·~ _, ,__. .......... ., ... { 0 G P -~• L-£ llM-.C: ·-~ .._w...a Ito¥ l-..... '""' Com MtctW ~'UCll, , .... ttH ..,., • , ..... c.llWMt 01111 C. .. ..,..,.., llD L S AN ELES <A > -Nev---.en Loftt .---.,.. .u •--e•D-r. · tt11•.w•~_Ni111u., ....... ee, ..... '! ... " •••• 1=&.~:'r. ••· ..:C:-~"'-UMACM.ut0. ;.,-:-z:=t.::::~' Crowded barracks. Little Btellop, TM lucky ~ aat a munal DMM UU. ud batllroom ~~ •• ,-.... ·*• ....... ., =.=•· .. tw. "'• • .......,. ...,..., CA "" Au .... A ... -. """t111t• ... 1 Pflvacv. Del~. Stru1111·• to week'• JM>dce -eoou time to and .,.... auppU. were at the ---• Tilll ..._, *_...._ a-11. ~-. .... •..,. .. ' .... l d of • .. -.a..1-1. ............... Tillt ..._.It~ 11'1' 1111 i.. •-IM.., t11 llto ,_.k -1•M INI A ...... A-, UJ•k• a pew e after the old one try to sell thelr belool n11 for a en ...,. _,.. •. •• HeCW..,_11 .,..,.., ... .....,. .._.,..... tNcll. ettlf9nllt ttwe.,. WH deltroyed. fraction ol tbelr coel or a&on Te.t btariDp are belal COD· ""'' .........,. -,.... .... .._,..,,,_ .-.c:a.n.,.._._ ""'' *"' ""·" tt.,,._...,.1 . ..t u d ,,... ..._ ,.._ Co '-·'-CWMy ~ ef 0t..._. c-t'I' TIMI ........ flltlf WMll -c::: ......... -111411 .. IM 0a1e•1~10N 0 .. ""°"altTY' t Tbole memoriee of World War them or •• ve them away .• ott ucwu 'lfT ~ mm--OD ,,_ 14, ""· C.-•• c... • ..... c-e, 1111 ., "',"a..." or.. c-ie, 1111 Ml_,,_ ~ ,,_ •Mt• ( IJ relocation camp• are re· cot far 1... Wartime lteloeaUoa aad later· ' ,,...14·""· • .. ,,_......, • ....., ..... , ..... "'. I ___.... of Q 11'11111 ..... QrMll ca..t Oell'I' llll>tltC, 1'*"9 .,,._., 0 IN WI nrfactna u a f•ral panel ID "Thebarrackawerejut-ment ftllw,utabU1bedby .1--.•1.1t.11.tt11 ...... ,..,....0r..,c.ec ... ..,......, .M~~~.~ ... c.·u•••~• • 0:.,.~~··1•1 Waahlnston. D.C .. bolds hear-covered wltb paper, 111d tM Con1re11 to lnvest11ate tbe 1-----------,,_...,,,...,., tt. "·..., ...,.. ' • • • 1111.ei '"'*'.,... 0r-. GMM o.11y .,,.._ ln1• on possible reparatlou for duat bit• ln tbrouab tbe treatmeat of Japaaue· "19UC NOTICS PtJBUC NOTICE J..i,17.u.1"' •1., .. ~ the three-year lmprilonment ol crackl," Cbuman 11ld. "You Americam ln t.be byaleria that "18UC NOTICB PVBUC NOTICE ~ 120,000 people of Japaneae aD· could to to·sleep clean at nllht followed tbe .Japan .. e attack on ":Z.:.:Mt::.~• ....::==• J dstry Uvln1 on the West Coast. and wake up ln the mornlna cov· Pearl Harbor'. Tiit ....... ..,_ 1t-.. ....._ '=M11zr llOTia ""' .. ~ ... , ~--~ ''In the beginnln{• the 1eneral ered wilb a layer of dust. Eacb About 71,000 American• of ..,..., ''"' ......._..,... , • ...._ IMlk.......... ..,.c..., ..OTtaCN'TWtftl'llAU 1 . d h f b i f il -20 , ...... b -J d t •-· • •1CM ,,_UTIA DATA l\'1,IMe .... , ~It r1 t• Ott fll ~ .... • .... IM1M'eLC>MAN moo was s oc , o e na am y • ..._a •pace """'~ y.., apaneM escen were relJUl(;av coNtULTAHT, mu vi........... .u•ctt•o•MYl'UNO••· ,,111.,1•1111,111 .. c-"CllllllMtn ••:Jl"""•v stunned to the point that tbe peo-feet with a wood· burnln& pot· ed al<1a1 wlt!l 43,000 J•panese MllMtll vi.i.. CtllfWIU..., ..._.. ...... .,.. x, c:-. -.. ... Cit• .... ,, n ,. .. , Ori.,., c-.. o.. A_. 1i. 1t11, .-11 •'c1ee11 pie couldn't speak," sald Loi · · nationals, most of them U.S. •k...,.01w'191""9tlt,ntuvi. c.n.a1. .. .... "•:M '·"'··., .. ·-•·111··•••s...1,_.--.. ..... f "'n1ele• attorney Frank resident.a. =• .... ~ v1e1e. Gellfw*• wim--....."'°' ... 11 "r 111•"•"., .. ~11e11"'"·.,. i11e o..~c:.-.e.,~.1ec.t· n o c -.~ It._, ......,._..,tw:t;, CA"""· ....._......_..: M 111 • ._.. fll Wltlt SMc."""' 1 . "'uman, who at the time WU ln rest area To Jobn Selto, who WU 14 ,..,.....,_,,CMWc ... ..,tfllfl. Tlll1 ......... clM!ocW11'1'Mlft. A ..... AL 01' THI l'INANCI twle•Wl'--ly-.. ... StrMC), ""'' ......... .......... 01 .. AaTMINT'I DaClltOll ct.,• IMU ...._~.LOS ANGELES bis early 20s and going to law when be Wll placed ln the 1t1cew•c. """'" .... ._....., ~ CM'll6lle c••••u•...., "• Cilrel T 1 TL 1 "" o "• s T 1t "c T school. d camp, the hardest part WU that Tllft ........ -..... ... ... ™' ...._.. -, ........................... ....._... COltl'O•ATION .. hltlllllll .. 81• ents set b ouldnotund tand c...t'l'°"11fl0r ..... ~t11.lt///y c-ty ~ ef °' ..... Ct!Mt'I' M NOTIQlll'Ult'"9lt.IV•1tt11111 ,,...._,..-ra.-...r111 ......... , . • People would go through the re e c era . "· 1,.1. .. ....... ""· ........ -..... .. ........ .., ICINNITH I .• l'ILDMAN, • MM· motions -taking care of their ''My mother would cry at the .,,..., ,.,_ ,,_., __. -•....,."' , ... -• 1111 .... _. ...-• ~· h • ' 1· f e ' h dbl UI. ... d th d t ""*'1--~ ..... (MtlOflly .. ltee. ......... ClrMttc:-ltDelly tllfaty(..il .......... _f tlft'tY,_.,..,.......,..,,.,1., C ildren, eating, sleeping -but po ice air ar S p, uae wie ays e UI J,,..,11,l4,lf, ..... 1.1t11 JttMt. J-.. ·'-'•1. ... 11,ltll -..i IMttw. ..,.,..,_...._Dm.lft ... 1as11, tbey were stunned by the swift· storms came and my motber t-----------.1.-----------' e1L1aN "· ""'""•v. "••• n1t et omc••• 1tec:or•• 01 • nes~ with which they had lost had to ~e aU OW' clothes af. ~~Ca•• ~~ ,.. ... ::4:: .. ~ .. ~~u • .91:"...:.; everything they had worked for The Newport Beach poUce de· terw ard and wash them ~ J,,., "· 1t11 l•llMI •osw1u. s. .10HH -HELENE a11 their 11ves : homes, cars, partment and residents tn the band," said Seito, director o1 t.tie For ccnnplete ad copy =~.!~~~~.:.·.:~-.:: ~-farms. fishing boats," he said. Newport Crest area of N~wport Japanese-American Citizens PVBUC NOTICE ,.,,., .. Js.to pme111 1111er'9it! C hum an wa s sent to Beach will host a "police fair" Lea.rue in Los An1ele1. "But Hl!1ttittr WILLIS •114 LILLUI' bl S t d e and art sorv~ces llOnCI IWtTINe t tDI WILLIS, .......... -wlle ea jelftt~ Manzanar, a hot, dusty camp l s a UJ'1 ay. there were times she would just v 1 .. HCE•l"T °'° ,.ltOl'OSALI: SM ... ~ .... ., _.. • .,..».oo pe11:en1 surrounded by barbed wire on The get-together, which beetns start cryins for no reason that I ~ .... • r..._.., .,. ""' •111e<•••: ..,. M1CHAl'1 00Lo1NG t lo will be t ed Id f/f ,,,,_, 0.-fll .. ....,__ 1ft .. fll· llM SYLVIA GOLDING, .......... #tG the eastern edge of the Sierra a a.m., s ag on va-cou aee then. Jt was a sense of ad rt . ll lon 1iu ., .. 01., '*" lecMM _. 11100 "'!'" "'°"" 1-.a •• .. en \INCi•.._ cant land OD Ticonderoga Street hopeleasnesa al havln1 lost ve isers a a g "'"'"' .. --· '"'' ... · C•lllor111a u .u perc ... 1 111••r•t1 ; U( a~uperior Avenue. ever............. tVl• illlW ,, ........... ,, .. ., J•. 1•1. CATHllllNE TOYE •11d I ETT • Guilty plea told :t UIUI. let Ille ClllllllnltllOfl flf UNweni!y Hltll ltlll0, ........ -~ .. joliolli be idea, residents say, is to The mildest reaction came th O ~-C k1tee1...., UtMMe u..,.-. n. ~. • ..... ....,, • ..., iu1 ~';• get community support for • from firat-1eneration lmmi· e range oast =~,=~..:._._ ... me.-. =::.::;.::~:.:,!::.;~. SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -The neighborhood watch procram ln grants, who untU 1952 were not ouciii1 .. T10N oF won: u.,. .., .. ,,,.,. ceN111 ., ... uons _.,,... id t f S L d 0 Steel tbe Cr-t area pe ltted to ..__ A ti l ,, ..... f'T«llo Fleld L1-11.,.· ... ,...,, -tc• of.,..,,•• rec:er4'd pres en 0 a an ean r ...., · rm ~ome me CID re y on UIOINIUl'SUTIMATI: • .-. • Merell 11. ltl l, es l11•trvl'Mflt N•. company. Ralph A. Falk, 68, has The four-hour pollce fair will citizens. It was more bluer 0 ., ... ,t'O "' l'ttOflOSALs· T,. m14 111 ._ tcm, .,_ 1 .. .,. ..._ beenfmed$5,000andgiventhree feature talks by Pollce Chief amon1 second· and third· ,.......wt11•"*6ctv...--°"L~~"~~LE S TI TLE .. .,0 Years probation after pleading Charles Gross and Coun· "ener1tion Japanese · I . 1•11 P1•1at "1111 "2=•, ........ --....Y.J,,.y ••sT11Ac T c ottl'OllAT10 N .. e Jt. l•t ... llll .... I ,_,......,Off~eol .,_tltlltlll T!'\61ee, wlll Mii el ~ guilty to a charge or conspiring cllwoman Evelyn Hart. Police Amerlcant, who by virtue of u.o-. wci'°" .. 11w ....,_ ~ '°' ~ to dump Japanese and Korean vehicles and a police h~licopter their birth ln the United States 0 1 '"1N1 NG c 0 H T 11 "c ' ,..,.,. 111 .. ..,.., -Y.,..,. u•IW ll ells l OOCUME~S: TN .-Clfket ... 1 .,. St.ltet a t Ille lime Of tale, wllllovt ·~· Steel in the United Slates. wi be on p ay. were legally citizens. •"""••. u111 .. ,.11., "''" Sc,. .. , ,.,..Y ., 10 111 .. _'°" WllClll'n ~~~~~~~~~~~-~-~-~~~~~~-~--------~-----~--~~'------~--~~-~--~--~----'"leM ~ "-"" ... " PIMI MCI ' °' . lfk ....... Md -·1 ' , -1 =: WM<H, u. ,.,,_.. con .. yld 10 ..... lntroducin Dodge your newest am Dealer ... SOUTH COAST tll" ., Cett rec -..... 11'1' Mid lnnl• _, Mi4lt .. "',.---'•--.,.' .,. oM•I..., ".... ... of lt'\llt Ill ..,.. lo -lol~ • fll 1'1-.ic werti•. Clt'I' Of d I • .,. 1,_ J.,.,_ ..__ ll'VIM Her llled .,.._,,, loulff 111 the ""'..:.... .. ...,..nflMdlllle fe. .. ,,; f=.:r of o..,.. St• o1 ea"'"'"'•· wfll .. <_.... ... _,, ... ff .... PAftCI L 1· Lal I Tr11<1 .. ,. Ill -ti. ........... ~wlll lte , ... City Of C.O.le ~ .. c-tr M ~~=L-:=~·"':S·11 Or ...... !tt.llO o1 C.111~1•, ea '9f · "' "'"' rec:orclld 111 ._ ~. P-o te Pf'....., llltll .. llCC°""'91~ecl .., e 0 lllCIUll.. Mlo<all~ MliPI .,, tertlfl• W <.,....I <Mell~ ltld boM Ille •llk e d Ille c:-ly llKorOt; qt 111 llle ....... Of It~ ef .. loWI Mid C-'1' -..._~tee ......... • 1111 city ot ,,,,.... "AllCEL J. Alt _, '°" J<i· .. e ....-:-.... ltll lt64Nw, 11 lllt 9reu e11d 19reU, <O,.,m11 .. lly ......... J.11<~, WHI -.Cly H · drlYewey -drtlN91 _._. OY9f Kllte Ille ~-t, llKWe ,.,,_,.. ef I ... pawed _. .... lylflll wltlll11 11tt WeAIMft't ~...,•-wee•. No•lllwe11er1 r • teel o l II>• eN hlnWtll e Ultltft<•'I' f'•llMvt !tMllll-y UM 1M1 of Loi 1 of WICI ......... -. ..,_ lft 1t11 --' Trecl t• percellf fll IM ........... ~Ice -• E.XCEPT THEllEFROM ell Oil Lelttr •lid Mlltert•I• ~ 111 Ille OM. ,.,,...,.,, - -llrdrocet..,.,· •-* fll 1• lilffC9"I Of ... lllCal llHI ltelow e _.,, of JOO lwl wit-.. prk e. r..,.I Of -111<.e .....,.., H ,_,_ In WAGE ltATES. At requlrM lty IMtrv-otr.c-.' Se<llOll 1m Of tM Calllwllle I.A-PllOPERTY MORE COMMONlY' c ..... , ... o...r .... Ottermlrwd !lie KNOWN AS: 3014 Jeffrl'f Ot'lye, c.&a. ..... rel -Yelllftt rat• ol ..... 111 MliM CetllotNe Ille locflftty Ill wNcll h WWtl It .. lie TPJi ~ lrvt ... dlK ltlll\I perter-. '-'" "' Mid •-rele ..,, llMllllY for ..,, Incorrect,.... of *'°'"'~ .,. mailli.llWd at Hie 11'9 •l••I lllldress -01..,. tommon Offk" '11 U. 0.......,.,.. evellaelle dlll-llOfl, 11..,,, _, llereln, • - , ...... TM COfltrt<lor "'911 For t,.. _.,... ot peylflll o41119e. ,_, • ~ .. Mid die-I •I M<li llOAJ uc-11'1' Mid OeeC1 of T"'at 111· ,.. &11•. n. CMtncw _. .., ... <lvdlllt ,_ cl\W9ft -·~~· <MlrlldW.....,""" illlefl '9Y -letl IM Tr.,....· -a..c ... If .., "*' t11e .,_. .... ,,..,..n,. r-.. ef • '· ...... tt ell _.,,., _....,., ,11 ltll .... terms fll IM Mid o.d of Trvst, ·-••••l•tefllr•t. IWHI u..-.......... 111 ........ .. ltO.llCT AOMtNllTUTIC*': All ~MIMI II ....... --by _..... .......... INS pnjlld .,_ DeH Of Tl'Vlt, -"" 1-1 .,,.,_, ................. ......_ • ..._... "-F...,_., 1, "'1 el IS~ ---· --.... Mid llOle -.., ·-• • J.._ OI~ ..,.._.. ,.._,, PNWlded· .,.._ COiia -.. _ ... "' tfl.,...... . OWNllt'S •1GMTI ltlSl•VEO: Ille ,,,.,. Of 11111"' _.kat ... of ,tlll1 , .. o.--.. rttM. ,..,_, :: ... ~ • .:' ...:~u.::..~-.... ""I'.,.,,..._ ..... ,,."""....._... OelM· Jiiiy t 1"1 l'I' Ill••..,. lo,.,... -llnfl In,,.. LOS ANGELES TITLE I. ; ._ ... ..mll111erMIOfU.O-.. AISTltACTCOllPOllATION ' O•tejf: .11/Ay t, 1"1 SMmtlluted Trw-' High ~-. ~,.. We~ve got What America needs. mileage, front-wheel-drive, and low prices. -..a ................................... ...... 41 ~· •• 1111)19' C·llY ef l,,,IM LENA 8. MAlllNOFF, 1-L.~ T o.otto ""' °"' -............ Or ..... c-Delly Piiot. :1~~"' !ti ... ~. .1111'1' 11, 11, '"' JlJ7•1 Lot ""8etft. CA '9012 Tel· 1211> ~.et• • ' rvauc NOTICE .......... Or-Caul D.ily p~ -~--------. J "'y 11. >•. >1. 1t11 n fMI'. ___.., PUBUC NOTICE ··: I • \ ~~ ---~------------. ----- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Frldav. July 17, 1981 •• ·Can't keep · a good ~an do~n Q: I ii.ope dae receat nmon • .._. 'Laareaee .• Oltvler tlaat IM'• sertouly W ud dona't lane • ••ell -.er to Uve ire _. &.nM. Wllat'• tbe .atoryf -Jeuyca G., Sprtqftetd, •111. H U." If M, wllo waa M aJtd wlaa& cUd t.e 1peelftcally Hyf -Mu. lollD Fos, LODI lslaacl. N.Y. • A : W'e're happy to report that alter a aeriea : of Wneuet -and llmOlt near deatb at one point -the 7'·year-old Olivier says he's back ln A: Dear Mra. Fox: You bave a sood memOl')'. Jt was T. Coleman Andrew• who made the co~nt. He served u commlasioner of • Sood hellth again. The recent ailment lo which • 1'0U refer ls rare and often fatal. Called • · dermalomyosltia, lt'a a waaUni of the skl.n and muscles. For a lime, it left Sir Laurence unable to walk. 'GLAD YOU ASKm THAT' "I've had all the big tbin•s." says the super·aclor. "Cancer. thrombosis. an operation on the liver. But this was certainly the worat." His latest film, according lo Varie"Y. "Clash of the Titans," has been released. And he's re· hearsing ln London for a TV adaptation or the ,London legit drama .. Voyage Round My Father." Internal Revenue from 1953 lo 1955 and made these remarks when he became the former com mlssloner. • • • .. "The income t ax ls such an evil tbln1." be said, "that I doubt whether anyone can patch lt up in sucb a way that we can Uve with lt." • Q: With all tbe talk sollls on aow In , ' W ublqton about tbe po11lbWty of cuttlD1 our tu:ea, pleue tell me whether or aot tlall lDcl· : dent a~y ever uppened. SappoHdJy, some years aio, 1 eommll1loaer of llltenal Beveaue One of h1a chief objecUona, be claJmed, wu that the income tax deprives Americana or rights guaranteed by "rticle IV or the Bill of Rights, which states that citizens s hall be secure against unreasonable searches and seizures. .. . . · called tbe federal Income tu "vlcloua aad Add to Our Llst of Beautiful Actresses Who Don't Think They're Beautiful: Susan Anton. ''Sometimes 1th.ink I'm beautiful," sighs Susan. •. ID.cest can destroy fainily 'OEAR ANN LANDERS : 1)\:enty-five years ago I knew m., husband's uncle was slt!i!p- in1. with one or the other oWiJs daughters -at the time They ~e 12 and t• years old. I did v~ry little about it except to con· fitte my suspicions to an aunt, who accused me of having a dir· ty mind. One girl fought her way to an education, married a fine young map and they had two children. 'l'culay she has deep guilt feel· iOIS about "a bandonjng" her lit· taiir· sister. She also has trouble Mating with her o wn children's emerging sexuality. The last tlme I saw her she seemed high· st?ung and tense . 'fhe younger sister is pathetic. She is divorced, the mother of four children -two illegitimate -+ has no self-e steem and is shunned by her family. She is aJ~oholic and cannot discipline her two junior high school kids. Troubles -you name them and she has them. I can't help looking back and feeJing ashamed that I didn't 11a'Ve the · courage to be more forcefuJ about what I knew was s· terrible situation. I may have been able to change the course All LUDEii of those girls' lives. Please keep writing about this all-too-common problem. It hap- pens at every economic, social and intellectual level. And often the mother knows about it and do es nothing because she is financially de pe ndent on her hus band and is afraid i~> might break up the fa mily. Thank you. Ann. -DETROIT READER DEAR READER: Incest, as you have witnessed in your own fa m ii y , c an be ext rem eb destructive. I urge all cblldren who are being exploited in tbls way to tell an adult at once -a teacher, an aunt, the mother of a close friend . . . someone wbo can intervene. Fathers who do this are sick - and jaU ls not the answer. They need treatment. Counseling for the whole family h as proved highly successful. . Cblldren who are reluctant to talk to anyone about tbls problem-or adults who don't know what lo do about It - should look in tbe phone book UD· der Cll.Ud Abue. Help Is u close as your te lephone. Trained personnel will. come to your rescue -and It's free. Act NOW. DEAR ANN LANDE R S : Be~ause of my snoring my wife moved me into the guest room several years ago. Everything was fine except on those few occasions when I fell as leep and left the TV on. Now my wife complains because she can hear the TV through the wall. We are in our middle 60s and I hate to think that we are going tq s p end the years left to us bicke ring about s uch trifles. I cannot move my bed farther from the wall without moving it complete ly out of the house. Perhaps y ou r medi c al c ons ultants can offer a suggestion. -LOUDER THAN I THOUGHT IN ATLANTA Dear Louder: Tbl• isn't a medical problem , Mister , It'• a matter of electronics. Get your TV rigged so you can listen witb earpllODe-. Yeu'll be able to bear perfectly and the little woman won'tbeer a tblng. lJandruff isn't contagioUs· B')' JOHN D. ROSEN, M .D. Dear Dr. Rosen, Tbls la a klnd of embarru1iDg queatlon but being re~ently divorced I have started dating again. I have gotten sort of ln· volved with someone and recent· ly bad to borrow bia comb. My new boy friend bas a bad case of dandruff. Will I catch It from htiD and ls there anything I can do to prevent It? -V .S., Santa Ana. Dear V.S.: Dandruff is an ex· lreJnely common condition and is-·also the sour ce of many mis· conceptions. Your question in- dicates one of these. namely that the condition is contagious. It is n9l. · · Dandruff is merely the result o(Ahe appearance of flakes of dead skin from the scalp. The normal life of the cell that makes up the scalp is 28 days. In ASK THE DOCTOR people with a dandruff problem the life of this skin's cells is much shorter and consequently ther e are many more flakes of dead s kin. It is thought tt>at emotional s tress causes this shortening of the celJ 's life span. Other misconceptions about the ailment include the idea that it is seasonaJ. Probably the rea- s on for tttis is that in winter we wear darker clothes and spend m ore time indoors where the wind cannot blow away the flakes. Dandruff does not cause baldness, and it is not caused by a germ. The old TV commercial showing the "bacteria of dan· druff" was entirely false. As far as tr eatment is con· cerned any shampoo product wiH wash away the offending flake s but some contain chemicals which tre at the spedfic problem. These chemicals slow down the life span of the scalp's cell and thereby relieve the P!\Oblem. The scalp "gets used to' these products after a few months so it is a ·good Idea to switch back and forth. A word of caution : if there are open sores on the scalp one la dealing with something more complicated than simple dan- dru!f and a physician s hould be cons ulted. Dr. John D. Rosen, a practitioner in Newport Beach, welcomes your question&. Mail requesta to A1k t~ Doctor, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, 92626. ~emini: follow through on hunch S1tarday, July 18 ey svoi-ttv OMARR ~AltJES <March 21-Aprll 191 Take stock. review project. know when to "le\ go." Focus on completion. rrtehdship, universal appeal and an ·end to burden which was nol n ghUy )'our own in first place You're on brink of major discovery! T~URUS <April 20-May 201. New rynlacl coClld be start or "something bit.'' Focus on busines-s, prestige. honor. standing ln community. Be •a&ressive In pushing across point of vf~. Aries. Leo, Sagittarius natives play Important roles. GEMINI < 1'{ay 2l·June 20> · Follow ttirough on hunch: intuition now will s'rve as reliable guide. Accent on cftrection. spiritual development. cl1rtficatlon of 1bstract principles HOROSCOPE which affect your legal and moral rights. Keep eye on Aquarius! CANCER <June 21 -July 22 1: You're able to dig beneath surface indications ; I( persistent, you strike pay dirt Emphasis on mystery. glamour and financial resources of one close to you. including partner or mate. Social in vitation Is "on the way." LEO (J uly 23·Aug 221: If obser-vant. you note detail which could aid In vindicating your views. Be specific. direct and don't pull· your punches . Lega l a rfa irs mleht dominate scenario. Let others show their hinds -play your own card.a in discreet manner. ~ llYASHLEIGH I • •BRILLIANT ~VEN EVERYTHIN8 ., • • • I • • • , . i··~·· .. 7/.. ~·.~~:.,_;,; .. ~ " ""-... ,. PA' • ; 1,;' ... ·-... .,,... . ........ I . . . ~,,.~ .... ;:.;:· ;· .r • •. VIRGO 1Aug. 23-Sept. 22 1: Focus on possible tri p, health, basic issues and special services. Gemini ~ Saicit· tarius and a nother Virgo figure prominently.' Co-worker makes valuable suggestion. and you would be wise to pay attention. LIBRA (Sept. 23·0 ct. 22 ): Gift re· celved Crom loved one aids In boost- ing morale Accent on romance. art objects. the beautifying of personal surroundings. Taurus. Scorpio and another Libra figure prominently. In matters of speculation stick with number6. SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 211 : Ar· cent on security. eroperty. deflnlUon of terms and 1b1Uty to 1vold seU· deception. Places. Cancer and another Scorpio figure prominently. Your sens e of perception la hel,htened. You can know wbo ls teWna truth ind otherwise. SAGITl'AIUlJS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21>: Check notes. be aware ~ce material and verify references. Older lndJvtdual can 11~e you trou· ble Ume and money -be receptive. wlllln& to learn r-rom ex.perience. Focus on titpg, vlaiu and relatwes. CAPIUCOltN (Dec. 22.J an. li): Money surprise du• at ''l0tln1 propo11ltlon" ii removed from per· aonal scenario. Lifestyle llnder,_. transformation and you'll have treater~lty for I UttftS, hp. plneH and prosperity. Ar1es. Leo, Libra naUvea ~ promlnenUy. AQVA&IUS CJ1n. 20·Ftb. lll : L"Unar cycle emphulaet ploneertn1 proJeet , nt1'1 1tart1, orU*lltJ, added lndepeftdence .nd clianee t.o trnprlnt ttyte. Judpient, lnlUltlon an on Wpt -YoQ'll IM at ,.,... place at ~ruelal moment. Wear ·& coAors ! D lf'tb. t•Mlftll •>: M· ctot lnvtlaUon to tour fMlltMI ~ sl>tfteJ club. ~or .............. Voa'll ot>ttJn 1•baelstt11• .w. • You're alto due to 11m ac-to conftdentlaJ data. C&Mtr, 5corpto ud another Placea plar llDf!llt.aD' rol•. "But sometimes I look In the mi.rror and can't understand what people see in me." *** Q : Wlaat bappe•ed to Ule former 1 W11~ PMt ref0r1er wtM> reslped la 41s· crac• after It ... dlaeovered lier Palltur Prise· wla•lal 1lory was a f1ket -T. Brown,••· pills. A; Several job offera have come ln to writer luet Cooke. One la an ofter to.write a fictional work for New York publisher Bernard Gell. Cooke's fabrication about an 8-year-Oloher:oln addict indicated, as far ft the publisher was concerned, that she had "creativity and ex- cellent writing abllitY\ And that's all It takes lo write a povel," coooluded Gels. *** Personal Postcard lo Bob Orben, NYC: We like tttis line too: "Nowadays a good conversa- tionalist is anyone who can taJk loude r than the hi-fl ! .. Send JIOUr queatfmu to H11 Gardner, "01.od You Asked Thal," core of tM Dolly Pilot, P.O. Bo% 19620. Irvine, 92114. Marilyn and H11 Gardner wiU aiuwer °" monJI questionl aa they con fn their column, but tM volume of mail maM• personal repliea impomble. "I've had aJL the big things ," says actor Laurence Olivier. The wedding picture Mrs. Stoneman Stoneman.,.Amies Cindy Amies and Richard Stoneman. both or Newport Beach, were married in· St. Andrews Church. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Amies, graduated from Newport Harbor High School and Cal State San Diego. The bridegroom, .son of Mr . and Mrs. John Stoneman of Newport Beach, also graduated from Harbor High and Cal State San Diego. The couple plan to live in Steamboat Springs, Color ado after a trip lo Mexico. DeLuca-Gough Anne-Marie Gough and William R. DeLuca wer e marr ied in ceremonies at St. Therese Church, Alhambra. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick F. Gough of Alhambra. is a graduate of the University of Southern California and earned a master's degree at Yale University. The bridegroom. son of Mr. and Mrs. William DeLuca Jr. of Philadelphia, also earned a master's degree at Yale. After a trip to Man.Jarilllo. Mexico. the couple plan to live in New York City. Arthur-F le.relier Lisa Scott Fletcher of Newport Beach aod Gary W. P. Arthur or Palos Verdes exchanged wedding vows in San Juan Capistrano. A Dozen Beautiful Longstemmed Red Roses DELIVERED FREE INCLUDING A GLASS VASE JUST $25.00 A Great Idea For Dinner Out ~IC VISA Call and Charve , 2-4 Hours 7 Days A Week Mrs. DeLuca The bride. daughter or Douglas Fletcher and Car oly n Fletche r . both of Newport Beach. gr aduated from Corona del Mar High School and attends UC Santa Cruz. The bridegroom , son of Mr . and Mrs. Bill Brown of Palos Verdes . gr aduated from Los Angeles Baptist High in Sepulveda and Cal Poly San Luis Opispo. The couple plan to live m Santa Cruz after a trip to Canada and Ida ho. Williams-Hendricks "(ammy J .L. Hendricks and Stephen G. Williams, both of Santa Ana. were married in St. Andrews Episcopal Church, Irvine. The bride. daughter of Edward B. Hendricks a nd the late Carolyn J<. Hendricks or Las Vegas, grad uated from Newport Harbor High School. The bridegroom . son· of Kathaleen A. Hill of Santa Ana. graduated from Corona del Mar High School and Orange Coast College. The couple plan to make t heir home in Santa Ana after a trip to the mountains. 50th anniversary E arl and Doris Kuche nbec ker re<.'ently celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary with an open house hosted by their three children. The Kuchenbeckers have been residents of Huntington Beach for the past 44 years. They were married in Starbuck, Minnesota and have eight grandchildren and seven great.grandchildren. -·RUFFELL 'S UftHOLSTERY . s. .. ~ ......... 1 uz tiA1101 nvo: .. cosr• ~HA..=.J~11u 7 0mzirs ~ CUSTOM FRAMING I' Open 6 Days A Week Mon.-Frl. 9-6 Sat. 10--4 1803 Newport Blvd. Costa Mew LAGUNA MOUL TON PLAYHOUSE L AGUlllA Bf ACH Worl!I Pre1111f'r~s1 * 494 80 21 JULY 8·25 AFTER THE FACT A MYSTERY av JOHN FEAZACCA II p.m. Wld....Sll Tlckltl: S8 OPENltiilG JULY 29 AWlrd Wlnntno Comedy MA1CHPOINT by Mery Jlne f!.obem The Finest In Re sort Wear Now In South Coast Plaza Wattah Clarke's South eo.t ptaza In The Mall By TheQrouael 751-7600 \ ~-------------=.. ~------... ~..,....._-............... , , , , , • • . u • ,, , • • -w s : a a c ; o c e;a; : s s a so s s ' Orange eo .. t DAILY ptLOT/frlday, Juty 17, 1881 ·TV Ustlngs llke never before! Today, you will find a big, bright, brand new television Sl}pplement in the Daily Pilot like Y0'1~Ve never .. seen before! You'll find the most complete T\l listings available in any newspaper around -with unique, , It's new. It's bigger. It's easier to use. It's inside today. It's Pilot TV Log easy-to-scan grids, plus complete evening program details. You'll ,. . - find the channels you watch (we list 22 including cable), pages of movie highlights, u:p-to-date sports, soap~ plots and more -all in a bigger, easier-to-r~ad format. .. Get the ~o~plete picture in the all-new Pilot TV Log. It's a new Pilot y'ou won't want to miss! ) New Grid Format Daytime Drama -A unique, sign-on to sign-off grid format e~y day. The grid is a quick visual reference to 18 hours of programming on 11 broadcast channels, and prime-time programs for 11 cable channels. You also get details of each show during prime-time evening hours in a "rolling log" format, with notes for re-runs and closed captioning. U~to-Date Sports Grid listings for each and every daytime show, every day of the week. And if you missed an episode of your favorite soap opera, yo u'll find a summary of the week's plots . •· \ I -Because Pilot TV Log is · published on a Friday, sports listings (almost a whole page) are fresh"' and accurate. ~peeial Programs -From blockbusters to 'dance to children's shows, you'll find all the week's specials in one place on Page 3. Movies, Movies, and Movies -Almost two pages of movies virtually around th~ clock every d~y of the week, with the stars and the year thf? movie was made. Our four-star rating system helps you . · choose, plus G, PG, and R ratings for cable movies. More Cable Listings . -Subscribe to HBO , Showtime, the · Z channel, ON, ESP~. CNN. WTBS. WOR , Cinemax, or Spotlight? Pilot TV Log carries listings for them all! N • • •· .. . • • ' . I . • . I • . . I . I • t . . i - • • • . . . . .. • . . *. ' ... ~· ' . . ~ ... " •• .. ... . • •• d .... • • I ., .. I ' l i • I • I I . /' I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, July 17, 1981 • .fi.. ·-- one ek on.ly , ~JULY 17 -JULY 23 FOR ELE CUSTOMERS For our customers now receiving Chan- nels 14 and 16 ... we have now converted our main system so these sam-anne ls will appear on Channels 17 and ~· · , . . ,,_ ... . ._ This may cause some i nconvenience because yo ur converter must be changed, but if yo u will please call 642·3260 or 646-0586 we will schedule a time that is convenient for yo u to have this change made. There will be absolutely no charge 'for t his change. Otherwise yo u are more than we l come to stop in a t our TELEPROMPTER office at 901 We st 16th Street, Newport Beach. . .• -::ff:::~;-~tri •. -==--Jn = = = =m;~ WE DELIVER TOTAL EN TERTAINMENT 24-HOURS-A-DAY! • I \ ~-~~~~~~-----:--~~.....-----~.--~~~·-:-r•--,~-1"'~• ...... -·~--..... ..-.·---!5~ .... ~=--••••--•,_. __ ,...~,~·..-~~·~·--.-,.~~s•s~a•s ............. 2•2•&111~0•2•t .. ll!•2•2 .. , I I~ I I I I I " Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Friday, July 17. 1981 END OF ROAD -Spreckles Sugar Co. worker Harry White expres~s s hock to learn he will be out of'a job after 17 years. Spreckles has a nnounced it will s top processing s ugar PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS •USINEIS ---------- HAMI STATIMllHT "ICTITIOUI IUMN•ll Tll• follo•lno parsons ere doing NAMS ITATCMaNT 1111\IMU as T II• loll-1119 P..--1 •r• dolno TRl!.AAY·U s A., Koll Canler. w .. 1 bvlln•u•. Tower, S11llt :IOOO, 4000 M.ecArlllYr Blv1 .. , HT, .. ach. CA f'2WO CANTAGltlEE.L _JGV Jetlrlt'f Or,. EI . Ttal>elll) G1ok LI• O.y, •A.Co&laMHa,U'. ... UHi Tempjco Piece. MIHlon vlelo, IC•,..,, L~ IC.-cty, •n Jelfrwy CA '2 .. 1. Or .. •A,CoattMHa,CA.-. Cll•rles NollanO Willlam1. 26SS1 ""' Ca lllerlne PM._ Kl-r, Tempico Pl•O. MtHIOll Vtejo, CA lO'SJ ow.-Park ~ ....... ~ '2 .. 1 B .. <11, CA m. Tllll IKllillffl Ii condu<l•d bp • Tiii• 1>v1l11t11 11 condvct ... .., • o•n•r•I partMMIP. vene••l oartnerllllp. El1je GIOk Lit 0.y Ka,..,, K~ Tllll SUI-I was llltd wllll Ille Tllll ltt ........ 1 Wat fifed wlltt 11W (Ollnly Cler-of Orange Cov111y on Cou111y Clerk o1 Oranet C_.,ty on July ,_ 14, '"' I, 1 .. 1 ... wi ...... within a year at the Salinas plant, affecting 700 jobs. Su~ar beets have become too ex- pensive to ship the firm said. PUBUC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS •UllNCll NAMll ITATllMCltT T"lle loll-lfte pertons are dolno Mlllfflas: __ 0 I. 0 REAL ESTATE SERVICES. 605 I( I nos Pl., Newport 8 ••<11, Calllornl• nwo, ,_ ....... A. Oe!Anq, 2*2 Spring l.atla I.II., El T-. CA,,_.., CNrt" Qayten Durr, '°5 ICl1191 Pt., Newport lloec:ll, CA f'2MO. -----. PUBUC NOTICE "'~IT10UI •UllltllS NAMa ITATCMINT Tiie fotiOM119 PH-II ctcMno IMlll· ..... •s: WEST SHIELD INVESTIGATIONS. a n Bll'OI 51,. H--1 Beecll, CA '2MO. Allen PNllp C¥d0la, 10!6J la\/onM l.n., Huntlllflon -·11, CA '2'-" Tllll 111111-II <ondu<litd by all ln- dlvlClllal. Al,.,, P car .... ... Tllll $111J-t ... liltd wllll Ille County C,_ ol Oroltl9l County on May PtJBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PtJBUC NOTICE ,.ICTITlout CUllltCU PUBUC NOTICE I lt ... 11'ATCMaltY •· TM 1011-1,.. --• tr• 4klf11v 1K1$111"6... • AMUtlCAN aANOSTAlfO, 'fU PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE 'ICTIT'lout CUllNCU NAMa ITA'fC ... ltT "ICTtnout a"'INIU "CTITIOUICUlllfCU NOrlll ~St., s..m. AM, CA. I • MAM& IYATCMCNT Amerlcen ••11d1l•nd, "Inc., • T~ hlllowfne ...,_ II 4Ml"9 lluel· lllAMa l'fATUMaN'r ""' H . TM loll••lfte --ere dol11t TIM ,.. ........ ...._ 11 dolno blltl C•lllon•I• ,.,,.,.tlOfl, 11•· ...... neu ••. Moln St., Sollt• AN, CA. ~ L C A L I , 0 ,_ H I A ~-l LIOAl.MAHAGCMUlf"T, '10..... QUlllTA TILi, 1"'2 0.e ..... DAY COHST.-UCTI°" a> .. ,... Marlo CMIM\IO, 1t $ta.w~I ~··· Ce11ltr Orl\IO, S..110 UJO, Ht•'6'1 G .. te M11M. Ca. '2611 Gar•n Grow 11¥&, ~II• 21', Gar.., If-port INcll, CA. c . t _ ,l Greve, CA ..a Thi• llUWnau 11 <ofMN<lllCI...,,.. 10t· INCll, C.oUlornl• '2'60 "tll•ld C11bl•••· lttt o .... , •• H•rold e,.,,. 1'11111, J5021 I•· poraU011. \ , O•nlel 1(1119 ~. sou P•NO Go.ta MIM, ea. '2t27 P"ffS Or., i......,. "1111, CA f'26S.S A,.,...I<., •-•..,,.,,I~. 1 de llevt, lrvlM, c.iltomle •vu SMtl Cllllltte. 1''2 o..,,., Cotto Thi I bllllftel6 11 cbncluct..:t by •11 Ill -lo C_,NYO t : Tllll llwinftl II <-.Ci.cl by tll Ill· MaM, C:0. f'2tD dlYIChlal. lllGe Pret'-il • , dMChlal Tllll ...._. 11 <Olldu<lad by M Ill H-E"""'9 Fllnl Tllil ~,el-I ••~ llled .ofllljllle OMlal K. Tllomptoll ctlvldllal ( ............ a. wllel. Tllll ,......,_I wat Iliad wltll tlle C-1p Cleo°' Or-C-IY-"'' T1111 11a1emen1 w•~ fifed wllll Ille IMli c.el1ta Co..111y Cleftl o4 Or-C-'ly on July U, Ut1 : • ~· C.0111111 C..,... °' Oranet C.-ty on Jiiiy Tlll1 tlo'-t w .. fifed wlll'I I,. I IM1 • rl DI u. 1 .. 1 c-ty c1 ... ll of 0ra11oe co""" °" . . ,.,UZM Pyblllllad Or-Coo l 0;'11, p OI, '"' J1111tU,l'lt. PYblllNcl Or_,. Coe1I Dally Piiot, Jyly 17, U, JI, AUQ. I. ttll Jl,-tl l"YbllWCI OrMft C-1 Dolly Piiot ,.IW. July J, 10, 17, 24. 1 .. 1 2'S>tl ' ------• J111, 11, u, "· Allo. 7. "" n1w 1 ...,..1..,. er.,,. eo.11 oa11y PllDt PUBLIC NOTICE : --------J-26,Jlollyl. I0, 17, 1"1 2162-11 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ... ,. ... "CTITIOUI IUllltlll MAMll ITATIMIEltT fllt lo1towl119 pertons •rt dol119 b\11lnaua: ICN L TO., m 1 $. lrlllot, S..lt• 101, Cotta """8. ea. m» o--1. m1 s. ar111of. ~ta 101. CMI• Mn-. C... '2•» Tllll b\lllnffs h COftdll<led by a limited ptr"IN ...... lp. GaNW.Ull Tllll MM-I Wat llltd wllll U. c...,.1y Clar• of 0r..,.. County on ,..,,.n,1t11. . PUBLIC NOTICE ~---------ltOTICIE 0" ttU•LIC • "CTITIOUS au111t1EU MIA,.IMG ••l'O•I TMI • MAMIE STATIMCltT CITY COUNCIL 0" ! NOT1C9 Of' IALll Tiie f01lowl119 pe,._. 11 Ool119 111111 TMll CITY 0,. 1 Hotke It ............... !Mt 11M PfO-MU H ,.OUltTAllt VALLllV • pe'1y W.C1111ed ...... <Ollataral IHI-LARRY YORTY ADVERTISING, NOTICE IS HEREBY GlllEN, ,l\al dotr . -"y eer-ftt cloeMCI A\IVVSI 5122 Sl1aon Or., H""llllOIOn BH<ll. CA on Mon<Ny, July 21, Ull, .. LOO •• m 16, 1'7' --by ~IO'l'NAMICS f'2Mt. II\ Illa C-.Cll CN..-r, 10200:flt' co.-~UTIOH .. OMNI SKATllS Larry Ray YorW. Sitt StUOft Or . Avenff, F-uln llallep, C..11 la, CO.-l'OMTIOH: TilomM 0 . Mol ..... I. Munll119'0ft BHcll, CA f'2wt. Ille Clly C..-11 wlll llOld a 11< Jr., "'~ •Ill, l>K-of 1,. Tlll1 !>UM,,.. I• t-.Cted Dy an In· 11t•rlno on Ille 1o11-1no· 1 dotMtr'I cllfeult .. Mid by tlle ..,._ dlvld11al. i _ C 0 N S I 0 E R A T I 0 M {: F dtrlll-9t a -k , ... °" !fie Ultt Larry R. Y\>(1Y PARAMEDIC FEE IN THE AMI) HT dayofJllly 1'11 at IO:OOa.,..,o•ctoc11 Tllll ilala..-1 wa1 llled wltll Ille OF 111.00 PER YEAR TO E CH al M21 w9.a MecA11llllr, ~lie 112'. C.o..nty Clerl<ol Oranet COllnlyon Jf~ RESIDENCE ANO BUSINESS! IN Soflta AM, Cellfonlla '2104. U, Utl THE CITY ANO FEE OF .-OW 'tEA TIM .... .....,., lo .. Mid ,.,,r.111• °' "1 .. DI CA L L T 0 N 0 H • A ES I 0 ~ N S , ,.t ........... --flllure t«-'• ,. P\lblllhed Or•noa Cotti Dally Piiot, CHARGES TO COllEA ACT UAL PYbll.,... 0r ... 99 Cotll Dall~ Piiot Ulvabl•, contr11<t r'911t1. _,_or· July 17, 24, JI , A119. 7, "" Jl71 .. I COSTS I J\IM n . Jo.tip J, 10, 17, 1 .. 1 2ttl .. I dart, <IWltttf IMPer. neeotlal>lt "°'.,. Those cte1lrl119 10 letllly In ,.,,... or --rnenlJ -pr-; all P4.Wlt. offk • PUBLIC NOTICE In -•lllon 10 11141 Pf~I •Ill be PUBLIC NOTICE 1 ....,._. 1 1 t 1 elven an OPC>Orlu•uty lo oo 144 ti rw 0 Mr • •I ,,...., ory ,,. further onlor..,.Uon Ii de1ir1to, ~, °" cl11dl11• r•w ma1erlal1, perll, •<-"'CTITIOUS •UllHllU ,.ICTITIOUI CUllltliS '"""r .... rwodwcl ........ '". OOocl• 111 MAMIE STATCMIEHT ~~,~~1M1 Ille Fir• Oeonmen~ •I proou, 11111....., '°°"'· -procffdt Tiit lollowl119 119'""' 11 dolno 111111 CITY COUNCIL OF THE ~TY MAMO IT ATIMllltT Of 1 ... 11" ..... rw OU.r dlstlOllllon. neu ai Tiie IOllOWlllQ per ..... 11 dOlno lluil OATI OINl IJU\dayol Jyly, '"'· (a) THE cAR CONHECTIC>f4 (bl OF FOUNTAIN VAL EY CIU-8Mllol All ANO &OAT CONNECTION (<I EWl1"M<Ct_,,, ,..., ... GREG BIEHSIE H WA L COYIEAIHGS, 1541-0 Adami A...,,.,., Cotta MaW, C..lllornla m» CN&aMna VACATION TIMIE·~ARE CONNEC Ctly Oera SK-Panp TION (di BEACH FRONT REN TAL PuDlllN<I Oranve Co111 Delly ~lot. Greg llensafl, 1no ParttH-porf. ,__rt Uccll.,rl, C 0 N N E C T I O H I e 1 July 11· 1'1! lllMI Ilk• Prltlldenl TELEMAAJ<ETIEEAS, 1261 Mlcllloa11 P11ltll-0rar)g9 COH I Doily PllOt, A\IO,. COiia MMe, eatuonlla tlll2' Jiiiy "· 17, 1"1 JIO .. I E lu nor M•ro ... rllt Reio T ro..11. 3UI Ml<lll9a11 A•t , Colla Mtu , C..lllOrnla '2t2' Tlll1 l:IUr.lnesi 11 cond.,<led by an In· dlYIChlal. ,.1 MUNICll'AL. COUH 0, Tllll !!::::: ..,'!;. T~:;w_:ii •1111 Ult P\lbll-Or-Coa1t Dolly Pl IOUTH 0••MO• COUltTY C.o..11ty Cl•rll of Or•noa COllnty on July J\lly·::_ ,,, "· A1111 ,,~~ P111 .. :~=~e::r "· "" ,,_ INSUAAHCE C.OMPANY OF HORTH PuDllllled Oranoa Coa•I o.,,, Pllol, AMERICA July 17, 24, JI, A119.1, ltll 1206.fl Newport BaKll, Calllorfll• nMO Thll llullMU 11 <ondllci.cl bY en 111 dlvldllal. o....a.n .... Tiiis ~--1 w .. llltd wllll COlllll'f<lartt o4 Or-COllnty on Jiiiy ·--~---­IS, 1 .. 1. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE 0.1-t: ,.ICTl11out. UllNCll co.-ENE CAMPI ELL Md ~ ITAT•MaltT DOES I llW'OUlll IO, lnc.llnl.,. P UBLIC NOTICE Tiit loflo.1119 ~-11 ctalflt ~· C.. ~Mii neu at. IU ltOTICI 0" TRUSTll'S SALIE B a. L MACHINE. 2tOI W. Sltl, lt0TIC91 Y• -..... a.d. T.S. No. M'l61-J PUBLIC NOTICE MU Ill Cl PAL cou•T SOUTM OaAltOC COUNTY • JUOICIA.L OllT•ICT , MIQ C-Valley P-w•y , LA9llM .. ._.. ea . ...,, PLAINTIFF SOUTHEtlN CALI FORNIA E0150H COMPANf, • corpou llon • OIEFE NOA NT YOU!>S£F MAAZI, alto known u YOUSSEF MOSIAH MARZE, JAMAA A80UL !>ATTAR, tllO -n n JAMAL flB DUL SAnAA, and DOES I t11rca.911 111.1nc1in1 .. $UMMOMS CAICNUM91•tt1N Tllll INl!nes 11 ~ltd by .,, ..,,. lncor_....,. -••Uon oc11ar ,...,, • p.trtnerl!Np. Rendol.., A. 0..L.ano ,.1 .... Ano,CA'2101 , .. ,,_.,..u......,..,.. ...... LAWYERS TITLE IN!>UAANCE Pvbllllled OrMOlt CoaSI Dally PllOt, Crenl LM AIW~ 10120 LA H11<I ,_ .................. ,.. ,__. co.-PORATION, .. clvly •P90inled 21. 1 .. 1. NOTICIEI Y• .._.,.. -.-d. lnle <•rt fMY *''* ...... Y• •llMM Tiiis ~ w• llltd wltll I,_ Covnh Cl.,. of Oranoe Co..nly °" JUMJ4, ltll, J-26,JlllyJ,IO,IJ,ltll ,_..1 de, F-18111\/all1tY.CA t'J10l. .t•i. a 8'1-....... IM•::..U.0 Tn11I" -Ille lo41owl11Q des<rl- Tlll1 -"-" 11 conducted by M 111 -·-· -Of ln.t1I WILi. !>ELI. AT PUBLIC ,_ ..... _ ....... Y'W~ •lllll•••YL ....... ""_ ... _ ---------dl•ldY•I. tf you wish lo -k Ille _,,,Ice of an AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIO· Cr.nt LH Allard 1t1or11ey In 11111 metier, yo.. MloulCI cto DER FOR CASH I payable •I llm• of 1'1M7t7 '~ "'Mnl PUBUC NOTICE wl... . AVISOI U-i.a Ill•-...... . PYbllllwcl Oranoo Cotll Dally Piiot. PYl>lllhed Or-Coall Dally Piiot, PYbllWCI Oranoo Coa11 Dally Pllo1, JIHI• 2', Jiiiy J, fo. 11. 1"1 2"3-1' JYIY J, 10. 11, u , 1t11 mHI June n . JIAr >. 10, 11. 1•1 2"4-11 Tllll llOi-t WM llltd wltll l 10 promptly IO 11\al 10\IF wrlll•n YI• Ill 1-..1 monitY of Ille UnHed I I lrl'-tl ,_... -ldW < .... a.» .. DEA TH NOTICES BIRC H ETT Munda). July 20, 1981 at THERESA B I RC llETT. 2 OO PM a t H a rbor Lawn resident of Costa Mes a , Ca ~t emonal Chapel with Rev. Pa ssed away on July 14, Joe Buonass1ssi o f.the First 1981 Pri vate inte rme nt Baptist Chur<.'h of Santa Ana services "Ill be h e ld al 0H1<.'1ating In heu of Clowers H arbo r La"n ~lemorial the famil) requests dona· Park Ser v ices unde r the lion s be made to th e First direction of Baltz Be r1ieron Baptist Chur<.'h Missionary Smith & Tuthill West<.'11ff Fund. 301 Magnolia, Santa Chapel Mortuary of Cost a Ana. Ca . Services under the )'lesa.6469371 direction of Harbor Lawn· BAR:--IES ~ounl Oli\'e Mortuary o f MILDRED JOSEPHINE Co~ta Mesa S.\0·5554. B ARNES. r es ide nt o f CHOLCH ER Orange Count~ san<.'e 1938 E L S I E J t.: L I A Passed awa} on J ul} J.t, 198\ She is ret1red from the C HOLCHER. resident of Los Orange Count y Probation Angeles, Ca since 1925. Administration office after Passed away on July 14. 198t She was a member of 21 vears. She is s ur\'1ved by the Order of the Easte r n ber hus band Eugene . "' mother Louise McFadden of Star She is sur vived by her daughter J ean Lucas of Cost a Mesa. Ca .. brother New"'ort Bea<.'h. Ca .. son·in· James R McFadden. Jr.. ., sister Bell\ Crook o r Costa la" Robert J Lucas. sister • ~a rt ha K1fker or Los Mes a . Ca .. 4 n1e<.'es. 5 A 1 c d hild nephews and 2 great me<.'es. nge es. a .. gran c ren S .-· 11 b h Id Kent a nd Danalyn Lucas. en ice.s wi e e on, Cryptsida services will be HAHOlt LA W,,._MT. OLIVE Mortuarv • Cerre1er\' Cre mator\I 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Me!>a 540·5554 held on Thursday. July 16. 1981 at I nglewood park Cemetery The family re· ques ts in lieu of flowers donations be made to the As· s1stance League of Newport Beach Child Day Care Center. Ser vices under tile dlrectfon of Baltz Bergeron· Smllh & Tuthill Westcliff Chapel Mortuary of Costa Mesa. 646-9371. Chur<.'h. orfic1atmg Services under the d1rect1on or Harbor Lawn Mount Olive M ortuar y of Cost a M esa. 540 S5S4. COlllllY Clerll< of Or11199 C...,,IY re1pon1t, ii any, may be filed on tlrne Stain ) all r'91W, 1111• -lnlt•"I con· ,.ICTlTIOUI au11111ss • J1111e •• 1"1. AVllOI ~ ... .... ........... vey•d 10-llOW held by II.,,,,,.. Y id MAMll ITATll.MIENT '1UJ II tni.-t ,_.. -i.ir <alllra U .. 0 H d of Tr\111 111 1111 properl p Tiie 10110.1119 per1on1 ••• dolnG PYblllNcl O'-CNlt Dally l"llot Mii • ...._... • -_.. u .. ,...... llareln•llUr ctnc•I-; b\11l11e11H: J111yl0,17,J4,Jl,ltl1 aot7 .... .._tn ... dlaLLMIOI .......... T AUSTOA : CLAR ENCE 8 . CA LIFORNIA SERI/ICES ----d........... I LACKSTOC.K Md FLORENCE L UNLIMITED, tK TOMI C...~ Or • PUBLIC NOTICE SI U1tad ._. IOlkllUr el <on•lo de BLACKSTOCK • IOO. Coato Mna, CA '26» u11 ab09adD .,, Hie .-to dellerla 9 IE N IE F I C I A A Y PA T A I C I A J ........ Frenc:ltco, IUI Rel----lla<erlo l11,...dlalame11lt de e1la SCHROEDE,_ Or • s.nta ,,,,.., CA '2105 "ICTITIOUI CUllltCll manere .., r-1• ucrlle 11 llay A1tCOf'-J.,,...ry at. 1•1 a1 l1111r. Tiii• _.Mil ,, caib.clad bY.,, In· ltAMll ITATIMlltT •l9Yn•--wrr911l'1r-· llempo. No. 1!2tl 111-l>t'JO, -l77. o•OI· dlvld yal. Tiie lollo.lflV penotu ere dol I. TO THE DEFENDANT. A clvll llclal Record1 111 Ille olllce ol Ille J°"""' Fra11<l1<0 b\lr.lneu .. · COfTlplalnl has .... llltd by the plaln· Recor-of Or-'91 C_..ty, uold deed Tllll IW......,,1 WoK filed •ltll I.Ila SH AM.ROCK INVESTMENTS 1111 •o•IMI YOio! II YOll Wllll lo cjeltftd of ''"" Clhtr111H -loll-1119 pro. C-ly Cle'1I °'Or-C-1y on J\lh 2Cl• Ulld Str9et. ....._., 9ffcll 11'111 lewwll, '°" INlll •ltllln • cloeyl perty LAWSON l,1tll. 02..o ' tllartl'llt""""'°"'l1Mrwd onyw, THE LAN O AEFIERAE O TO NELDA V LAWSON, "1UZ21 Lyman G Farwe ll 14u n lllewlllltlll1to11n ewr1n.nr910C>M1 HE,.E IH IS SITUATED IN THE Passed aw"Y on July 14, P11bllllWd Oranet C.ot•t OitllY Piiot, Slrffl .. ....,.;hoc .. CAf'JMO IO Ill• Complaint. Un4HI YOll cto IO, STATE OF CALIFORN IA, COUNTY u J11lp 3, 10, 17, 24, 1•1 H~I Ly,.,... H Fa..-li .. a. YOllr dtf .... l wlll .. tntared on I P. OF OAAHGE, ANO 1$ OESCRI BED 1981 She is survived by her Drive ~ .. acll 'c A t'Jt6.J pt1c.i1on"' trw p1a111tlff -11111 court AS FOLLOWS. son Kielb Private funeral P UBLIC NOTICE c'a111erl11e s ;:.,well JU may .,,..,• J.........,_1-1.m Y011 lor TlloM por1ionl of Tract No. 1«11, services will be held an the ••Y'"°" 0r1...: ..........,.. .. ~11 111e retie!~ 111 111a ~a1n1 ctfferlllecl• loltowl ,.ICTITIOU$ auSltllS5 .,..., • • •111<11 '°""' '""" "' .. mllllmenl "' PARCEL I. family plot al Fa1r ha11eA KAMlllTATIMIEMT N•ncyF.G.,,ley,W RancllO Oe ••ve,,1.-1noofmone1or ~-11 rw Alltllet-1lonofTrec:1No.7401,ln Memorial Park Services un· Tiie 1"'1..,,1119 perton is 4"'no .,..,1. Cerro, F•ll~. CA f'202I otller ••fief reci11e1ted In 111e <om· ,,,. City "' 1rv1ne. c_1., o1 0r .. oe. der the direction of Baltz neu as· T1111 11us111tu 11 '°"""''" by p1a1n1 1tat• Of Calllornla, •1 -,,..., ••· CLAYBIN COMPANY, HOI veneral~ Oalecl Jo.tly2t,ltl0, cor-lneo.m.-10,11 -u. Bergeron-Smith & Tuthill C•rdlnel 0r .. c..1aMe1a,C.. ,,,,. Lr"*IG F.._11 J-8.Ha,,11,Cierk Ml1<•t1--MAc1$, 111 111e office Of West<.'liH Chapel Mortuary Edwani A. c1art1111. 11111 c.arctlntl T1111 "~1 was lllad w1111 1t1e o. O. H\lt{T'll<ller, C>epvty Ille c-1y Racordotr "" .. ,ct 0r.,,.. Of Costa M"S" 646·9371. o c-ia ~--~--·,. C01111ly Clfftl "'Or-COllnly on J111y cooo•NO. au.-a1H a MOODY Co..111y. --delllltd as u1111 n '" u ' ' ·~ ,.._, ..... ,.. 1. 1t11. A ,.,......._I c.......... on a c-..i111""' P4t11, r11totdecl 111 LEATHERWOOD dl!i'~at""""" 11 <':''""cted by •n In· ,.16tll1 P.O. ••anti IOOll "''· Ptoe Uo -1o11-1no"' LITTIE "GERTRU DE" e-dA.CJ•'fbln PYblllNclOr.,.. eo.11 Oally Pl ... UIJS..c:a.1Dr.,"""91tt 0111<1•1 "1<ord1 ol u ld Or11111e LEATHERWOOD, resident T1111 lla*'-1 w .. "'"' w1u. Ille JlllyJ,to,i7•14•1•1 ,...., .. , ~:.:,~CoelltwWotM» cc;-~~CELt. or Costa Mesa. Ca. Passed COVfllY Cl-01 °'111• Co_, on Publl Oreneie Coat! Delly Piiot, All 11nc11¥ldtd 1fl611\ l111ere11 In •" JuM II, ltll. P UBLIC NOTICE 1 °' T 1 N 7«11 away on July 12. 1981. She is "..us J y1y 11,2 • .1 1"~-~ =:.,~'!.°"o.11...!:'~s ";:,....,::·a,.•': sur vi ved by h e r <.'h ildre n Publlllled°"'9n99 c-1 oa11, Piiot ltOTIC.MH,.AULT Oft 1tldconctorn1nl""'p1111. Juanita Cordiero o r Costa Jlllle2'.J..,,,J,IO,lf,ltll ,., ... 1 AltOl.UlCTIOllTO .. L.L. NOTICE Eaupllflv tw a Pt•lod of 10 , .. h Mesa, Ca .. Hazel Tankersley UMOU•HIDOf'Taun from alld .._, c1oe1e of -below) .... .i-,i.. - -u-. ..... . ...... v. ••dla.L LM .... _. <IH---. , II yov wtlll 10 ...., Ille ed¥1Ge of an allornt p In 11\11 mall tr, yow lllbvlf do 10 promptly so lllal your wrl Ian re-w, II .,.,, may lie 111.S on 11"'9 SI Ulltd -• 1dkltar el conwle de "" a~ en "la --·-rl• Ila< t rio lnmedlalemtnle, le ht• m111ere, Ml ,_lUI HCrlUI, 1l 1'tY l lOUlll. --Mr r99l'1rtcM a lie,,,... I. TO niE DEFENDANT: A tlvll complalnl MS -llltd by ti,. "'-1"' 1111 111al/lal you_ " YOll "'4111 "' del- tllh la..WI, you ""''t. •Ullin • .. Y• ertar tllls -11 ter\IOtl on t011, Ille wllll 11111 '°"" • wrltten,_nw lo lllt '°"""ainl. Un41t11 yQoM Ill> IO, yOYr deftvll will lie ,,_.., on: ap pllca11ott o4.,. p1•.-l11, -11111 C4111rt may e111 ... t 1""""*'4 1 .. lllM YOOI lor Ill• rtlltf --"' .... c.om~"'· •lll<ll could ••SI.Ill In 11o1mlllitn I o4 ••oe 1, lalllflt of m-..y or IH'6roer or ollltr rtllef reQ11etled 111 Ille oom e>t•lftt. .. ~ OAT£0 DK-r J, ltlO. J-B. Harr II, Cl.,~ By: M. PNCl'llOmn;w. O.OUIP • o "· L .. arUllll. Many W. Y-.,, J-e1A.T......_ ICl .... eyLM ..... M-•nlLc;:.tlltll, Att-ysatL.aw tt.o.a .. •. uowa .... onwA- •-.-. ca, t117' I ' hi: 11111111·11146 •• Publl-0r .. eie Coe•I oelfl. f>11ot l I I PUBUC NOTICE l~TMTMCmCC NOTIC.MHUITCH'SAL.I --hall of •II o41 QM. mlMr•I• and o r San Jose, Ca., v rg n a ., YOU.• ... o .. u•TY II IN OflA ... J,1 .. 1,atll:OOa.ltl.N•n· l!ydrocarbOn ..... tanc .. btlOW•deplll -----~' Kennedy or Goleta. Ca a nd -"CJITlOUl9U111tlll ,O,.CCLOIU•I •ICAUH YOU ,, •. "'"· -Sl*Cltuled TrwlH, ol ol soo f ... from Ille wrf•u of Mid PUBLIC NOTIC~ : July 10, 17, 24, JI, ltll ~llMI Ca I vert Leatherwood of lolAMll STATCMC1tT A ,. • a 1 <M 1 1t o 1 1t y o u • !Mt urtlln DMd of Trwt ••<wtH 11y 1anc1, w WllllOUI 111e rl.,.u "' .,.,,., Arizo na. brothers Hale a nd Tiie hllloWIM .,....., 11 do411Q b\ISI-ttAYMUNTI, IT MAY -..aoL.o w1111 .... c. ..,,,.,......., 111, -,. "P°" •"' -11oft of llM lllrf«• -... C600 ' • ' . 6 ,,... .,, WITHOUT AMY cou•T ~ • .,., cordff Ott-.. J. 1'1t • 11111r .... M1t • Cleplll ot JOO, ... tor the__. ol NOTICE TO PER~· • S H u I h T 1 P P 1 l • 1 sr.-Y Jt'6 Y°" "'•Y -._ .... 1 rlll" I• lllrlfta No. JIU.. 111 ao. 1-.. ,.._ 12t1, of u1Horlno 111<, borlno. ... 1n1no. «11111111. g r andchildren, 26 great· OENTAL OFl'ICE,.IEGI ' yowrec:~lrltMd llMCl"tbU•Y· Ofllcl•I Rtc«dl o1 er.,... C01111ly, ra,..ov1119, ntra<1ln1 or marktllno INTERESTED IN E grandchildren °nd 3 great· Cl•ySlrwt."'-JIO"tllff<llc'1CASlt'J~ lnt•llaly.x_t .. ,.y,,_lsplw t.illornl•, -,.._,to ..... (ff• told l\ll>lt•nc•I •1 r ... rwd by w. ESTATE OF c. I .IN .. Sllal'Oll Jo Wiison, J2U •v '" • """ltted CMll -·-•1111111 , .. ,, Notice .,,, OofMllt .... EIKtloll .. Bradford Helli• and Olflerl by dMdl gr ea l ·grand chi Id re n He•port e..o., CA ftloU. l7vM....,.. from..,...._ 11111 Mtk• s.11 llM,_,,. r _ _, .-pr11 J, 1 .. 1. recordtd J,.. s, 1"2 111 -ttM. METZGER, DECEAS-=.p. Services held on Wednesday, Tiii• llllllNSJ ls c.~Md by 111 1~ of,,.,..,.,_ raconlad. "''--.. 1111..-No. 2'7S. l11 .._ , ... , "'9• 11.,. "· Oflld•I Aacords, anc1 N otice Is hereby glvtn: July 15, 1981 at lO:OOAM at d1•1411•1;,,.,,.,, Jo ..,,,.1.,, " •u .... ., • "' JWt• is. 1t11, -P ... IUF, "'Dtfl<lal .-acor•"' Mid ,..,.ec:..,_ J..,. "· 1"2 '" ._ "56• To all p e rson s interest- the Ha r bor L'awn M emorial Tiii• ... ,_,,.,,. -lllMI wllll , .. Wiii lncrl•M 1111111 your UCOlllll C-ly, .tll..,.., Md,,.,,_,,. to .,....7 ... _7JOOflkl•IRtcordt.-e d , whethe"' a s c rea~ ... -s. bKOfTIH ,WinM, YOll ... .., .......... lilt Mid 0.-"' T ..... •II .. pYIMlc •v<· h.rtll•r ... rveci In Ille -from w ' ·~"' C hapel with Rev. Harold Co11nty Clark 01 OrM99 c°""ty on POY tllt Mliln ..,..ict _,,.,Of,_ u .. 1rwca111,1....,._yoftMUnll· areclfOfd Hetlls •"" 01t1er1 recorded heirs, legat ees, or: 9e- Carlson , pastor or the West J.,,,.14' 1911· ,1.,_ •cc011nl,•_ .._ 11;11 ,.,....... wa. •d St••• "' ~ke. •t SoltlJt ... ..._., t7, ''" 1"-,..,, Ptoe at, Of· v i sees, in th e estat• •f C. Anahel·m West U n ited PYbll.-.Or-"-•tOallyPllOI. dt mended, ..,_ y.., "'"'t ,., 111e 1ra 11ce, Ora111• C•w11ty H'er•or fkl•l,_ec:...._ 1 • u -u d •d ~----.,.._1st........... MYnlclpal Co11rl, •601 Ja,..INret 1Eac..,U119 t .. r91rom all of Ille r• rvin rTIC ger, ecea s,. , M ethodist Church, official-J.,,,.u,J1o11y~to.17,tt11 ....., A1t•r.,.,...mM«11atnoftt11e•1ea110111evarct. N••••rt leac h, .... 11111111 011. 1a1, mlnere11 a11d whose last addr ess "'as l'IHCI HOTHHS lli.L HOADWAY MOlTUAIY ing. Interment services im· -recor110tllft.tt1111-.C-t <••e11c.i1tor111a,•ll'*lilM,Ull•-l11·11yc1roc:ar11on..,..1anca11y1119be10w• M artinsburg, Penl'\s~I · FRANCESCHINI d . t I r II d s . PUBUC NOTICE .... ., '9( ............. " ....... ,, terfft ,_yed It --Mid w It ..,. .. of,. ... l f""" Ille wrlao of I 16662 th I tt .. me 1aey o owe . er111ces , 1111te1tt11e..._1e11 .. inerwaci-.c1-rM1dDMd.,Tr•t1"1t1e,...., ... 111 ,.1111,-.t*'t'*"111e'itntot..,. van a , ate ll:'rs w 1 L L J A M under the direction o ----wPM!lltmllta•-.r~.-._.... ,., 11t110te11111 Mid c...My -sie .. 1,., -.,,Y _,1 .. of 111e '"rfec• testame ntary or of •d· 110 Broao.vay Cos1a Mesa 642·9150 --. IAL TI & IHGHOH SMrTH & TUTHILL WESTCLIFF CHAl'IL 427 E 17thSI Costa Mes a 646-9371 "HCI llOTHIU SMITHS' MOUUAaY 627 Main SI Hun1tnQton Beach 536-6539 l'AClfte YllW MIMOllAL ,A.all Ceme1ery Mortuarv Chapel-Cremalory 3500 Pac1f1c l/1ew Onve Newp0rt Beach 6'4·2700 FRANCESCHINI. resident Harbor Lawn·Mount Ollv "4:TITIOUl9UllNllll 0111r t,,. 1 ... 1 r1e111 •• •t• ,,,. ctfferl'9d .. :Al•NflO!d""t•lll Mcl at>en • dtCltll Of• 1"1 lrw •ny ministration have been:ls· C M l f C t M MAllolMI ITATIMalfT forec10::.:.d1Nrl11t IM e11tlre to: ' Pll'POM wNI_,, H rft¥Ved In M d t H 111 d h of Newport Beach. a . oruaryo osa esa. T,,.1o11ow1ne--11do4no1N1a1-.,....,,,1 wr-c,....tar. """CllL1:ut7tolTractNo . .uo,1,,.tr11me111recordHOaca"'ber2t,sue O .o ays""4rg Passed away on July lS, S40·55S4. na11••: To 111111 ...... .,_.. 'rOll "'""' .. "'•-111•,...recOrdH 111..,. m1 111 .... *l. Moe 110 of 0tt1c1•1 Trus t Co., Holllday'*>u;"g, 1981. He was a veteran In the M..rH ESNE" AHWALT l!HTIEAPRIS£I. 1Dt pay, or lo"".,.. I•"'"*" to et• 2'5, ,. .... 10 t• II, lnckltlw •f Ml•· ltec:orft. Pa. Blair Co., ·PA, Ky: """" • LOfllt111'1 .. c..1o,..._ea,t'J•• 11w1otaci.w..w11 ,_,,....r1Yl1 uti-""-'rec•• ol OrMft PA,.CllLJ: B l I C t ti f US. Navy, Wo rld War II. He M I L T o N A . wa1w N.°'9Yi.,uaL.aN1111 Pt .. 1,, -.._.. 1w.,,.,...., ,.., ... c-tr.Cellfwlll•; All Eacl.,.1,,. •• 0 ,..,,,1 for a r oun y, a CO\lr ,o Js survived by his daughters M cCH ESNEV. resident of Co&t• Mou, Ca.,.. contact: ttA,.Cl!L 1: M ....,rt_, -· ve11tc111 ... POr'lllne _, 11111 ponlon of competent jur isdiction \ of Virgi nia Park o r Balboa Hunti ngton B eac h . Tllll ........ lt<-ltdbY lll ln· .-oo l'JELLMAN Olld LI U CIYUW:Elw llltf'--toldTrec:tHo.7«11,1MwnHP·S7on theStateof Pennsylvania. Island. ·ca. and Norma C a lifornia. Born i'n Burt. dlvldll•I:.. .......... "-·1• .. JllLLMAN..a:: _,.., o--.... ,.. .. 111r Letllflf Tr1ttt•2J0 ... ._ cefldofftlnium pt.,,, wt11c11 -· That the fol I otl)'\ g " .., " ..,.._ S..N, 211 Cllnll, CO<llfla, CA M .,,..,. M f!\111 r~ 111 .._ ,...111111or !tit lltMflt o4 --r1• M organ or Woodland Hills. 6 low .. on November 1, 1885. Tiii• ----llltd wllll tlw t17U; .....,_: (21J) »147'-us, ...... " t• II, l11<lllllw of Mlt· ,,.,,l \a P~ol• I and 2 ......... person Is Indebted • 0 : or grandchildren and 7 g reat· He passed a way in Costa co..nly Cl-of o...,.. e-y'"' H Yt41 .._.,. tttY ""u.,,, .,.., cat...._ Mlc9. -* • o..,.. 1uao-.G1er1, 1rv111e,CA holding personal property g randc hildren Gravesid e M c f i J t • J1111t u. i.... -.utd ~ • lowY'W • tM ..,_.,.. c-iy, ea111W111-. ....-.r •1111-· "Ill • w... ..,.._"' -•· of the salddecedent • · esa, ali om a on u y 11. .....,... _, OWICY Wllkh"'" ...,. lfwwM me11t• 1..-._...,, 111d set11-e111 1...,.t111111 .,_....,,.,no .... ,.,,ty H 0 M E S AV 1 N. ,4 S: & services will be held on Mon· 1981 at t h e age of 95. PWll!Nd 0r.,,.. Cout Delly l'ilel .,._ 1-. ""°'' •tld l'ercol 1 _,..,. Ltt a., 1111.,.,. •to Its cClmlMat-11 or ,0,. ~ ;... .. ; d a Y, Ju I Y 20. 1981 . at Sur vived by h is wife Jngri J.,,.. "· J..,.ya, lo, i7, 1911 ~ ••"''"''°'· YOU MAY LOH .. Id T·•• .,,. toeet,., •"h •-· r1t1MMI". Tt1e lltfttlk lory ...-. uolct L 0 AN ASSOC I A Tl V'l't , ll :OOAM at the Rlvers.1de M cChesney or Hunt1n1ton L. .. AL. ..... Tl ... YOV 00 MOT -hf•-"~~ °'"OfTIWC,lty,.....ol•Wff<ll« 23861 E l Toro ·Rd. El ff'"O>-o , Notional Military Cemetery. Beach. ea .. daugbt.era Mary PtJBUC NOTICE THl~~M..u :=.:c.-,... .... .:.:=1=:,.;!i ==.1~1~::,.=~ CA. City of : El f oto, Riverside. Ca. Services un-McChesney o f H u n tington • NOTICa 11 H1.-•1v OIVCM: -..1f!e'I<"..,. •..,,._...I -11w re11 eo IN........,..._.• writ'°" California 92630 • der the direction of Balls Beach, ca and C harlot(e •nM1 THA' SOUTH HILLS cscaow n <hllilw ~ " -.,. ••c 1111 .. o.c1aret1t11 o1 O.fOlllt -o.~ . That the undersigned ile· B ergeron ·S mllh & TuthlU Nason o r St . Paul. M in· "ICTITIOUl•UllNCll co ....... CM ....... QrparMIM, 1• ,...... l.ttll. ,., Sela, -WI'" .... no.ice of twoacll sires to receive the s-ld NAMCITATIMSNf dYly ..,..,.. .. 'f~ ~. 0.0. Tlle ............ .,~c-•lld ., •lectlot< ,. UllH Ille ..... West cliff Chapel Mortuary n es 0 ta U.a n d 1 1 1 0 "'' , .. ,_..,. perto111 •r• dol119 o1 '""' .... "-w. "" _....,. -..i ...... " .... ~" is • .. ,.1,"" t• au 141111 ,.. ... '1, t• pers onal property or col· of Costa Mesa.646·9371. Jrandchlldren. Interment _._.: · ~ JOHH "-A.OTHO, 111 -.rrlM hw•, ~ a..dl, qlHwtlla. 1ttltfy ............ .....,-.,.,...,,., lect the cla lm (s) and to re· HENRY W ' 11 be al Lakewood •JOAN ICl!MT ""1" 'TYLllS, 11' -• TNlltr, l•tK-~ • 'fll• II ...• ,.d ••dren ., "'• ... .,,...,..... .... ~Mid llOlka °' move that collected or te-• •• 11111 ... c:aea,..... Ga.~ .... .._ Ill •• ..., .. MM. HI.MA a.Mfklary ...... ,.... .. .... lllrMCll Md .... , .... I• .. ,_ec.,... ESABEL J . HENRY. Cemete.ry, St. Paul, Min , .... "'91..W•. • s. w..tw o•H•lt.. • ~ .. -· .. 1u111111~1t~H.w.i1ace .._,.,11u 1t11, ._ 111111 ..... n1'7 111 celved from the State of t:Hed away on July 8, 1981• nesola. • .... •M•.....,.C._,--..., ...,..1cw. ~ ,,_ ». "" • <I•~ ....... _ c.,,.. ._. '"-...., 1110. tf Mid 0ttkla1 California to the s.ld stale e.ldent Or Irvine. ~. She " rllNER • y~ "*'tWll:. 114 1• ltttl""""' ,._Mn, Ill ._. 1111l. Dttw., IMOl.c:.ilfllnlle. •• .,., where letters test..1.m•n· r. ... JOt, LM.,,....., ea.,... .,... .., flf OMtlal ._. ... Of· otrM.._ •• .. ....,. ........,."" a.i. .... Wiii .. -· -... "'"""' • .. waa 1 member o( I.he • E.O. LY~ l:[)ITH WERNER, ™• ..._ 11 ~ w ,,.. •a flf .. __._., 0r._ c.-c, _,. ......... -. "• "'• -'**""' .,. _,.... ....,.... ., 1"'. tary or of administration C lub Survived bk tier re•lden{ cl COit.i II.ell. C•. 111",_ .. <.....,. .. .,,.,. ca.._...,..,_...,. ......... ; 111 .,..:f.:"' .. a..ncw,..,_ ,..._,,........ u .. : ~., have been lsauect. ; bu.band A.p . (BJ ) Of P ••• -.-.... , nn Julr. l!i ,..,.,_....... .... a..ttlWWlp ,., ..... "" • .,. ............... _.....,_.., .... , .. ..__..... All person& ha vll'\9 -.... .,, ., .. ,...,... ---... -...... '"*.. .......... .,....... ............ CS) ....... I I --· t t-....-.... Irvin~. ca .. bt«hert Rcltlert IMl ......... nae Oft Tlllt .......... -fll ....... ,, .. "-t .. CMy•c.e.-.. ............................ ..., ......... ., ................ c . ms .._.,M .... --· Jo,.nson of Arlson• ••d board me"1ber o f O R. T c-t• a.. _. OrMlt c-ev " ,..... • ... ,., .... 11 • .... Miit • __,, ...,_ • ......... • ........ ......., ---. "-... nt Of' en lntwest In Mid Richard Jobnaon o( Wwom. end 1 Yice-pnaldHt ol Ute .,......... cee...._...._ °""" c:i..,, •· ••• ..., ......... .,___.,_. ..., .. _.,_..._._.'",,., Stitt Ind wllltlng \o Ob- , lat ...... ol ORT ,,..... .... C.tt0el:;1= "" ..... :r-...... • .• -·-.~~--:.-::-.............. __.--:-::.: ~"':r.::.::-~~ feet tOIUChrefftOVM1THfSt 101 Servic. beld on Thurt- 1 •m -··°" · · · J_., _.,., ,., 11, ,.., .... --•,... ,., 1r;";-111;-;;; .. '"'"· •• .. ,: '"""''.., ,... .._ _.. o... 11 ,.,_, .,.. .... w111 ; give written notice of suth ~o~~J.~'ft ~'.i~:•l.:: =~.,.:;. ;~~~ &1er!':..: :.-=·:,::=-..=.-:. :::=-:=.==:.:,:::=.=.:;..:."'..::,: 0:1r's~~c:' 1~::T: Memorial Cb8PeJ -1th R..-. ,_ Dwrrf -.a.an, Joel Pl18l.IC NOTICE .. ,..,... 1s -.. ._ •-* 111 ...,.,_., ... ..._., .... : 11 .. tll!M.OMar ......... • •• ._ _ • A•l'OD ....,.., t:tc; ot u.. A.,.1 _. llatlltw Lone. ... ,.,...... 11x "" ....... •: T.-".-. 2: "" .. ,.. o....-aw, 1111 1111 cit., " old .. ,. penanet "*"Y ~~;;_;~~==;~~~~~H~•=r~:o;r:~~r~l~~~~B~•~;t~l•:;t mo&Mr lln !:• Sam. NftW-• "",..._. • ,,__. .. ...., •• 11 ...,... • ,. or.&CA. or. the dtudint.-tl>Such Ind ..._.......... ur ~. ..._,.,~ ..... _,,.,,,...... ._.,_.,~,., -_a1flill ............... _.1cet1e11 notice must be ftft.tDttle .,..,._.. ~ n.-_..,_, ...... ,,...._ .._, •. ..._ .,_ ............. ...-...... .. JI 1a. 11nti19 .... lie IMid ...._..........-...---................. • -C:-.-Dr, _.. ...._. ef tflt ._., .. ,._person nO n•r:t"• 1'b_..,,.IUllfll.·l•at ... ALTM' .,....tctt ..... -........ ...,_ ......,.....,ca.~., ... ...,... ...... personal pro••r.1y er .................. .Loinm ~ ... ~ ~ u =-~ . -• ITATIOl'CAUNMelA,,,.) ... ,. == ~~=~~ agalntt ~ .... t ... m II ... "' ·~ ....... ---=-. _ "=""":-::.. .. ::. .. w.:...:. .... _ ... rm:d "'.::.1 ~ -:_:-::.,~..: .... .,. .. ---~-~:i..:.....-c111 .. ., ........ ,.. THIRTYDAVSai flfll of ,,_,CA.... t• ....___ IN• ....... PM ; : TU publlcettln ol,t9111 ---•trttell&;'......... .............. I ........... --...ATICNI D•tM· ....__..,.I -.._ .... ,,....,CA_,.,-:--i..,.., ....... _ ...... -._... &'!411L_ ·-'!'.L!. HD TMt-ttnsie.c ... 111r1 .... l ..... .... ......... ••• ~~ .... 8.: Wlaw I ..,,,.....,,.......... ....,.a=&.;. ... ._._ ...... _ ..._ ---• -....;c OIUCtr, 11 •1 IN .... m::..-=: :SC-.i!=-t..=---: =='5.'F ~· c. • • ~"I~ .:ti.Ii-~ ~ ~ ~ ..... _ THE F"MILl' Cl8Ct8 by Bil Keane BIG GEORGE .. - by Virg il Partch (VIP) --. ~ PEANUTS Or1ngt Coast DAILY PILOT/Frldly, July 17, 1981 iHE~'i'~OSE ME., CHUC~! DOESN'T TAAT JU5T MAKE VOU SMIVEJt ALL 0VEf( ? • by Charles M. Schulz l1M TRVIN' TO STAV HOMelf, CHUCK ... by Tom K. Ryan l TUMBLE• EED8 1-11 111 ~ ll ~ -- "What time is when the big hand is on five ond :. the little-hand is on the floor?" "You seldom see candlestick makers nowadays." •.. ~:\RMADtKE by Brad Anderson OE:\:\IS THE ~E:\i\CE Hank Ketchum l I I I .. ' :: "Well; next time you decide to knock over a beehive, you'd better run faster!" "Don't let 'that noise scare you. Mom. I'm 1ust washin' some rocks.· Jt:DGE PARKER GARt'lt;LD IT 15N"r HEAL.lH't' foP. A CA1' TO ~E AS 01~ AS VOO ARE, · GARflELP . ' l \ . I~ H ? ;!, tf WH't', VOU COOLO GET HEAf\i Y'ISEASE., GET FALLEN ARCHE':> ... by Harold Le Dow< THANK..'">. MAN;!.' I MAY HAVE ~METHIN6 lO REPORT VERY !:>HORlLY! bv Jim Davis SHOE WHERE HAVE YOU BEEN, NANCY'? veAH, l"Y"'S A SMOCK . P"esc~IP1"10N, """'-,::tlG;H1", &01" 11" SU~l!I AIN'..,. ON ONE! o~ MIS ~Ms ... DID YOU CATCH ANYTHING? 'TMI~ AAltltlO ~ ~ 'l:) ~! ~~IPl!~t rr CCV~~ ~ c.a.J'1tll) rtf by Jeff MacNelly (9'J~ .... __ _ by Tom Ba ti uk by Kevin Fagan M.~1~~ rO\l.... ~~OAA'f ... 1\4A1'~ L.IC, .. f ett.R ... M'i ~P1..U, L.1-Sf. !'EAMOf 601"1'~~ ~\10<.,€ SARc;? ••• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, July 17, 1981 DEAR PAT DUNN : I lease the car I use for my business travel. I've heard that I can cteduct the Jease payments from my tans iince I use this car in business. Js this true? -K. P., Newport Beach You m~ deduct tbe lease pay'IDllllBll~ ~e ex&ell& that they are directly a rtbatable tp your trade or buslne11, accor to tbe In· tenaal Revenue Service. You ma aot deduct l ay portion of tbe lease payme ta for com· muting or other persoaal ue the car, any ~dvance paymeau for comm g or other ersonal use of tbe car. Aay ~vance pay. enfa must be prorated over the entire lease terlod. You may not deduct any payment you .. ake toward the purchase of a car even lf die payments are called lease payments. !Ltd~' explained DEAR PAT DUN N: Ma ybe you can nswer something I've been curious about ver since I becam e a secretary and have typed a lot or business letters. Is "Ltd." after !he name of a business just added to give 'tone" to the name, or does it really mean i omething? K.L .. Newport Beach Even though some companies or mercan· tne establishments may tag on "Ltd." or 'Llmited" in the hope It will upgrade tile tirm's status, its signlrlcance is flnaaclal, not foclal. It means simply that the financial liability of each partner qr stockholder ls limited to the amount o( bis or her actual in· vestment in the business. · 'Brochure revi eim rates • I ' DEAR READ ERS: The state Depart- ment of Insurance is offering a free brochure to help consumers who have concerns about their insurance rates. The booklet, "The Answer Book on Insurance Rating Problems or How To Be a Good Complainer," answers questions the department receives about making raUng problems on automobiles. homeowners. workers' compensation in - surance and other types of coverage, and how consumers can proceed if they have questions. State Insurance Commissioner Robert C. Quinn said the brochure is the work of the de- partment's Rate Reglij,;ttion Division. This division is responsible for seeing that in· surance companies do not charge rates which ARN A D L , are inadequate, excessive or unfairly dis· cr iminatory. Jn California, rates are set by compeli· lion, not by the Insurance Commissioner. The only exceptions a r e t h e Californ i a Automobile Assigned Risk Plan. mlnimum rates for workers' compensation Insurance, mortgage and credit insurance. The consumer guide includes a section which aims to t}elp policy holders express their problems to agents, insurance company representatives and the Rate Regulation Division. Additiona lly. a consumer complaint questioMaire has· been printed to comple- ment the guide. lt is intended to get all the in· form aUon which the division's rate analyst will need to help resolve a policy holder com- plaint. Currently, the booklet and complaint form are availa ble In English, Spanish and Tagalog. To obtain single or buJk copies, phone (213 ) 736-2781 or write to: Rate Regula· lion Division, Department of Insurance, 600 S. Commonwealth Ave., Los Angeles 90005. • Tracing old policie8 DEAR PAT DUNN: I'm Interested in finding out where I can determine the value of several old life insurance policies. Can you ~Ip me out? E.T., Costa Mesa Write to the companies that ls1ued tbe policies. The name and address should be lD- cluded in each policy. If there Is no address, write to the American Council of Life Insurance laforma· tlon, Information Services Depanment. 1850 K St. N. W., Wasblngton, D.C. 2"N. Include as much lnformatlon as possible about tbe policies and ask that current addresses be provided to you. • "'Got a problem? Then Wri te to Pat \.. l Dunn Pat will cut red tape, getting • the an.swers and action you need. to • solve inequities in government and ,.., business. Mail your qiust&on.s to Pat I I Dunn. At Your Snvu:e. Orange COO$t Daily Pilot. P 0 Boz 1560. Co•ta Mesa, CA 92626. A• many letters C13 po.uible w1U be aMWeTed , but phoned mqu1ne& or letters not 1ncludmg tht! reader's full name. addreu and busme.u hours' phone number cannot be conmiered. This column appears doily ez. ce pt Sundays ·· 0 -.. a a s a aces s JULYl0-19 ORANGE COUNTY FAIR THE ASSOCIATION FR IDAY, JULY 17 RO B GRILL and T H E GRASS ROOTS SATURDAY, JULY 18 I DAVID FRI ZZELL & SH ELLY WEST SUNDAY, JULY 19 Carnival Rides • Country Contests • Livestock • Crafts Demonstrations • Fiim Festival • W i nni ng Wine Exhi b i t • Flower .Show • Hypnotist Va ndermelde •Rodeo 7/17, 18 & ·19 • ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS COSTA MESA •. 751 ~FAIR ADULTS: 13.00 JUNIORS 6-12: '1.00 UNDER 6: FREE Mon. -Thurs. Noon to Mldnite Fri., Sat., Sun. 10 A.M. to Midnlte Parking : $1 Deliv er the Daily Pilat Boys and girl s 10 or older - Call 642-4321 and apply t oday . Daily Pilaf SATURDAY OllLY, JULY 18 ·SKI (For Locals OnlyJ J Huntington Beacfl, Newport Biaclt, Costa Mesa, Corona def Mar, Irvine I residents ••• Don't wait for ou~ tremendous August $ale, sltop Saturday for ~ - Great Savings • • • IJeat tfte crowds • • great selection. ' Ro11ignol 1981 • 82 Sida ' • 15% IFF his sate is being held r our local friends and ighbors. ·s K 1· s 1·2 AUTHIER HEXCEL SPALDING TH SKI CHOOSE FROM THESE FAMOUS BRAND· S.KIS • CLOIHI• . io 10% IFF 4 f Daily Pilat FRIDAY, JULY lJ, 1981 BUSINESS CS STOCKS C6 Economists call Reagan prediction on inflation 'optimistic' . . . C5 .There was never • a day like this SANDWICH, England (AP) -Since the British Open golf championship began in 1860, there never was a first day like this. Nobody broke par. Jack Nicklaus, a three-time champion, shot 83 -bis worst round in 20 British Opens -after hearing that his son Steve had been charged with drunken driving back in Ohio. Tom Watson, defending champion, predicted the title may be won with an unprecedented total of 6-over par. AND AMID ALL the high scoring in the shift· ing winds, 51 -year-old Arnold Palmer lost an argu- ment with officials over a free drop and probably was robbed of a share in the lead. The 6,829-yard Royal St. George's links lived up to Its reputation as a terror for golfers un- familiar with the humpbacked fairways, invisible bunkers and winds that blow in from Pegwell Bay. Only two of the 153 players, Vicente Fernandez of Argentina and Nick Job of Britain, made par 70. They shared •the lead, with six men one stroke behind them Johnny Miller and U.S. Amateur champion Hal Sutton of the United States, U.S. Open winner David Graham of Australia, lsao Aoki of Japan, Simon Owen of New Zealand and Tony Jacklin of Britain. Leaders Vicent• Fernendez 70 Nick Job 70 Johnny Miiier 71 IHO Aoki 71 Tony Jecklin 71 Simon Owen 71 HelSutton 71 Devld Grehem 71 NICKLAUS: 83 MILLER: 71 T r a ilers Arnold Pelmer 72 Ben Crenahew 72 Merk O'Meere 74 Hubert Gr"n 75 Bruce Leitzke 78 Lee Trevino 77 Crelg Stedler 13 Jeck Nlcldeua 83 Al the center or the drama was the tragic figure of Nicklaus, who has never finished outside the top six in the last 15 years. Julio Sandoval gets visit from fleft J. Duame Jackson, Dino Bell. Emile llarry and Duval Love. ALL THE TOP PLAYERS had predicted the course would be difficult, but probably none or them expected it to be as tough as this. The pins were awkwardly placed, the wind differed from hole lo hole and tbe ireens were slow. Few of the 19,000 fans who lined the undulating fairways knew of his family worries. All they saw was a great golfer making a mess of hole after hole. At the tum. with one birdie and five bogeys., he was at 39, four over par. ~ . . . . Bell puts reputation on _ line agam But worse was to come. On the first five of the in ward rune he had four double bogeys and a bogey. They'll be. after him at the Shrine All-star game, but Edi son star is ready NICKLAUS SAID AFTERWARD he had . talked to his son on the phone. "I'm not greatly excited by what has hap· pened, bul it had nothing to do with my performance," he said. "There has to be one day when you shoot the worst 'round of your life." By ROGER CARLSON Of Ille O•ly ~, ... se.fl Dino Bell has been a player with his creden- tials on the line s ince he was a junior at Edison High School, with a repulaUon as a winner since he and hJs brother, Kerwin, transferred from La Canada's St. Francis High. And although the only reference to Edison High at the 30th annual Shrine All-star football game, to be held July 25 at Pasadena's Rose Bowl, is his Chargers helmet. the role continues. "TIDS IS KIND of an individual-type game," says the 5-1. 180-pounder, who follows his brother's footst;eps in this game. then on tc Kansas University. JOHN SEJ/ ANO .. And its a time when a lot or players want to prove themselves against you. "They want lo put Edison down and I know they feel they can if they can put me down. It's the same for l Michael> Alo of Banning. That would just make their day They didn't win any city or CIF championships, you know." BelJ is expected to be a starter in the South's secondary and he's anxious to see any and all com- ers head his way ''I'd like to see all or I.hem and thank them ror the 22 strajght wins," says Bell with a twinkle in his eye. DINO, PRO BA BLY DESTINED to be known as Kerwin's li ttle brother for at least three more years. says his decision to follow his brother to Ka nsas was based almost entirely on the personalities of the recruiting coaches. "The coaches at Kansas turned me on and the others turned me off," says Bell. "The Kansas coaches are just like the Edison coaches. They re- late to every individual, not just the starters." As for brotherly advice <Kerwin ran for 179 yards and two touchdowns a year aco for the South), Dino says, "He just told me to 1et along with my teammates and to play as a team. · "I've wanted lo play in this game for a year since seeing Kerwin play and beinc selected is just as important as making All-CIF." ALTHOUGH HE FIGUR ES to concentrate on- ly on defense, as he did in the Orange County game and as he is expected to at Kansas, Bell ad- mits he hopes to see som~ offensive action. "I'd like to run the ball at least one or two times and get a good gainer. There's not as much ~lory on defense, you know." · Watson doubte·bogeyed the first hole after . twice bitting into heavy rough. He finished with 73. That left him three strokes off the pace. Wlth the high scoring Ukely to continue, It appeared to be a contending position. Palmer posted a 72, and it would almost cer- tainly '1ave been 70 if he had not run into a bizarre situation at the 15th and had a double bogey six. P ALMER'S SECOND SHOT ran through the green and down a slo"'-1_0 a flat area close to the spectators' stand. He lollhd he flad no room to swing bis club. He claimed a free drop, under the rules or golf. Officials said he could have it, but must drop his ball in the nearest approved drop area. Palmer found the area a mass of long grass a nd decided to play from where he was. He went through the green again and had to chip back. · "t .../"' I Shaking off t h e b lues Bell is one of the few on the South team with a fair knowledge of the North's game, especially with Blair High running back Fred Crutcher, Muir High tackle Brian Lynch and de- fensive back Tod Short of St. Francis. Palmer was British Open champton in 1961 and 1962. Last week he won the U.S. Senior Open championship. HE DIPLOMATICALLY turned newsmen's questions aside, but finally said he thought the rul- ing was unfair. CAMP TIME! My how time rues during the summer when there's no baseball. The last two months have seemed like 20 years. Football is about to take care of the summer blues, though. Camps are opening throughout the NFL this week and next with the first preseason iame scheduled for Aug. 1 when Atlanta and Cleveland go at it in the Hall \:JI Fame Ill Canton Ohio. The Rams open their doors at Cal State Fullerton to rookies and a smattering of veterans Saturday with the heavyweights due to report a week later. Two-a-days start Monday -a facet of NFL training life veterans detest. AS A MATTER OF FACT, most veteran walkouts during training camp are not due to con· tract banlea, but rather the two-a-day grinds they . must endure. The top departure prospect among Ram veterans has traditionally been Doug France. This year is no different . . . As for AWOL personnel. linebacker Mel Owens, the team's top pick In the draft, is serenely sipping a Mint Julep back at bis home in Michigan. T he chances of him reporting Saturday a're doubt.Cul ... The Rams have moved defensive tackle Cody Jones to right end this year to battle Fred Dryer for starting duties. The Rami obviously feeJ that Dryer, 33, is geUing up in years and a successor needs to be groomed . . . MIKE FANNING, Incidentally, will &alte over the starting chores at tackle. where he had 10 Hcks last year . . . Coach Ray MaJavasi's Media Orientation.Day was a success if you happened to be one of a handful ol beat writers cove('ing the team on a .. y-to-day basla. Olherwlle, it was too lon1. too t.thnicaJ and too borln1 .•. Cl al mint th.t nobodr wanted the tiaht end· Nltlon -offenaive line eo.cbel say tbeJ aren't Offensive Unemen, and wide recelvera coaches IUIJn they're not wtde recetven -MalavHI hH Cllclded to coach the u,bt endl himself unUI th• Mason starts. Hit lint leuoo Is 1otn1 to \ieal wJtb elde•1t.ppln1 reporter'• q1M1t.tont Or that center Mic k Tingclhoff of Minnesota used to hike the ball with two hands on a run and one hand on a pass? Or that Dallas offensive lineman Rayfield Wright would lift up his right heel on a run and keep tl down on a pass? I didn't know that, either, and 1t really doesn't make much difference now that all of them have retired. Malavasi might have told us some current secrets, but then you could have almost heard him say. "Do you want to know everything?". DID YOU KNOW that the Rams still could have had Vince Ferragamo play for ~hem up until Wednesday of this week It's true. According to article 18 of the collective bargaining agreement, a playe r who has been playing in the Canadian Foot- ball League may be employed by an NFL team in the same season as long as he is signed by an NFL team by July 15. Vince didn't sign, which isn't too shocking ... Did you know the Rams gr'ade their films after every game? Malavasl said 94 has been his highest grade with 22 his lowest. A grade of 70 or better de- fensively, say:; Malava;I. usually means you've won .. · · The Rams are going to replace the gray cage in front of their helmets with dark blue ones this seasDn ... The average cost to completely suit a !\am player these days is S600 ... Equipment Mana1er Don Hewitt flatly denies the Rams are pulling lifts in Pat Haden's shoes this year ... Offensive coordinator Lionel Taylor has a formula for sucess XO XO -football players. Thanks Lionel. • Add Taylbr, on chan&Jng the Rams' o(fense for Haden. "We won't change a thing, although cer· Lain quarterbacks d6 certain things better Oian other:· Like throw long, lijah' "I started with Short in the Junior All· American program when I was nine," says Bell. "And I've been playing with and against Crutcher since the seventh grade." , Bel! also bas a pretty fair knowledge of his own teammates, including Edison's Duaine Jackson and Fountain Valley's Emile Harry and Duval Love. "Everyone's familiar with each other," says the All-CIF Division I selection. THE SHI FTY TAILBACK ~ored 22 touchdowns for the two-time CIF Big Five Con- ference champions during his senior season, whi~h included a pair of victories over arch-rival Foun· lain Valley. The rivalry, however, has been limit- ed to the playing field only. "Me and Tim Finley (Fountain Valley de· fe ns ive back) are good friends. So are Dave Desper, Bubba (Duval Love) and Emile. "Jack Braman came to me and told me, 'I bat- ed you during the season, but you're my friend, now.' That's .the way It should be, and it is." BeJI also possesses some big moments from the recent Orange County All-star game (won by the South, 40·12), but hls reflections center on the coach <Fountain Valley's Mike Milner), more than his own sterling effort or the victory'. "The best thing about that came was playinc under Coach Milner," H)'B Bell. "I never knew him before. He bad spoken to me, saying 'nice game,• and stuff like that, but l never knew him. 1 "I can see why they (Fountain Valley) win because he's • winning penon. I tboutbt our 1ame was a thing of perfection and it was because of him.'' BELL AND HIS teammatH visited the Sbriners Hoepltal ln Loe An1elea Tbunday prior to <See DINO, P,1e CZ> "I don't think you should be penalized because you are in an unplayable area that is part of the putting area." Palmer said. "That's all I'll say about it." But Graham. who was paired with Palmer, spoke out more strongly. "Arnold was 100 percent right," the Australian said. "There should be no local rule that overrides the general rules. "A player should not be penalized for uninten· tionally hitting the ball into the spectators' area. It is not right lo take a man's ball from a good lie and drop it into a lie that is unplayable." EVERYBODY APPEARED to sympathize with PaJmer except the tournament committee of the R and A (Ro.val and Ancient) Club. John Salvesen, chairman of the committee, said th~ rules must be observed and added: "You are bound to find some cases that are more unlucky than others." - Margermn signs Fountain Valley High and Stanford University standout Ken Margerum, a third round draft pick of the Chicago Bears, signed a contract wilh the NFL club it was announced Thursday. No terms of the contract were revealed, but the wide receiver was expect~ to report with the rest of the rookies at the Bears' Lake Forest, Ill. trainln& facllity Thursday night. Marcerum caught 146 passes (third best ln the Pac-10) for 2,517 yards and 32 touchdowns ln hls tour-year career as 1 Cardinal. Also si1Ded by the Bears was their No. 1 draft pick -offensive tackle Keith Van Home of USC. Baseball takes its problem 'to W ashin/jton NEW YORK <AP) -The Reatan AdmlnlftraUon. bi1Un1 itself as the volce or the-American people , haa stepped Into the maJor lea1ue baaeball •trike rotlowlng anOther da1 of frulllffl ne1otiatlon1 In which each tide rtJected propoaala made bJ the other. Stioftly after tbt club ownera ..,. JectM. Thundar niAt a uiiUaa JWC>- pae1I that U. lllUrt~bl t1irMd o.er to ftiaal alid • Uon. U.S. Jeere ~!..bor't'f:r aayrliiclra Dallefaa ID..-'-""..-tldll tohilW~ee~. "I 1ahtb ~.Mfte~f r. Ill" .. .. (Friday) 11d we'll take lt from there,'' DclnoYan laid ln an interview with E.,.._rtae lacllo late Thunday night. He H lled tb• walkout "• elrlke ~ the American oeool•1 fr6m one poblt ot •l .. ," and iatd be would '°tr)' to be tM ,_ce ot the Amertc• people I Wiak bu been mi11&D1 ila U.& ~I table." l'ru1 tM aftMo Off .... OD 1trl'•· II' 91•,_. .......... 11· fend Uit'irtilr8Ulil ........... . bit iolulleD. till~ .... Ill ... . ... ...,.TlltM ..... .... "-II. l..a e Gt I'••· ...,., .... elM flt ........ ---=== day nlabt. 'But the Player RelaUou Committee, barlalnlna arm ot the ownert, turned clown the arb6tration Idea. Donovan aald that Mlher. ~d ol the playen• unloa, and Orebey. cbltf ne10Uator for the 21 111., leque dub owners. ''will be a t a meettn1 In my Glftee ...,...a.IYr ·ftii Ml~· tioa'' and added dial be WU '"IUU op. U.llUe IWo.-1111 ...at• UllJ'U ................... l*k Oft tbe .. ..... .. ••• lfi .......... would 1110• a :~e'•DIJll .. fw Ge UID," ..... ,...... ....... & ..... ...,. o:.;.:11ft.. .. £ ~e: I Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Friday, July 17, 1981 ~-'!"' ..... ~----------lllml'J· .. ' Player reps angry ewer owners' plan All maJor leaau• bauball • players have been slapped ill the face by the club owners' lat.t move• ln It's not all boring ne1oUatiooa to aettJ• lb• ftve-week-old 1trlke, the player repreaentatlv• ot the two Jeacun aald. Phlladelpbla PblW" catcher ......... the N atJooal Lea1ue player rep, and Baltimore Oriol" third baaemaa 0.1 DeClllcel. bl• American Leaaue counterpart, reacted u1rlly after manqement 1ubmltted Ill plan to bandle the lllue of major-lea1ue lel'Vlce durin1 the strike. That propoeal would coet the ::::.•rs 35 days of biC·league service CMdlt and e 1ald It touched every player la the majon ... Mem· bers of the board of direct.on of bueball's Player Relations Committee declared full con· • fldence in chief ne1otiat.or by Greliley follow- in1 a report that be was about to be ouated ... Houston /.ltroe President Al ..._ aay1 be favon a playoff at the end of the season between teams that were In llnt place when the atrlke betan and teams ln lint place at tbe end of the season . . . Hall of Famer Dake Sldcler. who voted for formln1 the players' association ln UM7, says he almost feels like Dr .. Franken- stein' CON!ide_ring the current strike. o n the sports d esk No&. all was borin1 at \be Dally I} Pilot Sports department Thursday. aiihou1h another day wltbout ba~ball was passing by. One woman, however, livened thin1s up wlth a phone call inqulrin1 about a particular boat ln tbe Los Ancelet to Honolulu Transpac race. • "My busband Is goina tbroueb a mid-Ute crisls and I was just wonderin1 how be wu do- in1," ~aid tbe caller. ••He's spendint all his money oo this race rather than on an educaUon for hls children. Quote of the day "I hope he hasn't fallen overboard or anything like that ... I don't want him to be shark·.batt. although 1 don't think the sbarks could diaest him either." Judge Harry Pretel'IOD to Al Davis H the owner of the OaJtland Raiden ended six days of colorful testimony in the Raiders' antitrust suit against the Na· tional Football League: "Sort of bate to see you leave.'' Curl sinks seven birdies for golf read Wonder what kind or reception will be wait· ing for him once he gets home! Veteran Rod Carl'• seventh !I birdie of the day on the 15th bole From one jungle to another Wbere is be now department: broke a five-way tie tor the flnt· round lead and helped him to a five-under-par 65 Thursday in the Quad CiUes Open in Coal Valley, Illinois ... Sally Litt.le, who hasn't suc- cessfully defended any of her 10 LPGA titles, took a stron1 step towards snapping that jinx when she shot a four-under-par 68 to sha~ first place in a Sl.25,000 tournament in Jericho, New York with Vhiaa BrowaJee . . . Defendln& champion Jodie Madd of Louisville, bad to mount a pair of charges before defeatin1 Maril Saa1aer of Saint Cloud, Minn., and 0..1 Wa• of Crooked River, Ore. to gain the quarterfinals of the U.S. Public Ltnks Championships ln Houston. Judge Henry Werker. wbo re· fused the National Labor ReJaUona Board's petition for an iQJunctioa wbicb would have delayed management's compenaaUon pro- posal .a tbe bueball slrite, hu moved on to other judicial matters. Re is now bearing a cue 1nvolviD1 arzan, the old comk strip vine~1win1er and tree· clhnber. A cynic miaht suggest the Judie merely moved from one jungle to another. . County skippe r s d O' well in T r ans paC By ALMON LOCK.ABEY Detty" ........... ,.. HONOLULU -With the 1981 Transpac yacht race all but wraJ)ped up, unofficial results indicate that Orange County sklpptrS will come home with a ·share of lhe hardwas:e. Oply two yachts remained at sea late Th\frs day and they , were expected lo finish today. The tau-enders were Tahuna aod Troublemaker in that order. Four Jou.I skippers are among the tint 10 in the overall ban· dicap $landings out of 74 yachts which started the race July 3 at Loa Allg~ Harbor. Barely miasin&J.Qeet handicap honors was Kike Kennedy's 40· foot s1oop Audacious from Dana Point 1Yacht Club. Kennedy wilJ pick 1JP trophles for second place overall aJMI in Class D. BUl Palmer. skipper of Shenan-· doah. Newport Harbor Yacht Club, placed fourth overall and third-in Class D; Dick Ettinger's Free Enterprise, NHYC, was eighth overall and the winner in Class C. Trophy winners in Class were Mike Braun's Shandu, Bahia Corthtbian Yacht Club and Mor- rie Kirk's Hana Ho, Balboa Y ach"Ghab with fourth and fa.fth respe,eUftly ,in Class A ; Free Enterprtse winner in Class C and Allda-and Shenandoah, secon.SGlllUlird in Class D. Other local yachts and 'their correet.ed Ume standings: Aorangi, Uth in Class A; Win· terbawk, 19th in Class A; War· rior. 10tb in Class 8; Aleta, 15th in Claa B; Sister Divine, 11th in Cllflll B; Driller, alxtb ln Clue C1o Tomahawk, seventh iii Clan C; •Pele, 12th in Clan c. and belPlds. 15th ln Clu1 C. Tbe.J.1.i.;dl•cuasioii around Tr;....,_1-clquanen ... tbe unu,•lfy larse Q_umber of yaelUl•wlllich had encountered rud•r and other 1teerin1 p=tms, indicating that de- li may have to 10 back to their ~· boardJ. ,.....,.. was the uaual number I' of tales about blown out spin· nakers or busted spars as the re· suit of pushing the yachts in the strong tradewinds and of.ten con· fused seas. There were two man over- boltl'd incidents in this race, but both were recover~ ln short or· derby expert seasmansbip. Unofficial time standings overall: 1. Sweet Okole, Dean Treadway, Island YC , Alameda; . 2. Audacious, Mike Kennedy, Point YC; 3. Bravura-87, Irving Loube, St. Francis YC : 4. Shenandoah, Bill Palmer, Newport Habor YC; 5. Jubila· lion, Ron and Gary BrowneU, King Harbor YC; 6. Uln Na Mara, Jim Barnhart, Hawaii YC; 7. Zamazaam, Zamazum Syndicate, St. Francis YC; 8. Free Enterprise) Dick Ettinger, Newport Harbor YC ; 9 . Moonshadow, Tom Wall~skl, WaikilrJ YC; 10. Red Shift, Alex Goetz,LosAn1ele1 YC. Class A -1. Zamuaan, Zamazaan Syndicate, St. Fran· 1cls YC; 2. Merlin, Nick truee, San Diegb YC ; 3. Christine, Fred Preiss. Pacific Mariners YC ; 4. Sbandu, Mike Braun, Bahia Corinthian YC; 5. Hana Ho, Morrie KJrk, Balboa YC. Class B -1. Bravura-87, Irv· ing Lou.be, St. Francis YC; 2. Uln Na Mar•, Jim Barnhart, Hawaii YC ; 3. Brlsa, Deftnl• Choate, Loni Beach YC; 4. Shamrock, Roy Disney, Los An1el• YC; 5. ZJ1 Zag, Gilbert Jones, Los Anceles YC. Clue C -1. Free Enterprise, Dick Ettin1er. Newport Harbor YC ; 2 . Moonsbadow, Tom Walinski ;, Waikiki YC ; 3. Suman, Mark Spits, Wlncijam- mera YC; 4. Oz, Alvin Scbultl and Dick Deaver, Labalna YC; 5 . Llbalia Two, Arthur Kamiauat, Waikiki YC. Cla11 D -1. Sweet Okole, Dean Treadway, Island YC; 2. Audacious, Mike Kennedy, Dana Point YC; 3. Shenandoah, BW Palmer, Newport Harbor YC; '· .Jubttallon, Ron and Gary Brownell, Kin• Harbor YC; s. Red Shift, Alex Goetz, Los ~••Jes\'C. . •. Ken Mo/fett From Page C1 STRIKE • • • bargaining croup back al the la· ble on Monday." He went on to say that the strike "could be settled ln a matter of· hours" and said if it isn '1, "their' the height of ob· stinacy and stubboraneas will have been reached in collective bargaining." ~ Both sides made proposals Thursday which they said wen aimed at ending the walkout. But each 'side rejected the other's ideas and the bar1alners seemed al a dead end. There had seemed to be move. ment on signlficant issues with the owners shuffiin& numbers In their proposal on free agent compensation and the players accepting levels of compensa· tionfor two-thirds of eligible ranking free agents. "You reach a point," said Miller, "when you get a teeiing nothing will happen to tolve the issue through negotiations. The events of yesterday (Wednes· day) and today (Thursday) were convincing that thJs wUJ not be resolved lbrouRh ne«otiatiOC)..'' So Miller suggested the arbitration route, sometbint both sides had previously reject· ed. But Grebey wouldn't buy the proposal, calllng it "a public re· lations ploy." In a formal state10ent lsaued by the PRC after Miller's pro. poaal, the owners aald that arbitration "la not an acceptable alternative on the l11ue ot com· penaation. ti And Grebey noted that Miller's arbitration pro- posal came about oae bour after talJta had adjourned. The long, fru1tratJn1 day began with a new proposal sub- mitted by mana1ement to I.be players. \ • Baseball today On tbla date ln baHball ln llh: Baseball immortal Ty Cobb dJed of 1'~ cancer at the at• of '74. On tbls date in 1941 : New York Yankee atar Joe D1Ma11io• saw bis record 5'·1ame hlttill1 1treak come to an end at Cleveland'• Municipal Stadium. The Indiana' Al Smith and Jlm Baaby Jr. held DUla&lio to an O.for-4 performance, as Joe's bot smash in b1s • final at bat wu turned into a double play by third baseman Ken Keltner. Dw1n1 the 'bltUn1 streak, DiMa11lo went an amalin1 9t·for-m . On tbla date ln 1914: Pitllburgb pitcher Babe Adam1 hurled 21 lnnincs without l11uln1 a walk, but Larry Doyle'• homer 1ave the New York Giants a 1..01 21-innlnl victory. Today's birthday: Hall of Famer 1'9'1 Boudreau ls 64. Svalstad receives scholarship Gre11 Snl1tacl, a reaident of • Fountain Valley and a Loyola Mary· mount University volleyball player for the put four years, was one of only IO reclp· ienta nationwide of an NCAA poat1raituate scholarship. The 6·6, 200 pound Svalltad was middle bitter and blocker for the IJom. He served as team capt_aln for three yean and was team MVP for two . . . &«eve Nidia• ii free on char1es of drivin& while intoxicated alon& the Jack Nicklaus freeway, named after hia golfing father . . . A Jury of five men and seven women found former University of Arizona foot· ball coach T•y Muoa Innocent of all chart" that he intended to cheat, defraud and deceive the school . . . Tom Slleva. the track record· bolder, made the fastest trip around the bigb· banked oval at Mlchl1an International Speedway lo win the pole· position for the Michigan 500 ... Two skien from Napa have filed claims aplnst the State of California for Sl mllllon each for injuries suffered when a chair lift at Heavenly Valle~ deralled in April. Television, radio · TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: Bueball -Salt Lake City at Spokane, '1 p.m., KMPC (710). Co e will co1npete .. desp ite inj ury GATE.5HEAD, England (AP) -Sebastian Coe defied a painful foot blister to run for Britain in a two-day international track and field meet a1ainat the Soviet Union today and Saturday. Coe, who rarely misses a chance to turn out for the national team, was scheduled to nm the 800 meten today. Steve Ovett and Alan Wells, two other Olympic champions, declared themselves unavailable for the meet. THE z.t. YEAJl·OLD Coe bu bad a marvelous seuoo, breaking the 800-meter and 1,000.meter world records, but la expected to run at a more sedate pace a1ainst the Soviets. · Coe, who teams up with Gary Cook in the 800, was expected to 1et the toughest resistance from Vladimir Maloiemlln, wbo bas a best time of 1 minute, 46.8 seconds for' the diatance. Both teams are far from full atrenath. Twelve of tbe orilinal British lineup withdrew for various reaSODI, while a number of the top Soviet athletes are\to compete at the World University Games next'"week ln Bucharest, Romania. B&n'AJN WUL B~ HOPING to repeat its sur· prl.e vidory over the Soviet Union in the Europa Cup 1emlfinals in Helsinki, Flnland earlier In the month, but may not have the streqth in depth to repeat that feat. The preuure certainly will be on a number of youn1 atbletes, includin1 sprinten Steve Green and Jim Evans, who compete in a major intern•· tlonal meet for the first time in the absence of ¥lke McFarland and Drew McMaater. Steve Scutt of Britaid facea a parUcularly tough teat in. the 400 met.en when be claab" wlth Olympic ftnallst Nikolai VaJJllev. Altboulh lhe Soviets field a weakened team, they will : sllll be particularly stron1 in the women's events. LAS VEGAS <AP> -Michael SplnU aeu tbe. chance to fteJ> out of bJa older brother'• well· known shadow when be meet.I champion Eddie Mustafa Muhammad for the World Boxlnl A•· sociation U1bt·heavyweight title Saturday. Sp{nka, rated the No. 1 contender by both the WBA and the World Boxinl Council, la the favorite in the scheduled 15-round bout at the Imperial Palace on the Strip. The fllht will be carried by ABC television. "It's the biagest fight of my career," Hid Spinks. "I don't know lf It's the t.ou&be•t opponent. but It's the biggest fight. I'm 1oin1 for all the marbles." SPINKS' BROTHER, former heavywel1ht champion Leon Spinks, will be at rin1side'-the youn1er Spin.ks said. He said his controvenial sibling's well-known brushes with the law had not distracted him. "Not one bit." he said. "ltencoura1es me ... the things that Leon 1oes through don't affect me. ''He'• not coming here and drtv1n1 bis Cadillac through my training session." MICHAEL, NOW 1<.t with 11 knockouts, wu in bis seventh professional fight on the undercard al the Las Vegas Hllton in February 1978 when Leon scored a split decision over Muhammad Ali to win the undisputed heavywei1ht championship. Michael's 10-round decision over Mike Bethea went virtually unnoticed in the hubbub over one of the 1reat upsets in boxing history. FOLLOWING HIS BROTHER'S victory -and the cootroveny surrounding the WBC's decision to strip him of its half of the title -Michael didn't fight for 10 months. "I just bad to take a layoff," he said. "There wasn't any reason for both of us fightlnJr. From Page C1 DINO BELL. • • checking in at the Long Beach State campus for training camp, and he touched on this subject, too, which is Ute beneficiary of ticket sales. "A lot of people have been behind me, like the coaches CBiJI Workman afid Russ Purnell), my parents, boosters and teachers at Edison. "Now the time has come to return something, lo help someone not as fortunate." When BelJ leaves bis mark on the Rose Bowl grass his future lies at Kansas under Coach Don Fambrough, but he's looking further down . the road. "I'd like lo get into radio or television, may~ the next Bryant Gumbel." says Bell. "But as a secondary option l'd like to get into elementary teaching because I like to do things with younger kids. I think I could enjoy either field." ONE OF THE PIUNCIPALS ln an era that has turned Edison High into Transfer Tech (Edison's success has tremendous pulling power>. Bell reflect! on his decision lo transfer. "The first day I saw Coach Workman was the day l enrolled al Edison. I'd expect Edison to coa- tin ue to get more transfers in the ruture, it just m akea sense that you' re going to go where the winners are." ners are." Dino Bell's ups-and-downs have been almost all ups the past two years, but be hasn't forgotten the lessons absorbed by losses at El Modena and Newport Harbor ll\ 1979. "The loss to Newport Harbor was the big one," he says. "I'm not saying the 1981 Edison team has to lose a game, but we fo11nd out sometimes you have to have somelhin1 like that (for the ultimate success). "Sometimes big heads need to be brouabt back to earth. ti • It's not big heads that will prevail July 25, rather strong legs, which combined, figure to give the Children's Hoepital another payday. No motorcycle racing tonight There will be no speedway motorcycle racln1 tonight at the Orange County Fairfrounds because of the opening of three days of professional todeo actlonaltheOran(eCounty Fair. Rodeo events begin at 8 each night throu&b Sunday. Speedway motorcycle races will resume nexl Friday. WORLD CI ASS TENIYIS WEEKEND •• . This weekend the Caltfomla Orangee take on two tennis auperstar9 for two days of ep8ct8cular WOt1d due tennis at the beautiful Loi Cabalfet'Os Tennis Stadium. Tickets $10, $15, end $20. Orange Coast DAIL y PILOT/Friday. July 17. 1981 ca Finally, Canadian football goes big t~e With helR.f!_om the baseball strike. arid Vince Ferragamo, cable f i nds. a new game to li ght up the screen : By 8 RUCE LOWJ'JT .,,....,....,.. The game in Vancouver had Just ended, with Vince Ferragamo and the rest of lhe Montreal Alouettes on the short end of a 48·8 score. Said Jodi, Vince's wlfe: "I can just hear my friends In Los Angeles complaining, 'I paid $30 for the cable to watch that?'" Yes, that. And bizarre (by our standards) rules notwithstaJfding, the Canadian Football Leag~ Is attracting an increasing following south of the border, thanks to ESPN. ~ WITH T HE WINFIELDS and Roses of baseball temporarily off the playing fields and the Bradshaws and . Paytons of the National Football League not yet on them, appetites acroes the Unit- ed States are being sated by the Ferragamos and Overstreets who, at least each week. flicker across television screens Ced by the cable. This is the second season of CFL coverage by ESPN, the all-sports cabJe network now wired into about 10~ million U.S. homes and adding roughly 400,000 each1montb. In 1980 it carried 42 CFL games, including the Grey Cup championship game. Most of those games, though,, were shown on a tape-delayed basis . This year, most of the 42, Including the Grey Cup, are telecsast live, and often shown a second lime later in the evening or the following morning for fans who can't catch them the first time around. "It's not as though we're jumping into this '""because oC the baseball strike," says Scotty Con- 4\al, ESPN's executive vice president in charge of production. "We'd be showing the games this way anyway. But it's nice, for the time being, that it's the only game in town. Besides, even without the s trike, there's been a growing interest in ttie CFL because or Vince Ferragamo. David Overstreet, Billy "White Shoes" Johnson. Frank Kush -all the Americans who have found their way up Saturday's TV, radio Rodeo, taped June 27-28. cso> -SOCCI!& MADE· there." TELEVISION IN GERMANY. RADIO AND FOR ALL the Americans still down here, 11 a.m. C5) WCT'INVITATIONAL .-Harold Baseball -Sall Lake City at Spokane (flnt ESPN has its own announcers for many of the Solomon vs. Manuel Orantes, taped in March al game or a double-header), 6 p.m., KMPC (710). games. Jim Simpson, who caUed the plays Cor Salisbury, Md. NBC at American Football League games back ln 11:20 a.m . <41 -NBC SPORTS' SUMMER Sunday's TV, radio the 1960s, is teamed now with Paul Maguire, the SEASON -Edwin Rosario (17-0) vs. Rodrigo TELEVISION place-kicker and linebacker with the Buffalo Bills Aguirre < 18 ·2·2> in a scheduled 10-round 11 a.m. (7) _BRITISH OPEN -One of 1011'1 in the late '60s. Teatherweiaht bout, live from Tampa, Fla. Also: a rour major events, knqwn collecUvel)' a1 the For baseball-starved fans who think the only report on the Tour de France, and a preview of the Grand Slam. It's the world's oldest major cham· kind or single is the kind Pete Rose hits, havinit Michigan 500 auto race. pionship telecast from Royal St. George.,• Golf 11 :30 a.m. C7) -BRITISH OP EN -One or Club in Sandwich, England. The defendlnl cbam· golf's four major events, known collectively as the pion is Tom Watson. S POR'IS ON TELEVIS ION Simpson and Maguire at the microphones and former NFL and CFL player Fred Biletnikorr do· ing field-level commentary as he did in the season opener can~ a blessing. Along with the 110-yard field, the three downs instead of four, the 12-man teams instead of 11 and the multiple men in formation every which way, there's the single point in the CFL aame, a punt which ls not run out of the 2S·yard and zone or goes all the way through it. "1'bere's a natural tendency for the Canadian announcers to assume that the viewers know the basics like that," Connal says of the sportscasters for CBC and CTV , the networks which carry the games in Canada and whose "feeds" are generally picked up by ESPN for telecasting in the states. THE EXTENT TO WHICH ES'PN and the CFL a.re working to tailor the games to U.S. viewers can be seen in the network's plan to select games as the season goes along. In the NFL. every reg· ular-season game to be shown nationally by ABC . CBS and NBC has already been determined, "but we're maintaining .some flexibility so ir something develops we can jump on it," said Connal. Grand Slam. a ·s the world's oldest major cham-12 p.m. (5) -JAPANESE BASEBALL pionshlp telecast from Royal St. George's Golf Taped coverage of the game between the Olanta of Club in Sandwich, England. The defending cham-Tokyo and the Whales of Yokohama fr om p?ffn is Tom Watson < 13) -NASL SOCCER Yokohama Stadium in Japan. The Giants are cur· HIGHLIGHTS. rently in first place in Japan's Central Lea1ue. 12:30 p.m. C28> -VIC BRADEN'S TENNIS Lindsey Nelson, voice of the San Francisco Olanta FOR THE FUTURE. and Jerry Coleman, announcer for the San Diego 3:30 p.m. C2> CBS SPORTS SATURDAY -Padres will handle the play-by-play. Brent Musburger reports from New York with up-1:30 p.m. (2) -CBS SPORTS SUNDAY - dates in the sports world. Also: coverage of the Brent Mus burger reports from New York with up-I British Grand Prix, taped at Northamptonshire, dates rrom the sports world. Also: Ray "Boom I England In 1979, the last time the race was held at Boom" Mancini (19·0) defends his North American the Silverstone course, Clay Reganoni set a speed Boxing Federation lightweight tiUe against Jose record of more than 139 mph. (7) -GREATEST Luis Ramirez (22-3) in a scheduled 12-round bout, SPORTS LEGENDS A tribute to Arnold live from Warren, Ohio. Palmer 2 p.m. (4) -SPORTSWORLD -Taped cov- 4 p.m. (7) SUPER MEMORIES OF THE erage or the Michigan 500 auto race and the Clnal SUPER BOWL. (521 -IU-FIVIN' WITH THE leg or the Tour de France . bicycle race. DODGERS. s p.m. (50) VIC BRADEN'S TENNIS FOa 5 p.m. (7) WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS -THE FUTURE . Eddie Mustafa Muhammad vs. Michael Spinks for 7 p.m. C28> -VIC BRADEN'S TENNIS FOR ' the WBA lighl-heavywe1ght title. Muhammad T HE FUTURE . (38-5·1) is making his third defense, while Spinks ( 16-0, 11 KOsl is receiving his first title shot. Howard Cosell reports from Las Vegas. (28) - SOCCER. 8 p.m. (Ill RODEO Coverage of the Reno RADIO Baseball -Salt Lake City at Spokane, 1:30 p.m., KMPC (710). c The Dally Pilot ls not respon1lble for late changes.) " his Week s SJleCial For Omifitd Ad ACTION C•ll A OAIL Y '1lOT AO.YISOI '42-5'71 1979 ~ADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE Dual comfort seats, Cadillac wire wheel covers .ind an A~ FM stereo & tape player I 916WCQ> sg995 AllC<lnS..lljodTo l'rwra.M """-Plu1~6 U.- li:.E.J!!~I D~~TI= ::: :::¥:.Q -'s . DISR FOB CISR FUTUBITT California's Richest Horse Race • SMWOUL IU· Al W..._, p<()(ttl10t\ IOW·40 SM4I • lltwsr hNvy-dury high de1ergen1 sr QUAii!)< mo!Of Oii UMn ss• ~ QUAAT MIQUIM'I · ~ ~ ~ ..,, poly $Ulinl 'Y'l""' ~In llquld"Of IMStt •A9714,#A9816 YOURCHOIU 6 88 EACH ODelco OU.CO ·°"S!NI ~ pllU for moll CJIA p<Odu<B 196l·744~6Cyi 3~ 1957-738Cyi 4~ SPfmll <OAS lUATMfHT c..sr~r~e• ISoz •50118 CAUUlfTOll a.IANEA ll~1ore p_., Iner~ ~e IS OL •SOlSl CAUUUTOI Q.IANEA • Al.ROSOL C~.ans c.orbureton In • lllly II'/• 01 •S4144 rowu STlUING FLUID •51901 IGNITION TUNE .. UP KITS CABll SETS Motorcraft IO«.O, fAlCON. fllllU.ANl. 111111\/llUCllMOSlAHG. TOltlNO 1~·197'16 ~ 1011D IAlCON. IAlalNIL MUSTANG. TOUIO ~191J ,,...,_ l6018'>->0l(IJlt• 1968 14HW>t .. 1968-1900 -19'> .. 301 CIO) TIRE GAUGE Mn0 CilM • I 5/X!() mlle f)ftMd8 lorp ol RlcradOn. Moel* In Modi IO ti!"'°"~ <Ml. llGIM·l<IO. tl('.fM.]lCIO, ~.~ YOUI CHOtcl 109 MllSCa -Ulillze•. ltl(rlon trn bout_, tube Wllll .... SH~d tol<I b<A» mC)W'l'Wrtl '°' MttMANKS -DlXJlON • r or roaD • '"'Moll Moll c.me..i ron:t ~ Mocon Co '-'n Co\n •491·M U81·M YOUI 95. CHOfCl Quan IMPDIN.. r0t - Ametbn c-. #221615. •221617.1488 •221618, •22J619 IAOe GOULD. °"'P<)Clt "-Y ..... lor "°"" o1....-.. -CMI )'<Nft ____ IO <""1pl'ftOlf~~·a-..IO -~,.,........­.,.. .. ~~""'°' CM- IO«.O. r!J..CON. fAllll.ANL MUSTANG. lOlllNO 1901· 19711 (,....,.. UI ·lSIW·)SZ·l9CMZ ,-428429 -MUSTAHGl9fll..~..,m19'> .. JOZCIO(~ 998 1971 MO 00) t970-l9,4 I c,.._ lSI<~ CID IA. ~ fl\IRMOHT. MUSTANG. "Nro 19'1· 1919 '~ qq140CIO)MUSTANG .. l'INTO M1ott on.1111 12~ ~. fN#flOHf. CNl>il<DA.. M.t.YWC.ll 19~-19196(~ 178! ~n o.lly 9-91 Sat. 9-6s Sun. 9-S . ..... ......,.... . , ......... v.-., 1280 N. luiclld 5256 9ekh &Id 9880 ~ ,.,_..,._, (S.olttwy.91) ~~a(IOD (114)964607 ?7J.... K·MAtt) • hl•FIDD • A•1l11• (714)tM·IUO ''' L lrnpe$J . 23'°W. Un(OMAw.C....._ (714)na.e71 ..,_1611 17l9~A.... •f I -MJ·JJM; . 2971 YoitN Linda ,, .. ,......,. • • for~~ 6 C}I. 1960-'67 (bt lll c.,p.1 f01tn01t~6~195]...,, (be. 19' "11fne) rOfmoter~sac)'l 1588 1058-·72 (wlttt 260-189·102·)52 c.,p.) ... IUUILT CWTOI &.. PUSSUll Pl.AllS CMDO • '°' ,_ Ameillgn WI. MnllJIOWa I -e Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, July 17. 1981 ..... ~--------------------------------~ . ~------------------------------..... --~--~----..... ~------------.. ' • . . . • • ·: • ~ • .. ..,._,. ,..._,.. 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Anclr .. de Caerll, Ital~. M(IA,_. l•IJ.'7•. •. Didier Plronl. FrMCe, Ferr.,1. I: 14.070. 9. Bruno Glat-111, llol'I', Alie A-. 1·u .11t. 10. Giii• Vlll-..w , Cenodo, F•nerl. I: 14.112. 1 11. Merlo ""4re"':z:ll. .• Alie A-. I: 14 • .UO. 12. HKlor A , MHIU, Ir.-. Cotwortll, I : I 4.544. IJ. Der" Dely. lrelMCI, Merell. 1·15 I" 14. Alcc•rdo Petrna, llely, Arrow•. I IS.117. u. Jee_. urme. F•enc•. Telbol Lloi.r. l:U.313. 16. PelrlO Tamb•'I'. Freftce. T•lbol Ll9I.,, l:U~ 11. J-.Plwre J8'18r. FrMK•. Owll•, I IS . ..,. 11. NtQel Metlwll. arllelft, Loha ••. I U ."2. It. Ello de Angell•, llely. Lohn •• • 1:16.029. JO. Eddie Cllffver, U .S •• Tyrrell 010. 1:16 .• 1. 21. llrlM -· ar1i.1 ... Tolomot) Han TWllO, l :M.a. ll~!:...~le ~. llely,1 hrr•ll Oto, 2J. 1(-......... P'ln19M, '9111,.ICll, 1:1 ...... 24. $11"' .............. 4TS. l :M.1 .. .. ............... Hcorfllltllll1 21. Ell-5-'UM,Cllllt, ........ 1.11.~ 26. Mwc Sww, Swlt .. t1onel, T.....,., 1:17.IU. V . SitlfntdSC.W, 1'91y, M,_., 1.17.Dt . tt. 0..... WMWlcil, t rtlolft, Tol..,.en Hert Tllfllo, 1.17 ..... Jt. Clll(O S•rre, 9rHll, Flltlpeldl, l:lt.173. JO.,....,. GM111en1, 1191y,OM11e. 1:ao.m . Misc. .. ............ Linda Jonsson (front) and Hilary Cosell have helped hike NBC ratings. Cosell's daughter helps NBC ratings Hilary produces, writes for dad's rival By WILL GRIMSLEY AP "'8<181 c:-n ........... As ir one Cosell is not enough ror the airwaves. now we've got two. and show us any redblooded American male who's going to complain about the other one. The other Cosell talks in honeyed tones, not the trace of a ras p in her voice, is pleasant to look at, is anything but abrasive, yet, true to heritage, is exceed- ingly bright and "tells it like it is ." She is Hilary (one "I," please "I hale it when they spell my name with two l's") CoseU -- Howard's daughter , and one of two reasons that NBC is closing the gap on her dad·s rival network. ABC, for the nation's weekend sports audience. THE OTHER reason Is Linda Jonsson, Hilary's boss and the coordinating prooucer or NBC's n ew three ·hou,. Saturday feature, "The Summer Season," hurriedly conceived to fill the voi d left b y "Saturday Baseball," a victim of/ the cur· rent strike. They are a potent pair ,1 these statuesque blonde beauties, who have usurped Q part of the man's world and made a success of it. Jonsson, 31, born of Swedish parents, worked her way up -from secretarial duties to become coordinating producer of NBC's Sunday "Sports World" and later undertake similar responsibility with the Summer Season when big league baseball came to an abrupt halt. Cosell, 29, after attending Sarah Lawrence, New York Plucknett · • to re01ain in seclusion LINCOLN, Neb. <AP) -Dis· cus tbtower Ben Plucknett, banned from competition by tbe International Amateur Athletic Federation Monday after tests bad abown traces of ille1al drugs in his system, says be ln· tends to remain in seclusion "until this whole thin1 is Mt· tled." But despite the IAAF declalOI\, The Atblet.ics Congren, which rules competition ln the United States, said Thursday that Plucknett can at.ill compete in domeaUc eventa -but not the July 13-29 National Sport• Fe1Uval In Syracuse, N . Y. The Lincoln Journal reported in a copyri1bt story Tbunctay ol Pluck:nttt.'1 intent.Ion to remain lncommuntcado. The IA~F ban was announced Monday after re- 1ult1 of blood test.a tall:eo more th•D flve montbt a10 la ~9'rl1tchurcb, New ZHland, were nleaatd. Tbe t•tl re· ...,.. be bad' talrea auballe ... .... b• baa came le11 than a welt ltilr Phaek1Mtt1bad broUll .. ..... Neonl la tbe .a. wtt.b • t.brow of D7 feet •• lachll, at Stcdbalm Julf 7. University and Northwestern where she got her Master 's Degree, is assistant coordina· ting producer and does a seg- ment on the Saturday s how called "Sports Journal.·· She scrapes the crust off issues and personalities and presents them with the same impact charac· teristic of her dad . SHE DOES the research and the writing. but doesn't appear on camera, more's the pity. "It's not 'investigative report· ing' -·that's what Watergate was, .. s ays Hilary. "Mine is more f eature , magazine - oriented reporting.'· Among her subjects have been Paul Newman, the actor·aulo r acer, and Hollywood Hen· derson, with his drug problems, the latter · a TV firs t." Jonsson, a New Englander who studied law at the Universi- ty of Colorado and skiied lo her heart's corUent, toured Europe for six months after graduation and then came home lo take a secretarial job in the sports de- partment of NBC. She watched others work on exciting assignments such as the World Series, Super Bowl and Wimbledon and said, "This ls what I should be doing." When Don Ohlmeyer came over from ABC lo take the reins as NBC sports boss in 1977, he gave Linda •a shot at production. Her rise has been meteoric. In none of the major networks bas a woman held so important a position In the sports field. ONCE DWARFED 3 lo 1 by ABC's award-winning "Wide World of Sports," ·'Sports World," moved into strona com· petitiveposition in second place of CBSSports~unday ... Jonsaon explains that the con· capt of Summer Season is to make it "more retaxed and less r enetic" than what ls normally seen the bit Saturday and Sundays ts. For exa pie, this Saturday, in place of ball, viewers will see the Ml 1an 500 auto race, a boxing bo in Tampa, Fla .• a rodeo in Ari a, the Tour de France cycling classic and a horse race ln Ireland. ''YOV WOULD be surprised at t.he reaction we set from the Tour de France," Linda said. "Peopl~ have read about it for yea.rs. Boxing always is well re- ceived and everybody ·relates to auto races. They drive can, lake sharp comen and baWe with tramc: What we pr4'aent ~ a collection ol evenll -more alo~ paced lban tbe ltadltional ant.boloO-type abowa." Speaklnc ol his two femlnlnt 1tar1, Oblmeye.r aald, "If I bad 11 LlndM, I could rule the wor1d. A1 for HUary, •he hu a lot of Howard'• traits -ahe la ....,, very brl1bt, baa do11ed de- termlnaUon and knows .lllOltl . Wbea lbe aeenu a stmJ, lbe ..,.. after lt." Hilary WU dtecl boW It felt MIDI tbe daQlillr of one ti tbl moet lchtltlftibl9 ...,., .. ,._. lallON. ''The_ hlJbllt ~ompllmeat 8ft1GM CM...,., me II to,., tMl I •• u PfOf...-•al u •r fatlMr," lbe replied~ "I UalM Ill .. ..... bell.'' r Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, July 17, 1981 rn.rn~~m~~~ Reagan prediction .caDed optimistic Private economists believe inflation rate won't slow to 6.2 percent next year WASHINGTON (AP> -President Rea1an'a latest predicUon that inflaUon will alow to 6.2 per- cent next year appears overly opthnilUc, several private economilt.s contend. "That errs a bit on the aide of optlmilm," said Tbomu D. Thomson, senior vice president and chief economist •f'f San Francilco's Crocker Na- tional Bank. "Once we have had tb1a dileue u badly u we have for the put U yean, it doetn't JO away that quickly," he said. "It takes a loq time to erode the inflationary expeclationa" of consumers, buai· ness executives and workers, he said. lnflalioo, as meaaured by tbe consumer price lndex, wu 12.6 percent lut year, and the ad· ministration's forecaat Wednesday' placed this year'• inflation at 8.6 percent, dipplnc to 6.2 per- cent In 1982. · · lon1 u the Federal Reserve continues lt.s t11ht control over the growth of the money supply and no serious weather problemt or other chan1e1 boost consumer prices. The lnflation forecast wu contained ln the midyear budtet review that aJao sald lln1ertn1 double-dilit lntere1t rates will force the 1overn· ment to spend $10 billion more next year than lt had planned. That would bring the total budcet to $704.8 billlon ln fileaJ 1982, wbicb starts Oct.~The deficit would be MZ.5 billion. Interest rates a1ao are boott1n1 spending for this year, raJslnc the budlet total S6 billion to $661.2 bllllon, the report said. Tbe deficit was put at $55.8 billion. When interest rates are hip, tile foverpment baa to pay more for interest on tbe public debt, 1uaranteed student loans and federal bouslq pro- ll'&ms. It aJao bu meant more 1overnment spend· lnl on loans to help bolster financially alltn1 fav· ings -and-loan associations. The budget report said short-term interest rates, based on three-month Tfeasury bilJs, wiU stay above 10 percent In the next two years -run- ning 13.6 percent this year and 10.S percent next year. That's up from the earlier administration forecast or 11.1 percent this year and 8.9 percent in 1982. The administration did not back off on its forecast or a balanced budget in 1984 , but ec9nomists outside of government were dubious. "It will require a lot of tuck,'' said Sinai, vice pres· ident and aenior economist or Data Resources lnc. of Lexington, Maas. "It will require much big- ger spending cull than what the,Y're talklnJ about now." · "It hinges a. great deaJ on whether they're right on in/lalion," said Sandra Shaber, senior economist at Chase Econometrics in Bala Cynwyd, Pa. "That's rather overly optimistic." Paul A. VolckeT Tboee figures were revised downward from earlier forecasts of 10.$ percent tllia year and 7.2 percent ln 1982. The n1ures are a measure of lbe percentage cbanJe from the fourth quarter of one year to the fourth quarter of tbe next. ''That 's very optimistic," economist Allen Sinai said of next year's forecu(. Factory use declines to 79.6% Volcker uneasy over tax bill While predicting that lnftation would continue to decline, be suggested the lower neure waa "more ot a goal than a likely reality." WASIUNGTON CAP> -The nation's manufac· turers operated at 79.6 percent of capacity ln June, \he lowest level since November, the 1ovemment baa reported. But Edward Yardeni, chief economilt and vice president ot the brokerage house of E. F. Hutton, said, "It's do-able." "' The report by the Federal Reserve Board came one ~Y after the government reported lbat industrial production slipped 0.1 percent in June. Tbe lower figure can be achieved, be said, u Panel approves deregulation bill Prior to June's decline, factory use was essen· Ually unchanged for six months. The niures in· dicate that industry retaina plenty of capacity for expansion if the national economy begins growlne again later in the year as many economist.a ex- pect. The operating rate for producers of industrial materials was unchanged in June at 81.3 percent. WASHINGTON <AP) -The Senate Com· merce Committee has approved a telephone de· regulation bill that would free the American Telephone & Telegraph Co. lo enter new fields without requiring that the giant company be broken up. The utllllation rates for producers of both durable and non-durable goods materials declined in June, said the report. The drop, however, was ofrset somewhat by a sharp rise in tbe rate for ener1y materials as a result or a surge in coal pro· duction following the len1thy United Mine Workers' strike and increased electricity genera-Seo. Robert Packwood, R-Ore.. the panel's chairman. pushed the bill through on a 18·1 vote despite a warning by Sen. Ernest Hollin1s. D-S.C., that the measure gives AT&T too much freedom. Hollings cast the only "no" vote. tion, it said. . The measure, if approved by the Senate and the House. would require that AT&T divide itself into two parts -a regulated company orferin1 basic local and long-dist.ance.service and an un- re1ulated subsidiary lbat would handle lbe sate or lease of telephone equipment and could enter new In manufacturing, declines were Teported for both primary and advanced processing induatries. There were sharp drops in lbe operating rates for producers of iron and steel, paper and related pro- ducts, and electrical machinery, the report said. Other industries recording declines in eapacity utilization induded foods, textile mill products. petroleum products, non-ferrous met~ls and fabricated metals. ar~as such as data processin1. "Utilization rates were up tllighUy in June for PUBLIC NOTICE • PVBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE tfi=t'Une NOTICE OF DEATH OFI DOM PERIGNON HELEN M . COLEMAN AND OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE NO. A-109524 To all heirs , beneficiaries, creditors and contingent croditors of Helen M. Coleman and persons who may be otherwise Interested in the will and/or estate. . A petition has been filed by Rita Marie Bullis in the Superior Court of Orange County requesting that Rita Marie Bullis be ap- po Int ed aspersonal representative to ad· m inister the estate of Helen M. Coleman (under the Independent Ad· ministration of Estates Act) The petition is set for hearing Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic Center Drive, West, In the City of Santa AM, California on August 12, 1981at9:30 a.m. · IF YOU OBJECT to the...,_---------t granting of the petition, ---------you should either appnr PVBUC NOTICE at the hearing •od state ----------your objections or file ... ,... written objection$ with the CM1MN COUt1TY court before the hffrlng. ,.=::.,-=r .... Your appearance may be ... -.~-.. In person or by your at· ""-'"''"': ...,..,., MANNINO, torn•~· •AMOALL M•MD•I. J.,,.IY I Y 0 U ARE A HeHM, WILLIAM HINIL•Y, Mt!LODY LOUIM II.I~ CR EDITOR or • cont· oueNOMIT: evtMOOH lngent creditor of the de--• 11111 CMI__. ...... ceased, you must file your NTtat ._ ..,. ... ..., ,_. clalm with the court or .... -. .... _...,.. ..... present It to the pertonal ,.. ..... _.. --,.. ,..... representative •=-nted ..... • ~ ._. •.... •• ...... by the court wl In four av ... .._. .. ..._ -t 1 months troni the 4Nte of •.,.... .... ....,...,. •· first ls1uance of 19tters IS .......... _ ..... .....,. provldld In Mctlan 100 Of • .... • •-. w. .. ....._. the probate code of -r.c=: .. ,PCMT1 A awtt C.,lfomla. TM time for ~ • ........ .,, •,...,.. flllnt claims .i11 not ex· .,,'r.":r=,..... , • ....,. •• •• ""'°' .. four lftOnth\ ..... , .................. .... train the dete of the ... ,. ... ......... --• ,... ... Int notlc.ct abow. YOU :=.-:".: =~ ': MAY EXAMINE tM file ,,...a...,,_,... ....... kept by the court, If you ._,. • --....... • -• ere lntorHted In the ... ,~:• 1~':.-=:..: nta .. , you mey flte • ,. .... ..,.. _ _:.... " .. .,_. wlttttMCllUrtto,.._ ....-.-------· celve '"'"'£: h ............. ,.. •• ....., .... 1nven .. , a1 .-_. ,r;u :a5r0 l-.::= ............. ..... .. :;:~-......... ,....,. dllCi .... "' lee· ..... ti on uoo.1 ••1 ,._. • \•-r •• -~.:=: Cell ............. Cldlt. •• ~,.....,_ I.A. 111 •• • iil.L••-... ... 11...... .. ...... ....... aHila, CA • the motor vehicles and parts, and rubber and plastics industries," said the report. Factory use last month was 80.1 percent, up -from Ill percent in April and 79.9 percent in March. The June figure was 4.7 percentage points above the July 1980 low of 74.9 percent. All figures were adjusted for seasonal varia· lions. SDG&E's earnings up SAN DIEGO -San Diego Gas & Electric has reported earnings of 72 cents a share of common stock for the quarter eQl:ied June 30. The 72-cent figure is up from the 36 cents per share in the like period a year ago. There are three main reasons for the increased earnings : A general rate increase of S9S million took effect in January, a subsidiary sold surplus land for $14 million and hot weather result~ in increased off. system sales. ~ · A 497-acre land sale in Carlsbad increased earnings by 16 cents a share. The parcel was sold for $14 million for a $6.1 million gain to SDG&E . Despite reduced customer sales. ofr.system sales were substantial enough this quarter to af· feet earnings. An unseasonably hot June left other parts of California short or power. SDG&E's re- serve margin due to high generating unit availability allowed for otr-system sales ranging from L3S to 510 megawatts for several weeks. WAS HINGTON <AP> -The chairman of the Federal Reserve ~ has urged Congress to reject amendments to a tax-cut bill that might worsen inflation and keep in- terest rates high. ··1 have an uneasy feeling as it (lax bllt> wends its way through Congress . . . that things are being added to it," board Chairman Paul A. Volcker told the Joint Economic Committee. · · 1 would hope the Congress would resist aggravating the situation by adding every- body's favorite tax proposal." he said. Volcker ,' who oversees U.S. financial policy as head of the nation's central bank, said he is concerned that too large a tax cut will lead to larger budget deficits. Sucti a re· suit would increase the already strong de- mand for credit at high interest rates and add to inflationary expectations, he said. If a tax bill is balanced by budget cuts to keep budget deficits down, "then 1 lbink we can have a responsible tax reduction," Volcker told the committee. His comments were in response to a move by House Democrats to sweeten their version of a lax-cut bill in hopes of winning the vote~ of conservative Democrats who are backing a Republi can bill proposed by Presi- dent Reagan. Whle the world offers a rrulti- phc.ity of often seductr...e yard- sticks by whch to rreasu-e a ca's worth. there 1s onloj one actd test I its resale value when used A cntenon ideally suited to the BMW 3201 For according to the Jartay 1981 NADA Used-Car Gulde. whtle the value of other cars dwln· died ~ as rruch as 50%, the average BMW 3201 manufactured <M!r the past 4 years retained a ptleflOmenal 95 2% of its ong1nat Ptrchase pnce But as remarkable as this feat I of conservatlOl'I 1s, 1t is nvaled ~ the BMW 3201's abtkty to conserve • yout fuel Wtth 5·speed starda.'d trans-l m1SSK>11(automatic1s avcMtable). it delivers an tmpress1ve £~ est1- mated 25' mpg, ard 36 estimated mpg on the hgl"r.yay (NattXaly oo-fuel ettoenc:y f1gL¥es are for companson only Yru actual mileage may Wl'f, de- perdlng on speed, tnp length ard weather '1bJ' actual hghway mile- age WI. most W<.ett qe lowef') Of coe.xse. to dme tl'le BMW 32011s to~ an exh'lara· too that can t be calculated in f1g- 1Ses AA emotion r.nted at ~ the edltor-publishef of Car ard ~ magazine when he wrote. "The I BMW 320r rs the sort of car: that entMiasts tum into legend.'' tf the nooon of~ such a car: intngues you, we~ )O.J contact yw-near· est BMW dealer to 2#- , raise a thorough test dl'l\'e at ~ cornenienoe mw r~.M-~ LET yQUR LOCAL BMW 0£ALERS ARRANGf. A THQBQUGH TEST PRIVE HUNTINGTON PARK --6000 Pacific Bouleva.-d (213) 583·1901 ~H.=:. ~Btlc ~ (213) 691·6101 (714) ~22·!>333 H'R lONG BEACH ...... _ 36 70 Chefry Avlnue (21'3) 427-5494 (714) 636-5790 LOS ANGUES .,.. ... __ J.t43 WMI 431d (213) 299-3270 ~VtUO ~...., ~402 auerltt (7~$31~40 NEWPORT BEAC •Cllm.a 1 ~o .JlmbOIW Ad (714) 640-6444 .. NORTH HOllVWOOO 18?~ .. 4 4270 Lln~etshim Blvd {213) 761 6133 NlilAWA . ---l<*O f lf'f$10flt ~ (213) 868;a2J3 (714) 636-6] 75 PALM SPRINGS ....... a. .. ~~ Ea~t Plllm CM1yOr1 Ott"° (714) 328·~~25 . . •· I' .. . Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, July 17, 1981 Persistence of high interest rates has council puzzled ~ .IOBN CUNNIFF ~-.... . NEW YORK -When the president meeta next week ln Ottawa with the beadl of other lnduatrial naUom, he'll have to be more convincln1 than be tta• been about this country'• hllb interest rates. A few day1 a10, be •ouabt to reusure Weatern European leaders, worried beeaUH thole ratea tend to worsen their lnllatlon aad draw lnveatmeat money away from their economiet, tbat the ratea are a abort-term phenomenon. . Hla secretary or state aod bJ1 treHu11 secretary also have offered aim.liar u1urancea in the P48l few days, leavln1 Utile Cloubt that lower ratH are ea1erly hoped for. Bu& now the cat'• out ot the ba1. 'lbere is more hope than certainty in thoae assurances and forecast.a. Does anyone really un· deratand them? . SpeaJcing with reporters earlier this week, Wllllam l'Jiskanen, a member or the ~ ........ president's Council of Economic Advlaera, con- ceded that the persistence of hl&h rates had blm and his colleagues somewhat conf\laed and pu11led. All along. the administtatlon's forecast of lower interest rates has been baled on expect•· lions that confidence in a more 1table economic future would assure lenders and encoura1e them to accept lower yields. , It hasn't happened. There bas been evidence of f'isine hopes, as expressed in lbe forecasts of lower -rates by important bankers. but that's as far as .tt's gone. Hope seems to be a level below con- fidence. As Niskanen indicated, there ls much con· fusion about this situation. The inflation rate bas receded some, but lnt.er"t ralel have not, and the lfap between the two la the wldeat ln tbe memory of many money men. A11umin1, for example, that the overall lnfla· tloo rate is around 10 percent, why dld New Yqrk Telephone Co. this week have to otler 15.125 per· cent to encoura1e lndividuall and lnltltutlons to buy lt.s bonds? That spread between lnllatlon and interest rates ii about twice the uaual 1lie, and it bu persisted for many weeks. Dw1nt lhll time, confl· dent that a more normal pattern would uaert itself, some of the beat-informed of bankers have forec ut a decline in interest cbar1e1. "Interest Rates and Inflation: Somethin1'1 Got to Give,',' said the headline of one economic rorecuUn1 aenice nearly seven weeks aid. It declared that the gap had to be cl<>1ecl. tbat either interest rates would drop or lnfl1tlon would worsen. The odds, lt said, were that lnter6at ratea would live. But since then, nothlnl bu happened. What does lt mean -that's the quesUoo. There are ereat demand• for money from corpora- tions that muat refinance their considerable abort· term debt. And the federal government, or course, is stlll in the red. Still, say those who feel they are as informed as the next guy, that gap shouldn't be what it la. Does It mean, they ask a blt fearfully, that the market feels President Rea1an's economic pro- gram will fall? ll doea present problems with representatives or industrial nations who will be gathered at Ot- tawa, and who already have said they belleve their economic problems are a consequence or U.S. in· teresl rates. If It ls puullng to those Americans who should know, how can it be explained clearly to foreigners? And then, how can you convince thole foreigners that it is temporary, bound to vanish lo mere months? Tobacco price supports studied WASHINGTON (AP> -The government price-support program ror tobacco, which critics say inflates costs by millions of dollar annually, will undergo a thorough evaluation in the next seven weeks. The full -scale review was ordered by Rep. Charlie Rose. D·N.C., a strong supporter of the program and chairman of the House Agriculture subcommittee on tobacco and peanuts. "We have not had in this Congress an over· view by the Agriculture Department of what's right and what's wrong with the tobacco program, JlOd that is something we need," Rose said as procram supporters prepared for another fight when the Senate considers the new farm bW later this month. Rose told otricials of the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service that he wants the review finished by the first week in Sep· .tember' and a private briefing on its fmdings soon .after that. The service oversees the program. I "We've got to tighten this proeram up,•· Rose ~aid. "We've got stormy days ahead.-and if there's :any excess baggag~ on this program, we're aoin& lo throw it out in Seytember." Under the program, growers.can agree to ac· ·cept government acreage allotments and produc- tion quotas for the the types or tobacco traditional· h grown in their regions. II they accept those 3imits, they r eceive government price-support PUBLIC NOTICE loans and the exclusive right to produce the tobac· co types involved. It has remained essentially un- changed for three decades. More than 90 percent of the 1.8 billion pounds of tobacco grown in the United States last year was covered by the government program, which supporters say has ensured adequate supplies to meet demand. Although Agriculture Department officials say the program has cost only $57 million over more than 40 years, Rep. Thomas Petri, R·Wls., and other congressional critics contend that its strict production controls result in at windfall of nearly $900 million a year to people in the industry. An aide said Rose is concerned over Agriculture Secretary John Block's comments about the program. Block, who has urged ellmina· lion of strict peanut production controls similar to those for tobacco, said last week that be supports the tobacco program only because it's inex- pensive . NEWS from all over California is r ounded up each day in the Daily Plllt can you . afford tog1ve your money to a total , stranger? Of course not! You have trusted the Warmington Homes for three generations and Warmington Anonclal will have your trust tor generations to come. We offer tne high yields necessary to survive In today's Inflationary times. For solid Investments call Undo at .. WARMINGTON FINANCIAL CORPORA TIC)N I 3191A AIRPORT LOOP COSTA MESA. CALIFORNIA,92626 (714) 540·2635 "A Southem Collfomlo k>mlly Helpfng Southern CollfOff\lant" EAST MEETS WEST -General Motors Chairman Roger Smith, right, shakes hands with Isuzu Motors President Toshio Okamoto prior to the start of a joint news conference in Tokyo Thursday. In Japan to mark the 10th "" ........ anniversary or the financial tie-ups between General Motors and Isuzu Motors. Smith said the wide selection of small cars here will make it hard for GM to sell American-made J -cars in large numbers. N-Am•rkEJr T•r_,.,, s1.,,,., , SHIFll TWllb CvM< g Ftncllnc Ll•llfte9 SIS#it g WGNrt APKln M•rchAl ASlr -AeplcMt. No var Cllnl "'1 1•1• "" BentPtl CP A-wt =·· PwConv VerwTc C•rtMIDCP CO"Nllll Name EIO« un NP•r~ 0..5¥. KeyUI H .. ,,_ 00.UCI BoontEI Buco Della "" N1rrlllC» 1 Anc11"1-g Blkmlst Cocl.nol c-• GOldld "" SlllreNet i=~: Omni Rill TorAoy l U nit Sy MeaO" OllM"" s:~~m un L.Ht ,~ J"' 20 s~ • 2'!<o 11 1" s~ 11 2 1·14 ..... JY, • n •tt 3 , 21-~ ,.,_ 21<\ .. ,,. 17~ ' lO DOWNS .c':\. • lit • •llo + I • 1\,lo • v, • J . ·~ . "' + J" . ~ . ''"' "" • 1"" • l . * • v. +S·H . "' • v. • 14 ..... • 2 • 1 • l~.4 Pel. Up l l.1 Up &6 Up 21.0 Up U-1 Up U.1 Up 22.l Up 22.2 Up Jl.l Up lt.• Up lt.O Up lU Up 11.2 Up 14.I Up , ... Up U.4 Up 1•.l Up 1•.l Up 1U Up IU UP IJ.J Up ll.J Up 1J J Up 11.1 Up 1LS UP 11.1 Lui Chg P<L 1" -l't Ofl ... 211. -"" 011 11.2 ~ , .... Off ,.. 2-. -" Ott n.o UV. -3 Off IU 15\l'J -2 Off 11.• 3 -~ Off 11.1 ·~ -.... Off '·' 7~-\ltOfl H 19 -2. ~ t.S , .... -..... t.1 I "° I U I -Vo Off U I~ -1 Off l.S lV. -.... Off l.J 2"' -'"' Off l.J ,"' -.... Oii l.O sv. lh Off l.O , S-1• -~1• Off 1.S 411+ "" Off 1,4 '" -.,, 011 1.2 JV. "" Off 7.1 JV. -14 Off 7.f >'--"' Off .. . ,. 1-. Off .. . NY E COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS OVOYAYIC*t lllC'-'UO• ., ..... , ... , ... •IW YOlt•. MIOWllT, ~AC"IC. ~IW, "''°"• OtY•OIY AND CINCl•NUI ITOCll' ••a.a .... , MtO ttlll'04llTID I Y TM •UD A•D t•STl•llY Books tell times AltrH A. Knopf, one ol tbt !DOit pr"Ufloua names ln Amtricu pubUth.lnc, wW be out 'tbll taU with a new boot by Joumalllt David Halberstam, "The Brew ot llM Game." Hatbtntam'1 prevloUI two boaka w.,. "The Powers That Be," lnelllve pro- fiJea of med.la 11ani., and "Tb• 8 Hl H d UM Brlftrt.l,0 a 4evMlatin1 analyala ol tbe £.....,. eatablithment t,,.. "bo fed us Into tbe Vietnam M· venture. And "The Brew ol the Game"? It'• a book about pro buketbaU. It's come to that: buketball as a metapbot' of life. Knop{ calla It .. Halbtrstam's most powerful, re- vealin1 &Del rtv.a.ui. book." Al19 comln1 from Knop( is the lltb annual "KabW Gilwan Diary,•~ always a bot seller. Knop! has hilb h9Pes too for its "1982 Ml11 Piny Calen- dar." Knopf, In-~ cidentally, is \t: part of Random r o House, _which in ~d· / , turn i s now ....6,: o w n e d b y _.._..__.._ ____ _ ~ueb~cha~i~:s~ lllJll .... IJZ ha vi ng been transferred there last year by RCA, which tired of the publishing business. The books issued by pubUshers clue us In to tbe tenor of the times. Here's a sampling of other tiUet coming your way this fall: -"World-of-tbe-East Vegetarian Cooking," by Madhur Jaffrey, another entry from Knopf, which as- sures us that this Is the book vegetarian epicures have been waiting for." "Betty Crocker's Microwave Cookbook," from Knopf's mother, Random House. Just what you would expect since nearly 20 percent of American homes have been equipped with microwave ovens. -"Feasting on Raw Foods," edited by Charles Gerras and featuring 350 menus that use only raw food (look, Ma, no. cooking). "Treat your children to this novel way to boost nutrition in the family diet," urges the publisher, Pennsylvania's Rodale Preas, home of Prevention magazine and such excitlng·- books as .. A Practical Guide to Small·Scale Goalkeeping," "Gourmet Gardening" and "Goodbye lo the F1ush Toilet.·' -"Whal Are You Using?" ln case you haven't guessed, this Dial paperback is a birth control guide for teen-agers. Dial, incidentally, now belongs to Doubleday, which owns a Jot of book clubs and tbe New York Mets. -"The Genuine Texas Handbook," by Rosemary Kent, who's described by her pubU.1her, Workman, as "a fifth-generation Texan and a Camp Mystic alumna." This is a straightforward attempt to crash the best-seller lists tbe way "The Official P rep- py Handbook" did this year. -"Pills That Don't Work," by Dr. Sidney M. Wolfe and Christopher M. Coley. From Farrar, Straus & Gl~oux, this invaluable guide will give you names of 610 prescription drugs which simply don't work even though they're still sold. Just what we needed to make us feel better. (They won't even let us have the placebo effect.) -"Same Time, Next Week ?" by Paul Neimark, a guide to "wt\y, when and bow to leave your t herapist," published by Connecticut's Arlington House, home of nostalgla and conservatism (amonc their many winners are "Karl Marx: Racist," "The Conservative Decade," "The HoUywood Beauties" and "The Beautiful Bronx"). -"Creative Marriage," by Mel Kraotzler, published by McGraw-Hill. KranWer, a psycbologist. wrote the best-selling "Creative Divorce," b.ut he knows how to work both sidef of the street. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES ~YOllKIA~l fl"lll Oow-J-1 •"9S. ""' rM&ar. Jul. it. IT' K . JD lftel 4t:1s ~2 ~1 ~+ ~ I JD Tm !!Am Ai1' e4.ot All.»+ •.32 . 1S Vtl 1 9' 107_.. lOt.1.,_ o.a '5 Stll J l.2A 0. "'-70 Jn.ft+ 1.St !/:': :::::::::::::::::::::: Hn:= Utlll .. • .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. • SlS, 100 • '5 Siii .................. , .. .. S,°'3.G!'O , WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YORI( IAPI Jul. 1• ..,.,, AMERICAN LEADERS All'f~M ToN~ •,i, MM DKllnecl AOO ¥::rr.i::. 1m '~· MeW llltflt ~ 22 .... IOWt -TAMDDI) NaW YOIU( IAPI JUI. 1' p,."·. Mv-" T.,. ... Pf(llMCI 2'1 MS ~. ~ h't =:c:~· 10 I • ,, 11 Orange Cout DAILY P.ILOT/frlday, July 17, 1981 7 • Fountain Valley landscapers big winners at awards banquet NEWPORT BEACH -Southwtnda Landscap- lna of Fountain Valley w11 one of the bil wlnnert ln the 23rd annual Beauttncallon Awardl, whlch were presented durln1 a Newport Beach banquet by t he Callfomla Landscape Contractort Aasn. of Lona Beach and Oran1e County. Forty awardt In 11 replar and four special cateaortes were presented, accordln& to Frank Berry, chairman of the prolJ'am held at the Mar- riott Hotel. Awards were presented by television r.ersonality Reale PhllbJn, host of KABC-TV'1 'A.M. la An1ele1" and entertainment editor of Channel 7 "Eyewitne11 New1.'' Landscapin1 projects entered In the competi- tion represented nearly all communities ln the Orange County and Lona Beach areas. The Sweepstakes Award, hiahest distinction 1iven by the CLCA chapter, representine the best overall landscaping project of the year, went. tp David Lee of David Lee Landscape Co., Placentia, ror the Hooper residence in Santa Ana. The Presidents Award, given to the best over- all residential project of the year was presented to Frank Berry of Southwlnds for the Sullivan rea- idence ln Cowan tJelghts. Orange, for the Ke11ler residence in Laauna Hllls. 'J (Total Landtcape Care wu the bl11e1t winner of the banquet, with four ~er flrtt place and achievement awards In addition to the J ud1es Award.) · The Excelsior Award, representing the year's best landscapin1 project submitted by a new CLCA member, was presented to Steve Lancaster of Lancaster Enterprlses, Colla Mesa, for bis work on the Countryside Condominiums in Orange. OUSer major winners of the evening were two Orange County lan~scape contractors who each won four awards. They were Southwlnds and Habco Landscape & Irrigation, Inc., of El Toro. Winning three awards each were William Van- dergeest Landscape Care, Santa Ana, and Craig Pauley & Associates; Tustin. Those who won two awards each were Richard Cohen Landscape, Mission Viejo; Village Landscape Co., Irvine; Raintree Landscape Co., Laguna Hills; Plant Control Corp., Irvine; and Mission Landscape Services, Inc., Costa Mesa. A record 80 landscaping projects were entered in the 1981 CLCA competition, according to Berry. South~ndl l..and$caping's award ~nning landacaping o/ the Davis re~e The Judges Award, representing the beat over· all landscape maintenance project of the year was won by Jim Lane of Total Landscape Care. Judges were John Hourian, a principal of Lidyoff Hourian Landscape Architects, Orange, and Keith French, a principal of EDAW , Inc., landscape architects, Newport Beach. I Tropical pi!ints may be answer to world hunger By llON STATON ._,. ............. WAIMANALO, Hawaii -Some ordinary- looking cornfields and a grove of spindly trees in a remote section or this small. rural town are help· ing ri&ht world hunger and restore the world's tropical forests. f$ The cornfields and leucaena grove are two key projects of the 130-acr e University of Hawaii College of Tropical Agriculture Experiment Sta- tion, located on a narrow stretch of land between the mountains and the sea on the windward side of Oahu. Scientists here are working to develop corn varieties that will produce results as dramatic as were achieved with rice. "The· focus of the green revolution was to find varieties of rice with more nain and less leaf." said Dr. James L . Brewbaker, professor of horticulture. "We are trying to do the same with com; we are trying to increase grain yield on a smaller plant," he said. ''We are beginning to find, u the rice people did, that some of ·these varieties wiU be good anywhere in the tropics where light and beat conditions are similar. • "It is possible to breed in Hawaii hybrids that will be cood in other parts of the world," Brewbaker said. Even &uth" Korea, a country outside the Fuchsia group slates slww The history of koi fish will be dis- cussed by Terry McNay in Sherman Library and Gardens Saturday at 9:30 a.m. The program is free and open to the public. For more information call 673-2261. THE LAGUNA Beach Fuchsia Society second annual Blossom Show and Plant Sale is set for Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.mJ in the Lum- beryard Mall, 384 Forest Ave., La1UDa Beach. The large red and white fuchsia, Swingtime, will be among the favorite plants offered for show 'and sale. For more infor mation call 494-2126. THE ANNUAL Fern and Exotic Plant Show, one of the largest of its kind in the country, is set for Saturday and Sunday in the Los Angeles Coun- ty Arboretum in Arcadia. This is the 18th annual show, and hours wUJ be 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day. Visitors from across the f country will be on hand to see the fems, orchids, bromeliads, begonias, fuchsias, carnivorous jplant.s, aroids, palms and other exotic plants of- fered for show. BOB GlllllSHA W wlll present an illustrated talk on the culture of the epiphyllium Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the California ~ralive Extension, 1000 S. Harbor Blvd., Anaheim. The lalk is sponsored by the Horticultural tSociety of Orange County, and sales and refresh· 1 ments will also be offered. For more information ca 11 526-6713. 1 Vl88ER'8 PLOlllST and Greenhouses will 1host the monlhly meeUna of Executive Women ln1 1ternational Tuesday in their Anaheim facilities. ~For more information call 540-9380. A number of things to check getting water. Even in the tropics there is often a problem with drought. "We are talking about instant forests -these trees will mature in five years," he s aid. "They can grow in small areas and grow back quickly after being cut. • If you haven't done so already, co ahead and cut off the dried, dead foliage of any spring blooming bulbs you have. ,, • Keep training and supporting tomato plants so they won't sprawl on the ground and get their fruits dirty. • When any of your annuals start to fade, you can quickly replace them with fresh plants tropics, is producing some of the world's highest corn yields with hybrid seeds from Hawaii. "Half of the world's com is grown in the U .S. and half in the tropics," he said. "But the yield in the U.S. is five times higher than in tbe tropics. We feel challenged to find out why yields in the tropics are poor." Three goals, he said, are to develop varieties more resistant to insects and pests; to fmd cheap ways to replenish nitrogen in the soil, and find plants that use nitrogen efficiently; and to find varieties that ~an produce large yields with leas light. One way of replenishing nitrogen may be or ask your nurseryman if they would respond to a little pruning and ft!rtilizing for more 'blooms later on. • Remember to cut off the runners of your strawberry plants before they root. • Frequent trimming or hedges promotes new green growth and. full, dense look to the foliage. "Our tropical forests are disappearing and we must replace them." Brewbaker said ... At the beginning of this century, there were· 16 billion acres of forest ir\ the world. By the end of this rentury. there will be only 7 billion acres. and the disappearance has been almost exclusively in the tropics, due to increasing population. "The immediate impact is that there is no wood to burn. The impact of that is that food doesn't get cooked well and there will be more disease. · through use of the leucaena, rich in nitrogen, as a "The replacement or forest wood by kerosene fertilizer for such crops as corn, beans and and other li~uid fuels ihw:"~efy. •Rl'f no(-an cassava, Brewbaker said. ...~ -economic option," he said. "Qt.her sources, such Leucaena, known as lead tree In the southern as coal, are limited, and the people of the tropics United Slates and considered an undesirable weed will have to rely on wood . in Hawaii, also is rich in protein and is a "Those of us working with plants feel that. high-quality feed for animals. ultimately, we have to harness the sun's energy. The main interest in leucaena is as a fuel But we must figure out how to utilize light more wooo, but Brewbaker and his associates also are efficiently," he said. looking at other wood uses, especially paper and Some 800 varieties of leucaena are growing at pulp. the experiment station,· and Brewbaker and "Leucaena is a tree of very rapid growth, and associates are trying to find the species that grows few trees in the tropics CJD m~tcb 1'," Brewbaker the !~test. They have sent seeds to some 80 said. "It is a deep-rooted'&ee and has -no pri>bfem .J countrie' lLOl'D•s r ;~ gordensho AMERICANA MODB. 4, 1 100 Chair 1. 1142 Table S?lec• Set Example: The best set shown above ---42" Table and 4 Chairs Retail $428.00 MOW '24600 MARIGOLDS Pony Pak Ideal Sun Color (Black trays excluded) Reg. $1.09 MOW'.69 ... ~ CLOl9 ,•,-:;. ....., .. _ TUISOAT ,_ Property Being Sold NURSERY Liquidation Sale All Specials Wtiect to Supply on Hcmd SAVE UP TO 70°/o ' -SIERRA GARDENS !{URSERY IMPATI .. S. COMPIOSMA . SMOWIAU VllUIMUM .............. s119 _' ' •• • .. IEAI. ESTATE .-..'"". ler ... i. AJWt••h I• 'wk =~=••1 l'tn\tn l.oh l'r)i'l" t'ommitrt&•I i'h•rt' l ............... ,.. •• ~l"'4•'w~ ........ lobo'\l<At'4 ::::.~111,"~•rh l.Gh fOf:.01• M+AMat-ltftW Trlr t'tfh MOYntlll.l~tt """".,.' «•-•ro "'"" u.toll-• ...... IMollllotr lirw R1M'ktr. •'•'"''" Grm .... M.ta.I tA11t' •. \th~n•c­Mt.I t~hlt' • ••Ued IOITALS lk:lib.n ... , ..... ...,.. ll0t1'"t"\ \ nfwfnl,hf'd uow~~""'llf\n1 l OlftdilJMlfWliHt\' t Vfft (. tedORHN.aft\\ \ •f T.-.Mow""."'" , ....... M"\lftl °""'"" ~" r" IN~•''°'l"f Apt"' •vrn 4'1-.. lafi.te ..... ,.. .. , • .,\ft! ll;oon". ._ .. flo••d lkll•l. "'"'''' ttithl llnmt .. Sw-.mrwr k••••.., \w.t.•lll'°M.J,. ~W~.;.rt Cau&n fut Nrnt (Jlflff "''"•' ""'•f'lf'MI Jll•ntill flldu•lri.I MrOl•I -·tt ............ "' .. )ihw-M:MCah IUSllflSS, INVEST- MENT, fltlANCE ==~~ :::~::::~.!t' )1-iloLou w-1 •••" Mer1•Hf"' Tl>11 ...CEMENTS, POS8NALS & LOST & fOIHIO ~ ... """4M .. l'•r Pool l.iratl ~GU<'t' i•••··-.... _ .. s.n.in ..... n.,.,. SRYICES "°" "" lltrtc1ot) ....... ,, PllHUTIOll "'""I""' ·"""""-""'"-11tc-1n.. ....... , .. ,.,.,.,, t·lfnf't D . t°A1v1p"'°" M t••h lloa.• t"l'ttlol°" t\irNt11tt ~-..... ....... l~fj.ftOd, '"'"" Ll\blOC'k M....,_l 'II-· lil,ql_ .......... lhikal llbl••-· OflM'f ''"". t.q .. p Pot> :..-; t~t·:. = ... ~ ..... r.1':.i....ittf'1 l<K"' nATS&MutNE E_,..OIT c lw:I -ltr: IOll IMIU IUU 10. EOUAL HOU8INO OPPORTUNITY :: ,....,,.~ 1Clll All real utate ad· :: v t r ti ae d I n t h I a :: :e·rJ:.i1s~:~ ,.., inl Act ol 1911 which :~;; mallet .It Wept to ad· ,.., vertlse "1111 preference, :: llmitatll)a, or d i•· :: crlminaUon based on race, color, rellalon, sex, or national ori1in. :: or an lnt.eation lo make 1>lol any such preference, :: llmltatlon1 or dis· 111111 crlminatlon.' 111111 llUI ,., -'It" ZIJIJ Dt• 1 ... llllil a... ZIUJ 21W -~ .. Thia newtpeper will not llnowinflY accept any advert11ln1 for real estate which la in viola· lion ollbe law. BIOIS:Ad¥.._. ... dick .... = ~·-=· = . DA&. Y Pl.OT wtm11 = lt!Mlty fw ...... : l1corrtct l.Hrtlot liUU ........ --_,. loll --llW U!OI ca.. -...., ••••••••••••••••••••••• •.. , .. 1002 WI> t.lti ••••••••••••••••••••••• H,\IJ llw t»o -"!<• 41DIMHOME $105,000 of "·~If''' REALTORS 671-1111 llOADMOOI ILMAMCI: hr.....-W ~,... __. ........ , lt.tMN- Yltw ..... 4 ........ ...., ...... J flrl .. IC" wf ................. PricH to .... u10.ooo. COLI OF MIWPOl'r llALTOIS 2115 I. C...t Hwy .. c:... .. Mir 671-1111 ",\ J I I ', \ TAYLOR CO. I; I :\I I I ": " . • " l ~ f It i BMAMT "YBSA&US .. -IXCWSIYI OM 116 CANYON 60tl COUISI ·spectacular Deane Home s "Versailles" located on largest lot of all Deane Homes. Beautiful gol! course view! Professionally landscaped yard w/mature trees in a private park-like setting including a lovely large pool & huge spa +an at· tractive gaze bo. Gated front courtyard entry with fountain . Marble noor in foyer with glittering chan· delier. 4 Bdrms, den, formal dining room & 41h baths. Priced right at $895,000. Call for appointment. WISUY M. TAYLOI CO., UALTOlS 2111S..J ............ MIWPOIT CBfTll. M.1. 644-49 I 0 Comfortable ea.ta Mesa ramlly home on quiet street. Rool, 1 yr new. Covered patio, brick :: BBQ, beaut. garden ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .iou w /bearinc fruit trees. = Hurryto.ee!Me-7171 -!Im IU6 IOllO .,n - THE REAL ESTATE RS PEMl4SULA ...... Only 1te111 to the surf, is th1a bar1ala fiur. Briel paint bf'lllhel • a ho vela and cash in on m Call now: @ ltA COVE PROPERTIES 114-631·6990 : LOWESTPllCE :: IAUOAISLI -.u Only $19',.500! Unbeata· : ble terms. Owner will : carry lit. at lZCI. fer 10 -yeara. Ideal weekend ~ and summer hide-away. -Ste111 to bay. View boltl : Crom front aittin1 porch. -Just listed, to burryl : cau naao. 11!11 ----THE :REAL ESTATERS Wit COIOMADB. :: MAIDWLIX -South or the bJCbway alts = t6ia ···-lloale pl• -income. Hu&e owuera : unit, brick court~ leadl to French ,... that open oato lta lian •1• llled noon. Beautiful ::: wood peued floors :: e n h 1 o c e de n a n d "111 spacious family kitchen. ,,., 2Dd story lmta aechaded Mii muter auM.e ~b open balcony ud bubbUa1 ::; 1pa tool 3 men queen -11.Md bclnDI ror your Jilt. :: mj. Ruse 4 car 1araae -+ 2 Belin\ Income llft.lt. :'. Price reduced and --·"@""' CdMSTAITEI WALKTOICH Just listed, for only Slll0,0001 Auume 2 low i nterest loana . Completely remodeled. Co1y fire~ce. Modem kitchen rib microwave. Covered ,.UO for BBQ. Hurry, c.Ul7N550 THE :REAL ESTATE RS HAllOlllDGI Award winning "Jodelle" estate·home. lat resale offerina on this exquisitely appoint· ed townhome with m111lve view or bay. ocean, coutJine • nilhl llehta. orrered at -000 . EASTSM -61AMT 3400 aq.ft. ol family liv· inl ! Covenid entry leadl to huce llvinl room with ----:=..:=---I waJ.ll·ln lardeft window. THE REAL ESTATE RS Lara• r1mlly room, brick fireplace. wetbar. Kitchen with all the &oodles. Muter suite, fireplace and altylight. 3 hu1e chlldrens rooms, &ood financing. Call to see. 54e-2313 THE REAL ESTATE RS -111111 ILllR I. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE HAUOI Y1IW tlUS Just Listed In Much Soui~ After Harbor View Hills. Three Bedrooms Plus Family Room On A. Corner Lot. Beautifully Maintained. Owners Are BeinJ Transferred. Good Financing. Pnce, $315,000. COSTA MISA DWUX Just Listed This Lovely Duplex In Eaatside Costa Mesa. Each Unit Has Two Bedrooms. One Has Patio, The Other Unit Hu Private Yant. Both Units Recently Carpeted & P~ed. $1'19,500. I ... - IVllYTHI ... IS UP-TOGATI Terrific s unscreened spa, two fireplaces, great kitchen, ttrree bedrooms , large yard and convenient location. $193,500 Fee u.llUJf OOMfi REALTORS. 675-6000 U43 EMC......._....,, c-... lillr WI HAY! ti Of THE llEST USTINGI ~ TOWN ·ULD OWMaSUHIT! Deluxe 3 Bdrm 2 bath family /dlnin1 area , fireplace ownera unit. Plus 3 more delWle un· its. AU 1 story. $2.47 ,SOO. Call for more det.1lls. 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS llDUCID $100.000 OCIAMPIOMT Choice comer duplex. 3 bdrm, 3 bath up, 2 bdrm. 2 bath down. Can con· vert to a larger home . SELLER WILL HELP FINANCE AT 13%. Sl95,000! ..... 1-r,,... lttlon •'71-7060• OPEN .OAILY FOR VIEllNG 11 A.M. to & P.M. SH VW. Aor., ............. $241,100 435 e':'~;.% sw.. ...... U4s,ooo 2161 I cor. 23rd •••• $261,000 . 3121 Vf. CMlt Hwy. 7D •••• $211,000 121 Ya. z..4U. Udo •••••••• $l t 5,000 . Ill Ya.._....., Udo .••••• SllS.000 320 •-4. Sllonclffs .••. Sl~t,599 IOI ctff Dr, Ml ............ $375,tOO 21 ll Mir••·, ... Pt ....... $444,100 IOl ldpw.._, rta. ........ SHI.too I C:.-.. I•. l.t. Is. •..••. SI ,200,000 J024 0.... m.41.. CDM .... $1,JI0,000 I tell a friend. . .and help choose your new neighbors! '841MSULA POINT fiim OI .. """ ..... ,,..., of ..... ,.._. .. ..,, .... lW2....._ tw .._~or ........ Int ,,teed fw .-a ... S2ts;OOO. 6ll0J400. IAUOA ISLAte DWUI a~ z itOry .._ s ._.. tr- ..._. .. 1 ..... 2 ......... d ....._ Mr wt.clow, Widl Ii tfllct. °'" ..._ .cl • pr• it ca, w1d•l1 ... "" .. yow frollf ~ ..... 2 w.. Ill& f1N9t ... IM11l Priad fw • ..-. _. of s~so.ooo. '7Utoo. - MIWroaTCN~· s.,.r ...., .,... -......... . '-ttpoof ..cl ......... I t1d ~ ,.... ... ,. .•. .., .,.. ... ,,. 0,.. ..... ,.._ wt•...., i llDD dtlld ...... ,.,. ............. c..w • MW be*eo"" Slll,000 fM. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC REAL ESTATE SM>. Rtnt.11•. Propoor1v ~"' 24J6 W Co.st Hwy 31~ MJ1N Aw ~ Be.1th 8'lboi lsllnd '31·1411 67Mttt ~· ,.._ .... ~,t •.• Don't miss the Orange Coast's largest flea market in print! F.amous Dimes-a-Lines Satur-· day! I THE ~EAL ESTATERS ~~ Dalebout Bay &Beach Real Estate REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949 -. COME WITH US ... TO WESTCLIFF. NICELY REFURBISHED ONE BEDROOM CONDO. CO MPLETE UTILITIES INCLUDING DISHWASHER. SPARKLING CO MMU N ITY P OOL .SU PERB LOCAT I ON . H ANDY T O EVERYTHlNG .. ONLY $195,000 ·1617 WISTCLIFF H. M.I. u1-noo ---- UMDAISU Exciting opportunity! Wide channel view from spectacular architectural designed 4 bdrm. S bath, pool home. Slip for 2 large boats. $1 ,495,000. Summer Occupancy. UDO ISLE HOMES Featured on Homes Tours this lovely traditional spacious. custom 3 bdrm. 3 bath home. newly redecorated . Priced to sell q~ckly at $475,000. Must see. Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patios .. B~am c~il ings. Great for entertammg. $420,000. Best price for the money. PENINSULA POINT IEACHFRONT Panoramic bay & ocean view at wedge. from prime large lot. 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft. featur· ing marine room. Sl.385.000. NEWPORT CREST CONDO 2 bdrm . den. spacious Plan 8. im- maculate. Low priced at $215.000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J .; 1 Bn,, .i. 0' , . '• B t, 7 ~ r, o 11m------1 COMMBCIA.L 'D~&L~ _., + UYIHG Spacious 3 bdrm. 2 bath apt Bltins. wet bar. r1replace. atnum. Over 500 sq. ft. or business space + 4 car garage. Priced at SJ:S0.000 of I· ****JUST LISTED**** New On The Market and Newly Remodeled. This Fantastic 3Bdrm. + Den + POOL Home on Oversized Quartered Lot in Prestigious :·saycrest" area or Newport. Will Be Open This Weekend " MUST SH44UST SB.L Owrwr/ Agt offftiltg IMClllHIU FMGIK· leg! 631°1476 or64S.2IOI * HAllOI llOGI • This serenely beautiful home is set against a changing backdrop gf green & golden slopes, long shadows & twinkling lights! Featuring 3 bdr.rns + a spacious library, formal dining & gourmet kitchen for memorable days thruout the years. A dramatic stairway that's wrapped ar0und an atrium leads to a hideaway master suite with study & frplc for those chilly evenin's I For a private showin g of this superb residence calJ 759-1501or752-7373. MIWPOIT llACH oMcE 2'70.SerM"'91.,,... 1714) 71t·ISOI associated BQ0k[g'} '1fr: •'JQS J. ,_ ,., ') t I t ' ,,_f; I WALKTOICH $92,950 . Newport Bea c h bachelors bargain. Aa· sumable Sli4,600 lo11n Owner anxious Actnow. call 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS STlf'S TO IEACH 2 bdrm each un11 + room & bath olr 2 car garage. Good w /1'. rental area. ~l<nl. associated 8~r1>fll~ •ft. rru5 J ,' A R, • • t-'; ......... W.e.d 3 bedro(>m. rantast1 c ocean and canyon views, 11•z.ebo, IWih landscap. 1n1 . Anxious owner. 1299,000. RCTavlorCo I .1 ( ' , I l ~ JI\. I ICHOCIC • KNOCK This is no joke. It's op-portunity k:nocklng, Be sure to see this mint con· dltlon 2 br beauty. As· sume exiltin& loans at less than JN err rate Owner very motivated! S4H491. · REAL ESTATE AfMMr WIU.llSMOT IY ll~TISll.la if th.ls home II not sold lmmedlate\y. Aaaume exltl. loan at 91/• %. Great family home. Owner moving out o( area • despera\e! 545-949L. ~~! fficac~ (714)631-0680 lven Wells custom with re&ractable roof. 4 large bdrms.very light & ~n home with sparkling pool. Owner will heJp wilh financing $395,000 Lake Forest S&S Home. Jbdrm. 2ba. air. pool, tennis Sl.SS,000 13~,~ inl. for J01yn. R·3 property Three 2bdrm rentals Sl20.000. Owner will finance. Agent: 631-0680 ------~ WINNEIS !! 10 UNITS: Assumable $1 72,000 In loans $380.000. Orange . 8 NEW CONDOS: From Sl2S.OOO to $137,000 Costa Mesa DUPLEX: 1 Yr old As sum aule SlS0.000 loan rm.ooo. Orange 6 UNITS: Brand new S168,000 loan. 1255,000 San Bernardino. LOT IN DANA POlNT. 29 '1 down . wil l ubordinate Sl.S,000. SO. CAUF. IWn 546-UOS DWI.IX $94,tOO lnveston delilht! Two 2 Bdrm. Unlta. CW'nat i. come · S140 Mo. 1 year home protection plan in· eluded. Call to Ht 1 641-7171 THE REAL ESTATE RS WowlbuUm . Sell More ... with Daily Pilot PENNY PINCHER ADS Only $3 3 lines for 2 days only $1 .50 a day Advertise one or more Items valued up to $100. Each additional line is only 66c for the two days. Sorry, no commercial ads allowed. Charge Your Penny Pincher Ad or use your BankAmericard or Master Card tfloW.. .t]Vevv.. · More value for your DIMES In the famous Detty Piiot DIMES-A-LINE ADS AdHrtlH It•"'' up to 150 '" wal11e '" Dtnie•M.Jne eds nery Saturdey lft ttte Deity. ,Mot. """ '°"' eel """ ''"' .. ..., .... '"'" com•••~ office• Of IMI JO"' C09J wltll • "** Of MOMJ Ofder tor ... oonect llM4olflt. 21Dc-per MM. 11.00 .........._ teny, no llH .. odl. produ~ or "'"'' lfMI M COlll!Mf'd81 eds aN dowecl. bC .. llefll llMIC be priced wtdl "° ... "' over MO. °""'' A-'..JM Id• l'MJ be ~ It ... CMU ..... eMOI untll 3 P·"" Frtdly, until noen fftd9f et"" L1gun1 leldl Of HuntintJtoft leldt oMc... THE BIGGEST GARAGE SALE ON THE ORANGE COAST IS IN THE DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIEDS .. I HE ~1 ~)\l. F :-lT/\TE~1 S •No .. pd,. e.8'l no.. •No YaCIDCf. •Nom...._ee. •No tetaaal proWema. •All lnW.. ill real~ perty. . Seven propertlea, dupl11e1 6 triplntl. -From sm.ooo to ~\ooo -ExctUent flnucllll avabllNe. Buytn muat be qualiflecf. OWmr m&aat aell due to health . RFIM~ 11 t \' I •Tu leDIOll. POC' baformatlon ~Bob -.,. ._ l Newell, Lido Otflce, ll~ -.... . WW111ea1t1.mnao ..... ....... OCIAM YllW IO'l'e DOWN MOCOm TO IUYll MO~AL.,._ ) Models From ti 3-4.'m Secluded roof-top su nd eck for romancing t.1tder the sun or stars. Spiral staircas~ leads to den or of· fice . Please call bkr. 631·2246 for details. c--.... 10 ...................... .......... Duples .. bell ...... pool. hi IDeome. Owatr. suo.ooo. • J HERITAGE f{ t r.i r r 111·, ------ HI :~ii n1 ! I I ... !' ------- describes thil 3 bdrm. 1'4 bath.patio home ln Huntlnaton Viewpoint North. Soerin1 cathedral Olilinp, lar1• com· ~-famUy/dlnlq area with alid· 1111 11111 ctoora to patio area . Earthlone carpet.a • 2 car 1ara1e. OWner will contlder carrylo&. •C¥De ftnanc~ Pleau call Jan at •ss1s to aee property lilted at Sl'4,500 I RA/Shorecreat ,._S573 Exceptional financing! Bri&bt and cheerful 3 Bdrm end unit w /wrap around patio. Lrg assumable loan w /fixed interest rate for 30 yean. Owner will carry 2nd T.D. Ex.cellent locatron on lovely greenbelt. 314 Avenicla Cumbre. Opn Sat 1·5. Ca~ 8a1Jy Shipley 64-4-0496 or 759-9100. don osen THllLlllF rUMT 3 bdrm, din. rm., Uv. rm .. rim. rm .. FJP.1\.'t ba, xtn larce por~liin tub w /cer1mk tile walls " noor. 4 covtrtd pallo attu. Pri~D).~~~ down, auume teO.wu lit trust deed at 7~%. Xlnt ACCENTON l111d leue 1153.00 per INDIVIDUALITY yur. Can't change until b r 11 ... year 2003. 143 Int. oft1y Wit u oce1t1 ... ewa 2nd truat deed clue and decb from every 1916-87. Call owner for room, this 3 bedroom, appt. daily after s· pm. 2~ balb home ls 1 spec· (7t•) 7..,. .. _ tacut.r !Dllterpifte In!••"•...,..,....•-••• HAI• HILL ~e rustom home site. th spectacular view. . uat do~ the hill from arbor Rldee. Owner aeeka equity partner or pouible Trade. Ted "Geiuler m.:B23 .. . • VEISALl.Es.>-. , * 100/o DOWH• Beaut. 2 Bdrm 2 ba con· 1 do. Assume Isl T 0 • OWC 2nd T.D. at 13'1 I SlT0,000. Agt. ~4277 Big Canyon townhome Open daily l·S. 2S Ca· nyon Island Onve. Golf \I <:,Purse view, tennis. ls. Assumable loan • • S 000. A 675-S:m. Ctldwy 21/Mtw,ar+C.•r 640.SJS7 An adult community on the Back B•>'· Sptc tacular Spa, 7 swim mill1 pooll, I Ua&ed ten nil coutta, bib lratls. puttins ei'een Barhelon, 1 and 2 bedrooms apartments, and townhouses from 1110. 00 per month • On Jamboree At San Joaquin Hillt ROJd (714)fftlSOO OMT .. WATB Fabulous bay view, large upper dtaplex, 3 br 2 ba, garaie. Adulll. no pets. llKlO Mo. Yearly m-0236•m1cm. ~~~ ............ ~_!!~. ........ . jCn • ..._. l111rtlllrtW1 N11111t ' I • • ,.._AV .. •t111t:tih1 ~ .... Iii ... ..... • ,. ....................... ;;,.;~ ....................................................................................... ;~~ ................................ . Flex Muri, an Ttri w ..COCGMIT. ~..;:..::.t:t ALLTD'l\1Ulfs. ~ Wuta«IALLYCUAN Brochenec.tNdon rtaepeintmabyRkbard J.D.HomReftnllbilt• • DoaHMMN AcWMiw ·lwndt._, Oaim1a • •'--.. Omrd.O..•dlple· ~~l~'JOll HOOSE?C.UGlqllam *l>SaataADaAv,CM Sleor.Llc,lna.Uyl'lol Aotlq\111.IOt.cabinetJ Lcmas _._ wll tart ~~....._Lk, 1. · .. rwm.-. ...... 1w.m ,pq tcii II • Girl. F!!t•ttHm PI a 1 t •. I at /e 1 t . ba~ N.8. Nltooltrs. f'lneP!iAt.ly, ff5.9* f0t,.urd1Dd,.., ..... "'........_ ·/ ltHJI! GUAIAJft'ID .... J ............... ,. IOllH'Sa.&AHING ~~s::~l~e'r':°: 1'la YCM&.GJ.400 li•i•I& ..... Ul·ai9.Cll11¥. -Block .. ~ ll ....................... JU!AIONABLE Sen..._t.IM!roqbly ..._ Ext/let HilaUDI, cab. re ...................... . BAIYSITTIMO 111 ......... -•-•• llabe *' •'tft• ILICTllCIAN-priced PROMPl'.FRIEaT. ele!nMw!.MMll51 tul /1t1In. Prof, ~bl. Geiwral Senicet, no job home. W..U OK. Nr. THIOA.KESURPIUS&I ..... ,.._""& · '1IM. ,_ .... OD ALMOl'l'!VlllY !x..,U..lll•tku,.1 RE·DOYOORYAJU> Preeett.9Ley!5tl-911 too 1m11l. Pree eet. Vlnorla.£.M.HHll Ua6ta• na..d~• · ' . lat1eortmalljolll. R!PADlN!tDEI> Dt,...,.t9,refl. rlDltaetaolor,dtlMIP DB'ePAIH'llNO Rtd Call AAawerAd Lovilfmom.Wt.b)'tlt dthtred w • QIWC.,. Lk.llJlll f!P:M CHET@H7S! Suptlietfwa. Mlft m.mt lnt/91t. Neat, ttllable, ~.~.MM.1Xl,or'3J.l~~ "My flomt " bet•Mi emDee,IU,G0.!1=914 •••11•••1 -""'".. llSJD.JCOIHf'L Carpeotry·MllOllr>' QuaUtylbwJeuina ref1.DaveM5:0fteva !!! .. Buda • Gttfleld. Ul.tOJWll IDlhl:Y qladfted. No Job RoollnJ ·Plumblnl wtl.ltPencaal'l\:Macb. .. ..................... RENTA~ouupeclalfty, Sewllf/Als uOlw / ....-rt. • ....... ,_ ... ,,, .. , Hot \lacta. <!11:-Qri.. tooemaO.g -JMS Dryw1ll ·Sluct0 ·TUe Fr!!!!\. BethW-0~ lfORTGAGElfONEY intlelt. Seaside Paint· ...................... ~ ... AU T:r: R ..... ill 6 Ua!Prttdp!Lfft:SGI .... ce/llt •mO!'!. J,8.Mf.90 WANT!DI ffouletleaa· AVAILABLE In&. Prompt.SlMD Calm Dreu Mallin• ....................... ~ "· 'iJ:.U:::i· 17 UC. DAY CAii, nr So .......... -........... Discount• to senior itn1.eap'd, reliable, S2I0,000to'5(),000 INT EXT PAINTING alterations /Repalt,1, DIAL-fn ... area. · Cout Plua. All aJa1ftl tormJca~ cJU..U. All typee ot re-booeft.aa.'JU5aft4PM ........ ,.,.... GENERAL REPAIRS. Conaultatlon an YeQC • {11i)~~· llr. Pa Mreara.51'7·1MO CIMOIDWk~~ pain. fl'ff ttt. CaU R ESIDU! PR EE . UptolS/)'rltorepay LARGEORSllALL hon'ie1eo.a70 MellwC.dl • C•I sclel . Lat.eetC.olan/DeliPI Aftl•tr ad un. Carpet and upholstery PRIMEFINANCIAL REAS.·PROllPT s.a.-~~.:.': ....... ~-'!"*,, ... ~ .... ~b 6' .••••••••••-•••••••••• ~etCt. NMl!l ~:~4!00, or 131-113'7. 1team11tclea.llAftl.1lS yrs. 52st:7Rv::4~77 JERRY~'757 •••••••••••• .. •••••••tf Acceazt..._ CEUULITE· TOXINS• remvue ..... -..... Cuetom Brick, 81oell, .._.. ...... nncr.. qua y aerv ce at ·~ l~DJSCOONT Hot water+ poolheatil\j ........ ::?............ FAT c1e,_b traDDed la •nGI Tile. Patios, Walke, ...... ••••••••......... JACK OF ALL TRADES 1111raateed reuonable W. I BFW DfcD Custom Painting save rising entrlY rost.I· BOOK.KEEPING your system. Reliue le Cu 1tom.bu11 t ls l 2 Drivet. Covtra, Declla, CRPT·LINC}WOOD Plwnl>lna. etec. heatift& prices. &t&t7t3 ....................... lnt/ut. Guar.113-3263 gain tu credltl. Free For imaJI bu1iae11. t.ilhtell. LEARN to &Ive. wooden ahelvta tor Ca~!)ort1, • Pencea. lut.aUed"=. Uc. Odd Jobi. m.aa TENDER L 0 VIN G BRICK WORK : Sm all RALPH 'S PAINTING ...:C!l::.l:..::Sil-=-'-"l&a=----- Rea1, rellable. '3l·W3 roui'Mlf the body wnp. storaae, dlaplay • Uc!tDo!.11@9111 ,,.. m•sin H d ......... CLEANING BY STAR. Job•. Newport, Coeta Ext /Int, reu, prompt. Tie .tcfmt1ts••--'-E.Umlaat. aaloo mat· t~:Je. Our price 1, Remodel, 1dclltio11, Reflaiahlnl all floon, :.!= ............. 15 y u tixp. Reh . Meu, Irvine, Refa. Uc. Free eat. 984-5* .................... -• ........... ::?:::: ..... menta. Sht full body ....... 119Uos. NOBODY DOES cpll 6 wlndow1. HARDWOOOFLOORS Rtuouble.1Cf14t 115-3175 AGAPEFORCE TILE INSTALLED Matnesite paint, clean wrapt, 9'.51. 1'!'M de-IOUGH6f'INISR IT BETTER .. .I .I . Penoaal service. All Cleaaed6Wued DtpelldableRet.Scottilb Custom brick. atone, PAINTINGCOMPANY AllKinds.Guanntffd deou, cement, crpta'. moa. Call Mia Rose F-.claJ.Doan.etc. Coalt.r.Lk'd ... SU •ork aaannteed. Anytlme,&1Mll1S.A. Cpl will blKwlt/dean bloc.k, concrete, stucco. 3Generat.ionlof Refs. John,&p=l667 carpentry, weld, plwnb. Producta,IOlm ChrieMMOff Waterproof declllaa. .....-m ...... ffarbor ~a pref. xlnt Ref1. Freeett. 541-tm Paintlo& Excellence. y,.. Senia Br!d.M2·341Z Scul~fi"'~ Naill• Ml REFllINllHOD_,,_l'IJG Re~~er •• ~~~ ..... • ......... _, ........ , ref1545-l4Z5 ....... D-5151 ....................... , •pp'•ct..,. lit .... tr., SJURLEY ~ at.~c -·-....................... Haul deamq> concrete SONSHIHECLEANING ....................... -~AM JAYITlllCAU ....................... BEAUTY SALON ... t41·1S2t F'Mldaeogp.msnt G ..... 1. ludec.lpinl. removal~pt.rvcll. Chrhtiu couple lllovlot! The Starving '"~""" Toppins. pruninc. re GUAR. USED REFR 'a M2"'21% c.pet ""'-Dtca... tree trlmmla& • re· Q\lkll lft'\'. IG-7831 1peciali1ln1 In Reaid. Colleje Studeftb Moving Pauitin16P1,erin1 moval fc spraying. IO yn. SALESIJSERVICE l18i11u .............................................. roval, ~lean·up, DUlllPJ~ deanlnf; other Mrvicet Co. hat pt>Wn, lasured Gu~ai::i "':, quaprillty up. 1...ocal refs. frtt Goodcood. MZ.T1S4 ...................... •Shampoofcsteamdean. •WA1'WALLS• reeeat. SmaUMorin&Jotll avail. Quality wltb ume 10od atnlce. wofil ~Ca~ eat.Uc.omse6.640:930J. HAllOIAllA •8WICl&SOM Color bri,iitenen, wbt Crafted from volcanic Sam F1&hmoto YARD CaUMIKENl-131l peraoul ure. flu. tTlU·Uf License. t.e 1~ T' est ai. 609 TREED~IGNS Bullde,.aSIDce 1N1 crpta 10 min. bleacb. boulden,aell·cont.ained lllAINT. • Clean·Upt. ratel. lllM553 Ml=Wl now or ree · 1 Prunin&. Sculpturinlt; ~SBYICI Addition• remodeling Hall, Uv.-d.il. rm1 SU; S&ooeAleCrnt.iou · Tree ttlmmtn1. small Haulin~fcDumpJobl. Goodref.ldayawll.CaU ABC llOVING, Esper.......,.,...,... Topping, Thinning, Gary Walson Owner. plana.,f'reeest.Reu. ' av1rmfl.50;couth$1.0; M2-63Sl/eVelU'1·1.m l!ndlcapin,c.645-3540 Al forRa.ndy. alter 5:30 PM. '3l-8W prof, low rates. quick ....................... Removal. Clean~ Formerly 11 years Uc.ll'*2. s.mo cl'lr t5. Guar. elim. pet Mo'lfinlll~Sl5-SZS 141-3&27 uUorAna. carefulaervtc:e.552-0410 Neatpatchesfctextures 631·2513 w I 0 a vis Brown . odor. Cfllt repair. LS yn Haul1n1/lfovina szs HAULING-student hu FT.. ftt. H).109 -=:..==------ s..t.3077. ST RG 35848 CONSTRUCI'JON exp. Do worll myself........................ 7S4·11CM•OC15Mark lar1etrudt.Lowelt •A-f ~·. WillclowCls•g ._ • ..._.. Add/remodel. concrete Refs. S:tl-OlOr. ''I 0 -... 1111 y rate, ~rompt. ?59-l97f Top quality. Spec a al " 'lllg ••••••••••••••••••••••• •...--Freee1t.58l·DIOaft.S • rr--GARDENMAINT. a In bandlin• 25 n Orl•inalWindowWasher ....................... We Care crpt Cle!.nen Draperies by Giovanni yd cie .. up. Tree trim· T ink you, John. c re •· Y ....................... • L'>riveways, parkin& lot ROOM ADDITIONS le Steamdean•upbols. Al10 mlal·bllod1 le minC.S41-1J01 (4-apm) ca.--y-a.-a exp. Co~petitive ntes. M c C 0 RM, A C K Avg3br~,s:IS. repairs. aealcoatlng. RE.MODELING Quality Truckmountuntt levelows.~zm. ---~ -_.. "Secwity Ph•" will ail Nooverume.m~ PLUllBG liiiiiiii~631~·~-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiit SfcS Asphalt. 631-4199 construction from de· Worll uar. 3'7ll ........... TIBS Garaiea • .lite Haulina. your house. plants le TH ! v ET ER AN s REPAIR at REMODEL • Lk'd.. sicn. to completion. ... ,....._ Topped/remOWld, clean etc. 1 ton truck. $25. pets. Bondable, ref1. MOVING co. Ca~eful, St.oppages. Reu. rates. Family CCllltradon for ACOllHc ....................... up1 laWDf90\' 751-3'7t 631·11193 631-7587 Courteo\11 le Cheap\ Pis Uc. #294378. 6'7~9194 A~lfAL~REfStriAf!l~~ 30 yrs. Reu. rates. Fr ............... ~........ DrywallSpedalilt 'CLEAN UPS. le WE HAULANY'J1UNG It's time to plan for that call"2·13:11 , ... StrTicit ..-a&.. a CO• ' P<H6 eats. Allen E Jobnson.. AcouaUcCeili.np + Qual. "prod. New. re-. . Yard clean·UPI demoli· • I tri F t •--r-• Comm/raid. Free est. 30100'7 Call MG-5656 or custom hand1.nturin1 mod IW4.532-5Mt TREETRlllllING Uoa. Have dunip truck. vacat on p. or ex ra P ..... ,if',.uilg ..................... .. Lie. 1391312 ~8181 840-472'7 eves Uc _.... . S32-5Mt · S41-2IMI (Milte l Reu 9S3-l25S cuh, why not sell some ....................... Complete service re H = c•-Llf·-.. ~ . . Tape, Texture, Acoustic _ · of those items you don't The Paper Hanser, Prof. pairs, fclOlarinstall. So. ~::_r;m ~seU? .. N 1 .... Aua,yOW'one-Se!lthlnpfastwithD1Uy cellinp.Frceest.Kevin CW.llledAdl,yourooe-lfud wMt you want 1n need with a Clauified Install. Decoratorqual. Cal. Pool Suvice ied ads at weU. stop sboepinc center. Pilot Want Ada. 115-._ /l!J: 1503 !lop abopply ceater. Daily Pilat Claailleda. ad? 6'2·5678. Freu1t. Steve 547-4211 ~642:.=..!-8163='------ To place your mess a ire bdorethe ....,,.... rudinlpubllc, phone Dally Pilot Clusified, 642-S678 lttlred couple fro~ Heme& wll\ llouuatf9' " wllUtJtll .. •"1· lDt>aM • ACCC»n'M Irvine co. lw lmmed. 6peain1 for exper'd. penoa to hand.le A/R. related functions. & 1eneral olc. duties. Gd benefits. salary 0.0.E. CJ!I: 7SH931 All CONDITIONING & HIA ~ SBVICE PRSOH With Electr ical knowledge Laguna M11uel. Ocean Air. &31·0700 ALTEIATIONS F tr alteration,s 5'8·420 Allsw..-....Senkt Daytime slilrt: 7·3pm. Many benefits. 362 3rd §l .. IC. La&una Beach. AS SB mas Irvine electronics dis· tributors needs Cable AHemblers. Soldering exper. nee. Excell. workinc conds. & co. lltoefiu. Contact: Bob 1'racy, Mon.Fri , 8·S. 5'9-0954 AUTO MICHAMIC Foreicn & Domestic. SO% commission , own tools. Large clean shop. Larry Hunt's Auto O.ter, 1825 LlgWU1 Ca- npon Rd .. L.B. 833-8966 1 0{ 497 ·'2030. Automotive JIMMAllHO VOLKSWAGEH is looking for an am· bilious individual to work in the ParU Dept as a pickup & delivery driver. Must have good drivtng record and be o~r 18 yrs. old Great opportunity to start from the ground floor & work up. An interest in VW's helpful, but not nee. Call Rob. 842-2000 JIMMAllMO VOUCSWAGEH 18711 Beach Blvd 14~2000 Autpmotive Body shop secretary wanted. Ask rot Mike Experience ptererred but not necessary. 673-0900 Ask for Mike AUTOMOTIVE MECHANIC SR !TISH LEYLAND ..Ust be experienced Good worting conditions "comp111y benefits. Ap. pa,. In person. Contact George.at 131191.ogan COSTA MESA 979-1776 Previous financial in· slltution or cuh bandl· ing experience is necessary. Public con- tact backaroond helpful. Knowledgeol 11).key and light typing Is required AA/EOE/M /F .......... F ull & part lime. Nightclub in Newport 675-1094 •BLKESTORE• Ass't. Mgr. & mechanic for Schwinn dlr Sal I Sl0,400. MllSt have prior bike mech. exp 1n a 1 ~wre. s+4·983S Laguna Beach 494.9233 , .. Set~P/f Newpon Busmess con- s u 1 t Ing firm seeking rompetent secretary w at'curate typing, (ii. ing & telephone sJciJls. Perfer 8-l2 S da wk but flexible Call ~lehnda <714)640..~:ll \ * SECIETAllES * W.tl11, •t c• ivic11 HESTON I &A•1dltu Specialists in Temporary Clerical Penonnel SwltcMiMrd ~· P /time, nita Ir riends. 3pm-llpm shirt. Wiii train. &42-3113. I ~~T lOU MAY BE -~AYING IOI MUCH! CHECK YOUR CLOSEST DEALER LISTED HERE. Gn THEIR PRICE IN WRITING. THEN COME SEE THE VOLUME DISCOUNT TOYOTA DEALER '18CHIV ttis1 '73 vw ' 1111 ~-=·12111 AlHAMIU l'OYOTA CAN lO'fMA MAltNi\ '°'°'' MION\A .. ,. TOYOfA TOYOTA CIHTUl llllWAY TOYOfA MUMl '°"°'' Wllf VlllfY TOYOfA CAttoN TOYOfA MAMMll TOYOTA OIM CITY TOYOTA N. MOUYWOOO TOYOTA NOIWMI TOYOTA W. CCMMA TOYOfA wtm990'IOtA I ' '771MWJ201 Very sharp! Automatic. air, sunroof. <mrwK> S7."s JIMM.UIHO YOLISWAGIM 19711 Beach Blvd. r:o~~H l Cl-UVllOlET •• I • ... qb I iO) TOPSDOLLUS rorOelaUMd C1n6 Tnlcb . tl:lt ulh an tbupotl ~·t I aic · SANTIS :HEvRULf~ ---------...........---~· ..... ..,.____. .__ -....... -........-. --.--~ Ofange Cout DAILY PILOT/fr!dly, July 17, 1981 7trtc:IUP6' 41peed8ft.bed (Ra'713$) SADOUIACI IMW Hl·Z040 •• 4tMHt . . I(.. • ,, :. II I' I ·I 11 WANTS TO BE YOUR '#1 Volume Dealer in Orange County Discount on All Models Turbos Included -·-New '81 310 2 Door Hatchback Sedan. 4 speed trans. &. fully factory equipped. 113131. $5290 -·-New '81 Pickup Short Whttl Bue. Body si de m ol d1n11 . Thermo1uard protection pk1 ... rully factor)' equlpped. 121m. $5777 -·-New '81 200SX Hatchback Deluxe. 5 speed trans.. undercoat. wheel covera &. fully r actor)' equipped. (1322 >. $7172 ' I I I I . I • Orangeeo.tDAU..YPILOT/frldQ,July17,1981 AllM...,•rW ........ rW ........... rW Altel,e., • .w ......... rttd Alltot,Uatd '•'• ... • 1w....... ... I I ······················· .............................................. ······················· · ...................................... ,, ..... . '!ttl!11.11 •• 11. ..... ~ ........ ~ ....................... ~·.~·-..!~ ~·.~.~ ....... !~ Metce••... t740 Mlra4el... t740 W.I '744 v........ t770 YolH t772 Wdi :ttlO ............................................................................................ ··········~··········~ ...................... . d•W 'II MU• '79 aoo SD wt, all xlra1, M•I OWliBS 11115 VW Sclrocco. A t I YOLYODIALM ltTt Buick Le 'Sabre a400.SOIO + SO lite new. '2'1,250 We Med yow 1'71-1179 1uper tharp red coupe. lNORANGECOUNTY ! Coupe. Silver with bl~ WDISCCMIMTS 116-17'11,MO.a~ MGBll Top dollar paid S~rty Ir economical! velour interior It only !nlMT '74 MB uo SL. 40K ml, for.ood cm! C009405>.0nly"495! SAUS.SllYICI 22.000 mlles ! <'181YBFl. TRANSPORTATION aaraaed. lmmac., Red I IAUH MOTOIS AND LIASIMG Only~! CONSULTANTS :U~lo~,uklnf 2mHarborBlvd. ·~!1~~d~:.."ci1!':"! OVERSEASl>EQVl:RY 1978 Buic k Riviera M 1' . COSTA MESA u lud roof, cooker, EXPERTS Co 2 tone U I ml!!llllllllmll----•l'~la~!°i!~iea~:.e,:nr:t 979•2500 trld,t, 110 volts. new EAILJ•E urur·aport 1c~e~pu:· SEWNG YOUR MB? 640-P7a J7 MfH Pa n t Is more ! Loaded! 17311UPT) Only WIPAY '73 450SEL, Yellow I Dynamite "8 " $port1 <WWLBl.Only Pl95! 19116~~~~lvd ~9S! TOPDOUAI SS Muatard lnl, lmmac. RoadJter, very sharp! Financlna available , COSTA MESA 11177 Buick El1ct ra CaU Jaclt Bacca cond. SllJ(I04@4-6708 CSMRTH> trades welcome. 646-9303 540.9467 Wason. Fully loaded JIM1~S '80 300TD. Sunrf, S1ftl IAUHMOTOIS 1974 Volvo 1&4E, 8 cyl inc. pwr windows, _._" ~ I v o r y I t an Int r . JIM MAllMO • 2925 Harbor Blvd. 73,000 mi. 12.sso or mk locks, cruise coa,µpl, lilt lt'JO Harbor Blvd. Showroom otw. S23~. VOUSWACMH COSTA MESA reas orr 751~ wheel, 3rd seat & inore ! ~~::.,.~ 714t!U·'140'7, '114$-61141 11711 Beacb Blvd. 979-2500 '75 245 DL wagon. Xlnt (381RYX). Only 5'995' ••••••••Ill '71 MB 220 dletel beige, 14J..2000 cond. Air, roor racks MIW '"' center cooaole, auto '14 MGB, aood mecb 77 YWCAMPll New Mich. tares, new TIOOO MIW ltll CAIHT~AY 16.000.t'13-0B cond., SZ700. Loaded Pop.Top Con· brakes & clutch, lo ml. 4 WHllLDllVI HATCHIAc;K WewUtciometoyou '86 Mercedet ?> Clal1ic, 844-4157~ '151·9195 venlon. Automatic, air ororr 844-2466 • 1Sool1y hatetlback. front dllC brak"' 1.8 liter 4 .,,eed trantmllllon Ind body etnpea. MMCIDIS 6 cyl, 1Uck, 23MPG, Opel 9746 butane stove, ' ~frig Sacrtrke 15 Volvo Wag. engine, reclining bucket Mita. !old down re11 (112e40). WAMTID $5000/offer. 963·4444 •••••o••H•••••••••••• Sharp! (062134) gd cond needs minor INl•.41P"d.(201611l· A Callforlmmedlate eves. "73 Opel GT, good cond. S6ff5. work $2850 owner ''"' ..... appointment ~llver Mercedes-Mint wbl w/blk Int, lo mUes. JIMMAllHO desperate631·17l9 777 Aakfor Cond '73300SEL IWO.&U-Om YOUSWAGIH '76 VW Bus Excellent Mark Sachs-Buyer (213)698.QW "75 Sport Waaon, fuel in· 11'111 Beach Blvd coo d . Air, am / rm MISSIOH YllJO •••••• ................. I b 0 c k I I a I i ' n • 79 ...... DiHet 559.0771 IMPORTS '73 MG Mld&et. very ad am /Im /c111, Int. Im· 1979 Buick Le Sabrr Coupe. Super clean, low miles & a comfortable family car! (71fY8f). Only ~! Financing available & trades welcome. • IAUERMOTORS 2925 Harbor Blvd. COSTA M~A 979-2500 ... a. ma~non Pon['ac a. ma~non SUbaru. 831-1740 • 495-1700 MG t742 ject. 1900. New radlalt, 142-2000 cassette. New radials 4l0 79 MIZ 450 SI cond. Only 30,000 mi. mac. 59K orig. mi. Ask· Low miles, xlnt cond. AMto Used \ 2 Harbor Blvd., at far, CIStl Mesa 2418 Harber M , at Fir, Costa Mm Silver, loaded, beautiful This Is the lut of the Ing poo. 640-7218. <DPH7M,' a..... ..... ~· ................. 1:~kf~r~ v~~{'J!i 54Mm 549-1457 (207 PHM> ~/:~1cM~ :C:~ar Ponc"9 t750 upd. fuel inject, xlnt hie• 9tl0 cond. 557-0l!lo • ••• SADDLll4CKIMW ,. . ....................... cond. (2'16XWHl ....................... -----•-• 131 2040 4911:4949 MGI 9744 Fire Sale-'58 Porsche, Sed•t1c•IMW BUICK •1:y•n1:•• • _ ..I... J_ {• ' · • r ....................... mu1t 1ell. Reltorable. 11 IM1I A ~ .. .. L~zah.-~·~TJLTJJV 'JJv~~/:e~·i~~r~~~~ 6~h~e~!. ~·gr~~k; ~!e~~~~~£~ lll·2~4704.:'°4949 We ~~~you~~~l980 ;~:~=~'!J'ls.~ cass alloy whls -900 ..... •300 onalnal miles in Xlnt 1981 IOY01A c•ot.LA 2-SDAI Equipment includes 4 speed transmission, pin stripes, v.tieel well moldings, body side moldings & la fully factory equipped. (182327). 1911 TOYOTA PICK• Standard bed model. ~uipment in· eludes 4 speed transmission, one- touch tailgate panel, power b('akes & is fully factory equipped. (014974). · · ..... tops 11200 . Su 1 i e "'"... · Ruor a harp 412 Wagon, Rega ls! Top dollar paid cond 1213) m.5833 Ph840-3410 962·71S2 Al\er5:00 '69 911 T. 2.2 engine automatic, only 58,000 foraoodcars ! '"'!!!!!!!!!!l•!!!ll••ill• 79 ~_. Cauette, Ml chelis, m i. A·l & Sharp ! IAUERMOTORS 1" ,..... Whlt /Bia k · t · '69 Le Sabre HT, 80K mi . OnJy 13,000 miles on this e w c ln ertor. <235VBS) 2925 Harbor Blvd d d Far Ad Action cal a DailY Pilot AO.VISOR 642-5678 r11or sha rp .. B.. Ex lot cond $8200 SZ.495. COSJ'AMESA ~r14f ev;:,n $1300 Roadster. Casette, 64.5-23?S JIM MAllHO 979-2500 -=-==. ~=--Rally~s. orig. maroon '72 914, Xlnt mec rblt eng, YOUCSWAGEH , 64 Buick Skylark l'Onv wfblae'k IBVNS09l new pnt, Mlchelins, 18'111 BeachBlvd 72 Centunon Coovt full S1200 or best of(er Nds . $5,495 :~~~1• $4 700 /0BO 14z.2000 f~~1c. ll50. 631-0551 , en wk64Z.S242 JIM MAIJHO · • vw ---'71 Buick Electra' 225. YOLKSW"G..... Porsche '5'1 1600 Super. 60· 65 • lert & right 64 Riviera. XJnt rond. Cull 48,000 m1 .. 1J6, pb~ air. A g., bla"k /bla"k, or1'g •-door, 73 left door S50 k rf All •-lJ'1ll Beach Blvd ' ' "' e h West t I hi pwr incl. Wllldows 94k wor s pe e c "' 14z.2000 reSLd. AU receipts since ~c em s Y e w m1. orig. owner Has ap--new altemaLOr. R,Wl!i gd new. Tool kit, manual. nms for Super Beetle pra1sal or $1500~1502 . 499-:Dil. tlOO spare doors & parts $20 ea. 548-9?"4 p ,950. 498-1317 '74 Dasher Wen. 4-spd, A.Mtoa. H•w 9100 Aalto•, Hew 9100 Autos. M•w 1981 TOYOTA . 5 SPEED DELUXE PICKUP Equipment Includes 5 speed transm 1ss1on, window package, one- touch tai lgate panel, rear step bumper & 1s fully factory equipped. (016090). 1981 VOLVO · 2 DOOi SEDAM Eq ul"'1ttnt lncludu an automatic tran11nlallon, powtt,. ttfftlng, poMI' brlkM. plftttflpe, wheel well moldlnga ~ morel (1i51n~ 1971 YOLYO 16418AM Thlt car II In ••c.lleflt condllonl Equipment lneludel 4 epeed trlf'ltmieelon, AM-flM radio, llr condl...,lnt and It '* ,...,lie pelnl ~JN>) SIJft Porscne 92-i Turbo 1980 JOmpg, front wh.I dn~e. liiiiiiiliiijjiiiiliiii Loaded. lo mileage. A.~/FM tape, electr. ig· S20 000 Pb 714 J990.89Sl ruUon, xlnt cond. $2lli00. or ~fl 5pm 2l3Ai97.02 Aft 5:30PM •2839 Mel '71 911 T. Blk /blk. 1 ..,9 VW Canvt. Wht /Wht owner' lo mi, xlnt cond Classic' xlnt cond. 5 200 9500, 714i5§2:5Ml ~5148 , '79 Super Bug convert, 67 911 . Elec snrf. Weber 17K ml, xJnt cond. 3 yr ca~bs. blk lntr. New fuU warr Silver/blk paint. li500 offer. dys · 213/830-8754, ev /wknds IB20Q. 831-2684 art 6M 631-0490 73 Super Beetle. Good '70 Porsche 914·6, xlnt cond. S2'1~-0l87 cond. must see! l9500 64&-S3T1 73 VW Squareback. New '74 911, air, AM /FM cass. reatures. ~xclnt cond. lots of extru Cherry' Must sell. S26SO OBO $12,950. 631-5400 ...:640-c=..;l=.=304=------ ''19 '924, bright red '70VW~rbk,goodcond .. c u st 0 m whee I 5 & nu en&me, $1800. 857-9315 Porsche mirror. AC, "74 BUG rblt eng, good ·~~~:!!!!!!!.. AM I F M ca as e tt e. trans, $2950/080 Sunroof. Xlnl cond. S48-00S7 132·352'1 '73 VW Super Beetle ·~ 356C. 14.000 or best of· am /fm cass, snrf, lo mi, fer xlnt cond. pscJO 559·8606 55-2113 "79 ~lrocco, xlnt cond '67 911 Porsche Great 26,000 m1. Auto, air, '77 ~cs~~ cond! See to appreciate! stereo1cass. $6 ,500 Auto ,,.,..,,,,,.:!·"""', $4000 fm. 494 ·7591 , ...::.96U365=-=="'-· -----_,.,,..,..,, ONLY m~ -'89-sqbk, Ught blue. 4 spd .,. _______ _... ____ _,.. .. MUST SELL 911 '73 Excellent cond t.hruout. '7 8 JllPSTll 4-WHIB. SILVER·Like New $1850 631·95«1' ---~!' ~~~O~~lno 631.-C "16 Rabbit, 2 br, while ~~' OHLY •...a.. R 9756 w /pin stripes, AM tFM, ._ _______ .;;.;.;-., ____ .,._.. -oyc. Quartz clock, alloys, '78 CHIY lt' .. T~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• new trans.. new front ~~ -•-ono 'fl DEAUR IN U.S.A. susp Clean & dependa· 1111111111 ,_~INdo' ble. $2800 or bst orr ... -------~111.i. ____ ._. ... ROY CARVER ROllS·ROYCE ,,..,, .... " """9f'1 IHCll 645-9795. '79 CHIV 111 T~ '66 Baja, buy my 106t pro-SHOITIUAM! ject: Brand new cul & ""'° ,,.. Cl~5J 0000 turned front end, rear .,. __ • ____ , ___ o_M_L_, ____ ,....,. torsion bar turned up, '79 CHIY CAMAIO $ 59 ClOSID SUNOAYS new Winston Delta tires. srolT COUHt aluminum paneling, -.,_ -·-··v ..,2 Shdw. Mint 1 owner. 2 completely sanded & re· cmwQl c .... .,, OMLY \'----...- lone blue. $.15,000. or ady for pa.int & Baja fen· .. ,_7_9_~--y-.y----~s-1_1_4 _ _. ... trdtc11b.846-89&4 ders, front & back bum· ""'"' ..,... Toyot9 t7'5 pers, KYB Shocks, solid COIYITTll ••••••••••••••••••••••• trans mounts, needs ::;..:=f 1 "' 11 ~my 7SC&JCA reblt mtr, many xtra •------------~-... -. parts. $1000/best ofr. '80 CHIV I T~ Dynamite 5 speed 642·2449. YAHi • Coupe, ori&inal copper ' 8 0 C o n v e r l i b I e , -1r-. • -l•ll1tWI finish. (B23MY1 > blk /ailver, S .000 /best ___________ "" __ o_H_,L_, ____ ..,. .. $3.4'5. orrer. 875-0!a '8 o y~~~~ '72 VW Bus. New clutch. ::-Z:11 l87ll ...__chBlvd. brakes. Runs good u.NIWl_,..,Al OHU -. Clean ln.sidetout. 12700. ----------------~liill 142-2000 Days 552-1800. Eves. '80 CHIY •12 T~ $ 59 ''11 Toyota Coro 11 a -'55~2::..·7;:..::1""09;.:... -----LOMe-101 PfCKUPI D L Lo I A/C , I~--Ir-(IUOOIOI} e uxe. m • . 6 9 Vo I k s wage n v.,~1 ONLY AM/FM 8 trk. clean, Fastback, 1ood shape •-------------+tlloll 1teal. 9'1,2983 SlOOO. · ESTATE SALE : '71 MUSTSELL!49M873 Corolla, 2 door, 4 speed, '72 VW camper, reblt white with black top, low ena, am trm stereo, gd -----------------..... milea. Moo-Fri, 8·4. cond. $.135().675-2958 '80 aenu• LI IAIOH . ... , tql.-...... --(TlllOT). -..it1tt OHL Y 7~-4312. ..,2 Super Bua, xlnl cond. '80CELICAU Baell, xlnt all orig, 68,000 ml. cond , atandard, a /c, AM /FM stereo. 545-9718 anrf, ' more. 1'1.200 ,5 VWSuperBeetleCoft ... -------------Nloll ~ rt Blk ,..,., ... . '81 CMIY 1/2 TOM 'IO COROLLA SR5 ~ ve ' ,uJl top • t11tr. LUY fttKUPI I 5 I ' Lo ml, gd cond, 11000, 4 "' 11111) ·--W a m /f m stereo, w re ...;4::.N=-·0483==-------...,. _. OMt. T wbeell, 1nrf, lJK ml . ..,lSqb" V le E 1•------------.,.._ l@oo!1Ml50 ... fer)' c an. ng • ,_na under 2000 mi. l'1'1 Cellca, &ood cood., $1800. 646-8310. 548-lSIO AC, AM /PM, mar wh.11. HOT Oranae BaJa, oew f!.ZOO. $41-Dl'l palnt·lnterior-Ures-fun1 'fl Toyota Corona ad. MOVING must sell am /Im , a•w t ires· NOW . U 200./obo. brakes, neede enc work 531-5'1t'1...G9\hSt. H.B. 22183 RED VW Bul·nu eng-nu ...... '767 paint-nu brka-radlal .... iiiuiiH..... ~~u:~'t :: OMA.las aeu br 1-21. eome '" eoz "" ISh§t.H.B.Uf.57'1 We need~ lm·i.I '8'1 BUG. Relllt. ft\I, rwu Tl\71 or r.t Top xlnt. Perl for dune dollar p d for &ood buuY· •i!ft'.f!M@ can! mt VW 8** dielel IAr~~s ~:.~~:-'!~~ COITA MllA 711_, f lf-2$00 -:..:i:VW;z..:'11=:......SCl-ROCC0--1-m· IDie • ..,_ dartl .,... ••n F 9171 .............. • _ .......... -" .. 1m YW CilW. w1111 - .. Hnty, 1tffff, le ............... ...... =::=·~ Ht7114 ... ,.,_,, te oalJ W VW 1111. Mn IM /· ... , •• Mil ~ ''''' re•l l 'lHtce . .-.c.a ........ ,_ .... _ .. W..Ute4 ..._Ut.4 ~"-' . ......UMd A.ltet.Ulff ._.UIM ........................................................................................................ , ..........••...•....•••••.....••• c.· ,. "" C•• c . n11c... Ht7 ~.,.... tUOhN ""° .... ,.. H12 ._.UIH ................................................................................................................... ·······'··············· ..................... . COtll9iftA1M 'Tl SEVILLE, Burpnd,y, '71 Camaroza. Rb!t tQC, 'IS MALIBU CLASSJC 1971 Pord LTD The moet 'f7 Claulc Coavtrtlble ftrll1• HM CAl'&ACt UK 111. aharp, 8 tnck new bra.Ilea, tires, Abtoluteb'norwt. Mov· btauUflll eoupe avalla· automatic. See to ......... _ .......... •• ........ la..... H.000. pp Day : CUilom 1ntr, T·top, In& lmmediai.ty. utul bit for ill ace• HH bellen, nr perfect. Ooodtramportatioacar for t•• buiwa 11• 75l=4M2, Evtl.151·91'1!_ Sall o bl·amp 1ter•o. at p Nf.mo every coeetlvable ... as.soo 080. Wkdar• t100 ecutlve 6 ,..., ' ul. '77 Seville, Met. brn. · 551-1137 '11 Cbuy CAPRJCE tre I (591PID). Wh 151·0471, Ev• 84H798 •1141 L,moetS1l11l1 •Jmrf •all avail xtru, 19!1' Camaro; Nu pelnt, CLASSIC, Blktred lot, ... Now()aly-! •kforL1q. ,..... .OfMtw lfll Ml-Jll06 Ura, battery No denu. all pwr fully loaded '74 Mutana, a /c, pa, .......... ••••••••••• C 1 = 11 11 Fleetwood Brou(ham Muet sell. Sl.400/ best of. ml.lat sell 111\mtd: Any 1971 Ford Flirmonl 41pd, am tfm. 11700. lt75 P9ntlac Le Mau d'l"1uce. loeded, xtnt .kt:_.914-1982 for Ted reaSODableottrmzm W1100. st1lilb, roomy• 664-57•. Sport Coupe. Not tb• ...... ~ coed. 9'lllO or usume 75Camaro. Pwuteerin&, it VEGA depend &ood economical. • cyl. •• Muatua a cyl, au&o, uaual S year old car! lo NMfM lae 1 t $225 pr mo. pwr brh. AM /FM 8 tr 1 n 1 p . A m"'t Fm enalne ' low mil~•· a,ooo ml, orig eoc, xlnt excellent cooditloa • CA. 144·1230 alUPM. track, Exclnt cond. ae>o cw.tte. Mov1nc MUST (561WOfll. Only $4995. coed. 1311m firm. (714) d r I v e 1 • • p e r ! .; 'TJCpeDeVIUe OBON2...0l SELL by 7.29 SJ75/()80 '180-9110PM <taaMPV). Wu -; l1100H.11l1t•111>.,t Yellow, 44,000 ml LUlr '73 Camero 3SOLl, air, 536-sm 1919 Ford Pinto. No1WOnl1-! c "'''' ""'-""' '>40 '1100 epllt f wr aeatJ, loaded. etereo. 2~1 carb. lm· Chev~lle "7%. Year old 3SO. EconOJnl~I ' cheaf, to Oldl•1~• ttll --R ~ 1 Beauty. Gd macuateinalde. Power. New brakfl , air, maintain! Has ow ••u••••••••••••••M••• 1979 PoetJac Le Mau m 1 I e a 1 e . U 2 O O. 11.950. 831-<n•. A y / F )I 8 t r k . mllea ! <•YDJ). Only "11 Oleta Starflre • .,W-t.n , Waaoe .. F.conomlcal • 1t CAii.LAC (114)'41-340eM1981. '70 Camaro, ml.Ill sell. Gd Yellow /blactt. 838.1.2Sf , "295 ! lnl, s1pd, 1tere6, tape . cyl. luxury~-Hard &DOIADO "12 CDV lea Int t d -· deck. l1J50.144;45M. to find! (DXlJD). 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Asking S1S9S. blue bk. S36S0,839-2170 DELIVERS ANY NEW OR USED V&llCLE IN STOCK • MIW IM CAUf.7 • UTTUOltMO euom _ • SHOITOM DOWM PAYMBm • MIW OM YOUI JOI? • MNJTAIY7 • LOw..cuDIT----HISTOIY? WECANHB.P! fully equip, 14K ml, 844"536 Wehaveagoodselection Ford 9'40 IJ0.7000 -~ n.•rtMrd H70 112.500 below blue book. tt 17 or N E w, & US E D ••'•••••••••••••••••••• Monarch ''16 4·dr sedan. i2 PINTO Wgn xlnt cond, •••••••••••·~··••••n•• -----• AftSPMa.sm •••••••• .. •••••••••••• Chevrolets. '71 Ford WGN. auto, a/c, Leath upbol Loaded 4spd, a /c, am trm cass, '77 Thunderbird immac, '65 Claui~ CADILLAC '81 C1maro Berlineua llOO $2500obo. 7l4/990-895l $1200 Steve 833-1954. all acces Incl lthr seall, CONVERTIBLE. Xlnt f~ll pwr, loaded. 7500m,I, $40-6427 aft6PM ;i Luxury Marquis Col . 760.8308 gauees, am/fm l1pe, Cond. hke new. Under Dealer 5 '77 LTD Brougham, p/1 Pk Sta Wgn 9 Psg shrm '79 Pinto· Xlnt cond Lo new tune-brakes + ISOO 6U-08l8 :':~rb~c:k:~':1::~~~r. am /Im air cruise trailer cond , all opt Sl29S mileage: SZ97S. 846.a1~ more. pioo.a 15i9 Sellidle!tem_, §42:5678 760-6923 packlge8SH958art7pm 646-7274 orlvmeuage840-7672. WantAda Call64~8 ·;~.~:."! ....... !!~ ~·.~:."! ....... !!~! ~.~:.": ....... !!~ ~·.~: .. ": ....... !!~ ~~·.~:.": ....... !!~! ~·.~:.": ....... !~ ~.~:."! ....... !!!! •-...;.;.--+-~=ro---t----:T~::"--;--"':'11rn~r--. 1975 CHIVIOLIT IMPALA SIDAN ~1895 lt74DOMI DIOOPICIUP ·~---·-111111 ....... 119 ~ ............. ,... ....... .. 52595 1977 FOID LTDllWA~OM lho"' for I~• ,.hole , • ...,,, Auto111et1t ___ _,.,..,...,_,_ . ........ --......i 11"'7•1 Clla l'tlln A -'°'"' 915 1971FOID FIESTA ..,._... °" M -.. -..,._I• ... _.... .... ,..,, __ ~ ......... .... llAIT SELECT•I FABULOUS SAYlllS 01 CARS 10 · ~ILL ·YOUR EVERY IEEDI BRAID IE 1981 CHRYSLER . 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Equip m ent Includes V8, auto. trans ., bucket ... ta, 38 gil, fuel tank, radl0; pwr. ateerlng & brakes. radial tirff, max. coolh•o. tinted gtau & much morel '251429). .. . ~ • . ... •. ·. :· .. ·! ... . •' .. ... .. . • :: • . ·: . ·! !: • . .. .. .. .. •• :: .. , • ;. •. .. ~. .. .. .. •. ~· . l · · "C,~ Island," oil. painting by Richard Bunkell, was com - maasloned /or Pageant ·. 'Mas~~ring' the arts PUotWtpg Most complete TV magazine on Coast: See centerfold of Weekender .. ~ complete listing Kathy Bryant views 'The Figure by Three' of Orange Cpast events .• J I .. Griffin the Eacape Arttat tDCU locked in five pain of handcuff•, elbow reltramu, a bel· _ly chain and ankle eu/11, then left in a con- ference room, left. Five mi?Jutea later, he emerged unchained. At right, Costa Mua Police Detective Paul Cappuccilli secures Griffin in a regulation 1traitjack-et. Less than tUX> minutes later, he ii free. Griffin's bustin' loose everywhere BJ MICHAEL DOUGAN oe .. Dliltr,.... .. Grifftn dropped by the Daily Pilot the other day to escape from a COO· ference room, somethine our ex- ecutives can't always do when ·they like. It took bbn five minutes to 1et out the door, and it wun't even locked. He got tied up in his worlt so to speak. When we shut him i,n, Grtffm wu wearing five pairs of handcuffs, elbow restraints, a 'belly chain' and ankle cuffs. We could see bis hands turning -=~ as the cuffs cut off the now of Thia was Grifftn's second big bust out. A fnr minutes earlier, we bad left him in the same room tied with aome 10 feet of rope. It took him a minute and 20 seconds to free himself. Of course, the bindint WU done by two report.en who weren't ever in the Navy and aren't accustomed to tyin1 people up, or won't admit it ii tbeJ are. Once Griffin bad demoutrated that sbllekles were no oroblem. we put him in a straitjacket in fUU view of the editorial erew. ~ ate not euily distracted; so most just kept tYDinl, editinl and l'Mdina the •ptositlon-while GrJlf1D Ulrashecl violently about, fell to the floor, made unpleasant .sounds and ex· tricated himself in little more than a minute. lt's not that we don't like Griffin, you understand. He asked for it. The 20-year-old Lake Arrowhead native's full name -these days, anyway -is Griffin the Escape Artist. He claims he can get out ol anything. Al Griffin tells it, our conference room is nothing compared to the Guthrie, Ok.la., Jail where be wu locked naked behind a massive steel door. Nor was it as tough a challenge u the lake at Springlake Amusement Park in Oklahoma City. Griffin S'18 he waa chained and thrown into tbe water, where he became entangled in the branches of a submerged tree. Be didn't resurface for 2~ minutes. Having knocked 'em dead in the Midwest for a year (where, Griffin acknowledges, "people are starved for entertainment"), the IOft·IPOkea youn1 man bas returned to Calilornla for a shot at the bie·time. He's coa· vinced be'U make It, becauM Grttnn bu a secret. "Everythln1 I do barks back to one bil dynamic secret," be explainld. "Whether I'm encased in a aovem- ment mail sack, locked in a jail cell or tied aaa bl i'opu and thrown under the waler. It's IOIDetblq J came acroa by MddtDt." Fm Ids ~ation at the O.lly . Pilot Griffin provided a small satchel of handcuffs -antique, German, FBI and so on -that must be fun to (See GaIFnN, Pate t> Out of ·th• background Janie Fricke moves into spotlight BYAOEL c. DON .,,. ... Dmlfr ........ Janie Fricke was content to sine backup vocals for such country greats as Loretta Lynn, Eddie Rab· bltt, Tanya Tucker, Charley Pride, Johnny Duncan and Crystal Gayle. She loved recordln1 jingles for television commercials and radio spots. Then a few years a10 a ml,jor re· cord company approached her with one oftboH olfen you'd expeet ii Im· possible to refuse. Janie tricke bad to think about it • btt. After some debate 1be stepped out of tbe back1round ud fnto t11e malallae -*"at'• •Potli1bt. Since the I•" up blr uoaymlty, Frtdte bu ~a mimber ol eouatry music aw~ Ml Aft ToP ID country bits ~;&-rr:,ot.:Jra.c '°. ber, Nol bad for someone who had made a s uccessful career selllnf everything from household ap- pliances to soda pop. "I had to leave a lot of things behind," she said of her new careerc. "I can't do backup vocals anymore." Indeed, Friclte's name w1JJ flll the marquee when 1be returns to Knott'• Berry Farm ton11ht. When lbe stepe on the Good Time Theater stqe, tbil time sbe won't be croonia1 the back· ground vocals for enother star. ' She performs ton1iht at 8:30 and 10, with Saturday concerts at T:ao, 9 and 10:30 p.m. Tbe 13-~ear-~d Nasbville·ba•ed 1la1er IWted cloUat coaita..aal _. studio WC*'k to pay her way tllrvlqjla tbe U•lvenlty of Indiana. lhe 11atluMed wilb a teacMa1 ~ca .. · cee.·1 · ·~ · 1 I Movies: It's been a good summer for Coast movie-goers Cathy Rigby Tiny woman, big sound By MICHAEL DOUGAN ot .. Dl!lly ........... It was a big sound that came from the tin.y woman behind the gJass in the JEL recording studio earlier this week. She smiled broadly as 1be sang the song -"Somebody, Please" -that sbe • hopes will be a hit and secure her career in the en· tertainment business. But she's not concerned about being famous, perhaps because her name, Cathy Rigby, is already weU-known to most Americana. In fact, ·Miss Rigby said , that's part of the problem. The recording indmtry isn't quite ready for a singing gymnast. By JEJ'J' PAUE& °' ............... Movie-goers around the nation are rushing w the box offices in record numbers this sum- mer, and local theater owners say Orange County is no exception. Spokesmen for Edwards, Pacific, United Artists and lbe Port theaters are uniformly re- porting beaJlby ticket sales for movies in the last month . .. It's been a good summer so far because 'Superman Jl' a nd "Raiders of the Lost Ark' are doing so well," said James Edwards Ill, representing the 40 Edwards screens across the county. "And we're expecting those films to do very weU throughout the summer as people go back to see them three and four times." Mark Hendrix, manager of the United Arlists"theaters on Sunflower across from South Coast Plaza, says that his summer business is up ''significanUy" over this time last year. "We've ~en seUing out 'History of the World Part J' twice nightly. The ftrst week was fabulous. Overall business is very good -we'd like to stay like this for the summer and the rest of the year," he said. Drive-in business is brisk too, according to Pacific Theatres vice president Robert Selig. "We're killing them al the bo.x office right now,'' be said. "We've got six or seven pictures in release right now that are doing great busi- ness -'Superman II,' 'The Cannonball Run,' 'Dragonslayer,' 'Raiders of the Lost Ark,' 'Stripes,' 'Clash of the Titans' and Cbeech an~ Chong's 'Nice Dreams.' From the looks of at now, I'd say that most of these movies will have a great sta.ying power too." Selig reports that overaU, Pacific Theatre business is up 30 to 40 percent over this time last year. "Summer is always a 1ood time for Form.er gyr1111(Ut Cathy Rigby, left, dubl vocah of "Somebodl/ Pleau" at JE L Studio in Newport Beach. At right, Cath11 and her pr~. Stew Rookl, review the acore in con- trol room. "They say, 'Oh God, another jocktryine to be an entertainer'," she reported durlne a break lo the re-women's gymaasUcs , her occulooal wort for ABC cording session at the Newport Beach studio. Sports as a commentator and lier appearances in "There's a little bit of a hesitancy towards me J ohnson and Johnson tampon commercials, she becoming a singer because ol my gymnutics back-devotes most ol her time to beinc Mn. Tommy ground. Mason and caring for their IObl, Buck, 5 and "Some people have really liked the music a Ryan, 18 months. Masont a fonner Rama ~ k>t. We had Motown real interested, but they went back, distributes Coors beer la San BernardlnO. to their final 'meetin1 with the president or . The family bas moved from tbelr Oran1e County whoever selects (the artists> and they Just 1ot real home to Lake Arrowhead. · nervous. rnlbey come fint," aald IUll Rl1by, "and I'm "Another guy said, ·1 like tbe music a lot, she always real paranotd Uaat dlley're not letllnt sings Ctne, but she's a gymnast and she'• not aolnc enoulb attenUon 10 I wu real hesitant and to work that bard for this.' And bow does be I didn't commJt to It (the career). know?" "FlnaUy lut year I decldld tbat tbe kids are Jn fact. MiN Risby said she la world.DI on her fine and I'm goiq to 1ive t1Mm a lol of Ume. J'm show business career as hard u she did to beeome with' them conatantly in my owa liome aad I take the filth-ranked woman in world 11mauUca. I.hem witb me when I'm ·tone CMlt ol tbe llme. Tbe However, times bne cban,aed for tbe pert -.1ear· Udn1 b , if it 1et.s loo hectic JOU can always pull old blonde and at-e can no lollcer de-tote ber Hfe to back... . any sins.le obeeuion. · lll11 Ri1by's first ex....,. to Ule 11low "I've al•ays been serious and I've always buatneu world came in 11'74 wbea "a py trom practiced like the aymnutics," abe said. "I didn't NBC Entertalament Cthe netwwk'a Ital• Dl"Oduc· know lllY other ••Y or 1olnl about lt 10 I put lJI Uoa arm) JUlt call• me" aacl an.,.. birr lbl Ulle my hours." role lD a r'CNWl lbow ot ••.,._Pa." Bat, Ille odded: "I wun't -lllat I w-"lie bad .., Idea :!~\ ~ ed to hive a career and kida." reall1 tn.tlDa ol him,'' • " .. , --mleadl a .-t'ol double Ufe tbeH really shy. I'd ~ ~ ..._ I da,.. ~ J&.Mr M''"'D& ~4f·~"~-J4.JRM• ...., . t ... 't 1 .... to • c .~~•ltlt !>,:>,> '11dnl ••dmuro:> :1,.J ""<TJ-rfnn -----~--~p~-----~ us, but this summer has been fantastic," he said. The Port Theatre of Corona del Mar doesn't rely on heavy summer business, but acC?ording to manager Dennis Leslie, 1981 is to date likely . to be their best summer "We actually have to work harder in sum- mer because students are out of school and there are so many things for people to do besides go to movies," he said. "I think the beach is our great~st competitor. "We're doing a good business now with 'I Sent a Letter to My Love,· the new Simone Signoret film. We'll be getting 'Moscow Does Not Believe'in T ears ' later in the summer and we're expecting large crowds for that. We're all curious to see what kind or humor is coming out of the Soviet Union these days," be said. The theater owners and managers all agree on why the summer has been so good: good movies. "Nobody really knows why business goes up and down," said Edwards ... But basically, good crowds come to see good movies. It's been that way for 50 years and I don't think it's changed in the last three weeks. Last summer we only had ofte real blockbuster and now we're looking a t several. It's possible that the strike might have had something to do with the absence of good products this last spring." "It's the pictures," said Selig. "You can talk about the baseball strike, you can talk about the hot weather, but when you talk about the overaU movie goirrg population, they come to theaters when the product is good. ·'It used to be that for the Orange County market, we could talk about a certain few films finding an audience -and any more than that <See JIOVIFS, Page 18) Intermission ··~ilacs' 'Ok~aho.,,a'1 without music ~ By TOii TiTUS CM .. a.i..,,_...,. Tweety yem ago, the Westminster Communi· ty Theater sprang into existence with a production of Rodgers and Hammerstein's popular musical "Oklahoma." Two decades later, it's presenting the same story, only without the music. And that's the first thing you notice about "Green Grow the Lilacs," LyM Riggs' western ser· ocom~y which _J>rovided the Jrist for the com· posers' mill back tri tbe ittoe. Tl\ere is music, but not mtalclJ nuntbers, ancl lrs a big difference. This "straigb\ venlOI)!' leans heavily on the melodramatic, and some of its talkier mom~nts could stand some judicioos pruning. Yet Jan Angellno's production at W•trninster is well sti!ged and . .populated with fine talent, which in· cruses the enjoyment consJderably. ,· The comparisons with "Oklahoma" are bound lo arise since just about everyone bas view~ the musical version al one time or another-. 1'he characters of Cur~ and Laurie are pretty much in· tact (though they, lend lo chatter a bit more) but the role of Aunt Eller is magnified, while Ado An· nie Is Just an incidental character. Aod Jud (knowfi m-mlS version as Jeeler) is still a ditty old so and so. Michael Aquila presents a staunch, believable pic~ure of the heroic cowpoke in the Gary Codper mold though be has a bit of trouble lassoing some of hls character's stilted dialogue. Kathleen Dowell teases delightfully as the coquettish eow. . I Clark 8Url0ft 'romances' Kathleen Dowell girl and r:oanages to maintain a ~operly somber mood durint'wltat seems an Interminable hoedown as everyone else is whooping it up. , The charact~r or Aunt Eller must have in· spired the lyrieili the musical versiOQ~The com is as high as an elephant's eye," but Louise Tonti shucks it beautifully. And Clark Burson makes Rod Steiger's Jud in the movie seem downright saintly by comparison as be presents us with the most grotesquely depraved vUlain in many moons, a f88l'IQDle creature whose ultimate demise is ac· compUtsbed with flesh-crawling realism. Others contributing effectively in support are Jane Young as a young and inexperienced Ado An· nie, Rona! Grigsby as the slick peddler and Cha rles Lol~oma as the farmer running the hoedowu. A large and enthusiastic chorus lends high spirit lo the ensemble scenes. . Dlre<:tor Angelino also designed the four-scene setting , which works quite smoothly with shadowed cowhands "playing" the transitions. The play's pitfalls are the first and last scenes, • which seem lo go on forever, spinning their nar· rative wheels until their rustle charm subsides into homespun hokum. Aquila, Miss Dowell and Miss Tonti bear the brunt of this bravely, but cannot )ltave off encroaching ·melodrama. "Green Grow the Lilacs" continues for four more weekends, playin1 Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 at the theater, 7272 Maple St., Westminster. * CALLBOARD -Auditions for the musical "Guys and Dolls" will be held Sunday, July 26, at 1 p.m. and Monday, July 27, at 7 p.m. at the Hunt· inglon Beacti Playhouse in the Seacliff Village Center. M<U.n Street at Yorktown Avenue, Hunt· ln~ton Beach .... director Kent Johnson will be seeking 14 men and 10 women for the musical. ~y.a fanuly b~ch! JULY .17, 18, 19 7: · SUndays at DeBigYe11ow House . $5.95 ... even leSs for kids! FORTHEJEWELRY HOBBYISTTOTHE PROFESSIONAL! Exhibits • Jewelry & Equipment Sales • Demonstrations • Diamond Cutting • Seminars• Antique Mining Relics • Free Jewelry Ctaaning • Gold.plating on Coins • Peart & Opal Displays • Lectures• Fossils • Films • lapidary Machinery • Give-aways Here's the nicest Sunday brunching idea around. We call it the Family Brunch, because it's served family style, right to your table. Youil start with fresh fruit and a basket of homemade fruit breads. Then you'll enjoy juice, apple fritters and each of three tantalizing meat and egg entrees ... plus peach crepes for dessert! Coffee, tea or milk is included, too ... all for $5.95 (less for kids), and seconds are on us. Champagne and brunch cocktails are also available. 3010 HarbcSr Boulevard, Costa Mesa For reiervations, call 549-0310 H<NS: Brunch, 10-2; Dinner, 3-9 ::::::;::::::::=::::::::;~-::~==~==~~~~~~!!~~!!!!!!!!!!~.!.~-~!1!!12211 .. L--------------·-... ~-. -··· -·~ . -..... -. _-:. --t l I I ••.• Griffin the Escape Artist bustin' loose. (From Pace Z> check through an gale. 1ilpping bis band through them in a a~ ._bou-crusbing maneuver. lt was clear tb.at "' had"unlocked them. . But we're not fools, at leut not always, so we invited Det. Paul Cap- puccilli, one of Costa Mesa's fin~. to bring along bis oy;n set ol regula- tion cuffs. Cappuccllli also provided the straitjacket. When Griffin returned Cappuc- culli 's cuffs lo hitnr they were in- terlocked with bis own. Since the of- ficer's cuffs are a "deadlock" type, meaning they can neither be opened nor closed when secured, this ruled out the possibility of Griffin simply <Grl.ffin, lncidentally , wa.•lad on- ly in r ed swim trunks and was searched as thoroughly as anybody cared lo.) G riffln said his predilection for es- caping lies that bind began at an ear- ly age. ·•Me and my brother used lo lie each other up when we were "liUJe and l found out that I could get out of anything l wanted," he explained. "When I was 12, I got my first pair of handcuffs and freed myself from At w,omprimerate ~ loe& doivn. . CtmpldePrlllle&OtDl•Mr1PnlYtDS. '91• dnu Sat: 5-'lpa-Sml: 4-6p& When Cbartey Brown's offers a ba.rgaln. you eat a great deal. This delicious meal features over half-a--pound Of succulent Prime Rib cooked to juicy perfection. With soup du jour or tossed salad, stoming baked potato. sourdough bread and buttei:. Plus a tempting d es- sert and tea or coffee. At 87.95, it's one of the best prime rates around. a.atlJICtotl 8eada • E1dt • •-405 at 9Cl9da 1-....~~.,....,,.....JJi!!l!lll.IL~ 18180 8acla Bmt.. ln Bullt1n&toa Eacatiw Padt 842-8602 • them in six minutes. Now 1 can get with escapism. Meanwhile, he's out of six handcuffs ln one minute." booked an appearance before lbe Los "I've ~en buried alive in the An1eles Press Club and is audition- snow," he Sita. "We're -ldn~ _ ing at Hollywood's Magic Castle. being buried alive in dirt. I bear that ~" a liTi .. e ac an escape down under five feet it gels pretty artlst, said Griffin, is "tough '-•-- heavy. I'm going lo start at two feet, we don't have vaudeville any more ." then three and four feel deep." But Griffin said he will push on And then?' "[ have notes and mes towards wbal be knows will be a SUC· about beinR frozen in a block of ice." cessfuJ career, patterned alter. but Griffin and bis agent, Cynthia not an imi.ta.tion or. his hero, the Mc.Farland, are scouting the Great ~dini. networks and studios in hopes of "People say I 'm the second s coring some television ~pols and Houdini,'' he said. "I like lo think film roles that would combine acting I'm the first Griffin." Chew out a kernel a Real Rani:her Style Bar-B-0 Dinner. Nlghtlytbiu Aug'uSt 15. Tonight, sink your teeth into a tender, juicy steak, or a plate fullofBar-B-Q ribs. Every Bar-B-Q style dinner comes with smoky baked beans, plus sweet, buttery com on the cob. Tonight, have a Real Rancher Style Bar-B-Q. FOUNTAIN VALLEY• SANTA ANA• GARDEN GROVE • TORRANCE • CERRITOS • ~KEWOOD • ANAHEIM • r i l ------ • --- Remington, Russell, Helcka S.. thi1 renowned •rtist exhibit of or'9llt western sculpture in brona. oourtesy of the Hefkka Foundry, Huntington Center M•ll Thurs. thnJ Sun .• July 1~19. Jewish SINGLES JASSltd(l 24 Hottt "-~ ~ nf Jo.with ~ J\clkltln 714/537-JASS onANO£ COUHJY CJ\ft11P1I . 213/852-0909 lOSMtOUES CA.-. 21 36t .Jewilh Aseodatlon of S1r9119enlces A ... __ "' .... l.,. ~ _, c-,..,..r..,.•1oo> LATE EVENING SING•FS SERVICES •t Temple Beth Sholom 13031 Tustin Avenue Santa Ana, CA (714) 532-2104 followed by A GALA ONEG SHABBAT WITH WINE , CHEESE & FOLK DANCING ""'r m• Af112l·U Friday at 10:00 P.M. MOVIE RATlllGS FOR MRENTS AllD '°"918 PIDPlE ---·-=· ..... ,....._,.. ., ___ ... ...,.tr .......... ~ AU.Mlll~D l!!l 0.-11-- 1111~0 U-17 _____ , ....... ~, .. "". ~·-~ AU. D Ill NfO • 'II.Ml "l~IYI '"' ..... °' '"' MOnOlll "'l:"fUIW --°' .l, lllOUl.A 111* ·---- N.ow Playing (fSftR <RO~IRO Sf llXC110 n Tli~ MAX . m=.ACT()V . ft CCWDY N MK.T ~ 0 Sia 5PCXrn CALL NOW! (714) 772-7711 FOR BESEBVATIONS (714) 772·32Zt GROUP R~ERVATIONS 1b kJVe a~ is easy. 1b kill a bier is rd. ..... ....... _ ......... r , ........ ...._. ...... .., .... _ ................. . ~ ... -1~ _, ...... '1 00 off .... ,.. ......... . c...--1..-,.,.... _...,.... ..... - L.Mt fw .. TOP NATtl <.ttH wJrw A•-.. Me. 110. ti M 19• ... ".:1 .. 411JJ ) 11141146-7716 146-nn 14'-7711 ( CAPY'S SOON TOBE JOSE MURPHY'S NOW APPEARING "BOB GULLEY BAND" Wed thru Sun. 9:00 P.M. • 1:30 A.M. "LOST ANGELES" Sat. & Sun. Afternoons 3:30-l:OO P.M. Mon. & Tues. Evenings 9:00 P.M. -1:30 A.M. CAPY'S BAR I . ~ and~.f!ILL ~-·~,fr _...,.... ~~l~---114 McF•dden Aace ''!::::: ::../. ~ ~ .. Pllel~ -• Newport Be.ch _, _ 675-1094 """-~ A VERY SPECIAL JAPANESE RESTAURANT Award winning trad itional Japanese cuisine and superb western-style specialties. .. Your favorite seafood, chi cken, and steak. Delicate soups and delightful salads. Impeccable service in a most beautiful setting. Discover Yamato ... .a very special dining experience. 60 Fuhion Island ·Newport Buch/ 644-4811 Cenl\lry Plaza Hotel 277·1MO 642-5678 ~ P.td a /~ wordl to 1D0rlc for fOU .. ,,....., ... l • ---~"-....... -·- • Tinker will give shows a chonce -~ ' BJ JAY A&N0LD ........ ...._ __ LOS ANGELES -Grant Ttnker admitted Monday that be bu a lot to learn about b1a new job, but tbe new NBC chairman aaid bis philosophy wu that viewen will start WJllcbin& a new TV show 11 they're just &iven a cban~~- Tbat point of view contradicts a frequenUy held opinion that NBC, ol all the networks, bu been the one to change schedules or drop shows with the blink ol a Nielsen rating. But Tinker said that wW be no mor.e, although be said be won't directly oversee programminc for ~ the perennial third-place network. "U you Ci Ve them IOmeth.lnC good and you leave it there and promote it properly, they will find It," said Tinker. who recently assumed his new job. As for the current NBC line-up, Tinker said he wants to "work on the bottom rather than the top," to make the entire schedu.le look a little bet- ter. . "I will not have the luxury of doing two or three shows I personaUy like," he said, noting that be will have to do shows that are commer cially via ble, shows "I wouldn't necessarily rush home to watch." Tinker, who is stepping into the poaition vacat- ed by one-time f rogrammlni genius Fred Silverman on J uly , did not Q\ake any predictions about NBC changing ii.a rating's position. He told a news conference at the swank Chasen's restaurant he intended to take some time to assess both the network's shows and its personnel. But Tinker said be had no intention of initial- ing sweeping changes at NBC, where be had worked twice previous to his 11-year stint as bead or MTM Enterprises ("The lla.ry Tyler Moore Show," "Lou Grant," and "Hill Street Bluet.") "I don't want to appear to be a programmer who's going to run over to NBC Burbank and change all the programs," be aaid. "It's my intention to do a lot of mingling with the people at NBC . . . to satisfy my1eU that the right people are in those Jot., and then do u 1 did at MTM and get the bell out of the way," Tinker said. Asked why be would take such a notoriously short-term job as a network chief, Tinker ad- milted that his acceptance was a little out of character. "I just had the feeling as I drove to my office eacb momin1 that there Just wasn't a lot of challenge there," he said, addlng that when RCA Chairman Thornton Bradshaw asked him to take the job, "I knew that win, ION or draw, it was somet.hi.n1 I bad to say 'yes' to." Tinker, whose MTll procrams often were con- sidered some of the beat on televialoo, said he would like to bring a liUle bil of that type of pro- gramming to NBC. ''I'd like NBC to stand for shows that leave a little somethinc. -not nece11arily a message - but when someone turns off the TV set, be says, "'I haven't wuted a half hour.'" Tinker said be bas little experience in such _operations as news and finances, and said it would be a big load off his shoulders when a new NBC pres~dent ia named. 'Young Lives' not lust soap for kid s B1TOMJOaY • 11 ........... ..- NEW YORK -Post-Newsweek Productions baa a reputadon in the TV syndication bullnesa built on serious-minded stuff like "Acromky le Co." and the "The Charlie Role Show." So DO wonder the concern when a proposed aertn called "Young Uves" found ltHlf embroiled in rather nasty controversy. The hip -or low -point came durtnc the TV pto1rammer's convention In Mareb, when at least five church-related 1roup1 complalaed about "Younc Uves" -U.OUp hit-Newsweek in1lated at the time that none of the protettera bad aeen the show. Km Uveaay, tbe aeries' produter, took pert ta • panel dllcuuion durlnrc..:e C09Yatlon Oii ''Se• and Moralif¥ Oii TV," a WW. Cal Tboaal, a 1pokn1Qan for the Moral Majority, oae of ... .,... ll"OUPI beb1nd • e......-,n to boJcoU eom· paal• a.at ad.Yertlte oa procrama ~ ..... appr..,..111." 1':115 ...................... . !l'-Vl• faetn1tl011 wttll -.H, and matai.lfted televimcm cloel DOt.portraJ llfe ta Amtrtea u It ii. Livesay tnallted, "W•'N trJtnl lo pnrille wllat Cal HJI -a breed 1peetrum Giiie.' ID m u.&.Ylew MIDe t1IDI .... tM COll'I•· tioa, Jo.a Qaemaa, prllldlat of Poet-N ... ..- 8l8tiw, ............. -U.W,'• ~. wltla • dll at ~· people b1 called .. HP· ................. ''Tbey .. , ~.,........ ''!C ... NndtJ Ud..,.. me are ............. CM OWWiet7,'' Cbaaeman said, "but they aay that any prosram that attempt.a to deal with these problems 1-.id be suppressed. ... think that's entirely wronc. abon-1l1bted and counter-productive. "We think it'• poasible," be •a.ld, "to do a pro- gram that la on the one band realiaUc, and on the other provides parenta and kids and others with role moclell and 1enutne IOlutiom to problem• they might face." Poet-Newsweek ia partly reaponaible for the controversy. The orilbaal promotloaal material for "Young Uves" wu at leut dalldly au11e1tive, dnpite tM ayndlcator'a claim that the ahow "ii for all wbo strive to Wldentaad ud deal wtt1a tbe crises that dominate 10 maay JOUDI lives. ldellU- ty. Peer group preuW'e. lex. Drup. Panatal com mwncation." . · • Take for Instance, tbla "quick cut" from a pro- motional note for .ibe protram: • "Monday: Mutually attracted, Brad aad Melanie m-e paired olf for a atadr srouP project in clua -on snoattty and bealtb. Later in tbe day, Brad atartl lnTlttn1 bla friend• to bia un- chaperoned party on Friday DICbt. Hla mother, Cheryl Hoffman, 1 nurae wbo works tb• 1raveyard lblft. ii' at home letbl dr1119d after makinl ID¥• to lobnny RoJce, Herda: 5uHll walka In. Sunn -talaated, pnc , bat. Jloyee -eoDYID~ be ii a 'llood.' . , . '' 0n ma, SM ..... 1111ertbtd • .. 'Jll'Olll• donal ............. almoet t...-....., tile atuft of ~y. com~•'*= to IM ftlml elalll'dl .,_.. thmMl"9 • ........... problems" for Sunday mornin' broadcut. "It was a tou1h 1bow to decide to do," Chaaeman sald. "We were concerned it would be labeled a teen-age soap opera. It's hard not to be overwhelmed by categories and labels and clichea. "We had ln mind an honest-to-God family 1bow, that dealt in a real way with real problems.'' The aeries' producers, Otueman Mid, sought the counsel ol experta on adoleeeeat development and s-ycbology at two maJor iDIUtuUooa, Stanford and UCLA. ··n wu important to do aometblnc that rang true," be said, "j11d yet would abow troubled people that their problem• can be lolved." Alu, pro1rammers were not recepUve to "YOWll Uves," and POlt-Newaweek, perbas-un· der a bit ol preuure from the parent W uhlnlton Poat Co., decided to offer "YOUDI lJvea" to Ila· tiona in m~ TV markets, free ol cbar1e. for week-Joas trial in July. By mld·JUDt., several atationl, lncludlq tbe rour ia the Pott-Newsweek l"°'IP• -ln Detroit Hartford, Conn., Miami and JacUaavtlle, Fla. bad •treed to nm "YOWll Uves'! on the lelt bull. ''We tools ccmslderable nab," Chuemu said. "We eoukl have done uotber pme lbow, but we took tbe toqb course. We didn't do one pilot, we did five. We didn't hiN one expert, we 1ot two waiven1Ues. "We did nerytbinl we were •...-.cl to do, but maybe we dld lt ln tM ..._. ,..,. , " be laid. "We've been subjected to tbe went erttadlm from ~~. ~~ .~.~.-.• ~!.'!! .. ?!!'. '9.!!"~"~ .... ~ .. ·-· .. 12:-.Z:»-t:tt Tt:•tt:a FOR YOUR EYES ONLY ,,.., SNIAIC HEVIEWI:• Pmentld In 7°!tl'R'.R~'~llf "o REEVE SUPERMAN II DRAGONS WERE REAL ORAGONSLAYER 1 :003:15 5:30 (l'IQ) z:tt Jo:p llll MURRA.Y STRIPES , .. , IHOWIAT' 1:80 3:20 5:40 1:80 18:15 ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK <"> TMI EXT£RMINATOft CRI "AN ABSOUTl'E DEUGKr' r -E1eanor Rlngft. Mna ~ "IN nlE CIASSIC DISNEY MOlD" -DrllltdArwn, ~ • "TERRIFIC SltJFF .... A REAL MUST-SEE" -00ty Franklin, KNXT· TV "A RElURN TO PRIMAL DISNEY, TO nlE GLORY DAYS OF nlE EARLY FEATIJRES" -Rlchotd Cook ThM "-''"''"'"i. • .i.i.. DANIEL P. MANNIX ,~,....,_ART STt.VENS, TED BERMAN, RICHARD RICH tw,..,.......ii.. WOLFCANG RElTHERMAN. ART STEVENS ~-"'M ,,.-., RON Mll.LER TE<.:ltNICOLOR• ..._ ..... .-• ...,,.~co•-..,...,...... 'r)' "'' . ', I ..... ).-:t._i _ .. --· lllAllll m 111ta n n • flml• IMln Brookhurst UA Movies UA CIM1N Siddleback fountain Y.-.Y 772-6446 990·4022 540-0594 S81·5880 839-1500 1U1CE • .._ ·IUICI wunmm Oranae Mall Stadium Dr·ln UA City Cinema UA Cinema 637·0340 639·8770 634·3911 893·0S46 •'M Foa#IC K HC»C7' OKT Wiley llaTker. left. and lril Korn chat with Pete Kpebler in a acene from "On Golden Pond, .. the •tOfll of an aging couple fadng the final .,ear•· of their~-The play ii on the boardl at the Saddleba.ck Company TheoUr at ~back College through Aug. 2. Ruervation1 are availabie at 831-4656. -........ _,:. "' ... 1:1•-'-'·- IMf'CNITMT MOTICll C1ULDMI UllMtl tZ fRW -.......... , ... '" •:ll-.-ill ......... •:• .. Olli'! -•'111111,. CM .... .,.,..,_ fll••CM ... Wllll--~ .... --,. Nn&ll•M.I. ClllWI ....... ,. - ....... v ------ANAHEIM OlllVf IN .. ""'"""" " -,_..., .... .._ ... "10" "' 11t MIO Cllll ·" '°""° ... ...... =_........ ----..---...;;;;- • TitR ~N•ONHU MM' (N) "'°"YOUR ~ ONLT .. -....... L,,._., __ .. _ "~Y WOl'IUNO" (N) •-......., .._.. ..... C1llf ... IOUllO I'\ I ti A , A .. ~ BUENA PARK IHll>'! II; ,.. .... •. . HI WAY 39 u•'•' '" ' . ,, . ' --·--··· flOM:SI .... " -"'A.09 TO a.ACK " Cllll ·" IOUllO \ ........... LA HABRA u•.wt 1; -·-·--·--171-1162 lo •,Ii. I A.,• LINCOLN DlllVE IN - .. ,,. ~. , --.L-1.mWlll-·---··=· "UCAN l'tMJll .... YON<" .. -''T'Hm UTUtMINATOW' .. a.ell .... s. .. °"' ..... ,._ 191·3693 ------""'""""" " -"1f" "' C.·fl IOUllO ----~ "lMDLllS LOW fll -"HMIHTMAWKI" fll ..................... M1D1R8 Of' THI LOIT AM" (PO) . -•ttaNQMll 11" (PO) ORANGE u111vf ·~ loNo ,...., '"" 6 SIOIO C~ 111·7022 II. JJ. WARNER 1·~-.1 ~ --. "'ntR -.AT llUflNT CAl'IR" .,.....:,. ... (G) .. . ~ J : - PRESENTS FOR YOUR ENJOYMENT TONY BRIGHT AT TIE KEYBOARDS ..... AMCa ._.Hl'LYTOTtm OUNU WMDAY • JAD -MotellY • .,_ ... T .. lll•HT'OMH-NI.& SAT. FOOD -FOOD -FOOD -FOOD mcHEH UHDH MEW MAMMIMEKT EAIL Y lllD SPICIAL 5 to 7 P.M. _ •Steamed Vegetables s4os •~Pork Rit. :Y· • Terriyaki Chid(en • Snapper -Served w /Sd\JP or salad • • A Family Shopping/Dining & Entertainment Center Albertson's • Bank of America • Biibo Bagglna • Coco's/Reuben's • Command Performance Dolphin Hair Fashions •Edwards Cinema • Faah'n Splash • Hamburger Hamlet • Ice Capades Mesa Verdtt Florist • J'na Verde Travel • Mlon.'1 • Music Market • Photography by Jeffrey Southern California <JPUcal • Spa Lady • Swensen'• • Vicki's Sunshine Factory · DIYerslons "AFTER THE FACT," an original drama by John Ferzacca, is on stage for three weeks at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. Performances are given Wednesdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m. until July 25-Call 494-0743 for tickets. "GREEN GROW THE 1.IJ..ACS," the non- muslcal version of "Oklahoma," opens tonight for a five-weekend run at the Westminster Community Theater, 7272 Maple St., Westminster. Performances are Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 p.m. through Aug. 8 with tickets available at 995-4113. "PURE AS THE DRIVEN SNOW," an old- fashiohed melodrama, bows In tonight at the Saddleback Valley Community Theater, 25741-C Obrero, Mission Viejo. The play wlll be staged Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m . through Aug. 1 and tickets may be reserved by calling 830-9252 or 830-'698. "STORY THEATRE," a potpourri of tradi- tional fairy tale5 told with a twist of wit, con- tinues tonight and Saturday at 7 p.m . and Saturday and Sunday at 2:30 p.m. In the out- door Patio Theater at Golden West College. Call 894-9885 for tickets. v "ON GOLDEN POND," the story of an aging couple In love, Is being presented by the Sad- dleback Company Theater at Saddleback College through Aug. 2. Curtain time Is 8 weeknights, 2 and 8 p.m. Saturdays and 3 p.m. Sundays. Phone 831--'656 or 49>2790 from 10 a.m . to 2 p.m. Mondays through Fridays for reservations. "GUYS AND DOLLS," the popular musical by Frank Loesser, Is on at Elizabeth Howard's Curtain Cell Qlnner Theater, 690 El Camino ~eal, Tustin. Curtain t~mes vary. Call 838-15"40 . . "MAGIC THEATRE," a children's musical staged as a sen.s of sketches that deal with a child's world, such as fear, anger1 love, anxiety and jealousy, opened this week 1n SMdleback College's 1•seat Company Theatre. For tickets, call 831-'656 or 495-2790 Monday . through Friday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. -CLASSICAL MUSIC------- THE PACIFIC POPS, conducted by James Christensen, wlll present a free outdoor con-~rt b?nlght at 6:30 p.m. at Oekborrtc VIII~ SftOpplng Center south of Laguna Hiiis Mall. For Information, call 951·2112. RICHARD GLENN, C""5$1CAL GUITAR virtuoso, will ••rfwm ~y, July 19, at 2 p.m. in the Turtle Rock .Community Center, 1 SunnyhUI Drive, lrvtne. Glenn Is a member of the UC Irvine musk f acuity Md has ptayed througtaat Ewape. THE llOU• •IH>I, .... SCKalled "Royal #1\llY of U-. .. , .. , wtN ..,._.r for the first •• .tl:JOp.m. Wednesday, July In... .... Program Includes :tit 11 • Tlcbts .,. av.,IM>te • r Mutlial' Agencies or by credit card at (213) ...,.1'81. Call (213) 17-MUSIC, for ln- form•tlon. THE LOS ANGELES PMIUIARMOlllC wlll be conduct8d by Erich Lelftldlrf In concert at the Holtywaod Bowl TunAy, July 21 at I :• p.m. Tickets run fnlm $2 t9 '6.JD.Md rney be ob- tained tt.rouah all Mutual Aalncles or by credit card .. (21Jf -.1•1. For . .._ts, phoM (213) 17-MUSIC. J Robert Volk of Martin Aviation, left, welcomn Pml Schultz and hil 1131 Stiuon monoplane to tM Concour1 Aeronaadjqw, on antique aircraft uhibittorJ let fur SundaJI. ~· Etc. in Dfvm'lionl fur detaUI. p.m. and S.turday at 7:30, 9 and 10:30 p.m. in the Good Time Theater. For information, call 121-1n6. "THE WIZARD OF OZ" s tarring Judy Garland will be screened-tonight in Golden West College's outdoor amphitheater as part of Its family film series. Picnic time 6:30 p.m., show at I p.m. Admission Is $1 or $5 maximum per family. THE SHOWCASE SINGERS Wiii present • variety of show tunes from 7-8 p.m. S.tunt.y In the Oasis Senior Citizens Center, IOO Marg'*'lte Ave., Corona dll Mar. Admission $2. "THE SPIRIT OF THE 8EEHIYE,'Y an award-wiMlng Spanish film by Victor Erice, wttl be shown Saturday by the UC Irvine Fiim Society at I p.m. In UCl's Soca.I Science Lec- ture Hall. Admission q_ C.11 UM922 for In- formation. ' "ENOJ.ESS LnvEtl u•> _.,'"" .......... -·-ii-,.:;::., --.... ----~ "-~ .......... m llllllT-.i. "ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK" I"> .......... -..-. --,...,_..... . '=.....,_ "ENDLESS ~iu LOVE" _ _....... , .. , POI-~ .-.Y'alll...,. ....... ,..,. ,,, l • I I .... ... ( .......... _11) THe BILL TOLE ORCHESTRA will entertain dancers at 9 p.m. Saturday in C.talina Island's Casino. bts depart San Pedro at 6:30 p.m. and leave Avalon at 1:45 a.m. Dance tickets are $7.50 and transportation costs $15.20. Both are a¥~11able througtr Tlcketron. Dial 527-7111 for details. WOR~All, a slx-i)lece group playing be-boo, swing, vocalese and contemporary music, wlll perform Sunday at 6 p.m. In the Golden West College amphitheater. Admission Is free. PETE FOUNTAIN AND 808 CROSBY and his Bobcats wlll perform In seperate lhows at Disneyland beginning Monday, July 20. Foun- tain will appear until July 2•, Crosby unt11 July 25. A CONCOURSE AERONAUTIQUE, or antique Distinctive waterfront Dining_ Oyster Bar• Cocktails ' .3333 W. Pacific Coast Highway, N. B .• 642-2295 , ___ _ . . . . . ~vlatlon show Is set for Sunday at Martin Aviation, 1933l Airport Way South, Santa Ana. A variety of rare antique planes will be shown and J~, as well as aircraft typical of today's general aviation. Admission ts free. .. THE J. PAUL GETTY Museum In Santa Monica will be the subject of a tour set for Wednesday, July 22, by Orange C6ast College. A bus wlll leave the occ Auditorium parking lot at 8:30 a.m., returning around 2:30 p.m: Tickets, at $7 .50, must be purchased In act. vance at the OCC Ticket Office on campus. For Information, phone 556-5527. JOHNNY MATHIS wlll appear at the Greek Theatre In Los Angeles Tuesday, July 21, and the Costa Mesa leisure services department Is sponsoring a bus excursion to the concert. All- Inc luslve tickets are $20.SO. Reservations avatlabte In room 320 of the Civic Center, 77 ~ ... te~~··· ~~~fi- u pd:, up ~ ~. • A IMl11Jlf ll!GIW4 ............. "THI RJta SIAIONS" ALAN ALDA·· CAIOl. IUINETT • IDf CA1100 • ~ DllllfllS llTA fllOl!NC> •MCI WUl'ON • IUS AIMSftONG Wnuea ud Otrtcted bJ Al.AIC ALM • Eaecu!M ~ LOUIS A. STllOW!I Prodacfd bJ llWTIH 8REGMAN • A UNM1W. PICM£ --.. -· ... ... . ~ Fair Drive. Call 75-4-5300 tot malling Informa- tion. A DIXIELAND JAZZ. JAMBOREE (the 1oth annual, no less> will be held on cata_,na Island Saturday, July 25. A special boat win head out from Newport Beach, with round-trip tickets set at $17. Admission to the Cnlno, where the r;nuslc will be heard, Is $8 adults, $6 teens and S' children 13 and under. Reservations must be made by Monday, July 20. For Information, call 673-52•5. -IN VEGAS----- ALADDIN: Ronnie Miisap. 8 p.m. and mid-night. , 7~.0. DESERT INN: "Annie" with the Broadway cast. <See Dlvenloas, Page 11) . CALL POI ncm INfO 549-1512 ... .,,.... . .,. At DJer , .. lroollholow SANTA ANA FOR YOUR DINING & E'NTERTAINMENT PLEASURE. '! ~=======~~~~---------.-----------.~ f llms 'Escape' off~rs low~udget horror By JEFF PA&KER °' • ......, ......... "Escape From New York" is an excessive, nightmarish parable about the decay of the United Stales. It is set in 1997 in New York City, which bas· been turned into one massive prison for the coun- try's worst criminals. There are no cells, no ban and no guards - the prisoners are free to roam the city, detained only by a massive cement wall built around the city's perimeter. Criminals sent there all receive the same sentence, life, and they are extended on- ly one courtesy before they are flown in: they're given lbe chance to be kilJed and cremated. Snake Plluk.in (Kurt Russell) is a bank robber sentenced to New York City. Unshaven, long-. haired ~ sinlster, Plissltin looks lite a cross bet•een Cbar&es Manson and Jim Morrison, and he doesn't really talk, be bi11es lite Clint Eastwood. Pllsskin turns heads and draws attention from the people around him -he's got a nasty reputa- tion he obviously deserves. FOR THE HOTTEST ENTERTAINMENT IN ORANGE COU~lY ..• Go. to the !"'-. -JAMEi HA"MON BAND •JULY 17•11, JULY 11 Afternoon CHICAGO llWE DEVILS •JULY 1•~tt GlOAGl!8UTTI , • JULY 22·2S-2'-25-21 MN NEWPOaT BLVD • .NEWPORT BE ACH '15-!244 Drinks • SMwe Ice • loe Creem Teriyekl • Pe .. ton Fn.lt ~ ; ~ Lueu Pork• Popcorn• Video Ge,_. ·------•COUPON•••••--. : FREE sof:J DRINK : : PLATE LUNCH : When a terrorul 1roup hijack.a Air Fore-? One with the President aboard to New York City, the warden cuts a deal with Snake: lf Pllsakin sets the President away from his inner-city capton, he'll be pardoned. Snarling "I gotta go in anyway," Plisskin takes the deal. "Escape From New York" was written, directed and scored by John Carpenter, whose "Halloween" and "The Fog" establlsbed him as a master of low-budget horror. Unlike other talented young directors <Carpenter is in his early 30s); he doesn't elevate the genre with a refined sense or style -he embraces the pure crassness of low-budget horror by reveling in it. "The Fog" kept audiences wincing by the sheer simplicity of plot and the bold, byperreal bloodshed. In "~alloween" and "The Fog" Carpenter managed lo bring his characters lo just enough life so that we'd grimace when he .did them in. But his excursions into character always seemed a little hurried, a little superfluous -you got the impression that be couldn't wail lo gel back to the business of making you squirm. Carpenter always seemed more comfortable kill- ing his characters than developing them. Carpenter has diapealed with bwJdmg charac· ters lotally in "Escape From New York," but there's a chilling reason for it: in 1997 ~bod~ is rotten. From the opening notes of the soundtrack (a : <Ncken 'fP. s2as : I Teriyald I I • Yalue ta.25 I ••too-----• ..,... .. ,, .. ., ... ~ --. I ~·..... I _,..,,.., ·---------------~ . rme>•Am•-'"" ,,,,.,.,. f ...... er.-. .... ,,,,..,,._, . U..I W..,~._, * a11 I. t ?a IL C.... lleM .... ,.. ...... 0.... . a,.-..... baunUnc beautiful score done by Carpenter), we're su~ked into a movie that supplies its own context -we've got no bearinp outllde Carpen- ter's own Inspired, abaurd Dithtmare. Snake Plisskin is a vile character. as is the warden who sends him into New York <Lee Van Cleef), the President of the United Stales (Donald Pleasence), and all the crooks who are running amok in tbe city. . , . . It's a grimly believable logacal futunslic vis- ion scarier and dirtier than "A Clockwork: Or~ge'" where Kubrick was exploring tbe base- ness of human nature. In "Escape From New York," that baseness is taken for granted. Some of the most disturbing scenes in "A Clockwork Orange" in,volved the rape of terrified, struggling women, but Carpen- ter's vision is bleaker: in "Escape From New York." his criminals rape a corpse. Although he can put you on edge with sheer distastefulness, Carpenter can't work up the hyp- notic pulse that a movie like this needs to transcend its own trashiness. He still hasn't risen from literal staging to lyrical pacing: every few moments he'll cul lo a stupid shot that seems planted there to let you know bow carefully the director bas thought things out. When the warden offers Snake a full pardon if he can return from New York with the President, <See Escape, Pace 14) .. • • • 'E~cape from ·N. Y .' < Fnm Pa1e IJ) he reaches into bis desk and waves a silly lookin1 · pardon in tbe air. The law officen time Snake's rescue attempt (he's 1ot only 22 hours to pull it off) on a "Master Life Clock" tbat ticks off tbe ·hours !or us. The movie opens lamely with a colored, "digital" map of New York City, outlined in little lights that represent the wall around the city. When a director seems to trust his audience so lit- tle, it makes us wonder if be trusts bimsel!. That sort of nervous potboilin1 spills over into the plot too: it's not enough' that the! President is kidnapped, but he's also in possession of a messue tbat must be delivered to a "summit meeting'' within 22 hours or the world will erupt into war. It's typical of Carpenter's plodding literalism that tbe message isn't something the president knows; it's actually recorded on a cassette tape and then locked into a briefcase he handcuffs to his wrist. Carpenter isn't above treating us Jilte second graders. "F.scape From New York" aspires to be re- pellent and it is. The cast bas been chosen with a vengeance for stereotypes: Russell as the hip ·white warrior, Donald PJeasence as the portly, simpering President, Isaac Hayes as the un- Dancing In Dana Point To Rock, Regg.ae; Pop, Blues Country.Western .. ., ...... •!--............... -.................... .. AllMlter P••ltewller ftnt! ! 8-day ~ 8atanla1 "REGGAE WEEK" s-day-'l'lln. "REBEL ROCKERS" Wedrnday ..... Satanlay .. FRIENDS BAND" • derworld crime lord and, get this, Steven Ford as a Secret Service agent. It's easy to write off the future as inevitably rotten though, and while it's clear that John Carpenter is a master of low-budget horror, be strikes me as a low-budget vision~ry too. Mike Douglas for dia betes Talk-show host Mike Douglas said his first act as national campaign chairman of the American Diabetes Association would be a "Stars' War on Diabetes." ALBERT R. BROCCOLI pn.~' ROGER MOORE Make your weekends "special" with a magnificent champagne brunch overtooking Newport Bay. Smorgasbord buffet. only .... ·11'4.50 under 12). his~ 11•..:-w..-t.-; aMO ... ·MI ~' ..... lAN R.EMING'S JAM ES BOND oor .,FOR YOUR EYES ONLY su.m, CAROLE BOUQUEf • roPOL • LYNN·HOU.Y JOHNSON • JULIAN GLOVER Plock'ol by ALBERT R. B~ • Dim.1ed,t,yJOHN GLEN ~by IUC1iARD MAIBAUM lftl MICHAfl. 0. WILSON ~ Pludllm MICHA.ELG.~• ~by BIU.eotm ~ ~ P£1'1:lt LAMOf'(f • A111od11e Pmdlicu TI.>M PEVSNER -.."""-'""""'-••• l--~--1 -·---· ..... -.. -· POJ'!!'"•F• L-.Slfl'f>] . •l.P!!~~ ----.............. ~ Tldcs...,.""'._,bySHl-.f.NA i:.A.mJN • T !lil~.~ Books 'Gorky Park' Muraer; ttus~un ~tyz_,.. Reviewed by JOHN NEEDHAM Of ... Dlllly,.... ..... "Gorlq/ Park" bJ1 Martin Croz Smith (Random Howe: ll3.9SJ As chief inspector in charge or homicide for the Moscow Town Prosecutor's Office, Arkady Renko's job consists of picking up the everyday corpse. In other words, the preponderance of slaylngs are typically Russian, and involve equal doses of vodka, jealousy, boredom and despair. Renko, the son of a famous World War II general nicknamed the "Butcher of the Ukraine," bas few illusions about his work. He is a specialist in murder in a country that has little well· organized crime, and no talent for finesse. The usual victim of the ordinary Russian Is the woman he sleeps with. When he is drunk, he hits her over the head with an ax -probably 10 times before he gets it right. Bluntly, the criminals Renko arrests are or· ?Artier drunks d1iii lflllf~ second._ and far But the three bodies found frozen In deep snow in Moscow's Gorky Park ate not ordinary vocjka troikas. Portions of the corpses that could be used for identification have been c11pped off or peeled away. Renko is anathema to Soviet society. He is too vigorous in his pursuit or the murderer and too in· teUigent to swallow whole Communist Party philosophy, though it means a devastating toll on bis own life. Added to the tightrope he walks between the official line of Kremlin apparatchiks and bis own personal integrity' is Renko's love of a branded dis· sident. Irina Asanqva Jongs only to leave her country Cor a new life ~e west, where free expression doesn't come at the cost of a near fatal beating by patriots of the revolution. Renko is too shrewd an investigator not to solve the Gorky Parle murders, though it means ig· noring party doublethink that legitimizes corrup· lion and trampling or individual civil liberties for ~~..Rood. -Perhaps his greatest aecolnp100dbe'IW;1h1.~·~b. is that the reader cares desperately for Renko, as his own humanity causes his plun1e from social respectability into the fringe of Soviet society usually reserved for Jews and intellectuals, not chief investigators. Darker characters are also given a full range or emotions. Through them the reader sees there is no life in Soviet Russia outside the system. "Gorky Park" is a consummate thriller, a well-paced blend of terror, mystery, suspense and romance. Most of all the book is highly original In its selling in Iron Curtain Europe, complete with the nuances or survival and career advancement unique to societies of the region. THIS -SUNDAY . Burt Reynolds • Roger Moore Faltah Fawcett ·Dom peLuise . BOSS OUR CHEF AROUND I )bu1/ root m, them all. .. but you"I nwsr guess who w;ns. JAL ft COLDEN HARVEST PRESENTS AN ALBERTS. RUOIJY PRODUCTIO# ·A HAL NEEDHAM FILM '7#1. u-..u /#Hr Cq Sr11nttg llEAll llM11N • IAllll'f ... JI. • AMEM#E M.ull · JAlllE IA/ti TEMIY BllAD$HAW • •t '11LUI • JMltlE CllAll • lllCHML 11111 E1ecu1we Ptoducer RAYMOND CHOW· Ptoduttd by Al.BERT S. RUDOY· t#ttrn by BROCK YATES Dff«ted by HAL NEEDHAM • Ml/Sit COfltlucted by Al CAPPS • Mllllt SllpeMS/()11 by SNUFF CARRm i.:::...:;;.i...,=--_..;;;,.;.,:: =~====-od flEAIJW£ZEISQR£Nf88ACK/ -· ~ ·-'-"""'~-1 .. We have a feast of a table. rnore than 30 feet long. ftlled with delicious breakfast and lunch entrees. fruits and salads and breads-plus our chef (an omelette expert) stands waiting for you to tell him how to make your custom omelette. he'll cook It right in front of you toof Come to Calabash this SuOday for Champagne Brunch-and come hungry! I I (P'rem .... U) cast. Indefinite run. • p.m. Md mldnlght Fri· ay Md ~ p.m. Tuesday !J\rough Thursdmy, daf't( y. 73:M444. CAaMWl-"PaLACE: Paul Anb untll July 29. 9 and t2:3Dp.m. 731·7----~hCOU:RaftTe ~ on Ice. Indefinite run. a p.m. Md mldlght. 73442AO. FRONTIEa: Glen Campbell and Fred Travalena. 8 p.m . and mldnlaht. 7~40. HILTON: Biii Cosby and David Copperfl8t. 8 • p.m . ancfmldnlght. Call 7'J4.T177. .. RIVIERA: OoUy Parton. 8 p.m. and midnight. 737-1755. ·SAHARA: Charo and JKk Jones at 8 p.m. Fllp Wilson at ·midnight. 735-GG. STAaDUST: Lido de Pwts. 7 p.m. and 11 p.m. Sunct.y thrdugtt Friday. 6: 15 p .m ., 9: 15 p.m . and 12115a.m. S.turday. 732-6325. TRO~CANA: Foiles e.rgere '11. 8 p.m. and mldn._. 7J9..M11. , UNIOll PLAZA: Continuous Broectway enter- tainment. I p.m ; and 11:'5 p.m. Dark Monday. -.2~. • SANDS: Under construction. I .. ~ FIVE" (R) '\ II "FOX ANO· THE HOUND'' (Q) '-c>NCE UPON A W'' ~'tllTORY OF M WORLD, PARTo."~ For Information, call (213) m.ecu9. SINGLE IN ORANGI! COUNTY a new group, wlll visit a Mexican rest.aur.nt #Or dinner and dancing at 7 p .m. S.turday In S.nt.a A_!"8. F_pr • lnfor~cMA su.._. OUTDOOR SINGLl!S Wiii have a bike ride at 9: 30 a .m. SUnday from ~ Niguel to-S.n Juan Capistrano. The group wlll have a volleyball game In Cost.a Meu at 6:30 p.m. next Wednesday. For Information, call 544-8276. CENTER CLUB SINGLES Is sponsoring a dis- cussion titled "Up Ideas f« Downer. Days" at S p.m. Sunday In Newport BHch. For Informa- tion, call 975-0700. PARENTS WITHOUT PARTNIUIS Orange CNSt chapter will have a clscussion on mar- riage vs. Hvlng together at 8 p.m. Tuesday In Huntington Beach. For Information, call SS9-0M6. aALBOA SKI CLUa wlll have a general meet- ing Tuesday In Newport BHch. F« Informa- tion, call 752-0128. STl!Pl'AMtL Y FOUNDATION will have a dis- cussion on "Whether or Not to Rem.rry" at 7:30 p.m. next Wednesday In s.nt. Ana. For Information, call ,.,... ... -CUIS----- MENSA SOCIETY meets Sunday at 1 p.m. In Anaheim. F« more Information call 634-o907. DOLPHINS, Women's Division of the Newport H rbor A mber of merce meets at --... ' n&P 11 : 30 a .m. Tuesday In the Balboa Bay Chat>. For more Information c~ ~11. NEWP08T·HARBOR TOASTMISTRESS Chat> ~~v •t V'b lfkl•'hn-----~ _.-::. :.~"""''' , ca 494-3651 . IRVINE BUSINESS and Professional Women's Club meets Tuesday at 11:30 a .m. In the Hungry Tiger Restaureut, 2101 E. Edinger, Santa Ana. For more Information call Linda Doyle at 833-5461. BAJA CHILDREN'S FOUNDATION meets Saturday at noon at Rancho <:aplstrano. For more Information call Mimi at 556-9003. HARBORLITES CHAPTER of Sweet Adlllnes meets Monday at 7 :30 p.m . In the Neighborhood Community Center, 1145 Park Ave., Costa Mesa. For more Information call 557-8935. Stapleton has 'Life of Her Own' HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Jean Stapleton, Richard Kiley -.cl Peter Coyote star in tbe CBS movie "A Life ol Her Own.'' lllu Stapleton plays a widowed secretary who bu clevoted benell to her bola, playecl,by Kiley. Wbea be ls forced into early retil'em•t. abe must readjust her life and choose between a career and marria1e. Guy Green is direcUa1 from a screenplay by Oll.ver Hailey. * aAllGAIN MATHI••• • . ...., ........... , All ~before 5:00 PM C&Dlfl ..... El'lllllF I k .... ......,., ....... ••f!Oll 'f'OUlt .... CM&Y"""' ...... --.. .... .. -------Hd'lltlatt ... ~:Wir.""""'.-• .fl! .. ma.-• ·~ ..... .., ... ~ t Al<fWOO[l ( fNTEQ <,(J ll Th ""a " "" -~- '9 ___ _ "acANMOlll ... TOM" ... .... .............. .... --"&.0-•" ...a.m~J'! .. --·-~ ''THE CANNONMLL ....... ~:~~'""' --·--• .,_ POUR llAllONI" -----(PG) --·--''RAIDIRI OI' TMI l..ft91'Am" ... ...... -.--;;. .... .J ~ ~-~~~-----~----~ ...................... . . ~ When it comes to Sunday Brunch Our French Chef is really Beaucou Exquisite pate, salmon fumcc. crepes, cclairs. Our chd ocvcr knows when to say jl11Js. And ncit™:r will you . nus Sunday bulfet Is a bbulous arrar-Qf fruits, sotlads. ~. cnu'ttll -from the proudest. ol baJ.U adsifU! lO the hcanlcst of. brm kitchen cookery. • Add lbc sparldc of coq>Umcnwy c~agnc and the strumming of strolling marlachl. No wonder cvcryonc Wks about this brunch-when they linalJy 'ltop caling. FC2tut'Cd C\U)' Sunday • lo 1tic elegant ~ ~0-,:0 a.to-to 2:.~> p.m. ~REGISfRY 18800 MacAtthut Boa.ICYard. Irvine 7S~ • -,,.. lqlJltrf ttntd ~ ..... -~.'Iha she is 15. he is 17 the love every pareQt fears. . . ' brooke shields ... Is sizzling in her most shocking role! PEOPLE MAliAZINE PolyOram Pictures presents a keith barish-dyson lovell production a film by franco z.effirelli brooke shields martin hewitt ..... "?" shir1ey knight don mumy rictwrd kUey perwlope mUCord· beatrice straigbt based on the book by soon spencer scnienplsy by judjth rascoe executive prodatcer keith bmish produced by dyson lovell directed by franco ieffirelli (:·~ .. f '~I . --.. ·-:r.;..: . - A SEQUEL THAT READIJ_ Y SURPASSES Tl:IE ORIGINAL." RICHARD SCHICKEL TIME MAGAZINE .,, -Mmsm,..a1m ·..mm .-1r llUll · .... -- • • · Maft(IU ·Ill··-· Qlll.llllS· .. UataltWi·lllllWI .. 011•---~·· ,.. ....... r.,.11. r.iidi ~Ill• ti-... lilli., ~· WlMMS r.r..11 MIWrJ "'~··--~11 .... a. ..... ,... ••• ,.,~,.. MI1...,~• lfS111 a.MIU11 .. n •,.. 11 ............. ~ ...... n,..1 •oc:=!!!" :r f E , . ' ' " • -.... • -----~ ------------- 'Flg~re by Three' beyond rea~ism By KAntY BRYANT ........ Dllfr,.. T be. nude body bas always interested mankind. One of the earliest known art works was of a nude woman done around 15,000 ·B.C. in La Magdelaine Cave in France. Even today in the age of Polaroids, we enjoy seeing ourselves, whether it's in the back row of a fuzzy snapshot, or as a universal torso done by an accomplished artist. "The Figure by Three," DOW at Mills House Visual Arts Complex, present.a three artists' views ol the nude figure. Simply because the human bocJy has been done so often, today's artists have to transcend mere anatomical re· alism. In thls exhibition Mitzi Trachtenberg and Dick Oden do just that. Trachtenberg, using mixed media collage, is especially effective in "Turning 1." Picturing the body from the shoulders down, she creales a sensuous, tactile figure that is alive and im· mediate. Her strokes, reminiscent of De Koon- ing's , are vtbrant and strong. She attempts to reconcile tbe conflicts between tbe inner and outer appearance of the fiJU.re. She does so in this work. She's less succeufw with her mural "Degas Remembered" which .hasn't the visual impact necessary m a larae won. Both too much and too liWe are oc:currinc. Diet Oden combines realistic, anatomical drawing with mythological subject matter. His graphite pictures st)ow the three-dimensional figure on two-dimensional paper. Oden equates his nudes with work done by cartographers wbo flatten the world into a map. His drawings incorporate the Cubist idea that all stae. ol the fi.ou'e can be seen at.once. There is great attenUOD to detail in every fac;et ol the body except for the face which is amorpbic and muk-llke. 'lbe iDtriaulng concept here is the dichotomy of realistically-drawn forms seen from all sides at once. Since the figures are pictured u falling, it's as if they're viewed turning slowly through space. The thlrd artist in this exhibition is Inez Ow· ings, who has done plaster and brooze sculptures. Her works seem strangely lifeless and derivative. She offers few fresh insights in· to the human form, and although she's &be only artist working with three-dimenalonal material, her work is the inost static. In the east wing of Mills House is "EaaU:lay We.stclay." This show mates a nice balance to - Dick Oden's 'Orpheu.! Series' the figurative works, since the five a7tlsts featured here are working with clay. • Patrick Crabb's art pieces show bis interest in primitive cultures as he experiments with ceremonial vessels by turning clay bowls into semi-flat~ wall pieces. Using the low fire technique o( ruu,_the Indian ambiance remains even IMQsh lbe works are obviously modem and decorativeJ rather than utilitarian. "The Kite Series," by John Bobeda, features kites that look as if they're made of hand-made paper, when actually they're ceramic. The deception ls perfect. Bobeda has captured the airy, lacy feeling of kite fabric and light-weight wood in the clay medium. Done au in white, the kites seem to be waiting to be flown. ,\lso in Utis show are ceramic vessels by Yoshiro Ikeda, whimsical ceramic ducks by IMz Owings' work lifeless Gail Ritchie and opalescent porcelains by Jerry Ga plan. The Mills Howie Visual Arts Complex bas come a long way in its three-year existence. If you've never visited it, this would be a good time since both "The Figure by Three," which runs through August 16, and "Eastclay Westclay" which run.s through July 30, .are worth seeing. There will be a dialogue with .the artists on .• Thursc!ax, July 23 afrp.m . Mith House-Visual Arts Complex. is located at 12732 Maln Street, Garden Grove. lt's open Wednesday through Sunday, noon to 4 p.m., 638.fil07. · A lecture seri~ dealing with the collec-tion or prints will be offered oo four con- secufive Fridays from 9:30 a.m. to 11 a. m. beginning on July 24 at the Newport Harbor Art Museum. Call 759·1122 for more information . • • • Movies attracting lar ge sum'mer ·crowds (FromPa&e3) deleting each other. But that's DO lonaet true. Like I said, we've aot half a doz.en pictwes do- ing great busineu in Orange County," be said. "ute Sbatespeare said, 'The pla7'1 the thing'.'' said Leslie ol the Port. "If we do IOOd box office it's because ot ~ picturea. If we have a eood movie here we'll do buslneu in a blindlq ralmtorm. flee weekend in history. "Superman II" alone amaased $10.05 million ln It.a first two days of releue in the U.S'. and Canada, setting an all- time record, according to Warner Bros. "Raiden of ti.. Lost Ark" was not far behind "Superman n1 •• with a ·box office gross of SS.30 million in i.&l.'.Jmenlnl three days in the U.S. market. -~ Remarkably, "Raiders" received even hiaber box offtce bu1ID'9• on tbe Monday loUowm, the ftnt weetied of ill run -movie makers 1Qin1 llMlt tbe 1troq word of mouUa bad fired entJu•lum for tbe film. ing studio spokesmen to lament over the lower ticket sales. Like lhea~er owners, studio heads are crediting the sudden resurgence in movie going to better movies. "The consumer is the ultimate critic," s~d Gordon Weaver, senior vice presi- dent ol Paramount. ••And that's why there's a direct cause-and-effect relatiooahip between su~­ cess at the bo.x office and the quality of films. If the CODl"!mer doesn't like a film the word spreads like wiJdflre . . . look what happened to 'Heaven's Gate.' tt took two daya for word-of. mouth to klU it." ul tlliak U.. HMOD for tbe treat box office busineu Uais summer la became UM movi• are· otfei'iq pare entertainment. Tbat'• wbat people want. Tiie)' doo't want '4> be pnacbed to, tbey don't want vlolmce. Thia la what nub Gordoa did f« ua in tbe '309 and •a . Our rustomen are here few eecaplam too, tbouCb lt'• few a UW. • deeper feelinc than pure entertaiDment. Tbey're Loottn~:r,: lllce ol life Ibo caa Idea· Ufy witb m.I t ftlm1 do tW. 0... piMple Naturally, studio pubUcilll are predictinl that IWIUDer 1•1 will be tbe best ever for HoUywood -a much different tune than tMJ were wbJst"•I a few abort montba aao. Studio heads and local theater OWMn .,_..ee that when one or two fll01s do well at tbe box of. nee, it belpe rather than b'81a aeMI' aiovia. ''Seeinr one Sood mcme IN people back lnto the habit of 1old1 to tbe mori• lnltead of atayiQC bolne or aotni bowllq, '' Nld Weaver. 't 10 for~~ ...... ~ ttJIAib styw.a..tt'1Mtdeme •• . Amsteam • .,.., ... •• llt .. moriel tbe weekeDd ol June •ao -tlM ..,.._ boa ol- Aa of tldl 1pr1Da, overall movie buainea wu don eearly 10 percent trvm 1•, wblcb ltMU ... n a ..,..i year for HaUJwood. · Tbe ............ tltud of ••Illa••'• Giile," tJMt wrtt.n' ltrtb, ... &bi'.,....,.... ..... of tbe haNtual IDM'M Solaa ............ all l•ad· '' An1UJDe IOIDeGM 109 to a IDOYle, it belN all of UI, .. Mid IAIUe. "It,... U.. Cllt ol tiae house. I lowe to ... the 1U7 dowll ........ maktna maney too. Good moviea are,... bual-neee~·· Art Festivm Art & craft show/ .... at Huntington Centet daily thru Sun. Plus feature eXhibit of renowned Remington. Russell. Helkka weetem bronzes. ~ORET LOVE ALL a m NII/) • ,IL,,. MCEIYS 1"l IEAL OF llll MOTOI ~TI.* • COOi Of SEL1 Mlkll.A T1Clft If it's got wheels, you'll move it faster In a Dally Pilot classified ad.call ,,_.2-5678 and a friendly acf. viser will help you tum your whlelstnto cast.. .. A Rollins -Joffe -Morra-Brezner Production l>Udl8rMoore • jza rAmeiii John GielgUd "Arlh&r" Music by Executive Producer Produced by Wntten and Directed by Burt Bacharach Charles H. Joffe Robert Greenhut Steve Gordon ~··.·.:,·i . ._, . •' .. ~ Technlcolof . A" OitiOi"f PICTURES ,.., .... TIW11 WAANEA IAOS 0 A Warner Comm11n1ca1ton1 Compa"y ~· -.,.- •.. ,.,,, ~ -- 0 '111 I • 0 -I l I I '· ta ... I f9 1. t a • • Mastering the arts (,.... .... 1) . commissioned to create an Thul lla•enaeroft's resonant ortliul wort, "Coney Island," to ·voice bl been beard..S TonJ tbe be nlplicated in tbe Pa1unt. Tia er. tellia1 U;S lab favorite Uve entertalnmeDt is allo in- cereal i• .. G-r-r-r-r-r -e-a -t! "· eluded in tbe festivities, wD Al>'. Mat--':fd• Dorat1aJ Day pearwes alatecf bv tile Balle& bu ~ tbe P.,...,. .-. ••Hk'a. tM?aelfll Cbon1e and 1184. AU tbeae people are a puppeteer. coordinated in' their work by The Ballet Pacifica dancen PqeMt diredor Glen EJtdQIGD. will entertain oo Sunday after. Tbe Paaeant of the llMten noons stanma at 5 from July 14 bet:,:_ ma to attract auemtion thrOUlb Aug. 30. to Beada'a Festival af tbe. Tbe cbonle wW preemt four Arts, -......... display ol ,,..... • evemnc procrams at 7 -July 20. by local artiata that opened tbe %7, Aus. 3 and 10. , year before. Early Paaeanta took plaee • 1ta1ea ereeted downtown aacl some h11am were ......... tbe bard way -real babies tend to Cry, plaeoaa will Janel OD mbd peop1e pretenclina to be ....... . The Festival ol tbe Alta la ,UU an tntecral put of the aetiftties that surround the Pa1eant. More than 40 lint-time abibikn have joined old Festival bandl this yar, diaplaylq a variety af Tony Urbano's E::: marionettes will a ID a muical revue, "II Holiday,.. several times dally ln tbe Forum Theater from July 14 tbrougb Aug. 30. Admi11ion "to tlai ':;p•tlval sroundl Is St for addii, tree for cblldren under 12 if a~ by an adult. Pa1eant ttcketbolden are admiUecl fne OD ~day~~ performance. art and hllDdieraft worb. Richard Btmlr•ll1 .~ .• ~bland Tbe grouncaa are open dally art.lat who ha eXDlDkea at tbe from 10 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. City Festival for three yean, wu ..-tue buse9 run continuously .. ••• Janie movln' up CP .... Pald> but WM lured by jtqle producers ID llempllla and later Nashville. Briefly darial tlae '109, l"rieke (pr'ODOUDHd PridHe) ,..cl111I IMI' .~ ....... Le ..... ---to mft tile lucrative Soutlaern California market. It wu not a memorable stay. •'I tried to be a studio ..,_ ID Los An1e&es and failed miserably." lbe nld, LD a tel~ bateniew. "I•· covered there were • eliqae of liDler9 already belDI uaed and they dida't need any new ones. . "I learned a lot wlllle I waa there. It Just .,_•t tbe riCM time for me to be 1D Lm Anples to be a ltudio sbtler. "My matlMr' talcl me not to feet bad. She Mid ~erytlaial uppem for •reat0n." Hu splrita ~ ta.miabed, lbe returned to llemplala to cut more commercial aomwltneb. Slae wellll to· NubYille ia 11'11 ..S aidded ~ slDlinl for couD1rJ mataHaen to her' repert.c*e. It didn't take laq for the music world to dlsco¥er tbe taJeaU ol tbia lifted woealist. Witb all ber 1ueeeues, it's toiDa to take a. while for Ille •Lacer to catch up wllh stardom. "I dml't feel like rm there yet," sbe Mid. ''I tblnk there's a lot more to be done before I'm aucceulul u .. artMt.'' ,.:1aere are add lit• 1 ~ ... on a loAo career. Aad the traveli.q · can be nbauattn1. As a m•tptiaer, Fricke ftadl. otben aearebinl for an inlet to tbe ~ music market. "People come up to me for ad· Yiff.'' • aailll.. "It'll bard to .... people advice Oil wut to do -there are so many ways to do it." Tbe aLDcer would tell you that lbe. learned to play lultar at 15. When sbe sot a cbanee to aiq at ebureh, she'd live the 1ospel tunes ber own special eouaUJ flaYOr. ''My mother wanted me to ..._.. tai" and linl wbenever I Ud the chance,.. sbe 1Ai4. "WbeD I wu iD co1Je1e I bad DO ldea I'd be lD the music tM••neu. I bad no ..,... for tbat. I wu 1n colle1e to 1et a de&ree." . P'rtete jumped into die tOGilbt scene u it sur1ed lD popularttJ clclr- inl the ''lOI. "It's not a fad," abe said GI ber music. "The 'urban cowboy' ban ... I call that faddiab. I'm sure lD a few years somethin1 elH will take over." I .. • Is there age 1 discrimination in TV? ·July 17-July 24· .. . . Sports highlights for the week l ' • .. Index Age discrimination on the tube. Daily gridl ............................ Page 10 Inside TV .............. , ............... Page 18 HighUght1 for Week .................... Page 3 Letters ... , ............................ Page 38 Movies for the week .................... Page 30 On the Cover .......................... Page 8 Sports highlight1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 7 Televieios .............................. Page 2 TV pu2Zle .............................. Page 38 Word gonie ............................ Page I Program information i1 prouickd by the networkl and 1tationl and ii aubject to c~ without notice. Cha~l IJstlnts , (2) KNXT <CBS) '6121 W. Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles, Ca. (4) KNBC <NBC> 3000 W. Alameda Ave., Burbank, Ca. By ll.ICllAEL DOUGAN Of ...... Pllll ..... In the world of televis1on, getting older isn't necessarily getting better. Many TV personalities fear alial more than death. A wrinkJe here, a gray hair there, can mark the route to professional oblivion. . I once asked Stepba.Qie Edwards, former co- bost of "A.II. America," her age. Kw Edwards ts an attractive, outspoken woman whose demeanor invites that sort of personal inquiry. She paused, as they say, prepanUy. "The bell of it is," she finally replied, "I want to tell you.'' Miss Edwards confessed to "abeolute am· bivalence" about the age question. "I '-le to refuae to tell what my real a1e is, but there are thole who absolutely will not aive you a job if they know your ace," she explained. "I'm iQ my mid·30s; that's about u truthful as I care to pt." . Camie CbUQf, whose strikinl appearance ls more tau matched by her proleaionall1m u co- ancbor OD the Channel 2 news, bu been quoted as saylnc tbe tbinl she fears most ii lookinl older. (5) KTLA (ind.) 5800 W. Sunset Blvd., Loi Aqeles, Ca. · "It's a batUe women filht more &ban men," said Miss Chung's CO·worker, Ruth Ashton Taylor, whose pleasing features give evidence that age is (1) KABC <ABC) 4151 Pra.pect Ave., Loa not an all·cooauming evil. "It's a particularly Angeles, Ca. _. fearsome thing U -" you've got going for you is that you can alt there and talk." (8) KFMB <CBS) 7677 Engineer Rd., San Dleao. Ca. (9) KHJ·TV <Ind.) 5515 Melrose Ave., Loe Angeles, Ca. (10) KCST <ABC) 8330 Engineer Rd., San Dieto, Ca. · (11) KTl'V (Ind.) 5746 W. Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles, Ca. (13) KCOP·TV (Ind.> 915 N. La Brea Ave., Los Angeles, ca. (28) KCET·TV (PBS) 4401 Suolet Blvd.1 Loi Angeles, Ca. (50) KOCE·TV (PBS) 15'14' Goaden.. West St., ffuntlncton Beach, Ca. (0) On·TV 1131 Grand Central Ave., Glendale, Ca. CH> (HBO) . Tlme·Ufe Bldl., Roffatelllr c.ter, JC. Y., N. Y. (9) (WOR) N.Y .. N.Y. (17) (WTBS) Atlanta, Ga. White (Showtlme> 2 Black (S) (Spotlipt.) MAINOFFa 330 Wnt 8-y SI., Costa MeM, C.. .L Mall .-W : Box 1560, COlta Mesa, t;a., t262' Te..,._.: "2-G21 In other words, age ~mlnation is more Wtely to be aimed at an anchor person than a re· porter in the field. (Mila Alhton·Taylor'a com· '!Dent, however, was not aimed at. Mill Chung, who bas proveJt her reportorial abilities at CBS Network News and wbo still contributes infrequent special reports to the local station.> . llill Ashton-Taylor 11 unquestionably a senior reporter, at least u far u women are concerned. Sbeioined CBS in 1151. "I always say that J wu iD (televilioa news) before women were," sbe stated. "I'm coming' up on my 30-year anniversary." "It's an industry of the JOU11C and the pretty, u far u women are CCMH:erned," lbe added. "It's a result ol the glorification ol youth and the female form. "When men age they become wiler la the perception ol thole around them and women juat , get older." Age ls a1ao a factor in casting entertalament pro1rams for the tube, aeconllna to a report bf tbe Annenber1 School of Commuoieatlon1 at . tbe w--. t.o the Piiot TV Los. oae fl tM latest ... , • to tbe DaU1 Pllot'• dll•llelt enterUlnmmt eonra1e. In tbe .... w tbla tabloid-lbe tel ..... ma1ulne. ~·n Alld • .,...., ...-:tit <JI Hett• u ... ;ax·· Piiot , ....... Tube ,.... ..... -speeial ............. far ,... .......... ...... .. . Yfm!D .... • ..... t.o -a.i'IJ a t.111 ~"TS Li& Of dae boud, Ca ~~'t ban to worry about loliq tbetr moalblJ calendan ol · movl•, sport.a· ...a otber noa-commerc ... Jrc>- 1reaum .... AD •tlr•. w•'• Ua&iDO wW ap-pear iD the centerfold position of the tv lot. You allo can turn to the new television maaadne for gen•~• and •Pf(ial Interest. features on celebrtU•, new prosr .... , tbe bull· ness of TV and bow a few make declllooa for millions. . Follow Televtew9 for nen, ...ayall and criticism ot all thine• TV. Staff Writer Michael Doutan probea the industry for the atory beblad U. direet.on, ~en. 1tan and acripta. He'll Oftar: .-e ~~IMO teleTllloll aid lta lmpMt OD oar Uni. STEPHANIE EDWARDS BUDDY EBSEN ' ... in my mid-IOs' 'an over~cent on youth' University of Pennaylvania. The report, issued in April of last year, claimed that only seven out of 300 prime time characters were over 65. One of those was Barnaby Jones, played by Buddy Ebsen of Newport Beach. The show still runs in Turkey, where the procram tiUe translates into "The Young Blooded Older One." Ebeen acknowledled that age discrimination may exist in the television realm, but said be hasn't seen it. o "An old Chinese proverb says tbee's some truth in every reproach, but I as an lndiviclual have never been subject to it.'' be explained. "My motto hu always been if you don't use it, you lose It .•• 73. Et;.en sWl uses bis talent. He's a busy man at AJtbouah Ebaen baa escaped the jaws of age discrimination, be readily criticbes the public's general attitude toward older Americana. . "There's an over·acoent on youth," be said, ''and the country isn't in too tood shape and maybe that's an indictment of tbat policy." To which we can only add, "Right on." But notbina is likely to chanae the attitudes of the televisionland moe_uls. They are agtst. They are sexist. And they run the abow. ne~ TV Log lnaide TV will be atatf writer Jeff Parker's weekly sampling of what celebrities are up to. Parker will tap a variety al IGUl'eel to tell you what bappeoa on u well u off tbe studio set. Alao, look for wlrt eervlce news and' featunl covwilll tile Datlcmal aeene. Discover bow ...... "1l11per" protrama turn into over· nlabt WDlllll tttdJe IDOWl'I fall under tbe 1trob Of.-NlelMn ratiall u . o.,time Dr... II your weekly pkle to what'• happened in your favorite aoap operu: )'OU won't miss an ounce ol love, fear and in· trtgue. ·And for a quick glance at special interest programming, turn to such weekly offerin11 u the Movie Guide, Sports Hl•blighta and the 1eneral HIPllthta for the WM. Budding writers or lnquisitl"e television fau can turn to tb'lr typewriters for the aew lettera·to-tbe-TV edi\or column. Kids will enjoy their own s pecial column each week. And older folkl will find brain· teasen la the form of TV pualea aM word tames. -------------- --. --. ----- I A \ FRIDAY'S SPECIALS JULY 17, 1111 MOMIG l:OO CJ) THI NlWlilAID F0t )'OUllO Jofr/, Man. 11 mor. ttlan IN -meld - ..... -end needed friend. t::30 Cl> DAVID •1&1WN ~ .. HOU.YWOOD DeYld 8Mehen ......... BUrt ~end~ lllelt. t-.aO (J)M'LL • NGHT Mac Avwy 8chnllbet end Criati- na Ferrer• ho9t Ihle look at acme of the moa1 unJOf· gettable ~dell -made. AiidWOON 4llO. HOT ITIJlllF: THI ...,.AUMN'Ta ~ NlW ~. v..... ... tall .. on• tow of AlnMca'• mCMIC Ol'lglMI oulllne ffom the Cfede ,_...,.end the ,.....,.INt ..... 11. l:OO (JI) THI GOCWY "°"'8 "'°"" ~.The Welt Dllney «**'e ..,.,,. ... he cldn't k.-llbout IN wmtd of ... """""" 1111 ,.... lrtend. ''Tiie 8'llrtl Of 8port911wllfllp, N (J)DAW>•-wta ..,.,.... .. HOU.YWOOD DeYld 81-'-' lntervWa .., ~ encl Linde lllalr. .,,_ -uo (J)wru. • NGIKf MCI( A.,.y 9dwelber end Cf-. ,. ,.,.,.. ..,.. INa looll .. _,. of the lftOet Wlb- ...... OOllWIMldMI -mede. t t:OO CD> ISM.a Ne CIO'TI .... ..... end Crofte .,,.... • .-ion end ...,_ mat ln-atudlo epeclal t.aUlng ,_. Mur,.,, ~~end Pall Wll9ma. Cl> llZAMI JO( Jotln ~ --you "*"' ..,.,... than trutll. larger then .... encl -- ttlan 8f'Y1Nnt you•w --· 1:00 CJ) Wl'LL • NGHT MCI( Avwy 8c:fftlber and CftaU- na Ftnwe ,_. tflla looll at acme of the moet unfor- ~ -a... -made.· 4'30 Cll llZAME JO( John ~ ltlowa you ... .,.,., than truth, llrgar than ... and Z9nllf ttlan 8f'Y1Nnt you've --· SATURDAY'S SPECIALS JULY 1t. t•t MON9IG 1:00 Cl) AMENCAH DANCE Mot.atM: Gw.i V•don and a troupe of danoara ~· many of Ille beat l'OYlin. from eome of the blgga9I hlta on 8roedwy. tO:OO Cl) T/IMYA TUCKEl- HOTI TlW ~ rock 'n' rol 1C*:1111 IPOClclMa IN dynamic lirlgW In a pea- ... and~per­'°"'*-.__, at ... AoJty nlgh1duD In Loa ,..,...,., La Coala .. ...., taalured. • t 1:00 Cl) HOLD IE Paul ~ 11 -.iured In thll twl>«:t play by .... ,...,., dlPetlng the .... bllty of urtlln .... t:009 TNIWAI A'Jllm•CA "A F9lllly Allufn" Cl) U. ICM DMCa IMCIN . o..i v.dOn and a troupe of dancer9 pt9Mnl meny • of ... beet routtnee from tome of the biOoaal hlU on •oadweJ. !:GO. KWt9lllt Tiia hlltory of IEaal9rn ,........ ...... end how .. l(JlyMr PMa ,....... to ltw bealegad country I• llXplorad In .. ~ t#y. . 2:aO • .,..,.,,. ~ LM!8 ,.AIT ~Ptloa...,.... .. tlmaboutthe~ AamboWI ~ of fel*lll • ....... end ... ~ ....... ~ ... ... of "'°"' Idol Audolptt v~. (A) UICI CJ) HOLD .. PU~la.......,ln thll two-act play by .... ~ LOOKING BACK -WUM Star~U flop left), 1tar of the Pitt.burgh Piratu, will be among ho1t Hal Holbrook' 1 gue6t1 on the fourth edit1on of 'Omrabul,' •patusing the~ art1 on tM ABC Televilion Ndt.oorlc (Ch. 7) Staldal/ from 1-8 p.m. OtM11 appearing OTe muJical hper ltar Carly Simon (below left) and le{l(n- dary rock 'n' roll 1tor Chuch &rry. IVB9tll UO (JI) mm I IR Wt8: --... .... Ne WM8n9 ~ Cawtt ........ ,. IOty ol ,.,__.. .,.,...,,_ t.-on "°"' .. OCMf9d WligOfl of tM Qd W.C 10 ._....,.,,a.,.....,. ......... l:OO. THI \INIJIRMOUND COlllXllUN Alt UntllttW ..,... thll ~ of ... plgt'll of paraacuted Qlrtlelana In Co1nmunlal controlled countr1aa. • THIWON.O~ QWW.a~/IMY John i.aw-•a fllm _. aring Illa de)< to day lta of U.S. oomNl aolclara In VlllnMI wtlldl Ol'tglnll)' ..., Oft C88 In 1910 .. 1*oedceM and updliled. Cl) THI flOOTI Off M>CIC 'N' ..OU. • "Rock Starta Aolllno" Ho11: Franecte Avalon . Guallle: The Am•*iooa. The ~ WolfMM .lac*. l}la °""8B. Lima lvrfMny ..... Boone, Con- way ~. Danny Md the Jun6ora. Cai1 ,...... ~ HO I'-TMIY NM'°" na.UWI Johnny Mann ,........ ... plgl.i of EINol*n ,... palnSo!Mla. -A~TION WITM MM.CGlil f'MllR A ¥1111 with ltle prime rntn- later of Al*talla; an lnter- Ylaw with Tom Fowlar of Soutfl Carolna'• CTV and 1111 ... wltfl Preeldenl ~ 10:tO CJ) WHAT'8 UP AMINCAI Anand the MCOnd annual «-'ry "F~lc:­ Klnetic SQApue "-''; ,,..., a Here l<riallna Palece In W.C Vlrg6n6I.; conault a bird~ wM cour.-- .... pet -· wlttl prob-lem blrde; axPore the teo- -.d •ound Hartey-OeYld- IOn; and ..,.. wlltl i.... a--about the gtMt- ... c:oMacllon of "kltech" art In America. SUNDAY'S SPECIALS JULY 1t, ,_, MOMIG t:00 8 Al WI WITH CANDlaDO Modern marriage and anclanl lrulN ... ..., lhrougtl h lby of one ooupa'• wadding --~(A) l:OO • Al WI WITM CANDlaDO Modern mautage and , ....... !MM ... ..., ltwOlllll Illa *"Y of one ooupa•a wadding _. ny.(A) NILJIQON t:at Cl) THI WN:/l!(Y WOMD ~JOMTHANWWT'IM Hoae: Orton walea. ...... Mmff INQAl IV9ltea l:OO (II) V11nw.t THI TIN TIGIUND DAY WM "~ Hopae" The U.S. tuppon o/ the Diem regime " ......... (Pitt 1:00ia OM•'• Hll HolltoOil " joined by Carty .._. Md .... FIY9 Dunewey In ttle blrtfl ol ..... --of . ............. ......... 1:11 e tlOD It THI DOaC In a daaa don ..... Ood II placed on trtm tar al Illa '*"' ~ end ftllMry .....,. e.r ... l'unln tamll)'. .... •• naMl ~INCIAL -~---- -ii~ _ .. For 250 mllon,...., raptlal and.....,...... lleve ~ .... torm mpatt from ._ llW* n- "'*--~THIWN> "The Seedl Of Fire" Aa • ,_.. of ,_ lmrOlverNrlt In !tie ,..,..,,. .... ~ llltl Ne In nland. 111- ~~ Mary ...,_ " •••ICiad to _,.., years 91 ,.._ Soultl WaMa. a daacMale penal colony. (Pert 1) l':OO •a 100 Y'fAM °' GOUllNHfT8 Wllllam Windom and John DaYldaon .,. joined by Johnny Caal'!. June c.rter Calh, George Cwtln, Gor- don Mac:Raa, Hanry Man- dnl, EtMI Merman and ottler9 fOf • chronologlcal looll at the muatC wl1lc:ti llaa tie.I NCOrdad llinOI ThomM Edlaon .,_.,ted the pflonograph 1n 1 an. • AGAINIT THE WIND "The Wld a-·· After • lix-ftlOnttl YOV9 Mery .,.,,_ .... '*"'colony, on/ly to make a ~OUI ~of a .... Soutfl Wal•• Corpe officer, &wlgn ~(Part 2) t:IO CJ) THI WN:/l!(Y WOMD Off JONATHAN WlifT'IM Hoat: Orton Wtllaa. 10:00. MAMT THE WINO "A Ouaaltot'I Of O." Maryftrldl .. 1.1~ Mind In JondWt Garren. • ~ Engllfl conYlct. (Pwf 3) • DON'T COUNT THI CANDLa A_.....,.~ on aglrio produced by Lord Snowdon '°' C88 In 1981 pof11'•>11io ttla dlflwent ~ people dam with growing o6d .. r9bt09dcaet end updllled. (Jl)81'Ml*e ROOM ONLY:HN•••tWt HOU.YWOOD From Illa MGM Gr8nd .... In t... Vegaa. 0.. Kally ,_.. a olltWtno t... vao-,_ ""*" ..,... th• ootdan era of ~IO In acJflO end danoa. l:OO (J)8UUM40T CNWOND The ... of .. WOftd'• lftOllll lllOOll.,...11 ....,. ~llperbiMdbyllla orlglN London caM .... CoronM .,._ In Loa ,..,.... ..,...... Altd Arn&lflllj.-<See Pace 4> '1 • I ~ • . --~· (From PaJe 3) MONDAv•s SPECIALS M.Ya,1tlt ...,..... l:OO (J) ll'OTUOHT ON JBllf'( LEWl8 The any c:omedllrl .,.,. '°'1M on _.. et the Satwa Hot91 In LM Veo-, le ....,. In • beckltll09 ~Ind In dips from -of hit fllml. 7:00(J)TAHYA ruawt .. HOTI This h¥d-dr!Ylng rocl< 'n' roll ~ IPOlllghta the dynM1k: elriger In • PM- tlonate end powwful per· lonnance Ulped at the Roxy nlghlCIUb In L08 Angeles. LI Coet1 11 llllO leltured AFTE1'NOON 12:30 ()) IPOTUGHT ON JIEMYLEWl8 The uny c:omedllll .,.,. forma on ltege et the Sehl(a Hotel In 1.M Vega, .. r.tiJreci In • becUt8g8 Int.mew end In dips from -of hit fllma. S:OO ®DR. INUOOLi8:.THE AEM•AKAalE f'tDOETY ~ Anlmated. Dr. Snugg ... ·~ by Peter UStlnoY) tr..,. to outer IPla to find out who hu ~ steellng ttie OC11N from e.th. 5:30 <Bl GEOAQE JOHE8: WITH A UTT\.E H8.P FftOM HIS,...,. The count[)' ""'* ,,., .. joined by hie dalghler Oeoro-tt• JonM, Jaaal Cotter, EMt Coetallo. ~ HSi1I. Waylon ~. T~ Tl.dw Ind Tlf'lllTIY ~ '°' • ._.... ltlOW Id the Country Club In Loa Ano--- ~ 7:00. /tDllllMT THE WIND ·-n. Aogglng P8non" Dinny O'Byme. • lltaable rtbel. befrilnda Mary end Jonathan end "VII them to conform to the ayatem. (Per141 CB)THE BEACH 80Y8 IH COHCEn' Thi IOft-rodl group wtlich brings bad! hippy memo- ,... of tile ·eoa perlorms dll8le lllla lnc:ludlng •• Ber. b1r1 Ann," "Surlln' U.S A.," "Uttll 0.UC41 Coupe'" end "Good Vlbf• Ilona." (I) 8POTUOHT ON JEMYLEWll Thi uny comedian P«· lorma on ac.ge 11 the Satw1 Hot.I In LIS Vagea. " ... ,urad In. backltega lntervtlw end In Cl1P' from eomeofhillllm-. l:ilO. AGAINST THE WINO "An AQr.-nlnt ~ Officers And Othan" Mery, Jonllhln end Dlntly drMm of trtildom, but their futurea are thrMt· 11\ed by thl greed end power of the Hew South We ... Corpa. (Per1 51 ~.Cl) ..... UHIVEA8E PMV.Kf Co-llo9C• Bob aani. end Elke So(!wner end ..,... gueet .....,. Allen llfl on hand .. -of lhl world'• most "-'llful -* tor • title end etown In thle eplCill to be ...... "°"' .. MIMloft ThMter ln New Yclftl City. • A cw.ca <W1WO ~Ct4"AAHD AliWNCA ArttaUc clr9dor of tlll Houlton Biiiet Bin Ste- YINOn'' l'9tllm to Iha People'• "9pllblc of an to ~ ltud9ntl of Iha Peking Denol Acedemy In Wlltlrn .,_ .,....,_ le dWOll6dld. 10:00 •a THI! LMT CCWWEHllkl Georqa, Del end Teny mMt for• 25th reunion to loOk bed! • "'* c:ollgl days end .,.-11 theit Mure. (Per1 51 (A) • re 'OMS <W BJ8lE A tt1bute to Ellble Blake .... Uf. • """ eegrnent namitad by the greet reo- llme planitl hlmMlf end per1C>m\lllCIM by S., Tey- IOr, Alberta Hunter end Iha Hlri. Slot .... (A) • POAC&.AIN EHCHAHTMENTI A 10o1c et Iha er1 and at the llrtisU WflO UM POfQMln u thell' ptlmery medium. TUESDAY'S SPECIALS JULYl1f ttl1 • MOMMO 11:30 (I) DAVIO 8HEEHAN'8 IHOWTIMEIN HOUYWOOO OIVld Shllhln lntarvlewl Burt ~ Ind Linda Blllr. The wec&y comedy Of ,.. l.Mdllberg Ind • muelc:el performance by ...... Scnielder -.... tured.· ~ t:aO Cl> WON.O ..ou...P a.ex> CHAWIOMIHtP Tll 8abllollla end Randy Gardner jolfl Mat Skip s~ .. ten coup1ea from Wound the WOf1d compete tor Iha lltta of WOl'ld roller dl8co c:hlrnpl· on. 7:00. AOAMT THE WINO "A HOUM On A Hiii" Jonethan drMmS of mar- rying Mery. but her mll- lr .. I~ her to to reject him, (Part 8) aJ) GREAT MOMENTS i.. BAIEBAU. The hletory of bMet>911. trom Its origins to IM P'M- ent 0.,. 8:00 . a..DMN Of THE THIN>WOAU> DMl'I Jor1-holll "' up. bell oocurnentary on the • torootten cnlldren of Third· Wof1d countries. • AQAIHIT THE WINO "The Tree Of Ubetty" Din· rry la ~I to Cutll Hiii prllon farm Ind becomes lnYOIYad In rebellion plana. (Pan 7) Cl) BIZARRE rY John Byner lhOWI you things w.nger thin trvlh, lwger than Illa. and mnler than lflYlhlng you'w - -l:'I theM tpeelat encore pr_,t1tlonl from the ShOwllma BIHrra librery. -8:30 (I) HOUSTON 9IO l:AF'F Off' Billy Ci'ys1el halt• this ltlnd-up comedy comc>etl· lion Ulped at Rodi ........ lnHoutton. t:OO. Cl) MY OlO MAN l(1'lty ~ Ind W•· l'WI Oat. .,. In the 8tory of • t..Aiier Ind her down-anckJut "*-ltain- er NlMr wtlO -.....ited Iller a 14-~ MPWation. ; WI.DAM A drernadc loOk at • fire lhld burned 111.000 ecrea of loreat In ._. than 8 daya and needed air atttkea ullng Wortd W11 K pl1ne1. IXH, l hOYl ll , Chlmlcall end thouMr1dl of ftrlflght.. to utln- Ql.lllh. WEDNESDAY'S SPECIALS JULY 22, 1881 M<>fVflNO 5:30 (I) INTEllHA T10NAl AU.· ST AR FESTIVAL Loi• Filan•. Lia Mlnnem, W1yn1 Newton. Ban ver..... 'rile Muppet• ere emong lhl stars 1 .. tured In this apec;tacutar 9\llfllng of enter1111nment. 8:30 (I) WE'U. BE RIGHT BACK Avery Schreiber and Cr11tl· n• Ffltrar1 host tllll IOolc 11 -of the~ unlor- getllbla commercllll -mede . AfT£ANOOH 12:80 (I) IHTERNA T10NAl ALL· STAR FESTIVAL Loll Flllnl. UU Mlnnllll, Wayne Newton, Ben Ver_,, Thi Muppeta ere lfTIOl10 lhl atart1 fMIUfad In this "'8Ctacular evening of enter111nmant S:OO (I) THE NEW MAIO For young Jo.,. Marta Is ,,_, than the ,_ meld - ........ • ,_ and needed friend. t:ao ®Oft.~ a · THE UtmUIYMLI WON .. 0-. AININTUM Ani!Nted. °'· ~ (volcle by P«er l.letlnolll t..a. tor ... '*'* °' the ~ to lelWn Vie rMIOf'I It* wery<Cf91lture In .. d ,_ tumid Into • butter· ('I) ~T10NAL AU,. 8TAR R!llTIYAL Lola F 111111, Liza Mlnnllll, Wayne Newton, Ben v..-n. Tiie Muppet• are emono 1t1e ....... ,'"" In lhll tpeCtacuw -*'II • of entertllnrnent. \ IEVENWQ t.'00 Cli) THE GOOf'Y SPORTS STORY Anlmllad. The Wiit Dlaney canine lelrna things he didn't know lbout the wottd of spor19 through hll .-i friend, "'Thi Spirit Of Sportsmanship.'' 8.:30 CJ) WE'Ll BE NOHT 8AQ( Avery Schr .. bef and Cristi, "' "'"-host Ulla look " some ol 1111 most unfor· gettlbla c:ommerc:llll -made 7:00. AGAINST THE WINO '"Wharl Kings Go Forth To Bittle'" Dinny and other rebel• l)f'epara for blttla u 1 lore. of redeoats loPPfC*hea. (Pan 8) 1:80 G NATIONAL GEOORAPHtC SPECIAL "Gorlll•'" E.G. M1rsna11 h<>lll I IOolc 11 the lflorta ol zoo dltectors, dedicated lndMduall and ac:ianllst• wllO ara worillng to anura thl1 1111 largest of the GfMI apes doea not fall vtctlln to llC1lnc:tlon. (A) hJO . AOAIN8T THE WINO "The F1rmer'1 Friend" Gr9¥1111, now 1 powerful landowner, tt1es to lore. <See Page 8) Th8 San Fernando Yalley11#1 Audio Centre Con111 To Orange Countyl 1 Northrld~ Audio Hu Senecl The Valley Since 1974 & Now c ... 1 To 0Nnge County A1 SOUTH COAST AUDIO CENTRE I OPENING JULI 20th . ., ~ • -.. -· ....... _____ __. ------... SUPERIOR YAMAHA PERfORMANCE AND . . . . ---....... ·-· ... EXCLUSIVE EEATURES IN A COMPlETE SYSTEM R~lOO ·RECEIVER he R-300 provides plenty of power for all istenlng reQUlrements: 30 watts RMS per hannel, respectively (8 ohms, 20 to 20.000 z). What's really impressive, hoWever. is that get this power with no more than 0.015% istortion -a startling figure In this clus of eceiver. All your favorite musiC will sound rem&IMble live and natural even with the volume turned way up. MS-4 2-W A Y SYSTEMS <:ompact, Y9f prcX1uclng sounds for better than their dimensions would imply, theee speaker systems are ideal for use in smell-to-medium sized living rooms. bedrooms, dert6. or offices. A nice listening experience. FOR 'ONLY ' 1 I l"l"-f ---------------------------~~ --., • I, AMC-JEEP COSTA MESA AMC-JEEP~ULT 2524 Harbor Blvd. .Costa Mesa -549-8023 IOI Mcl.AllMS IMW At Beach B~vd. & Whittier La Habra ~ 522·5333 CREVIER MOTORS - 208 w. 1 st'St. Santa Ana -135-31 l I ROYCUVBIMW 1540 Jamboree ~oad Newport Beach -~64.4f SADDLHACl IMW 28402 Marguerite Parkway Mission Viejo 131·2MO -49M949 CADILLAC MAIERS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Blvd. · Costa Mesa -540-9100 CHEVROLET CH RYSLER-Pl. YMOLJT~~ DATSUN NEWPORT DATSUN 888 Dove Street Newport Beach -133-1300 UNIVERSITY OLDSMOllU 2850 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -540-9640 LINCOLN-MERCUR 1 JOHNSON & SOM UMCOLM-MERCUIY 2626 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -540-5630 MAZDA MIRACLE MAZDA 2150 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -645-5700 . . OLDSMOBILE PEUG·EO r PORSCHE-AUDI CHICK IVERSON. INC. 445 E. Coast H\W. . Newport Beach-673-0900 BILL VAN PORSCHE-AUDI 13631 Harbor Blvd. Garden Grove . 636-2333 SA AB IEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street Newport Beach -752-0900 TOYOTA EARLE IKE TOYOTA 1966 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -646-9303 MAXEY TOYOTA · :18881 Beacti Blvd. HUntington Beach 147-1555 VOLKSWAGEN ~MMARIMO VOLISWA•ll4 18711 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach 142-2000 VOLVO EARtl Ill VOLVO 1988 Harbor Blvd. ·O:>sta Mesa -646-9303 --I l SATURDAY'S SPORTS JULY 11, 1911 ~- ~I IQ!Bt ON TMa<IH' 10:aO THEM~ BUNCH tat: Johnny' Bendl. 11:0019M .. AU TODAY WCTTBNI "$200,000 ~ ln'ft. tatloNll" Vljay Amtltrlt Ya. 8118ca'llofl •• 11:11 •• Nee 8PORT8 SUMMER IEAION 10-round fMth.,...ighl bout between Edwin Roaarlo end Rodrigo Aoulue1 lrl1h Gu1- 0ek1 tll«ougllbted hor99 redng; CART MlcHgen "500" ~ (1l¥e trom Btooktyn. Midi.); • l'9pOtt on ... Tour de Pr- '*)ldt,.... ,, •• aotl .. ..., Open" I=:'°"" The IHrd rowtd of p9Y In "*~golf tour- -' .. be ---from the Roni St. Oeotot'• Golf CM> In s.n.tc:ti. Englilnd. AfiZUIOC* 11:11. VIC IMDIN'I TBMI POR THE PUTUM ' ...,.., ..... CC*ll'I vtc ..... ~ ..... to Illa ..... end""''' .,.. ~end .... COlftoo monmyttw--...,...,,.. 1:111 .... c:r:o=:k a. WWWIW OUTllOI ... Topics the __. lool'll ~ ,.. Burro ,._ hllld In .. "**"' town of lMIMle. Co6ando; the ~~ hllld .... of Dullea. .. "*"-()) eMATUT lfl'OftTI LllEIDI • l::IO(J) WIW OUTDOCM...,_.. l:GO(J) TMIWlmc .. ..... -"LL ... (I) lfl'OftTI aA~Y 8rltlell GrMd Prix --~ F0nn.a OM ...., ,.. (trom Noi1hemp. ....... ~ • flMA19T "'°"" LHLIDI "Arnold....,,... SPEEDSTER -Bobby Unser (inset) hopes to be fint under the checkered flag in the ~chigan 500 in "Sportsworld" Sunday at 2 p.m. on Channel 4. .......... ,ow 0# THE IUfllR 90WU llcGO. Uta ICAN MJlllNTUN "U.-water TT..aur• Hunt" VI~ 11111>_.. i.m to ~ '°' hlddlft trMIUr9I otr Freepon In tfle ....... !Na. • -.wa..o"' lfl'OftTI CcMrl8e of ... 15-round WM UgllC t••r •ICIM Clllmplonalllp bout ~....,.Eddie ................ end nun-.......... COft- --MfdlMI~ • 800C8t 8rtghton 119. MllldlHU uni..d t:ll a wm WON.D"' 9'0RTI CcMrl8e of .. · 1~ WBA UgM ,._., llgM Chemplon1hlp bout .,....., ......, Eddie ..... ~end numMr-OM ,...... CiOn- tendlr MlcNll .... ~ ... YIC8MD8ta TBlll POR THE PUTUM "The lled"'IWI" * ... .................. .,.., ... °' ..... MIMI..,... Md ttlOM ~hoWto~-- Ion* Mgllll (0-. "- be ...... ~ .. to .......... , .. , llAIRMXJeO ~""'°' .. 88WANV ... 9'0RTI v.m9CA ·~ W°"*''' Ventty MOVIN' UP -Unbeaten 19-year-old Bobby Czyz (12-0, 11 KOs) will face another OPeO- nent iA a to.round battle on 'SportsWorld' (NBC, Cb. 4,) Suoc:iay, July 26 at 4 p.m. Tennll Chlrnpklllltllp'' 10:00. lMI wm< .. .. -w. SUNDAY'S SPORTS JULY 19, 1911 ~ 11:00. 9 INT18H °"" The tlnel round ol pley In tllla ~golf tour- IWMnt ... be t.-c.t from th• Royal St. George'• Golf Club In Sandwlcfl. Etiglwld. al lf'ORT'IWON.D CART Mlc:tllpn "500'' lody·type "" rece (IM trom Brooklyn, Midi.); a l'9pOtt on tfle Tour de France~_~aur­ YIYll of the Flttelt. Alt!fUIOON 1:ao. ()) "°"'8 ~y Uwe OOWf1ll9 °' .. 12· round Norttl AIMrtcan loldng ,,........ LlgM· ....... °*""'°' .... boUt MtwMll Ray ''Boom lool'll" Mancini end Ja9 Lull AemlrH (from Y~Otllo,_ a.. lflOfn'llWORLD CART M6clllgM "500" ~ '*,.. (trom 8roaldJn. ..... ); a rlPO't on .. Tour de fnnoe lllC,ae ,.. ..... of the Fltteat. ~ 1•• w: ......... 1'8NI PORTHI NT\N "The ...... ld"vtcllr9-____ ...... .,.., ... °' .. .,.._ llMcl ... Md ..... ..... howto ........ ~ Ind "'*" °' "* ~..,...,..,Q 11:ao. 9'0RTI PINAL. Hoet:Jlm ... MONDAY'S SPORTS JULY ... 1 ~ , f:IO (a>HOW Al._ .....-n'I • "U0,000 Almadefl .... Anll9 ---ClllllW' The ...... llllll 'hof-. and ~~· ...... """'*'° at wtiet .. be tM -of~~ tlon for the 1114 Loa ,.,.... Olymplo a-. TUESDAY'S SPORTS JULY 21, 1911 EYl!NltG 7:90 ®MOE llOR THE NNNANT Barry Tompldna and Tim ~ '9CIC> dMllonll ~ llandlng8 and lntem.w IOfM of the oame'• tq> ~ (If the ~·.,..~ an upcllle on ... ~ .. Ille> be lncludlldJ 11:11 (]I) MCa llOR THE NNNMT lany T~ end Tim McCarwr r9Ctp dMlllorW ~ lllMdlngl and lnterv19w 80f'N of .. Glime'• top .,..,.... (W ... _.,. . ..,..~ .. _.... on IW llb.alon ..... be lndudad.) WEDNESDAY'S SPORTS .U.Yll. •t ~ .. e::mooen ..... ~·· aw-. The °*'· .... Ind ~of12-fMl99r~ OOlltl 11t 10 tor tfl9 MOit Pl •U11"'~1n~ ..... --~ .............. _ .. ~ ..... In .. doou'!MIU/y1 natrat.ci by AObel"t MacNal.(.., (JI) MCI 'OR THI NMWff lllrry Tornpldna and Tim ~,...~ ......,.. ...... and .,,..,.... 80f'N of .. oame'• top ..... "' .. ~ ... ~ an updMe on ttie lltuellon .... be ........ ) ... li:mcJM'8 ..._ • ..,_UCA'I ex.-The cotof drama and ..... ~2..-,.-00fftPI•.. tor .. molt "'11-1 ue tropfly In ~ ,...off .. ~ ............ _ ... __ lilnd In .. doal&iN etaiy narrat.ci by Robert ~(Ra I I I l -I • OntlleCofg..._ ___________ ___ ------ fay sol..-nds a lot like Barbara· ByJEUYBUCK APT......._ .... LOS ANGELES -What Barbara Boaoo aay1 at home often turna up in Fay Fwillo'a mouth on • 'Tbe mu Street Bluea.'' "My husband .W plek up whatever be may bear," abe aald. H~r husband 11 writer Steven Bocbco, wbo created and produces the NBC teriea .. with Michael Kozoll. "It's the same with the other cbaracten. Tbe writen really write for us. It gives ua aucb a now of energy." Miss Bosson is tbe divorced wife of Capt. Frank Furil.lo, played by Daniel J . Travantl. Sbe'a the one who hanp around the police station and gives him a hard time. "People usually ~t her to yell and scream, but she's done many other ~." said Min Bosson. "I only scream ln the ftrat few epilodea. Since then, it'a been a wonderful ranee. It'• so much better tban tbe 1Hretari411 I med to play." The relationahlp between Fay and FuriJJo is forever tied by their son. She said. "They can't break up became of the aoo. Tbey must continue a relatiombip, wlaicb I think 11 lntereattna. Un.like any other relatlomhip he may. have, the one with Fay will stay the same." "Hill Street Blues," which now appean oo Tuesday nipta, I.a one of the beat new 1bow1 of the year. Set in a potice station in a crime-ridden area, it's a mixture al pitty realiam and black bumor. Even thoulb it bu a large cast, each character ls clearly deftned and atanda out. Miu Bolaon came to "IWJ Street Blues" by way o( small roles in two earller terlea, "Suftlbioe" and "Riehle Brockelman." Sbe also was in the movies ''Bullitt" and "Caprieorn One." She was born in a mlnlnt tawn ln Pen· nsylvania called BelJvernoo. At U, ber family moved to St. Petenbur1, Fla. SbeJeft home at 18, determined to enroll at CarDelie Tec:b in Pitta· bur b because she retarded tt u one of the beat aiama ichool.s fn the counlr)'. She didn't make it untiJ she WU 26. On sunny side of 'Hiii Street' "1 was 26 when 1 enrolled. Freshmen would come up to me and look and say, you're not a kid. I met my husband there -be waa a kid. He was t.atinl .the playwright coune.' She said, "Mainly in the laat 10 years I've been 11a~;.....-:.:;.i • into car-poollne, room-parenting, and tbl.! morning setUnc up at my dau1bter's school graduation. That's another reason why it's such a Joy to do this. I've done other series work but none has made me this happy." Barbara Bosson and Daniel J. Trooonti FROM THE COVER -Michael Conrad cu Sgt. Phillip Elterllaiu, Daniel Traoati cu Capt. Frank Furillo qnd V eronka Hamel cu pul>Uc de· fendM Joyce Dav.mporl ore ,.,_, on 'HUI Strtet .B~s,' tht NBC (Cit 4) poUce drama that airs Tueldafl• at 9 p.m. "I just didn't sit down and wait," she aalcS. "My parent.a COl&Jdn't afford to aend me, so I went to New York aad did aJl aorta ol work and took claaaea. But 1 klaew I'd never aat11fy myself unJeaa I went. Miss Bosson said no one. not even her huaband, knows what's ahead for Fay or the other cbar11cters of "Hill Street Blues.'' "Tbe lriteresting thing," she said, "is that they must make it work as it is. ''I have problems whenever Fay gets too un· pleasant," the actress said. "Most people become actors because they want to be loved. It'• hard for me to play someone who's oot nice. I tell the writers, come on, don't make her so mad aJl the time. They say that's what makes her interesting. "Fay has two characteristics I loathe in other people. J love her so I've bad to rationalize this. She thinks she's the center of the universe. She walks into the squad room llDd thinks everyone should stop work. And second, she think• she can say the most hateful, hurtful things because she can say she's sorry later. ••For myself to do it, I choose for Fay to do it out or fear. Which makes it more undentandable for me. She's vulnerable, a lady who fights for her life, not just a bad broad." Miss Bouon writes, like her husband, but they don't write together. "We're into different areas," she said. "He's very streetwise and has always done cop shows. I wrote a script for 'Family' and one for 'Knots Landing.' ·rm doing a movie or the week, but I'm not sure I'll never show it to anybody. . ''I identlfy myself as a working lady. I got married at 30 and decided to have children. I couldn't picture myself not workln&. ID my lean days when I can't act, I write." ·- ltsb119btt for the lfeels (Fnm Pate'> ...,,· lfld ........ from tMW tlnd. ~., • MTIO*L WIFWlllO~ "Qaftli" LG. .._..., ---• looll .... ~ °' IOO ~ fl #c ..... 1n11t1•• and ......... wtlO .. WOftllnl '° ...... ............ -.. ... _ ......... .. ru:=="'. ,..._.IMCATn41 HOU.YWOOD9a. lMl*I ........... .... ............ ., .. .. • OOIMlllllOt °' .. Lei An..... ....llflarmonlc Owdl.-a. """-~ 111 ............. .... ............. "A ...... Of I.Ill And o.111" ~ II pur- ._, by~wtllle Mary .. In Mid °' ~ c.9 and .... dellet\. ,...,, ;TNf'tA 1\DC8t Hem The IUltry, clfl-* T~ Tidier ,...,_ IOrl9I ,..... "°"' ~ '° ~.-·n·rai1, 11ve tro111 lfl• Ao•y ... :. .. ':'~ '-n.l lplrll °' ........ ---""' to ..,. NI ...,.. and Miry Cleft • ..... ....... ~ ,, . • T .AIU). It I ITI ''T• " ~ .. All ................ ~ lry'I I I lll•IOI to tile ................. r..-............... COlllPMY ,_..,. ""' yalll'I ........... ................. -1===. A....._llilMllllfll• flf/lll111:1• ........ ............ _ ....... -.... .... . . .......... .. _.. ........ ..... 11 ' --·--·---------.. --- t • . -- SOUftl COA5T THRIFT PRESEITS JUMBO RADS 30 DAYS II I YEAR Now you don't need $100,000 to earn Jumbo Rates! A minjmum amount of · , , ,, ,, $20,000 will earn you 18o/o for 30 to 90 days. Or you can earn 17% for 6 · months vvith $20,000 or more. *Above rates change daffy so pleue call for current quotes. (Penalty f« earty withdrawal - 90 days interest.) • ·RXED RAIES I • I YEAR TO 5 YEARS If you are tired of moving your ;' funds, relax and earn a fixed rate for up to 5 years. , Yes! A $20,000 minimum inve.stment will earn you a check for $250.00 each month for the·term you choose. *Penalty for early withdrawal -interest 1 . reverts to 6% per .annum . . ,,. Offer limited to California residents only, . ..... t . . ,.. I I ~~ -™ -... --Lf i ·a IOOCT KN8C KTlA KA8C KFM8 KHJ KC8T KTTV KCOP KCEr KOCE Frida)'• • • • • • ~ • • • • • • Details '-...... '-..... '-...... AMAllllllll ..... ..w-... .. ..... "-Allllllll ... ...... ........ r-,, Good ..... ""' r-. -~ ,... JULY 17. 1111 Qub ...... ..... R'OGdll .. a,.... l'lllCll ~ ~ Tllnll --Mlgllty A c.... .... 7:00. HN't'Y DAY8 MAIN a: 0..-. ~ .h Apper Alc:Ne pOMe • the - IClnglroo Sin~ ~ .. of • dllll'I of ....,.. .. o.111 &•,-, ... In orOar to,,... the ,.: Mlooi181t• Cola,,..., girt. 1111 ..... .... Thi ~ 9. LaYlfll A.M. Thi Dallllll'9 ILM "°"""' "To Se\19 A Deed Men" ........ ... --... ........ Luo, "°°"' • 8nmT8 Of MN :l MDI .... ....... ~ MDI ...... lpeclll MHICllOO .., -. WMn aeon. 11 trllNd to I 10: ThlPrtoe .. Tlww'• ThlPrtoe Wlllll I Of a.room look •• 118'1 on ttle tell•. llfl!' v~ ~ llfl!' LA. Fonllnt .... INN:tlon ~~--onthalcwce.. llnl'• ~ ~ " • OWl'IAIY PU All* Ouftt1: 1uthor 8tud1 11: OneOlr ~ Young And en ThlGtlOll McMI: Blctr1c Hunl9I Tertlel, nutrltlonllt Or. AIATllM ,,..,.... Slwb , ......... ..... ~ ...... Merton ~ Mnclymen Y-aAftd .. lbll: ToTtl ..... ....,.. ..... ~,. Al Cem1. (A) Q ""' ..... ~ ThlTnllll .. Cllld A"'-' a....v ..... 12: " Nlllll ..... 0.,. Mo* Didi Col IL $DfLY au-; a.. Otodln. .. 0..1.Me z.. .. Of o..u. ..,.. .. ~ CMft ... Aobett Wlihl, David Coppei1Wd. ,..,,. MIN AaThl ~ ~ ...... 0. ..... (ll)MOYim .... z.. Waftd .. "Honey1uckl• Aoae" MtlM .... Timi .... . .... (1llO) Wlla -.on. o,.i .... ~ Waftd ....... =-Cannon • Wld. . .. (J)MOVll Wld ''The ldolmllker'' ( 1MO) r-,,. .... ,_ .... Term1 Of Ray lharkey, Tovah ~ ~ UIM ~ ...... ~ .. .. ..... ~ 1•• IONTHETOWN .. .. Holee: l'9w9 Edwerdl, MlllMy Aogera. CtlM with ... lbll: &Ar• Hu::• ... ---·*"·.,...,Aly ~ "food -..... -...ury; ...... look .. lbll: OfThl GNM Ftll 0. .. ,_.,,. .... of .... "Tiii Godl" Ooalle ,.,.... ;w=: •• =-KlrtDon \'Ill ....... IWMll ,... ..... a..: Didi Cllftl. M..U.H.. .. ....... .. ..... Wld (I) ... Ml\MZJNI "'9 N9wy'1 Aol fight ... --DllMl•llllOI• 8quedron. ..... _.... ...... n.-.~ .. °""" ....... ... ... we()) THEIMCW:-.i Va. Wll'TI ~ MUU( ......... Yw~ " Olwld goea to "°"' In • ---..n owned by • KMCT "KNBC KHJ KC8T KTTV. KOOP KCeT KOCE .,....... ~ WOl'lllft.(A) •• MMlllRYN.UY • • • • • • • • fl'TA , .... cempaiglll for ...,... _ ...... '-...... '-Allllllll Lei ...... .. ..... OfOlla ..... _, ....... ............ .,,11• -11113 ~T--. .... ..... ;~ .. ..... •• ''The T,_,.. (1M7) ..... fOfld9. "-' ........ ~ ;n....,.. ...... _,Marcy .. } Kr9a .......... .,,,,, ............... ) ._,.""'~- ...,.,.. to -..... _.,..,.. e-:&;"'°'· CA> * "The FM!ly'' (1173) a.. lronaon. ........ i land • • lllCMI *** "flGlw For T_ ... l I 1• ffllnk 8lnaitr9. Urw-• ·~ ..... , • L.OllulCS •WIB( -~ Holl: a.ea Mbana . • WALL..,_,.Mm< "A Second OlanU At The ....,...,. Quall: lllonlld A. Ollll9......, ...... ....... of~ :::..::.-....... (8ee DSl'A.11.8, •••e IU INTR0DUGING .· ·~ • • NATIONALLY KNOWN. AWARD WINNtNG.JEWB..AY DESIGNER ~ s,;_,;._,. c.r.,.. Ml Mir l¥ N,.,,,.,., ''"'" ''C~iw E/tga11tt i11 Fini Jewelry " ~IRJ[.~ C.JI far 1111 ..,,_..,,. (714 J 7«J-6166 (.n·~J_"\\\-l11iit In:. 2110 E. P~ CCWIT HWY.• CORONA DEL MAR, CA., 12125 Haf1"1'.'ond -Organ and Piano center MOVING SALE Hammond Organ and Piano Center, located at 2854 EaJI Coast · Highway in Corona de/ Mar for the past 20 years, is · "l()tling September I st. The new and larger headquartm will be al 270 E. I 7th Street in Hillgren Square, Costa Me.ra. All merchandise new and used ulill be on sale with di1ro11nt1 11p to 400/o off d11ri ng the remainder of July and A11g1111. Sale ends A11g11st ?9th. No reasonable of'9r refUMd (71 .. )644.., ·llatcber -f.lells FRESH SHARK FRESH S\\ORD DAILY SIDE OF BEEF '1.39~ KTLA e 8:00 -"The Trip." Peter Fonda and Susan Strasberg star in a Cilm about a young director's LSD trip, which becomes a rampage. KOOP e 8:00 -"Four for Texas." A shady banker settles the feud between two cowboys in this movie starring Frank Sinatra and Ursula Andress. NBC B 8:~ -"The Other Side of the Mountain -Part II." Marilyn Hassett and Timothy Bottoms star in a movie continuing the lite story of skier Jill K.inmont. KCET II 10 :00 -"Free to Choose: From Cradle to Grave." Dr. Milton Friedman discusses negative income tax and the welfare system. Frldayi Details ~ --- --~-- oa.-. •. .._.. ....... nw·•, ._. J ... W 1 "-w'IZ".4 ... 4 0.,. A• .... 72• ,.,. ... ,_. hr· M .... ba,f .... Offw ........ ""' 23, ... c ........ .., ... .... MewW•DllMf....W...,,_,,,_.. D 'I wma.fter.1• c!i ~W...-hm!Wllld , ... ..._ ............... ~ .. .................. MMNP4 c.n. .......... ., lliw1·1 -L ... ..., .,........_ •• r: 1w-"""-T...., .... .. ... o..· , ......... ................. ...., JULY. SALE OF ...,._ V.IDEO CASSETTE RECORDERS VET460 -~"-=~· ~·-•'"·--· ··---.;..-:: ··~- THE LOFT ANTIQUES •·SPECIALIZING IN: • Pnfeelional ~ • RetNlir. Belton ,_,. f1ll'llit1lre • 1:at•• .......... Sold • 11--.emeet ol Estate Saa. onO-•..._ • Llqllidation The Art Gallery ''We sell the best-we restore the rest'' • Fine Arts • Portraits • Restoration • Art Lessons • Autllentic Indian Jewelry ,. THURS. EVE. SEMINARS How to value paiatinga -what ar~ Lithogropha, de., famoua guest artUts. Fun and Rc/re~nwnti 4 -··----------------.._-. ..-- KNXT KNBC . KTLA KABC KFMB ~ ~ . ·~ • ft,. • • • ' a......-.... ~_ ~!!it"!-. .......... ....... 7: Quler• Tiii ,........... ~-~ T,..._ Fiii ... .. ,,.. Mirto .. Big Blue .. ~ " " """* .. .. s: Tom And Godzlll ,. lluldlrr flll Tom And .,..,., .. ......., ...... .,..,., 1::.V llltnwl Alt HlllllcM luge AndTlll Plfrol &Dhlblt lkmy 9: ttOIO &tplf V..,e ..,Dirt Rold ,_..., s..i Te TM Ollig ,_..., .. Dllt1 1118111110! .... .. . I " -i>uct n.a. flctl .. 10: ~ Tiii Oall& ~ ~ .. ...... Hlnlll .. =.wl<Ollg Anwtcl'• Thundlrr Tiie .. " T~T .. ...... " 11: Lone . == WCT ---Lone Alr'9lr T ... Spec:tll Alr'9lr Tinin Summar .. Goll: Temn .. S-0., .. 8rtlllfl .. . 12: Flf Albert .. loll In °""' Ft&Albert ff " Spece -Onill Pldl " " .. Onill Pldl " " .. ., .. 1: '&(Ir .. The "°'* IRlf COllllllllld .. ......... 1 COllllllllld ...... .. F-TtOOP Ol9ll ...... .. " .. AMnUe " 2: .... ~ umglll'• " Allboll ''Olllll Ollldlill-...... .. C-..0 CNll" TllkAllaul ..... Amlllng Welell'll .. ...... .... Woltd ~aa1•••t 3: .. Aei•·-Mollll: .. ;. . U.&A. "The .. ::::.. e., ...... .......... &partl TllilWealr "· ll.-dl ....... 4: .. " .. ~-...,_ ~ .. . . ~ . .. . orn. ...... .. .. " ,...,BOii ....... s: ..... ......: .... &pol ~ 4M -WoftdOr VI. Lllt()I ..... " 8partl Sir!°"'° llltWld .. . .. ..... . . KNXT KNBC KTLA KA8C KFMB • • • • • La ..... ........ w1-.... a.....-. ....... 6: CISNM NICNM Mollll: .. "Hiio ..... Mllyl'yllr OIMlt ..... Moore llln" PortrllOI .,,. Allglnd HalrMIOd = OL &IOI " Lo. 81111 ,.. ..... KHJ -KCST ~ -KTnL KCOP· t«JE'f I r ~ -... Fl' ·~ . ~r. ----i..a,..... .. ..... a..-.-a......-.......... l4ot Tiii r .... Aon.-Yoga For Fudge Fintalonla Sc.le Room Hllnll Giggllll10l1 .. UpAnd ~ v....- l«*I .. Comna Fectcwy Soup Wei Goddll McMt: Rlbop Rlbop Andltlrdy .. "8'111 Ftldwll 8llmlll Tiii o.tlln' Ula .. AndTht ~· 0. AIOln!U. .. &!per .. QuePm, ~ .. SeMI .. U.S.A.? .. .. Dllt1 " c.ldlr .. .. Did .. .. .. .. Tiii Hogln'• Mo¥lt: Keep On .. ..,,. Hlrola "Th•Lllt T'***1' Mo¥lt: Hongkong a.-.. DlyaOI ~ ''Hit ~ llllndl Pompll" The . a-. Todly c.c... .. .... Ice" N8CSporta Cenlrlt .. Q*I .. ~ ScU SOCI:* ~·· .. s-.i TtWI .. Tibia Md. ff " Mlrc:ua Slln Md .. .. Wt/bf QMll Welt .. ....,,, .. Vic .. .. .. llndan McMt: .. " .... Fall "The .. " .. ,., ~ Liit .. Ol*9oor CondlOI" llltO.- W....." .. I.lie " M CO!lnl .. 5 ..... Khyber .. Hltlllmoa .. To lJWI .. .. Etplnol .. lob " .. ~OI .. *"'-1 .. .. U.Pllt .... MlrJT• 11lil Wealr .... OldFttlndl "llMm Moore In ..... '-n.n" .... Fttlndl Ab'llllle AllnTht Dodglr " liUldO ~· FMlllw ~ .. Alli .. .... ..... .. ,,_... " WWlll:uo(.:" Lal " ff .. " = .. n. .... " .. .. Voice ~ .. vs. .... .. .. PH ... . ..., SOCI:* " ,,.... F..-. " .. " .. Clnoonl" .. KHJ KCST KTIV KOOP KCET • • • • • .... ~ ....... La ..... .... ....... a..-...-. N8C ..... Ola .... AClll* ..... TOIWIW'a ,..... WldWortd t.ar.a 1..-... OIAllllMll _. _. Gold City ..... Llmlll ...... .... n. """'• ... ...... Radio .....,.., WoltdOI C--*" , ...... " ........... a.ti ..... .. ,.. IJAnd _ ... ..... n.a.. ForTll* I.Ml TlllOdd ..... ~ ea..,e. " ..... .... --Up "Cllidne" ,... ... Mo* "Odd .. Lit• RDCll .. --~ ~ ~·-· .._ ------- --·.~ -........ - Ol&rfl And Mln OI Elr1ll AndMln WdllngFor AAIMorl Wl'lllngFor AAIMorl WftllngFor AAIMorl WTlllllO'F« AAIMorl Votlr'a Plptll'9 Helllll ..... ...... ..... Hellltl ..... Hllllfl ..... Hllllfl ..... lnlnldldlg 8loloe """**'° Bloloav "*odlldnO ... •allldlg 1 .... ......... ...., .... 8lfll!W ....... ' ....... ...... ....... .... ......,, .... ~ KOCE • ......... n. l.....-.• Ylclr8dlll'• T-* ...... e--. OI 8por1I -.a .. Aullrl City Ulllll . ~ . u ------ JUl.Y11, 1tl1 EV£NNO U'° 8 .. SEARCH ~-·· '"Mwllyn Mont~" • PORTIWT Of A U!OeHD ''St.,_. Wondet'' e WILD, wtlD WOALD ~N9iW..8 "A T• Of Two Fox•" The lo• llgur• ptom~t­ ~ In men'• mythCM<>gy - IM In W9Y9 wt1'c:tl •• not r« 1111 "lly ltU9. • QI LAWMNCE WW< "Ea9y Listening" • 80UDGOlO Ho.I: DlonM Warwick. au.ts;~ Miia, Oeryt Hal a John o.t-. Dotu. w-. -PNston. Jim Phologlo, Stan .. y CW1I & Oeorg9 Duk•. Cliff Ncfllrd, "'* fillldeno. • AUIT'IN aTY UMITI ... Monro. And The ~Boyt I AlcW9 In The&ky'' .Cl) THI!......,.. Guell: a... l<My • 9 lHAT'I HOLLYWOOD "Fonda And F~" .(l)MCMI ''The°'-' SanlW' ( 1979) Robert Duvall, Blyth• o.w.. , •• THI!......,.. Guell: o.borlh Hany. eWHAn IWFB•IGll fWun oet• hll tougll ...,....,_.. to bet hll ~ money on a toot- 11111 """ IOOOI dll 19 to ~·· ''1ocApiout" ay.-""'-• MAGIC Wl'HOO Of OI. PAlfTIMG ...... ~ ..... Cl) .. 11.MCH °'-· "The l..ullm!W' ...... Tw.!IM ~ Hoel lob ...... with Dr. M9rtl 8du*lt of "" YA ....._ c.Mr In LaJoll 9bollt the .,..._ mentof ~ .... (C)MCME *** "TM YOUftl In .._... (1938) Douglu Falfbankt Jr.. hulMI• Oodderd. <B)MCMI "Soft Yoyaoe. Chart .. BtcN!n" (1979) AnllMt«t. ... IN08 Eno• and Turk ert ...... to WOiie wlltl • P"'"Y cllttlct enom.y on Iha -.of • mllllnO '* •27 .. -~ Nl8)T'HE IWIDMl.L ..,_ Qveeta: ..... ., G-. T..., Pwldtl91-(ft) • N>OTI"" M)Q( NIG9'0U.. Hoel: Frankie Avalon. ~~IM i...ea, 0.0 llerry. FaD ~. C...W T""'Y, Ftltlllft. ~Miiian, .... Boone. .. -..r • INOUllH (See SAftJaDA Y'S, Pase IJ) . -- .. (formerly Stereotype Sound presents a '""' --• ..!!" • -~ -• ~-·----- ·----· ----.. ...._.. ----.. KTLA e 8:00 -''The Roots of Rock and .Roll.'' Frankie Avalon hosts a special with guests Jerry Lee Lewis, Chuck Berry, Fats Domino and Coo way Twitty. KCOP e 8:00 -"Merrill's Marauders." Jeff Chandler and Ty Hardin star in the· life story of Brig. Gen. Frank D. Merrill. Ray l"arllay, Tovah f'eldlllull. t:ao. ROCK IHOW , OuaMa: Prtnca, Blondia, the AofMntic:a, ~. ~ ....... .. ..,.,,. Of T'lla Not1tl" The mylhl and ,...._ of the llgandary Viking «» .,,._....,,_,~Q CD>MOYll ''w.le a Ptlll" (1MO) Mlctlllll Onellaan, MllrOOC Kidder. *IOeecwa~ PLAY F9lllUrWd: Nglonal 1111811 In "America'• ToughHt Bouncer" comj>9tltlon; ~~~IMn'• and "°"*''• ann _... tlllnglNllL(R) •B 'NffMYaAND A -,_q m6ddle ... "·~Into. etunnlng ~ beauly, and an 1111daioower aoarlt tncb ~ ..... of ~CNQ • MCMI •• '"Tiie CnidW' (tt71) ~ Cenol, W.Q. MeMl- len. • U\'8TBW "AIOecca" At the .,_. tlon Of Mra. DarMrl, .. -Mra. da --oop6aa • dNaa trom • por1nlt In the gallery tor • ,.......... of .. tt.-a.111 ... ~ coaune Ml. CP9tt •I I"> it AU111N cm LlllT'I "Doug ~ I CMlorl a..'' .MCMI "Sornewtl«e lfl Time" (1llO) ~ ...,., ......... 1MOCC>lllCMI ''The c.tMlount l<llng'' Horet aucttllob. Al'\n Wedgaworl\. CllWMAT'a UP ,.._ICN Attend tfle-" ..... ~ .. ,~ IUr.elc ........... ; Wilt .... l(ltlflM Pallaoe In Well Vlrllllle: OONUlt • lllrd ................. ooun- ... ,. ---""" PfOO-laM...,. ........... lnder'OUllCI~ ~-....... L.-lr ~ ........ . ... oallalolt of '"'*"'" ert In AmartDa. , ... aNNY-... ---, .. , ..,.._ o.-= Dllllld .... l!llilrl Folly • • lllCMI ••• ''Clludlne'' (1174} '*"-' c.ea. ........ EM--. .DMOIPIVM ~ ~ Carot w.-. lof9lt •oot1• . .... ...... Gueat: Lar-•GI::... ,........ .......... loll ............. ,..,.. ...... .. ........ .. ... ~Mm ....... """"· Moe °""' .... T .... Cll>llDWll .......,re..,.,..... ............... CZ>... . -a-•au•• or n. ................. U~\ (Di --;------ $599°0* HSCIRM TILIVISIOMS s70000* * TAPE SPECIAL $J299 * • --/ -· ~ ~ .---_.--~ i~ , · . ,~ -~ ~Qil ,!1f ii :! ~ i 'I lI! l 11 ~ : 1J'1 . I ~ i.5 ~ I ~ 11( "' 1 ., f ,,• ~ - i . i ... l ., . "'" i ~ ' 1·~ 77 777 -i •i - '•i l • -i' 1·~ - '•i I .... i 1 ··~ r ~ I..~ ·i ~ i •s t.. 11. i . ;< :z: ;•111 5 •§ > ~11~;~, ~ i I i.1~:1i ~ I r1 ·1~i . ·1~11111 · .·z1 ·J 11111 i. § . : . . ; .. , , ifl ; ; z. -, ... I .. I!. .. _... .. ~ ~(lf;i "'r·i J . "-"·"''~ ·~·'· .. ---~ . . . " '\..~,1 rH:~ri ."-~ i 1!! t!t 1!iiil1'~M!1 ii:i~s 1 f~11!iisl 1 l•!i 1 ~i!!ll :h!I ·:l'i1 I !Hd,;!!hliFiiil' a ~ •HhU ~' · .~! ; f ,1 U i!J~~f ~:di,· HfJI~ U "~if ·11 U (m Hirl 11 h u:~ -!11! ~f~u f ~-111, ' a_ •. ....___ -....' ,_,...... ? I ~.· "Jf ·• ~' . . . ' s --•·-•, '"'~·· -·-Lr\'.~r---:· ~·--.. -_,&oif _ .. dOf es--,;;--> c • \ ~ 'I I. ~I "' •, ------------------------------.......--------------------·--.,~~--1 .. 1303 AVOCADO I SUITE 115 NEWPORT BEACH, CA 82MO 714 / '40-4210 • •TOP QUALITY Comp«1tlll9pbe • • Offlet Printing Business c.rdt • •Colored Inks lettetheadt • • Metal Ptates Envek:lpet • • Ayers Libels • • Catalogs Booldets ~ • Brochures NCR Forms • • Typesetting Newsletters • • Technical Manuals Photo Copies • -COMPU'n ~..-:I- TOM AND RAYE JONES • ' CALL POii PICK-UPAllltDm.iiiRY ·: w • .,. .... .......... ................. .. , ....... .PANACHE, JUNIOR & CONTEMPORARY CLOTHES YEAR-ROUND RESORT WEAR ' • Bilr&.M • Shoee • Ungerie • MmBot. • Short. a Sea. • Dre.ea • Jeam • Tope a a Loi.p A Pante llo•ee • Aeeeeeoriee 7 days 221 Marl•e 67a..1810 a wk. Balboa lsla•tl 1e>e '········-···· f YOU HUI IUT DJ llEISTAllD I I .'I* c::11n probebty hefp youl Come In f°' our I -~lectronlc HMring Test and 4Mf' bring along I you!' hulbandlW!f• or friend to help with the · I ev81uetlon, becauM hearing i. a femlly aHalr. I Find out th• latHt method• of hHring I I oorr.c:tlon, HEARING AIDS to tiny they fl~ tot.lllly within the • .,.. t I I BBi llH $ 100 *20.00 value· -~ -BIS with thl1 coupon ~ I I COAST NIAil .... AID CIMTB I L MftLC...tHwt .. C ...... W. . 675->IH ············--Famous Bedroom Ensembles at 20°/o 5a¥1ngs ABC • 7:00 -"Omnibus." Hal Holbrook joins Carly Simon and Faye Dunaway in an entertainment special. K'ITV. 7:30 -"God iD the Dock." God is placed on trial in a class-action suit against human sufferimr. KTLA • 8:00 -"Reptllea and Am- phiblans." A National Geographic special tells about cold-blooded animals. KTTV • 8 : 00 -"Against the_ Wind.'' A young woman. is sent to Australia as punishment for rebelling against English rule in Ireland. SLIDE ~IOCUSIN5 cai..,._.,. _. I . . . • ' ••• .,, .... ~· ,_ 7; -· .. I 8. .... g 9: ~ ::) ~ I 10: 11: 12: 1: 2: a: . ' 4: s: ) ~ ' • " • . .. . . KNXT • #' •• --'-......, :::"' " " =00 .. " n. -.......... .. . .. TillPrtcl II Rfl!!" . OMDlf AI A T1IM Young And ""' ....... .. .. Alllll Wortd I Turne .. a.'d!For Tomorrow ~ .. ... --.. " ~ ... ..... .. ..... . KNXT • ~~r--:-~~~""""'!"-~~~~ .... am~)~Wj ... ~:W...,F,~.-~"!"'9'._.._.~~----~---1111!1191111!!'19111111111mli!l~ ...... ._. ......... l!lll .. , ..... ,~J .... lll ................ lll, .. 11£!11( .,_--l~ ""-.'· ,,,. • ' . . ,. ~ Kn..( KA8C t<At8 KHJ ... r ---. ...... -, • •. I~ • L..~.,o-~_., . : w~ a Le,~: "'Les$ 2 ....... ~ '"'! 1W -::" .. CM ...... .,...... .. .. ~ .... " Tllnll " . . " AW. " .... \.:~ .. .... .... . i. " a..~ ...... .. IAMI . .. .. .. To.._ ~ " .. .. LAIVtgll ....., • AM. Thi .. ..... ..... '~ .... Jllnonl .. ...... lldlll'd ··~ Na " ...... -.. .. -Of Big llftl'I Tlllflrtcl flldrtlorNng ForUw Y*! ~ .. ~ LA ~ TlllW• .. PM " lc--w .. .. c.d Bonlllla ~ y Ol.llll And .. 8Pwtl " Feud TlllAlll'-.. Thi " ~·· .. Movie: Dodorl .. HGpe .. u~•• O.,.Of ~ Mtkf ..... .. OurU. l.oM Olldrtll .. .. " T .... .. AITht .. .. Zona " World .. MdlWI "°"' OMLll Tuma ..... Wortd *"!*" Tol.M .. .. .. .. 5-dlkr Wld, " .. .. TomotrOW Wld T-Jotln oen.11 <Mdlng Wiit .. Ort1dlorl ~ Ught .. .. " .. lroneldl " .. .. .. .. OoNi?IUI .. Edglor Jotln .. .. .. Hlgllt , OMSlol1 .. .. ~ YOlllg McMe: .. I.Ml .. "UNI MlryT,_ Specie: ..... .. ... Moore 1999 " .. Tender" lob .. " M.A.S.H . .. Ntwtw1 .. .. .. .. ..... Stinky Newt News .. .. & Hutch .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Whll'• .. . .. .. ,,-_1• ~ l KNBC KTlA KA8C KFMB KHJ • •· • • • Loe ... Loe ..... Loe .... ..... Loe .... ..... Kwig ..... C8SNlwl T1c: TIC "' ~ GlbtAnd ..... Joker'• Welker Wld ..... ""'" Tic Tee ~ .. ~ ~ Aglll ........ PM FICI Thi Bid! Mullc lMll MooAe: t.lcMe: Holl9I "Dull ''Sim'• °"Thi lnllll Wllcoml ~:· Prllr1I Suft" Bid!. l<ontr ......., -... .. lMMrll .. McMe: ~ ., ...... ..... .. .. ..... Niwa ~ .. . Geml Thla.t Oumy, IAt'•Mlk• ore.nan M.E Ao.I .,,. .-ct TOIROrTOW ·a,.,. HlrlyO ,,.....,.. .. .. MONDAY KC81' KTIV KOOP KCET K~ -. -----,_ •• •• • ~:1 .. Ii ,. ...... "-....... &.-....... &.-....... r-,, ... ....., ... Yog1FGr ....... & Fttlncla TlllCel ..... LIMr .. --MWitY ..... 0. .. c.-.. ... "°"" e- " " 0...Upaft Body ~ • " .. Aa.lc ....... .. °""' &.,~ICY VIII ~ .. Ben A-. Tlli DclnlM IL.ow ~ ..... 8'ldo .. Lucy Room • S1r9ll s. " l..tldlld Women'• .. Bldrtc .. .. ~ " ·CClllMW .... Of :er... or Dotti a.room VIII FcnN ..... Dly lnltruc:tlon --Pmword F-"1 $upennln .. Yog1Wlltl PM AM " .. Mldlh c.d TlllGllOll McMe: Bletrtc Humln SPwta &Mn.Ml* "Lei'• ~ BePIMlt ToTtl ..... Go ToBt Wrfang FOf ThlTMtl " Nlw'' Annolmld A Rlllorl Dlya Of MO* t.lcMe: '** Prcjlct Ourl.MI "Honky 1hundlr c.v.tt lMMrll .. Tri" Aoed'' 0-• Helllh .. .. .. Euv ... . AnoCtw .. .. Now =~ WOl1d .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Anllrtcln .. .. .. .. GcMmmllll TIXll Mitt TSlln LoollAt or ea1t1 .. ~ .. Mt· And Men .. .. a..oom y~ .. .. .. lnllNctlon McMe: l.11'1 Terry-Wig Hum9lltill "Arl1 RIP toons Humln .. You GfocMI .. Miking It 0- Or(' Goollll .. Count Euv .. Tom And Kanoon Y1ll McHell .. Jerry Klrnlvll All9I l.thrlt .. Thi .. Mist• Alm birds .. ~ .. Rootra .. Donlhul Blwttdled Frid Seslnll .. .. .. Flntstont Strwl .. .. 1er...or Wiit 'Tl " Oil .. ..,,. YCNI Fathlr .. PlinlWIQ KCST KTTV KCOP KCET KOCE • • • • • ..... Loe .... u.-... Loe~ ........ NBCNlwl · MAS.H. Good 8eetric Bletrtc nm. CompMy Comptny ..... PM Binny Niwa S1udlo HI Set Strtlll 0. MlcHlll or Sin Elsy Lltwlr Femly Frlndlco MacNtl Gt9ll FilUd LlfAr ~ Ul1ll Aglllllt McMe: Gt9ll Haute Thi "Top f>9110l lnll ICll ... Onllll Wind Sctta" "Olnce In McMe: Prllr1I ''Ofl, YtN Alrilgo Top 9-ltlM Rold S1ory Doi" Merv Ottflln Thll.Mt ..... Mtmorlle Ponllllln Colwtrtlbll . Of ElJbil ~ PlrtS INNNlwl ~ Tlllln ...... Mtnnllc Binny Urblll "Upltlln. .. .. .. lMgul Oownlt.lln" Thllllll ~ ~ C.,uonect ore.eon. ASONlwl ABC ..... ..... Blnttl Tomorrow Aloi ttumt.d ,. 'TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY Monda,. '· ·Befalls .IULY ... 1 tv...ca 1:00 • *"'Y ~YI M/11/H WMn ,.... cir'-en 8lllOnlUI ~ llllln out of town, .. 1111111 thin pl9y tfll roll hlmlillf. • MIAINIT TM! WM> "The Flogging Pwlon" DlmyO'~ ·---rebel,. befl1enda Mery lftd Jondllln and urgea tn.m t.o oontorm to the eyetem. (Part 41 •• STMET8 ~ 8AH P'MHCeOO Poelfle .. a dnlll ~. ~ jolfta • group of ~ ... IMng on a lwm to track down the murder- ., of on. of "*"- • OY!AEASY ~ lea M'llfllf Buddy Greco. neurcMoglat Or. Hell Ralilln, Chef Nataal ~ . (R)Q l1I MERV~ Gu.ta: Dudley Moore. Suu n Anton. ArnolO Sc:hwl9119ggei,Stlphln- leM .... QI) THE MACH 90Yl IH OONCE.RT The aoft~odl group wNcn twinge beck haWY memo-'* of the ·eo. pettonna olualo 1111• Including "Bar· bar a Ann," "Sur11n· U.S A .• " "Little Oeuc. eoup.·· and "Good Vlbra· tlon9 " . (I) SPOTUOHT OH JEM't' LEWIS The zaoy comedian per- forms on atage II the Sahara Hotel In Laa Vegae • Is IMluted In a backttage lntervt.w and In cilps from 1101T11 01 his 111ms. (%)MOVIE "Ck>M Ehcoontfllfa Of The Third Kind: $pedal Edl- t1on•• ( 1990) Richard Orey- "-. Francois TNlfeut 7:30 8 2 OH THE TOwN • Ho1t1· Stave £dwaro1. Melody Rogan. A prollle of llllOfl/f Ric* Nellon; en lrlUdl lo<* II the p.--. .. Ing o4 ,_,_, to the U.S. • ~NANA · GuMta: Ronnie Spector fnd The Aonett• • MOVIE •• "Rebel Of The AoM'· (19711) Gregg Henty, Orent Good9ve. • GAL\T ~ "Dance • In America: Beyond The M..,.,_ .. The rich ver~ or dance activity In lofta, ctlurcllte and other non-thMtrlcal ptacee llal r9'l\8lned out. aide the rMlnstrMm of dance'• IWlullon over the 1*1 20~. Cl) P.M, MAGAZJNI An lnMMew with Olene ~ • Virginie ~ . wtlo , .... .,. enaAI• CC>.M<Ma . "Anlmelt .Are BMl.ltllUI <See.MONDAY~S Pe1e 11) FRIDAY ~ATURDAY l Cook"1g ;S~hoOI · · 20 ... ·-c......, 21 -c... ._ .._. .. -..,,..,_. °""""" ....., ....... ·~ 1~0 " • .._. . ~ -, . ._ ......... .-.. For a great sandwich. try our 3 decker turkey. bacon, lettuce and tomato with Russian dressing. Catering for all oc- casions. We have a great sandwich selection. GARY1S DELI ll09 E. Coest Hwy .. C.-.. W.. 675-J ltl ,._. • c•. 4111 ~SI.. Ml.,,.,. 752 .. 540 I Custom Shade & Drapery •Draperies •Wallpaper • Coordinated fabrics • Laminated shades • Bedspreads •Shutters 20% off on Draperies, bedspreads & Decorator Shades "'"a. la1•11 M rb Decor9'orA 't c• Sal• Continues 7 /17·7 /3IJ 3531 I. C...t Hwy. c .............. 67J-71JO ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •· :"WHAT'S A POPCORN PARTY?" • • • • • • • ..... onw lll, .... HC ......... .flDJllS ,..ty pl• la Calif. Ollly for ....._ S-_.1 !a.odlH tHt•llll•g . llMJeri•, .or• f••· • CNl'f a.cl fNICll-.ad ....... Alld WI ............. popcontl! 4'iln a p.ty or becCMm a Popcont LAldy POPCORN PARTIES UNLIMITED CALL (714) 556-2330 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• What to do this weekend? , ... ,. KTTV e 7: 00 -"Against the Wind." The story of Mary Mulvane con- tinues in Australia. CBS 8 9:00 -"Miss Uni ver se Pageant." The beauty contest is broad- cast from New York with Bob Barker as host. KCET QI 9 :00 -"A Dance of Two Co untries: China and America." An American ballet director t ravels to China to teach Western dance techni- ques. KCET QI 10 :00 -"Memories of Eubie." A tr ibute to the great jazz pianist. Mondays Detatts <From Pa1e 11) 10e1r1g SM! end ,,._ to P9opee" ( 1175) Oooumen-Aeldln9 .,.., .. .,.,,.. t111Y. Chrilllle In In MO ecd- (Dl MOYIE dint. (R) "Sci-MC>VM" ( 11711) • TOP ITO"Y Oocumenterf. Mulk by HOite: Jim ThomM. ....., Miiie Oldftekl. lrlgerd a:00e <1> w·A•t•H • A ~OflWO Colonel PotW 11 gMI! tlllO OOUNTim8: 09'A AHO week• to get 1111 btood '....:A ~ dowrl Of.... .. At1lltie director of lhe hie commlnd. (R) Houlton S.... Ben S• • 8 UTTU HOUll ON __,,,., return to lhe THE PMINI ~·· RlpUtlllC of QIN Am.llO end i.-a l'Mk• to INtNc:t ...,.,... of lhe the,.,..._. of ..,-no to P9ing Dllnce ~In ~ '°' ,... tll'O poot1y· WelWn --~ beNv9d ,._.. (R)Q le dwo116ded. • MOYie 9 MOYE * • * "Duel In TIMI Sun" * * "Altlel OI TIMI Reed" ( 1947) Jennifer .SC.-. ~ ( 1979) Of-egg Henry, Otent ~~ ~. • ....,,,_ (C)MOYte **"' "8em'• Song" ''The Stunt Men" (1MO) (11174) Aobert OeHlfo, Jen. P9eer O'Toole. Stwe .W.- nlter w-. bed! . • ~THE WM> (D>MOYE "An ~ ~ "x.nedu" (1HO) OIMa Olflcere And Other•" NewtotWc>M, 0.. Kelly. Mery, Jonetl'l8n end 01rv1Y t: 1 IJ (Z) MOYIE dr..n of INedom, but ***°" "Ho1>1on'1 their ""'"' -.,...._ Ctlolce" (11154) JoM ...... lned by the greed end CMrlea Llughton. ~ of the New South t:aO. MOYIE W .... Corpe. (Plll1 5) * *°" "Gargoylee" (11172) • MOYIE CorMI Wilde, Jennllef ** "Top s.cr.t" (11171) s.it. Yea.by, TrmcyAeed. • r.EWOM'AN • GNAT GuMte: Dudley Moore, ~ SuNn Anion, Arnold "Dence In Alnet1c:a: Pio-SdMWU!legger. StepMn- bollll Dence n-tre'' In • .. ..... Bob S.0-. Doug '*'°'"-teped It the c..,. Amlr'lclln 1*101 ~In • MOYE oumem. Nof1'I c.r<*1e. "Bronco_.. (1MO) Clnt the Ploboll'9 Dence Ti. &ltwoOd. 8ondra ~ 1tre l*fotml tour wortlt 10:00. 8 THI LAST ohor90\jli1Pf*! by ~ OONYMTa.I ders Molla P9ndllton end George, Del end Terry Jondlln Wolken. (R) meet for 1 2MI r-*>n to (B) MCMI tooti bee* el ttlelr collgl "AnWlc:ln Ol'eftttl" ( 1173) deY9 Ind --.. their Ron Howwel, Cindy 'NJ. lutut9. (Plll1 l)(A) lllml. • ••to,.°' IUllE Cl) MOVIE A tl'lt>ute to Euble Bllke • • • 14 "Rio Brevo" IMturw 1 lllm eegrnent (195111 John Weyne, OMrl nwraled by the llf9't r9Q- Mlf11n. tlml pWllll lllmlllf Ind • MOY11 perloin•ICll by B11V Tl)'- "Ulllm11e Thrlll" 8rll1 IOf, Albef1a Huntw Ind the Eklend, Bll'ry Brown. Hin. Brothen. (R) l:I08 HOUMCM.&.8 • ~ A-II convtnoed he't ENCHAHT'MINT8 dying twt cen'I qultl hM-A!«* It the_, end 11 the die a vlllt from hit gf9ldy enltlta who U11 ~ --Ind _, Of'9ldlll' 11 lhelr prtiywy medium • OOU9lnl. (RI (JI) MOVIE e MCMI ''Coe! Min«'• Deughter" ••'A .. Oh. You 8-ltffl' (1980) SIMy Specell, Tom- Doll" (1Mt) June HI....,, ;l•"'°'*- Mlfk St-. 10'.30 MM I Wl9CI (I) wncc;,.. MCK, THIATM "8TIYAL Of l<OT'Tlft FAVONTU 11·1 the fire! dly ~ It "~ Oownltlllrt: A tdlool lflCI Gibe II Mt• PM Of Eldlel" When ¥0\llly ewelllng lither· J-~·"* Slr- hoOcl (P1111I lh It pr.,.m by him. the w e CI> ... ~ ..._. .-'° ... ~NlllNIT 1eepotllibllltJ Jot'*· (Pwt ~ 8otl ..... _, 1l~Q Ille '°"""9r Ind __... Cl) TNlfA TUQCIR... .... ~ Miit .. Oft "°" lleM • ....-. of H Tllll llhlierdlflllcM1i..11t•,._11 f'Odl •n• WOfW'll ...... .......... 'II ,.. ............ ~~~!i!~~~~~~~~~-;"il:i5~~~·=1P.5~1~·~~·=·~,..=·1 ··~· <••m ·With Back Pain, Every Day Can lie A TouglaDay Insuraaee? Chlroprectlc MNice It covered under Wof1unena· Compenut.ion, Medicse. Auto lrwurances. Group In~. and mo.t private Insurance plans. Cell now for your compllmenatry spinal ICfMf'llng. Be safe. not sony. '11wooa ClllOPIACTE OFFIE 1 u Ira•~.,. C-.. w.. · • ... tt411 SPECIAL OFFER wtte.c..,.._,,, . 20% OFF · Slits ...,. Spertcuts Slacb -NecknM' S,.r*ts -Dress ~irts Many other items -------------.. ] , w t. l i SELLfNG YOUR HOME? YOUR HOME HE TV STAR OF REAL ESTATE LISTINGS ... VIDEO LISTING SERVICE can provide you with faster. more efficient marketing of your home than ever before possible. VLS will professionally film the exterior and interior of your home, adding a descriptive narration and selected background music, to capture its best features for the sales presentation. THROUGH the eyes or a realtor VLS offers the viewer a complete tour of your property. Your home presentation will be added to our library of VIDEO LISTED HOMES for distribution to all VLS subscribing brokers and their buyers through an .elaborate membership network. . SECURITY Llmlllng· 1ne lrelllc trvough your home reduc" lhe potenllll loM of per.one! prop erty. Only acrMnecl 1nd qulltfled 1>uy111 1'"° e,,.r ~ eliow.d ph~lcll KUH 10 your Pf091'1Y "°"r VLS brOller I• PfOIKll•• Of Ille c:om· ton. MCurlty and Hlely of your home FORT .. VLSlaoemt ,,.MIARIST YOU CALL 714-ltl-JU6 1· YOUR PRIVACY Ael&ll lll1CI 91\joy Ille Pfl•.CV ol YOUf home wt\lle VLS brQQl1 1re 1howlng your p;operty l'ttfY day ot lhe wM11 on TV. OICOMTACT: Newport Beech-Corona deJ Mar UM19UI HOMIS 7t4-67MMO Huntington Beach CIMTUIY 21 IMRY714-146-Ull e able SubscrlP-tion Service JULY 17, 1981 FRIDAY EVENING 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 • r, _ _., ~ lilo'llt "Hit" (I) CID lilo'llt Cont'd cm Mowc ·~t11 Rose" Cl) Mo• Cont'd • Mowrt CoM'd liloYll. "$onlnlhere In TirM" {%) Moc"TMWollNUf'' Cl) TBA KM* tm Mews JUL y 18, 1981 SATURDAY EVENING 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 I 9:30 10:00 10:30 • Mews s,eits Prtss Boa r,_ Rtports Mews Sty4t ~ M°"9CMl'd liloN "The c.t-1 ...... .._ ~si-.a 1.c111s·· (I) 5'orts Ctftttr Socar. CalilorlU SWf Ys. l'ortlMd Tmlllrs I l'llA ~ WMepn Open CID M°"9C.C'd Mo"' ''loll Voylct. CNtllt 8fOWll" Mo'llt "s.olty W Thi 8Mkt r· cm -I 111o ... : "Wille , ""'' To lie Allllouftctd CJ) M°"9Cont'd MDYll: "Thi ~ .. Whirs Up • M°"9Cont'd lilllN: ''Wlloly Moses!" Mo• {%) Mh•: '1hl Grut Slntffli" MoN: ''Tiil ldoblUr'' Cl) lillltcWottd "'lltport lllMJ Hil ~ Wrtstllrw liloN: "Blood And Lace" i tm Movie: "Aaoss The 8flC!tt" I Mews Tdl! JUL y 19, 1981 SUNDAY EVENING 7:00 I 7:SO 8:00 8:30 9:00 I 9:30 10:00 10:30 • MtwJ s,eits 8'mm 1111 Of TIU Two Mews Hwt's How ~ ._ Celt'' llll'M: '1.,.m'' I fllooM: .. __ o. Pr9Cllld u .. (I) s,.uc.-en FCIGIW: £drllontol ta-Ys. .._ ... Bo1111en CID llll'M CMI'' ~.,,.....," ' I 1 Wiiden .._ . cm ~~R,..OMll'" lllooM: ........ (I) "°"' CM'• ._ .. Or__.. I 1. -.rs .._ • Mo.i.Coll'• Mo'fil: "lrOllCO ., .. .._ (%) Mo.i.CMl'd lllo'fll:'1111 ........ . ... i ' Cl) *15'#1pt ..... -Mo.ie: "ClllUin Frot11 Clltile'' tm MtwJ °'*'"' Mo.W. "It• Me TO!Mfrow" Mo¥1t JULY 20, 1111 MONDAY EVENING 7:00 7:SO. 1:00 l:SO t :OO l :SO 10:00 lO:SO ................ ________ ..._ __________ ~------------------~----,,---~--'."'"~~~--- I JULY 21, 1981 TUESDAY~· ~ING . 7:00 I 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 l 10:30 • fretNn Reports Spo<ts Mmdesl West Coast People l onctit ~ MoYlt Cont'd Mov1t: "Blume In love" I MoY1t (I) . Spo<ts Center NASI. Soccer Omnc: China Vs USA CID MoYll Cont'd Buarrt ri Houston Be latt Ott Mov1t cm B.tseball I To Be Annouftttd MoYlt' "Nitensl (' Cl) Mowlt Cont'd llilartt " 11ous1on 111s utt Ott MoN • MDN Corlt'• MoYlt ''Mlllopny" MoY1t CZ) Mofte. "1ht Glut s.tn" MoYlt: "S9ic• .._ .. I llD'M Cl) -.an I t 0ri1U --Rlcilll llD'M ... ..,, c-flit Gris" m llNs Nidlt6*J """'= .. ~ .... -.. JULY 22, 1981 WEDNm>AY EVENING ,.,. 7:00 I 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 I 10:30 • r,...~ $4lofts ,..,..,. West Cont PtOClitTOllllM ~ ..... c.t'd --''Tiie f'lnt IWt ........ """'= "1900'' (I) SllOtts c-. $4lofts TIA m F 11 eor.tKt 111r11e CH> llDM CoM'• """'= .,,. Slllir!(' . I llD'M cm ...... ,,.... -..: .,., .,.. c..r'' Cl) ... c.·• . .... "Tiie sw.aa" ,....,. • ... c.t'. -..: "Tiie Godfltllw. hrt ,. CZ> ............. a.a .. ..,_ "1ht lil9lt S--" Cl) 'flle'91111dn ...... lillrlie:"$GflwW ...... aJ """ 119t6*y .... "ClOS1Clll.r' . lllloM CoM'd L JULYU, 1981 •• l:SO 9:00 t :SO 10:30 . ~~ Brings T ~ You '1eleprompter's Gmy Service is Out-ef-Tllis World T Ital Entertainment" sPiTs -~- .MOVIES 24 Hr. NEWS ~ NEWP.ORl - NOW I --~r I • ( I 'I J( If ff ~I U !! ~ rf rf ~l . . iJ. !1· si ~ . ~ I : : •i : I : . . .. . J . : I ,.. :1 .: : : I : 1: ~· ~ •. ~·~ ~ ~ II .Ill --... ---... ....a ,_. !".:i ..,. Ut -.... -~ Z 3 g I "' i~ . n ~ ~ ~ N · Ht!IJ' !! llJ~ \' ·~ G\ ,, > ..... ~I! :;··~lif i J ~.·; ~,-,,.,1 -J·· ... ·f . ·. " ·f '1 • (i i~ ·f 1:1 . : : : 2 , .. , . I .. 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H~i i ~~ , .If {Hi ~If J , , . , , ·H H [ll '(f I , ·If i .11 f if f JUf i ·~ P .. 1p1 n ·I ·' n f llJ Jlf jJlf fl!' 1rrsa1 JU if I i. •! . -. l"""'Jli "'" • ~-..-, r~ • ;·• ... ...... ·~·-f': "' . ---- \! I ·Good Selection Volume Discounts SEIVICE Convenient Service f.or Orange County commuters! 405 Fwy. & Western Ave. Call for your appointment. LEASE Bank Lease for ALL makes & models. Orange Co . Buyers & Service Remember! Before you buy your new Toyota ... see us! The volume Discount Toyota Dealer KCOP • 8:00 -"The Count of Monte Cristo.•• Richard Chamberlain and Tony Curtis star in a remake ol the classic tale. KCET 9 8:00 and KOCE 8 9:00 "'7 "The asteroid and the Dinosaur." The program examines a radical new theory on the disappearance of the-dinosaurs. <From Pa1e ZI) "The T,_ Of Uber1Y'' Dln- 'ft i...,. 10 C..... Hm ptleon Wm end beooniea lrwoMd In rebellon ... ~.:l,. • • • "Th• Count Of .MoMe Cftleo" (1175) ~ 'erd CNmberteln, Tony Curtlll. • WO/A ''Thi "*"* And The ow-'' A redlc:el ,.._ Rabacca'• bHl·ll•PI _... (Pw1 4)(AIQ • tOIA ''The "'*'* And The Dlnouut'' A r9dloml new theory -to wtiy the dine>- -died out .,.., 150 rnlmofl l'WI of • cc 111M don*--.. .amlnad. ~~ "The Tenant" ( 1917) "°"*' Polenlkl, ....,... rMOVIE "Spece Movta" (1979) - • The Cause Often Is Pinched Nerves. Chiropractic Restores. Health NaturaTTy. . - YO U DESERVE TO FEEL GOOD Most Imuranca AcceptAMI FOR AN APPOINTMENT CALL M5- . l. WEST~.iJ:!~=-"C ~CE 204J W1Aclff Dr .. Slih IOI ... ..,.,. .... 1 ... c...· •• 1,-.-..8"111et lheory • lo wtiy Ifie ~ ...,,. died out .,.., 150 .,,,..,., ~of~ dolM-........... (R)Q ~. Muelc by·-----------------~ ... Otdlled. • - • M't'8TIRV "AMlecce" An lnqlleel end a bleclunell attempt Md the de Wlnten 10 London, where thay uncover Rabacca'• bHt·ll•P• _.._(Pert 4) (R)Q ®MOVIE "Tha Godfather" ( 1972) Mlf10ft Bnndo, Al Peclno. Cl) mAME rv Jofln ~ .,_ you thll9 .... ttWt ttuttl, *VI' ttWt ... end --than enythlllg you've - Nan In IMM apaclal ancot'9 preaantJrtlonl from the 8howtlrna Blzerra Mnry • • MOVIE "M11ho9eny" (1975) Olaoe ~Anthony P«lllne. t:IO • Cl) PU> Mill oomea for a vlltl end 11't.IOIMaowrtha~ ... at tha y""""" Roea. (R) •O LAVSINE& 9HR.lY L.enny end Sqi.4lggy fenta- .. about ""'* .. would ba •• If dlay .... lllarrt movta...._(R)Q Cl) HOUSTON llG LAR Of'F -Cry9tal ho9tl Ihle ~ c:cmedy compell.- tlon ...,., at Roc*aWar'• In Houllon. t:OO . CJ) MY OLD MAN Kttaty McHlc:hol end Wll· ,.,.. a... ... In ... atory of•~lnd­down-end.-hOne treln- • ,... WflO -~ .,.., a , ... ~ "'*8tlon. ;e..u.mar a.um ~F\do~hll ~ to exonereee ~endH•end~ go undefoower • W01N11 IOMber ....... (A) •• TMME'I "°"1'Nf'f A,._.., 1Mn ~ ~ wlltl !Nklng .. r'llllCtant ~ "" ..,.... ;~ ,. .................. ... llu'ned 111.000 ..... ol --In ... "*' • • :;:.. :'.. =adwwat; plan.a, ax•. ltlovela, cM11 I t llld ..._. ol • ...,.... to .... .... '""" Hoee9: Jim n.on-. M9y a=:. .... ....... ",,,. ......... - ... ,.,,, ...... ''TheHlt ...... ''~ K.el Audllwl, The Pointer Sleterl. K.C., RMdy ~ -· Joa Ooloa, Jerlle Ian. F,_.le Srnlttl. 10;00. 8 NIRO WOlR Nero ... a 9l*6da Md ltne _, • ..., unraie.ed murdeR In with a mlallnQ rnenuaci1pt end Ila .,..,,. euth«.(R) • 0 HART TO HART Wtllla on \llalllon at ttllllr c:et1M tWICll. tha ...,. baooma the 1#99' ol a ruthlMI lend bllon wtlo went• their praparty for ;r~ "Puerto Alco, Our 5111t Slate?" Puerto Alco'1 Pf9Mnt end future polltQI ;:;:: 8Nllymd. "Nljlnatly.. ( 19791 AIM eetaa. Gaol've de .. Pwwa. (l)MOVIE "Blazing Saddlea" (1t74) a.von Uttla, Gana Wiid- ., . Directed by Mal •oo111. .MOVIE "The Godfather, Pert II" (1974) N Peclno, Rot1ert Dwell. 10:aD. ,Mn ~AN> .. ~ And Dlaptll(' A lo<* at COftlPUlar9 now being UMd to alml.llate ... •• ....,..,.. oeMrwlae toocoetty.~ « dengaroua la II'..,._.· •.wa~ WOMD ··&poru In AIMttca: w- an In Spot11" Jemee Mlc:Mnar ~ peM end prMen1 ,.. ol wom.-.,. ................. ""° awta E-1 ~ • ..., ~~end.,.., ~~<Mlwte. (fQ "C411MriM I Co." (11111 Jana Blrlll", Patriot& 0-.... 11*1. STM ,,._ The& ... ,,.. ......... peM ..... ""'--... .... ....... to. 1PC1arentty da11a1lalad ;--.... '°Cfy Pigeon" ........ ....,... In the l'llidcla ol OC*'..,,.........,IWO ,,_ ........... ·--Ml.&. ,,,. .................. ...... ~ .. °"'*"""'" tr to "" ..... ~ lj!f'o ...... . • TMIUMAN LIMUl'IMTIOML COHU.,,... oee... ...... I ......... __ . . -,,...._ .......... ~--· --· KNXT KN8C . K1l.A KA8C KFMB KHJ I . ., •• • • • • • ....... ....... ....... .. ....... .. Dllte Lei ... 7: Mon*'ll T'*'! 700 Good I~ The ..... CM> Mon*1g Frocidel .. .. " America .. There Is .. . ,, .. .. " AW., .,.. a: c..-i .. Ano4hlr " &nip Jin I ~ ,. Liie .. Sin~ Bekker .,.. " i..tK .. .. ~ .. .. To&eMr .. .. .. 9: The 1.MVeg11 Alc:Nrd A.M. The ., ~ Jef9erlons GlrNllt Simmons LOI Jellenons .. Allee Blodt· Alc:Nrd ~ Allee .. ::::> .. buleert Slnvnona .. .. .., I • 10: ThePrtce w.IOI Big Three's The Price Midmorning ~ IS~ Fortlllt VIier, Complny 11~1 LA. P.-ord Three's .. .. PM .. IComolnv .. .. 11: OneDly Clrd 8onlnza Femly YOl#lg Md .. • AIA Time SNrtl .. Feud ThlReltleee .. i YOl#lgAltd The .. Ryen'• .. Movie: TheAldela Doctors .. IHOot .. "Conllct 12: .. DlylOf Twllglrt AIMy News Of~" . Owl.Ml Zone Ctlldren " AtThe .. Twllglll .. A.tThe " WOftd " Zone .. WOftd .. 1: T11m1 'Anohr Hour Onellfe TY"'!. News . WOltd ~ Toi.Mt " 8-'d!For .. .. s-d!For Wld, Tomorrow .. .. .. Tomorrow Wld 2: ICMlllll r-Jol1n o..11 Guiding Well Ugflt .. .. Dlwldlorl HOIJ*ll Ught .. .. .. ... .. lrOllllde .. " .. " .. .. 3: ..... Donlllut .. fGlllOI I JOlln .. ...... " .. Hlglll DIMdlorl .. .. .. I~ Young .. McMe: " .. lMI .. °Flthorn" 4: I lllmllf MlryT,_ 181111* ..... H .. ...., Moor9 -.. .. .. .... lob .. .. M.A.S.H. .. .. .......n .. .. .. .. s: ..... ..... = ..... ..... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Whit'• " .. .. .. . " ·- KNXT KNBC K1l.A l<A8C KFMB KHJ • • • • • • Lei ... .. Dllte Lela.-. .... ..... cas ...... Tic Tee .. .. .. Oolq. " ..... Joker'• " Wld ~ Fa The Mllllc Mcwll: .,,......, °''"" .. Mind'' ...... TOllllM .. 12. ... ,. .,, .... T_,. ----------- KCST KTTV Kpc>P . • • • .. Dllte Lei~ Lei ..... Tocllr, Bugaan,y Ftlbc l Ftlendl Thteit .. Space ~ .. COllllr ~ .. ~ .. " " .. Gentle em..~ .. a.n . Donlhue 1 l.oYI Romper .. Lucy Room .. Bewl1dled Vox .. .. PQC)Ull WlleelOf I Dream Of Dot1I Fortune Jeennie ~ Password Femly ~ Plus Aftllr Card TheGlloal McMe; Shllta & Mra. Muir ''Looklng To Tell News For The Truth .. n.n.-'' DlylOf MM: Movie: Owl.Mii .. ANl.Otff'/ ··o~· .. OfA .. Murder" .. Another Plrt 1 .. WOtld .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Teus Mb Tlnlfl .. ~ ". .. .. .. " .. McNll: LAll'a Terry- ''Whn RIP '°°"' Elglll GrocMI .. Dirt" Goolll .. Plrt2 Tom And K.wtoon .. Jmy KlrlMI .. The . .. .. Flnllloflll .. Donltlue e.lldllCI Frid .. " ,..ona .. IDr..n Wiit 'Tl .. OIJeMnll YNFdler KCST KTTV KCOP • • I • .. Dllte Lei---Lei-- NBCNlwl M.A.8.H. .. .. ..... .. Ftlllly Feud ""' Ptopll Tiii ' ''Splendor .. Wind '"'"" I• Otw" Dllrrent Top S1robe 8tofy TheFICtl Merv Ofl.Jtl Gltlln ~ ..... .. ...... ..... .. Tonight .. .. KCET • Lei ..... Yoga For Hellth ... Roan a... tp'OUll VIII ! Aleen s.anie Street .. .. Classroom Instruction .. .. 8ectrtc Company TNsOld Houae Dick CMtt °"" ·FMV Claatoom· lnatructlOn .. .. .. .. oriceUpon ACIMllc Being IUnM ~" CcM!t VIII Ntqe ,::. ,8-ftl S1rtiM .. .. KCET • Lei ..... .......... --9pec:illl Loe Mgllel ~ IWmonlc ·KOCE • . ......... MacNll I I.elver °'* F- Body Budcllee Outen Taa Studio See Electric Comolnv VIiia Alegre YogaWhfl Madeline Humll1 Bellavlor Wrtllng For A Aelaofl COllttmpOnll 'I Hemtll ...,.. " Introducing Biology Americln Gowmment Of&r1h Md Miii YO'Jt!!' tMnllllllll .. ~ MICHlll I.elver TheDudllla OINI S1rtiM .. QI Pllntlna . KOCE • ....... Elec:trtc ~ Studio Sal MlcHll lAMr GNlt Pwbn•icea Miit ALmll .. .. • 11 . -· .Detalls ·JULY 22, 1111 EVENNG 7:00. HAPPY OAY8 AOAIH Richie and Poole hi~ to tulftll six dar• to -n their jecketa when they try to become mernberl of the OemonOlub. • AOAINSTTHI WINO ''When Klngl Go Forth To Battle" Dinny and other rebel• prepare for ti.ttle u a force ot redc:oata epproacnes. (Part 8) • 8TAEET8 ~ 8AH FRAHCl8CO A. elngle "Saturday Night Spec;lal" traglcally aflect1 the IMll of_., unrelllt· ed people In a 14-hour period. ' • OVEREASY Guettl: VlllC*'t Price, J-Bryant Quinn. (R) r:;J Ill MERV ONFFIN Gueeta: David Brenner, . Dan Hartman, Cllriltophet Attdne, Of. Alhd 2-n . ®MOYIE "Bon Voyage. Charif• Brown" ( 1979) Anlmllted. (Q)MOVIE "Wllllt & l'tlll" (1NO) MlchMI Ontkeen. Mervoc Kidder. CilMOYll ***'h "fiobaon'a CIM>lce" (1954) John M•. a.tee laughton . 7:30. 2 OH THE TOWN· Holla: Stew Edwards, Mek>dy Rogers. Vlllt en L.A. movie thMt9r where .. the employ--handicapped; en tnteMew with producer-turned· actor Howard PllPUlf\ . • IHANANA ~:Adrienne 8art>eMI . • NATIONAL ~8PECIAL "Oortlta" E.G. Merahal holta • look et the ettOn. of zoo dltectora. dedicated lndMduele end actentlete who .,. wortdng to MeUf'8 that the lerg91t of the . Ol"t epee doel not ... w:tlm to eictlnctlon. (R) (II PM. MAGADIE A dlelgrl8I' who INll• lllgill IMfllon paper en- -• Mlf-t1todelllled ohW ~II put to tne Ml t:OO e Cl) THI WMTI ltW>OW Coectl "8e\l9I II off9r'ed 11.000 to ..., In • aom- merollll and hie team --• dlanoe to out • l'9COf'd. ;.MM.~ ,..,,..: • -clOCtor. "'" ....... comp9tltton; • wllildng oomeet; • lftdl.. en JW!thuc : 1110 _. touoM IM'°"911WM11t w _.., llnd. (A) •• MCWtl *. ~ "The ltlWadoe" (1"8) Onlgory '**·Joan Collne . e9MCMI **~ "DrnMtY" (1M1) John Forsythe, Linde lwna. lb:==::::d~!:!~:::b~:::~:::~::d;!d~::=~~~~b:~==d:~==::d~~=::::b~==::!======b::==~dJ(SeeWEDNEIDAY'SPageZJ) TOlllOrrOW ........ ... Avai~e Jo POOlic: • Advice • Counseling • Readings SPIRITUAL READINGS SUMMER SPECIAL ....... ooNow 915.00 -" • Happy • Successful 14 Years • Business • • '\!• • j • Decorate like a Professional . . . at half the cost! 50°k off Normal Retail Prkes Whether you're preparing ror out-of.town guests or Just givinr a "new look" to an older home, you'll want to check our selecUon of beauWuJ decorative fabrics. Over 3M In s&ock to cbooee from • Draperies • Bedlpre•d8 • Upholstery Decorative Fabric Hou,e 18885 f;•cllcl <• •> Furnl&areBew Foutain Valley ... (714) Mt-t•"' (714)1U-- .., , I , , ~ -~ Tube TopPers KOCE 9 7:30 and KCET@ 8:00 - "Gorilla." E.G. Marshall hosts a look at · the largest of the apes. KCOP m 8:00 -"Splendor in the Grass." Natalie Wood and Warren Beat· ty star in a love story set in the midwest. KCET @ 9: 00 -"Los Angeles Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl." Zubin Mehta conducts and Itzhak Perlman plays violin in a televised ap· pearance. KOCE SJ 10 :00 -"Mark Russell." The political satirist pokes fun at sightseeing in the nation's capital. Wednesday' Details ( Frqm Page %%) • MOVIE *** "Oeuglll« Of The Mind" (19e9) Ray Mihod. Gene Tilmey . • AGAINST THE WINO "The Farmet'I Friend" ~.now•~ llndownar, lrlel to loroe Mary and Jonattlan trom their land. (Patt 9) • MOVIE ***~ "891endor In The GrHI" (1981) Natalie Wood. WWT911 BMtty . • NATIONAL GEOGMPHIC SPECIAL "Gorttla" E.G. Manhall holta a look It the lfforta Of zoo dll'ecton, Cledlclted lndMduall end ecllntllt• who are wortllno to aaeura tMt the lwVMt or me OfMI epea doet not fall '1lctlm to ex1lnetlon. (R) (C)MOYll "Our Time" ( 1973) Plr'Mla Sue Mertln, Peril« Si. -*"'· (l)MOYIE ''The Shining" (1M0) Jack Nictlollofl, Shelly Owlll. Directed by St1nl1y Kubrick • • MOVIE "The Gocn.thlr, P111 II" (,_74) Al Peclno, Rob«t Owllll. t:OO. (I) MOYIE ** "A New Life" (1979) ,.,... Dlcklnlon, Gordon Plnllnt. • e8DW'MHT 8TAOKl!8 w ... ,_ probllftle recion- clllng 1111 oriOlnl ... PO« bladl-youth wltlt hll 04//f • rent.,. Of luxury. (R)Q • TOltSTORY HolCt: Jltn Ttlomu. Mery ar:=·NMB• ~AfTHE HOU.VWOOD IOM. ZUbln MIMe !Nik• Illa IMt ~ IPPMl•IOI • conductOI' Of the Loi AngelH Phllh.,monlc ~, .. VlrtllOIO *In- let ltdl4lk PwertrMn ..... lured M '*91. ®MOVIE "Wlleml1tre11" (1t7t) ~ Anlonelll, MtrClllo ..... .-....w. (ll)MOWll ''MY Brllll1t11t CarMr" (19'0) .Aitly DtMI. a.it ..... (J)MOVll ''1119 car. Slnttnl" ( 1t1t) "ol>en Duv111. Blyth• Dlnns. .... ,..,ACTaOf' UPI ... .,....,_ llwoMd '" '" ....... oompllllGift ,,.,..__....,~. ...... • """" 4llill - DO IT YOURSELF ·PllOFESSIOMAL · STREMTH ·INSECTICIDE . . · ... :··=-~·~ ·~~ -, .. .,-'~ BAR DEN'S CSE ' t SSS S 0 amz ' PE:ST CONTROL 696 RANDOLPH COSTA MESA I s46-ss1q LAGUMA -COIOMA DIL MAit f 494-76'5 J I 673-0210 ·1 I ASK ABOUT OUR IN tlWf SERVICE In teven month• or leu, you c a n. m • k e a R EA l DIFFERENCE WITH YOUR LIFE In one of these muctwteeded careers: I • • 0 • . [ .-.. • • .l · • • t • -; i -., ell) -gl ~ ·::::> .., I • AM 7: a: 9: 10: 11: 12: 1: uu . 2. 3: 4: s: ~ s: 7: a: 9: 10: 11: 12: KNXT KN8C • • ......... :'-....... ...,,.... T• ..... .. .. .. " .. Clptlln .. ~ .. .. .. .. The a..v..-........ GelMI Moe ... " ...... Thtflflol WlllltOf .. ~ FortuM ..... .. ""' Onl°'¥ Cerd AIA TIIN Sflmb Y01119And n. The---Daceart .. 0-,.0t .. Oll'LMI AITht .. World .. Twn1 NtlJIM .. Wortd a.dlFor " TOlllOrrCIW " Oulllno T- I.Wit .. .. .. .. " ... OoNhue --" .. ~ " BlrM1 ....,Tyter ... Moor'9 ..... 8otl .. ~ ..... ..... " .. .. " " .. KNXT KN8C • • .......... .......... ..... ..... " .. .. .. " .. tiBSNlwl NBC ..... .. " 20nTht FMllr TCMI FM TM NllCUCMI: WllloM .,... .. ...... .. Wlmlna" ......... .. P.I. .. .. " .. " KllOll " ~ .. .. .. .. ..... ..... .. .. Tiit Tonie!!" ~ ltlC " ~ .. TOlnOffOW .. .. . . . .... ,. . -.:. , KTlA KA8C KFM8 ,, • • • ....... ... ....... ....... 700 Good Man*'ll CM> ....... ..... .. ~ .. .. " .. NtlJIM .. &nip lit .. s.~ Law• " ToleMr .. .. flclwd AM. \ The ..... Loe ....... flclwd ~ Ab ...... .. Big Tine'• Thtflflol .. ~ ~ ·~ Tine'• .. ComDlnv .. llollnil FM!ly Y°"'!!And . FM The Alllllll .. ~·· .. .. Hool .. ~ AIMy ..... Zani Ollctrtn .. T_. " AITht • Zani " WOltd How Onellt Twn1 ~ Tol.M " " a.dlFor " " Tomorrow JolWI Genlrll Guiding OMllall ~ I.Wit .. .. .. .. .. .. EdpOf JolWI .. NWll Dlwldeoll ~ Y°"'!! " lMI .. SI** ..... .. 1tM " .. .. .. M.AS.H . .. .. .. blky ..... ..... &Hukll .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. KTLA KA8C KFMB • • • ... .... ....... ....... KAllg ..... cas ..... RI .. " " .. ..... .. .. .. ..,Dlye Ast; ..... TICTIC ... .. ~ ....... EyeOn PM .. LA ....... Mo* Molt& n. "How Mnd1 w-. OtTht 8ololn " <Ml'' ..... .. .. ....., ....,...,. .. ... PJ. " Taxi .. .. .. " ..... 20· 20 Knotl .. " ~ .. .. .. .. .. 5llr ..... ..... Trlll .. .. .. ABC,_ The .. NltJtl6w """'1one Mo* ICNrtle'a Hee .. ~ ~ '· ~ Of Laredo" .. .. . .....;,. _-:-_ 1'.:I:......_. ·.:;;.... ~ -"· -~ ... -----KHrl ... KC8T KTTV KCOP • • • • ....... .. ..... ... .... .......... The Todi? llllglllmy ftlx Froodll &ff-* ThtCll Thll'lll .. --~ AWflf .. COllMf ~ Jim .. ~ .. 8*lr .. .. .. "/ °""' &..'!""" .. .. 8'rt .. ~ IL.CM ~ .. Lucy Room .. Bllllkfled LA'•Tht .. .. .. Pm Mldlnorr*'V . WhlllOf 1Dr9M!Of Oortl . LA For1Ulll ..... Cly .. ~ Ftmly ~ .. PU """' ... .. Clrd ThtGllOlt McMI: " Sflmb ,..,.. ..... ···loQll Mo* ToTll ~. In • "The ThtTruOI London" "'*'• 0-,.0t McMI: McMI:' Edge: Oll'LMI ""'*"'I "X·15" " OtA .. " .. ......,. . .. ..... NtlJIM Plrt2 .. .. WOrtd .. .. Md, .. .. " Wld .. .. .. Welt T .. ... T1rm1 .. .. ~ " lrOfllldl .. " .. .. .. .. .. Mo* Lit'• Terry- " "~" Rip '°°"' Mo* c.toonl " "The .. .. .. Llglnd .. Tom And Klr1oon Of " Jtlrr KlrTMI CUIW" .. The .. .. .. ~-.. .. Ocnltu Bllllkfled ffed .. .. " Ai.n Wiiie'• .. IOrWMI Wllt'TI .. or.--YowF"* KHJ KCST KTTV KOOP • • • • ....... ....... ....... ....... TICTIC NBC ..... M.A.8.H. Good Dol9I .. .. nm. Jok ... ..... PM ~ Wld .. !Mllmlrll .. ~ .. ~ ~ .. n. OtSln F-Tht FM!ly Wind FrlnCtlco MllllC FM .. .. ...,.. NBCMG* ~ --"The ' "Twe>-The ''Sky Flm ....... Wind Hellt" Fiim W"'*'°" .. .. Min" .. Top .. ,. .. s.orr .. .. .. Merv .. .. .. Gtllln .. ..... .. .. ..... .. .. " .. .. .. .. IHNNlwl .. .. .. .. ~fUI ..... Mllril ~ For .. .. .. Th* T~ .. s~ lMI .. !Seiall A. " ..... 8lttltl .. .. .. " .. Tomorrow Hogln'a .. .. .. ... .. -----~----.. ---. ... KCET • ~ ....... Yoga For .... ..... Roaert Big~ ...,,. VIII Allar'I 8-111 Slr9llt " .. a..oom lnllruc:lon .. .. Bectrtc ~ HIN'1To YowHllllll [ti CMtt OWlr &Iv a..oom INWClan " .. .. .. .. .. 8111'11 .... ....... eo.n VIII """" ..... Aoalrl s-s..... " .. KCET • ... .... TOlllOrTOW Todlr ..... .. OWlr &ly ....... Latnr T.MAC. ~ Snllk ~ .... Al W.-.00 .. U.S. Chronlcll Amlrtcln ~ Dick CMtt CapCioned ABCNlwl ··---·- i<oCI"" • .. .... ....... Ltfnr 0- E.-•• ..... °""!?TIV 9'do a.. Bldrtc IC-.... --Yog1WI ...... HulMn ...... Wl1llng For AAlllGll Col ... IP IH 1 .... .... .. lnlrodUdng ..., MlllDI OcMl111•ll Ot&rll And .... v.,,_, ........... .. OWlr E9t ....... Ltfnr NM .. .. .. Kiii(• Klldlln KOCE • ... .... Bldrtc ~ s. ....... Latnr ..... .. OI Pllnllng Ml Qlld ISnelk ~ Hidden Aal ..... .. "*"'?.'' The Tom ConltShow CljJtloned ABC,_ -'l M.vaw1 ~ 1:qo• HAWY~YI~ .._,...-men UiM n ---for ..., the glltl • ,.,., •• ~ l)Mr'I rnodll. • MAINSf THI WIND "A......_ Of Ula Md o-111·· JoNllNn .. put• llied by~ .... Mafy .. In need of medlcl9I c:ar9 Md ... deeltl. ,,.,, 10> •• -n-.. -~ ... 1-a Of MH ~ ,. _..,__,by• troubled young man conca•I• Information about her per90MI ... "°"' .... poloa ... ~ COllS her her ... • OV9'u.r au.ta; lertNir• Cool!. ptdogi .. ,...,_ Van Dar z.. Or. OorOlfly w-. dll.(..,Q a...v ..... "a.lute To 'fncllll Lowe'" °"""* .-oou ....... F-r9flOO z....a ®MCMR "Aodcy ,, .. (1971) ~ Stalona.T•&t*a. (D)MCNia "INIMIMr"(1tlO)~ Adord, YIPf* Kono. • TNf'f A TUCICllt MOT1 TM Nlfy, dynMllc Tanyia TucMr ....,,_ 8CM'OI ranging "°"' ~ to ~rod! 'n' rol. llve from tha Aoay (!'=:'Loi Angella. ''Tha ........ (1te0> Rey Sharkey. Tovah ~. 7:30. 2 OH THE TOWN Hoeta: St-Edwerda, Melody Rogan. T• to ''Wtllte c:oller oeya" to '-n~!Nlr~ producer H-ctlft Smith t ... ebout ............. .. t!Ofl to,...... the .. ......., TNCll om.'' • a netlOnel pop cuhure mnttty. • IHANANA au.ta: Edger a.van llnd Ctlerte McCrir1'ly • • tvaOHL.A. Hoet9: .._ PedrOD. P..e ~·A lootc .. __,. lend'• ..,.. MCNe: lnOYle -----...... who 0..-"-":. ** .. Ula electrtc: auto: • trendy 9'lot for hOt ..... ~ ''Tha Hot TYi>." Cl) ft.M. MMIADtl TM alnnil\.. -net. U.S.S. Kitty ...... fleturad. ltOO.CI) THIWALTONI Rote'• •..flllnOa ~ to Walton'1 MOuntaln llMl'Ctl- lng for a MW llf9 and hid- ing the feet that he hat no1 ~ nMntally ..... {A) e8MOV11 * * "Two-Minute Wfll'n· Ing" (1979) Ctwttori ..... ton. John c-wtea. • MOVIE * •~ "Hour Of The Gun" ( 19'7) JamH Gtrner . <See THURSDAY'S Pa1e ZS) .. . . ---~,,..-...._...-..__. __ ..... .,..,... ........... @E ... !ml .. m!!lllll!'l!lll'll~lll!'!~~--~~.•-~~-~-~-----~9'." ......... lll!!S ........ ~ .. a~-!1~~~2121 ":'t .. . . :.. .. 111 wa·som aw1s- Authotiad vldlo W.-rMly S.Vlc::e ~for Ulllfa•K1CS••. lmilll•BPMllH ..aasm• m•u-..... ·-·· . '* c.r.. Slit" lmlll ......... iUITmc __ ... . 1_ss21 eo......-a.- • ..... ~ .... ta.5733 . REAL ESTATE LICENSING SCHOOLS * f OI' Brokers and Salesmen * right ;nt weekend classes (T-. I Well Ht-.-MO p ,,., * Texts, Practice Exams * C:Ollege level Broker ~lification C:011ses ,.....761-9255 u.,4 l••••lller far~ -pricn LLOYD SHOEMAICER HAL ESTAll SCHOOL IMC. . lt07W_ .. ..,.... ,._c....,u n.u 'J' IMdl.CA LE PETIT CAFE& BAKERY .~ l ~ .. KHJ e 1:80 -"1be Flim·Flam Man.'! George C. Scott and Sue Lyon star in this movie about a con man chased around the country. KCET QI 8 : 00 -"T a ke 10, America." 1be Twelfth Night Repertory Company takes a humorous look at re· sistance to the metric system. KC ET 9 9:00 -"Bluegr ass at Waterloo Village." A three-day festival of foot-tapping music. KOCE 9 10:30 -"Vtldngs : From the Fury of the Northmen." The Danish raiders devastated Europe, city by city. <From P•ge Z4) K9lly hom • gltttetlng Lu Vag119 ~ wflidl MkMa th• golden era of lnOlllamalllng In tong end danca. (Z)MOVIE ·:s~ Movie" ( 111711) bocum.ntary. Mllelc by ..... c:>tdftMd. 9:30 • 111 TA>CI T ony'a llckluater boxing career -to be draw· Ing to • cic-when his bolllf\g lfcanM Is ravotlad . .. ~QNmN "Salute To 'Endtea Love"' Guaeta: Bloolla SnMllda. Franco z..ttlfell, Martin H9wltl, Dr. Joyce 8r(l(herL • HtOOEH PLAC:al: WHEM HISTORY UVEa .. Two AcMee W•t" Hoat Philip Abbon tot'owa the OV9rland rout• and the M'-1 RIYer to Iha g< .. t frontier, atopplng at flttle Nutrftletl o..Ja wttlt ,,_ C.U•, Not tfw ~lllplOm. ...... - A Diet program you can tlve with. A System lndMdUalty dellg1led to c:omplimenl your lit•tyle. SpecllllBng In: PERSONALIZED NUTRIENT DEFIC1ENCY Md FOOD EVALUATION TESTING By Appallaiirwtt Only. I am interested In educating others, and I believe that it starts with peo- ple taking re~ponsibility for their own health In no less fashion than they take care of the financial aspects of their lives. Plan for tomorrow's good health - TODAY! .... , ..• 3625W.MACAATHURBLVD SUITE 302.C SANTA ANA. CA 92704 (71 4) 641·5977 known alt• that ltll •lot .......... ---============~ about America'• put. (C)MOYIE "AQattia" (111711) OuilJn Hollman. lllll)HH Redgr"I"". CD)MOYE "Alf Tl)at Jazz" (111711) Roy Sdleldar, Jeelica I.Inga. 10:00 9 CJ) KNOTI l.NONG Garf• ambition to oet lllMd fandl him $50,000 In debt to mob-connact.o Plf'I• jot>ber'I. (R) DAVIS-BROWN SENSATillW.. OFFER!! • . • U.8. CHAONIClE -~~-"Boomtown" Jim Llhrw eumlnea IM modern-day energy boomtown of ~llO. Colorldo. and IM ..... ~ ..... ~~ ~ thet proepat1ty .. bMglng tu the oommunlty. ® H90IHIN< MIVIEW ~-wlf9 cornlca Jerry Stllfer and Anna Meara In~ tM mov· .... IPadlla and ~ _.. corrq to Home Boa Ofllca In Augult. CJ) llZAMI )()(I John ....,. .,.. ~ "*"' """"" "*' INtll. llrglf tlWI .... end zanier than lnYlfllng ~·v. .,.. -· ' .MCMI "t.•o•nd Of f:ranclll• King;' ll'fgltte' kdot, CleilOla cw~ to'.IO. ALlll ICAtt ,.. ICJM: ANOne ~ "II Tellr'G em. u l !O" A look .. --... llillary of tM~ F ........... n..r ... . *"'°' ......... ... .... L.11111 Vllllla. ...... ""'°"' TM fVf'/ CM TM .......... "-·Wllllt ,.,_ ................. -0..-*"19 ..... --.-~·· r.=.:~: . ~¥4:· ~J -FREE . riJ VldeoDisc ALBUM Wl)lfl you~ 1111 exCltfng RCA SFT100 ~.~.)'OU can d1ooal one of 34 wtdlo...dllelilbums .. abaOUely FREEi Selec;t IM"Bucch Caslkly Ind 11\e &lndlnce«id". ·Miah-, Ind 32 more Ii I • , i -i .lqm . KN&C i KTLA A.~:;. ·a.· • . ' • ~ --J.Y.l .......... .......... ........ 00 "'°"*'O 7. *"".. Tocflr, 7'00 a: 9: 10: - 11: 12: 1: 2: a: ... --s: ~ .. .. .. ~. .. c.-.. .. ~ " .. .. Gllgln'• .. " lllMd Tiie LaVlgll Ilg ...... a.. V*t Nlot llodt· " .. ...... .. ThlPl'ICI MlllOf ,_, .. ,...,. Fenn .. P.-otd .. " .... .. OM Dly Clrct ""*" AtATlnll 8Mta SilNnonl s.dlFot Thi a.le TCllllOmiW Ooc:tora ..... YOllfllAnd Olye()f a... Thi,.... OwU. .. " .. AaThl Wortcl Twna tt . Ouldlng ~ .. " a.n.y ... a.lllby Jonll " " -" ..... .. .. " .. .. .. .. Anolw Heu Wortcl ~ .. " " r .. JoM .. OMtlorl .. " .. .. Mlldl " GllM " MlryTyler Moen. ~ Mlryr,llr -.... . , Bob .. ~ .. ..... .. .. Womln " " . " MIRROR SPECIAL a..Mlmw i ..... ( .. 100lldl) 1:;:.·=- ..., '149~ •.• f ~I MIRROR 7 DESIGNS fl POR Nf'f AOOM ====~· ... lilmln ......... •c;:-. ..... Ill ! I KABC .. i ~KAIB KHJ Kttrf 1 • • • • ....... ~--.......... ........ QOOO Mor'*'D Thi TCJdl? Mon*'ll ..... Ffoadll Aln9b " Tllnll " " .. AW• " " Surq> Jim " .. Slrl~ a.lier .. .. .. .. " .. .. .. A.M. Thi H Donlflul Loi ......... .. " Angllll Ab .. . .. .. .. .. " lcM ThlPl'ICI Mldr!IOl 1*'11 wtlll!Of lolll ·~ LA. Fortune .. .. Plllword .. .. . PU F..ity YN19 And " Clrct Fwd Thlflllti. " Shlrtll ..,. .. .. Mo* Mlry Tyler Hiim " "Thi Moen Miity ..... SMnll'I Dlya Of aildrlll .. o..n" OwU. " s.dlFor Plrt2 .. " TOl'llCllTCIW .. .. OMUft AaThl Niwa AnoCNr ToLM Woftd .. Wortcl H Twna Thi .. .. .. F9I " Gnral Guiding .. TIXM ~ Uflt • " .. lrOlllldl .. " .. " " Edgl Of JoM " Mo* -OMteorl " "MM ThlWOttd .. Mo* OnA Of PIODll .. "SIMia I Tlalllrooe" " " ..... ~ " • l H ............. " ~ .. rtu.8.H. " .. " .. .. " ..... ..... Y111J.fllaPI'• ~ " " 8pec:llt aqu.. " .. WIW'a To Tel H .. Thi Truth SLIDING . MIRROR ~ DOOR · t .. :r ... -1 ,. u." .... °"" ·~Oil •0.C--·• ...... , • ...,Ylllly Fxllt ... A .Ftllllllll Clllrlla,11 •Antique •Aldm ....... ..... •GoldY91n , • Mlmlf & Wood ...... ., ..... -= .... KTTV ,, 'kCOP • • ~----~ ........ Bugalunny PoftyPlg .. MIFIY COllelr Mell.- Tom And .. .,., . Thi ~ ......... ; llAM . Romper LYcy Room 8'illedied C** " .. I01911 Doria or.--Dey Fllf'iltt~ Room AM 222 Thlliiiili ...,. &Mn.Ml* '7h1Mln . ..... "°"' .. '*"" Mo* McMp: ''TlleMlft "Yollnglllood F10l'll ....... Color*" .. " . .. .. " .. " " LAI'•.!"'> OntSltp ~ MyTine 8upenMI Soni .. ll0.000 ~ ~ .... ... ~ I~ ". . Ff9d " """'°"' .. I~ .. Thlllr9dy 'Clrtoonl 8llndl " llAM 8cootJy 11...,,, Ooo '-KCET • ....... YOQIFor Hellll ..... IAocllrl Gifting To Know MI VIII 1 ...... 5-'111 sv... .. .. Educlllonll ~~Ill .. Blctrlc Compeny Fell Gubr lick <:Met °"" I ~ Edllcltlonll ~~ " " " .. " You And Thlllw You And Tllellw .-r ... ..... 1 ...... 8-111 ltrllt " " K\NC • " .... MICHll IAtnr °"" IEMv Body lluddlee •• VIII !Ai-. OnOI Upofl AClllllc Blctrlc le- Educlllonll ~~ " .. .. H " Educ8llonll flrogl.•11•111 .. " tt . .. GIMn Teg. Wlla.M'I? ThllW Voice Thi ~ °"" 1~-.... lAlllw --For A Alllorl Projlct lWvlrll Humln 8lflMw • Dnuna sara becomes ang~ • • By LYNDA HlllSCH ALL MY CHILDREN : Catching Sean pulling Nina 's missing picture back on piano, Palmer re· alizes Sean m aki n g duplicates of the photo for himself, but lnstead of be· Ing angry P a l mer is pleased with Sean's interest in Nina. Att.empUn1 a re· co nciliation be t ween Palmer and Cllff, Donna arranges a dinner party. Palmer tells Daisy to get out of town or he'll have hls Doberma.ns kill her. Nancy is livid when Frank moves Jesse Into Carl's room . Jesse refuses to go to sum· mer school. A stunned Mark catches Betsy and Wally klulng, learns of their love affair and then hears Devon say how much she now loves Wally. With Ro1er suffering from severe case o( mononucleosis, Sara can-cels European trip. When Erica shows up al hospital to check on Roger's condl· lion, Sara becomes angry. Erica flees and lets Bran- ( See BRAD, Pase Z1) I • Get reedy, Orange Cowity, The Weight Plac. bu come to town! We'v. helped thouundtof our cl1entl loee the wmc;ibt they wanted to-the fut, healthy Weight Place way. • RAPID WEIGHI' L0$ WrI'H NO HUNGER • INDIVIDUALLY-TAJLORED PROGRAMS • HIGHfSI' S~ RATIO FOR WEIGHT OONTROL • • PROFES9IONALLY SUPERVJSEO BY NUTRITION SPECIAUSTS • DELICIOUS, NU'l'RmONAIJ.Y WELL-BALANCED~ • NO SHOI'S, DRUGS, UQUID PROl'EINS, STARVATION DIETS, STRENUOUS EXERCISE OR CHEMICAL PRE-PACKAGED FOODS. •MONEY BACK GUARANTEE • Scbeaule your FREE oomultation today. No obligatial . ------~--~ -· ... triltfi (From P~1e 21> don think sbe's dating Chad when in fact she's in Pine ·· Valley. Palmer tells Donna they can start' working on having a child right away. ANOTHER WORLD: After Blaine's testimony that she 'didn't' love him at the time ol their marriage, Jerry quits law firm and decides to resume police career. Cecille suggests to plane crash, Raven takes another look at Jeers and Sky's. photo and realizes that Jeff and Sky have identical scars on their backs . This discovery makes Raven think that Sky Whitney may really be Jeffersoo Bn>Wn. Sky tells Gavin there t.s no way he ls going to let Jodie quit the• dancl! group. Kelly tells Valerle that he'll make sure she's never alo.ne. the worst. Morgan wonders if Hilary . and Kelly are romancing, while Derek tries not to be jealous of Hilary and K e lly's friendship. ONE LIFE TO LIVE: A seriously Ill Peter confesses to priest that he learned Jenny's baby died and Katrib's live baby was switched· by Karen ancj Marco. As. Peter confesses, .llarianne that Rick is giv-.---,-----.,......,....._,......,,,...-__,--..:..------, ing Jamie drugs. Released from psychiatric ward, Jamie suspects Cecille' might be feeding him the medication. Larry .dis· ccwers Jordan's blaek book. It ia revealed that Coltota . killed Jordan and Blaine Is set. free. Mitch .thinks Raebel milbt have been ~ctr staying with Hae. AIS THE WORLD ·TURNS: Carol and Steve , •ilc9¥er Sona let Natalie see Amy. Natalie swears she'll •er try to see Amy 11gain and explains she pro- nai.led her husband never to have another child and wmated to see tbe only one · slse'IJ ever give' birth to. Natalie getting ready lo leave town. With Barbara's designer ~ shop set to open. James plans to smug· gJe jewels in with the or- d ers . James· p l an is sidelined for the time being when he discovers that Hfyley is back on tbe track of the hieroglyphics on the bracelet. James knows Ir the tomb Is opened that the _.._ __ ....._ ______ .;;__....;;;;.. __ _ jewelry be is smugsllng wlll be discovered and feels Hayley inust be gotten rid of. Annie tells Dee she is to be a surrogate mother. DAYS OF OUR LIVES: After Alex has three bulleta pumped into him, Renee walks into office and finds David stndina over him . wlth gun. David swears be came in after the shooting and picked up the gun and was rubbing otr the fingerprints because he re· allied touching the firearm wo a mistake. •Urie thinks Mary may have shot Alex while Mary thinks Marie did this because Marie saw Mary and Alex kissing. Jeu.fca also thinks Marie may have shot Alex. Forgivln& Doug for bis strict altitude, Hope In· forms him she has no feel· log• for Julie. Trish teJls Mike she isn't ready to ac· cept his marria1e proposal. Evan reallies Maggie is the surrogate mother carrying bis ebiJd. SOAP ROCKER -Atutralian-bom Rick Spr- ingfield who recently joined the cast of "General Ho!pttal" as a surgeon, is an award· ~nnmg international rock star as well cu an ac· tor. Nicole w•nts to have another baby. GENERAL HOSPITAL: the tape recorder Brad planted picks up the story. Brad Is stunned when he retri eves tap e fr om botplul room aftd learns Mary is not his child. Bitter and vowing tb get even with all who let him believe Mary was his child, Brad decides to keep quiet for the lime beina. Doctors are using experimental drug on Peter. Even though it may be poisonous, Ted cooUnues to drug Vicki an~ when she cannot remember the name of her own children s he pleads with Ted to stay with her becauMrshe needs him. Pat aceompanies Clint as be goes to open Olym. pia 's crypt in Texas. Bo wonders why Asa's order- ing heavy guard around Olympia's grave. Marco delighted when Asa sends him to Texas to lOok for new talent. to htm, decides to get even with Joe by. killing Jack. Jack. on to Joe, wants to make it look as though Joe's tactics are &ettlng to bin\ and p~ to have b~ak with Ryan family with the final straw being a Cist fight with Johnny. Jill agrees to having law partnenhlp with Frank. SEARCH FOR TOMOR· ROW : When Cissy, takes apartment and leaves building, Lee smpect.s it was Stephanie's doing. Lee offers to hire nurse for Roger Lee, but Ci:asy insists on watchinl child benelt. Feeling sbe needs lime alone, Uza goes to New York 'to study vojce with Dane. When Dane ls out ol town· she decides to ·take cniiae. Stepllanie finds her son Briu boxing in ring. He wins the match after be ls told to take a dive. Garth feels Ile ls tiriq off Cathy's mcmey _. feels further re~ buffed-..t.en she says she ls too tu-.d.)o make love, TEXAS: Parnell saves Paige after she swallows sleeping pills and asu her to live wilb him. Mpx learns Bubba and Justin getting oil olf. Max's land. Joe confesses to Elena that be killed Chris. Dennis get· Ung five years for Chris' murder and cannot get pro- bation for over two years. Iris h war)1$ Stryker to keep Ryan out of Alex's will because she thi nks he caused his death. YOUNG AND THE RESTLESS: Kay offers to s how Liz bow to be a lady so she won't feel out of place on Leslie's London tour. To complete Liz's ensemble, Kay takes her to see famous fashion de· s igner Mr. Blackwe ll. Jonas on road to recovery. Cbrls tells Peggy she hates ller apartment and is tak· ing loads ol sleeping pills without Snapper 's knowledge. Patty stunned when Paul shows up just as she's about to spend coiy evening with Jack. Learn· ing Cash bas started gigolo service. Nikki quits as Bayou stripper. After Cash tells Kay he really likes her, she wonders if they can be more than escort· client. Andy the bartender is•interested In Nikki. Hoot a quatton about "°"' /aVoriU toal> or ioClp .tar? Write to · Lf rrdo 'l'HE DOCTORS: Follow· ing a fight with Matt, Mag. gle leaves him and moves ln with Althea. In his first colunua. Billy exploits Nola~s· past. Her first day back as an internist, Althea treat-a a hit·and·run victim. Steve tells Biiiy to atop writing mallc!iou1 tbln11 aboUt Noa.. Natalie gets ln· terview with porno lrint for St~n. Nola Jeams she owns tae Chrclnlcle, 19 auiq Bil- ly 1nd tbe paper would re· ally be~ tilrMlf. Rl1bt after O'Rlley dies, Scorpio promises to get Cassadine. Scorpio and Luke go to yacht. The duo create a diversion or a man drownlpg. While everyone on the yacht Is looking away, Scorpio and Luke sneak ooto the vrset and are stunned to discover Laura in the batch . .Leslie realizes Cassactine ls Tony Castle and theh gets letter from Lura explaining she is once again on the rvn. Fearin1 Monica, Susan leaves Alan goodbye letter ·and tleada for New York to hJLve her baby. Ramsey 111>· set when It appears Joe no longer thinklr Rea-ther killed Diana. No one ls able to identify Heathe~ in police Uneup as woman at Diana's apartment the ni&ht abe was murdered. Hirao~. c l o ')' eld New.,,aper S~, P.O. Bo:r 19620, Irvine_. Calif. 92114. Site •will QM«r QI manu ~QI • can in Ian column, -bul tile volume of mail malcea RYAN'S HOPE: Barry. peraonol repl'-• fmpoHf· tonfirms Kim's story to ble GUIDING LIGHT: Diane Seneca tba she forgot pill;:==· ===:i:::===:-J IDOi! Of' wishes Alan would 1ive up one nllbl and she made on reco.-clllalion with tove and lhe child could Hope. •ean•ue, Alen Seqttea's. Seneca aaya lm· plans to foOow straight ad Pollillle. but wbln alone narrow In order to win tw•s DOt to cert81a. Seneea Hope bad:. Eell1 tells ttlll want1 d•vorce but Hilary Nola prtput and wantf U.. elllld tf It'• his. Hiler)' ......_ Nola 1et Orton ll "°r-IDI for •bc>r\1QD. ~---... _, Va II lllo Iii .... b'/ become IM4l•&••· A._ Jotr: lie taa. tit bola. spends in t ~ feelln1 Joe. Illa· .Diane's. him •II Use the Daily Pilot "Falt Result" service directory. Your · tervlHilour ......... Call fO.NTI •~ m ~~-~~~~~~ ~ .... - • lc1•1•lc• ••l•lanrc• fneo•er••• • Pro¥• _.. effecH•• -p1l11M • U..._,,4w .... of~, pt co.en 1100 Mt-W. f . I • , ...... I •d•W...U • No spec:W 1nt•lltla9 n "' eel Typical Applications •One unit can prot9ct an arN up to i600 9qUAI• , .. 1 . , .. -- I 4 I I ' ' • • 1 .~ ~ I t I l ,· •· " ·~ f > 1 l c: Brinkley wins L:owell Thomas Award By JEPF PAUE& °' .......... a. David Brintley, an NBC News correspondent for 38 years, bas ·been named wianer ol tbe ID· ternational l!latform Aupclation'• 1911.#Lowell Thomas Award fOf' eleetroalc journalbm. BriDkleJ wu cited for hia "illdellble mark • televilioa journallam," and will accept bla a-'rd Aus. 7. Past recipients are Harry Reuoaer, Barbara Walters, Eric Sevareld, Jim Lehrer, Howard IC. Smith and Frank Re)'DOlcll ... Comi.nc olf with rave reviews for bia flnt com· edy special, Robert Kleln's new special, "Tbe Robert Klein Show," will be aired July 31 OD NBC. Rodney Dan1erfield and Jane Curtin will be special cuests fOr the eveniq. Klein wUI be lampoonl.n1 1ucb topics a1 popular psychiatry, · rock linlen and celebrity competition telecuta in the oae-baur abow. Amon1 Klein's comic musical numben will be "You'll Never Love lie Hall Al Mueb Al I Do" (in a sk,etcb called "Manllomanla"), "Daneln& Cbaln .. and "I Can't Stop My Les ... " Two short stories by Bret Harte, "Tbe Out- casts ol Poker Plat" ud "Tbe Luek of Roarinl Carop" are the bueS for the NBC t.eJevillon movie •'California Gold Rush'• set to air July 28. Robert Haya, who sot some of tbe many lau&ha in the sl)09f "Airplane," will play Harte. Joi.Dini Haya iJl this story of iold lust will be John Dehner, Henry Jones, Gene Evan and Cliff Osmond ... James BroUn h'as replaced the aillnl Sam EJ. llott as the lead character in the CBS production "The Ambush Murden" now fllmlnl ln and llround Loe AngelesJ The television movie la baaed on the book by Ben Brad.lee, Jr., and tells the story ol a defense attorney who tack.lea an expal\'e case involvinl an outspoken black activist wbo la accused ol murdering two white policemen .... Youna Tracy Kaplan won the KBLA radio con· test "Win a Day with Erik Eatr.da" and 1be re· cently followed the ~ "CHlPS" atar t.brouCh a work day at MGM. The bard day's work still left time for a quick lunch in the MGM Com· T.Vpuzzle Tracy Kaplan tom. a clay wUh Erile Eltrado . ' miasary ... Music industry stars and NBC have teamed up for "100 Years of Solid Gold," a tribute to the American music busineu, set to air July 19. Amons the entertainers lcbeduled for t.be ex· travacama are Glen Campbell, Johnny Cub, tbe Ray Charles Singers, Fo1bat, Marilyn Home, Gladys Knight, Henry Mancini, the Mllla Brothers, Andy Wllllams and Sha Na Na ... CBS News and American Airllnel have struck a deal for ln·Oigbt programm.ins. News correapon: dents Charles Kuralt and Douclas Edwarcll will in· troduce two 30-mlnute news maguinea-"Eye OD Science" -and "Ma1u1De of the Ali" -this month. "Eye OD ·Science" wlll focua on health, technology and nature, and ''Maga&ine of the Air" wJ U offer feature stories on people and event.I that 24 TV studio GfOUplng 25 Spoil 28 Mottt -Mindy 27 ~-science •how on TV 30 s.ncroft or Baxter 32 Miu Rutherford's lnltlala 33 Ml .. Booth'~ sign-off 53 Mr. Nlmoy'• lnalgne !54 'Haywood -of Whar1 Happening 5e Paul -on Dayt of Our Liv" 58 F111ncla or Golonka 51 -Senderl of AH My Ch!_tdren DOWN 38 Sb Mllllon -Man 38 Saundefa of Deys of Our LW.. 40 Meedowe or Mansfield 41 TIW -Yo.tr Lffe 42 Rote for Robin Wiiiiama 44 Dtxon of Boaom Budd lee '48 -Atwet 47 ~otCowMI -eo CompMa he9dtng 52 Rubyor~ra 55 MIN Lynn•a 1'*9ne 57 -Othlf LAM SOl.UTK>N Zubin Mehta (~ft) and Danny K~ 1 "rarely ma.lee the headlines ... " Comedian Danny Kaye and the New York Philharmonic will team up OD PBS September 23 to raise money for the phllbannonic pension runes. Kaye, who cannot read music, will conduct the or· cbestra. Described by Dimitri Mitroupoloe as "a born conductor who can eet whatever be wants from an orchestra," Kaye believes that a little fun with serious music ls good for all involved. "It may start out formal," be said, "but it won't stay that way. We play tbe music straJ1ht - no slopping through it -but what comes between the oumbera, well, it's not serious." This la the third time Kaye bas worked to the musicians. He conctucted concerts lo March of 1958 and 15165 also. Letters Kem Dlbbs (who?) 'Buck Rogers' ;50 BEaofCS -la &Ille okl TV serlaJa, eaa >'" tell me wllo played Bliek &opn, n ... GwM. aa4 J••ale llmf -E.C. PlaMe, Jewett aty, C.U. "Buck Roeers" had a brief TV run ln 1950, with Kem Dlbbl ln the title role of the lnt.er1alac· Uc trouble·ahuoter. There was a syndicated German series adapted from the "Flub Gordon" movie serla.ll, •t.arrinl Steve Holland u P'lash; the star ol the movie serials wu Buster Crabbe. Johnny Welumuller played Jungle ;Jim in the 1955 syndicated aeriea. · . KID8' STVPF -Aa •-' u I l&Ut n.leJ hp haay, I'll •Yer ... Her •1 Cid.Id.II ... ._.. of uaeelrJ 6 a.u.-.ae ... Cu ,_ pleue tell •e •M PNnied die v .. eet fer lledJ, ..Uwt.kle, •rt. • N.aulla, O.U.1 o.tlM ... &lie ml ti Ute ebraetenf -Bob •ce-. Waeei'hry, c.-. I { • I I -- ~ ~ t f l She -mad& 'se biz' 'show biz' By MARY JANE SCARCEUA> Ol .. DMty~-- Fancy needlework isn't the usual path to stardom, but for one woman, "sew biz" bas led to "show biz." Barbara Johnston, who grew up in the sub- zero winters of Onekama, Mich., taught herself to sew, knit, embroider, needlepoint and quill at an early age when bad weather forced her to stay indoors. Today she can knit a complicated sweater in about 14 boun and describes needlework as "the one constanUy satisfying area in my life." Recently she sat explaining· the dif· ferences between French and English smocking on a length of fabric in her lap. Bright lights beamed at her from several directions, a television camera moved in for a closeup and a crew member silently signaled her to conclude her demonstration in 30 seconds. "It's bard to count stitches and talk at the same time," she complained when the cameras stopped. · She was filming at the Huntineton Beach studios ol Channel SO for Coastline Commubity College, which will air '-0 half-hour prolJ'ams beginning Sept. 14. Miss Johnston had won over lS other can- didates in try-outs last January to host the two- unit course and helped develop the script and outline. ·'I was a voice and musit mltjor ln college and wanted to teach elementary acbool," she said during a break, "but I opted for the usual 'MRS-degree' so many women.bad during the '50s.'' Her interest in handcrafts continued u she raised four children, and she began demonstrat- ing and instructing first at a department store and then for various needlework auoclaUooa. The Texu resident has traveled to Orange County four times since January to film for a week or 10 days at a stretch. Tbe TV crew estimates it takes about five hours on the set for each half-hour segment of completed work, "and that's not counting the planning beforehand or the editing afterward," one pointed out. For the star, time on the set often means stopping, starting and going back to reaboot some parts or the tape. She sat wearing a turquoise dress and ar- ---~. \ Barbara John.st.on on&tage to film her needlework program. ranged props for two minutes ol abooting to "match up" with previously shot tape. . "Did I have my gluaes on or off?" she asked the crew. "And wu my smockin1 board on my lap or on the table?" A fast rerun of the tape showed the impor- , tant details, and shooting began again. The course will be uaed by about 500 other colleges &cro$S the United States, with the money for the leases going back to Coastline College, acc9rding lo Jack Chappell, a spokesman for the college. Even before cameras began to whir. six months ol development and research went into the course design, including research into a market for it. Donna Friebertshauaer. a needlework in· structor with Coastline, is servinl u a consul· tanl on the project and on the set, taking care of s uch diverse tasks as keeping track of needlework samples and ironing dresaea for Miss Johnston. "Now I know why award winnen lban.k everyone connected with a project," lliH Johnston said. "No one can do this alooe. What the audience sees is the small tip of a very large iceberg." Sbe indicated bulky microphone equipment taped to the inside of her leg with a wire run- nlnc up to a pin al the neckline ol her dreu. "I have to watch bow I sit," she said with a laugh, "because it hurts if I move the wrong way. People think . beinc on television is all glamour and fun, but they don't realize bow bard everyone works." She paused as a makeup woman worked t.o change her eyeshadow to go with another dress (or the next shooting. "But don't gel me wrong," she said, "I'd certainly do it again.·· NBC planning 'Fame' for TV audience BJ P&ED YAGE& RllFT .... ,..._...., NEW YORK -After years of teaching others bow to fiod fame and fortune in the entertainment world, Albert Ha1ue ia finally findinl bimtelf in the celebrity spotlight. Last summer. Hague, a Manhattan-baaed composer and drama coach, played a tough· tal.kina but 11mpalbeUc music teacher ill the mov-Je .. Fame." Tbe United Artista film took a realistic Tiew at wbat tem-agen in a bilb achool ol perform1n1 ' an. 10 lhroulb ln hopes of addeviilg atardom. "'lbe llle of a celebrity ii like an lceber1;• sald Hque. "llOllt of it remaim underwater and just a little bit 1Uckt out. You jull hope the little bit that atlcb out u the good put." Hape is about to re-Cftate bla rote tn the television pilot ol "Fame" for NBC. A network apoll•aum said tbe teria proe.blJ wW not be ln the 1.u ....._., but will be ecbecblled ha u a mldle..-.=:emeot. "It's ," a.W Hap ol hi.I recent rile to fame at ap •· ••1 wu Juet •=I« a cab on •J ,.., to WI iotervlew wbm ID can aald bello to me. Tbat's aner ...,.,, ... Mien. nae 'Nlblltt;J .... ._ IDetedlble. "&'1 a lmd t1Wa1 I PliJid a alee fV1," be ................. o1., ......... ..... • ..,~.,._ ..... '° ......... .. fMrMlm.OW.,..la...,.~ "\ ' .~T, great deal of thinking toward.a manipulatinc the prenure." Hague said the best way to deal with the pre11ure ii lhro..gb preparalkin. "Whatever area of the arts you're in," -be said, "you must prepare as much u pouible ao you can tn&at your reflexes. That way you don't have to think about wbat you're dolnc. Tbe audWon is our marketplace ud show wlDdow Md ti JOU're not lK"epand, )'OU will lose out. "Teadda1 politics of the tllnter and bow to · malte it In Ulis buaineu," H.,._ coaduded, "u a little bit like teacbia1 bow t.o climb tbe Himalayas. ~=~~~:t~;;:,:~d~ ,... . . . "' ... ~ r -- , . l I I • I i ~ t ' ' • ' ' j l 1 ·1 f I I t l J ' ; ) ~ I I f } l I I 1 J ' I I • ... FRIDAv·s MOVIE8 .av11.•1 MGN•• .. a:> ......... lgedoon .. (19&4) Qerie ~. C,d Cflarl8M. Two friendl ....... lll)Ol'l lrtgldool\, • .... In .. loatM .._. .... wNcll..-to .. t c IQr .......... .., 100 " .. ~ ... "8IW tnaourt- ..,... (117•) lopllla LOf9fl. I Aldlard lwtoft. A IMllft, ftWYtacl --~ .............. o1 .. ..... In •dlaflOa .......... ,. Cl) ''The 0.... Sanlnl" (1979) Ao"'1 Duvall, ---~.A~ . an6-4~ ....... Corpe olloar ..,_ dcllftaalllC Ml- -.._ M ttta9 IO 'lmpole .. mMlry ....... onl*~.'PG' .. a:> .. ~ .. '""' OU.. Hoffman, Van .. •• .....,..,.. In LoMan In 1921, .. ~,_ paper ,..._.. -... ~ ._....., wilt\ --~--,,,.,. .. awtllla. wllO ... llft lw unflHMUI lluaband. 'PO' *IO(C)"T~ ~Ing" Frad KaJler, JoHph ~A~glrt ,..... an ll'lllnof1al ~ .._ • .. Tucka. 11•• ** "Jlnll Mor~" (19"1) eo..y lor9. lMI caorc.y. TM 9ol'8 Nl'IMIYe NO.OOOll'Clllla..,,_.. ...... llwellto~. Cl) fl fl* "IOllllll a ~ Up nw. ~ ..... (1181) ................ Anfll. ..... ChlllM. ..... ftrtr" .. ..... ""' • .._ • • ata41ta• ,,.r. ........ ... Of~( .... ... c-..IM. a... CGNft. . A.....,_.__ ...... o1.,, .. ~ ................. ........... GO FOR IT -John Cassavetes (left) and Charlton He'Ston arrest a sniper in a crowded football stadium in "Two Minute Warning" Thursday !it 8 p.m. on Channel .t. l:GO 8 ...... "Foiod Of Tlla God•" ( 1911) Mar Joe Got1nar, Pamai. l"tlnlllln. 8Med on tfl9 novel by H.G. w.... 8trang9 neturat- growtll lood oadng "'°"' Iha llOI UM ...... _.,,. ........ lntO lftCIMWI. ......... "TM Oeoar'' (19M)~Bo,d.~ ~. ,.,. Olea' ,_,.. ,....,,...'° ... .. rcaled ., Illa ...... ... _,,_......._ Cl),.,... .... (197'>~ ~T-...... A. ,... ..... in .. .. ,... ,_ ..._. ....................... .... I F In art llan In ... .,.. . 4c9Cl:)"T ........... FrH ~. JoMPfl ...,..._A~tlif .................... ----1\dla. ·····•C-" , ..... -..... 0... Andrw9. A Mid ...... iwoteot• a CtllffatMa---.... """ ""' ... ,...... .. • -------~ Bumi, F_.. --· A )Yno-gtl Mlrdl party " 0!09" nlmd to read! • young plane cra1tl 1urvlvor b9fore ... .. capturad by cannlbll&. • .. ,. ••• 'A .. .._. .. (1MI) Joan Cf'llwford. Ty Hardin. Scotland Yard ~·--of bizarre murder• II • olrcua. 1:11 • ..... "Devit'• Own" (1917} Joan Fontaine. ~ w.-. M fftGllltl ICflod. "*"' .... under ""'**"' whell OM of her puplll "--• MCttlldlll *" ttmof~. ........ •·ono.t Of 'l«ro" (1959) Clayton Moore, Pame61 8'1ke. A gang of cftn*lall wtltl Iha lid of • .. blacllamlttl plol 10 ..... wtttl vttal COf!WTM- nlcallOnl by deltroylng lalllll'llPfl.,., •:ao CZ> "catMrine ' Co ... (1973) Jarl9 Blrkln, hW* Olilieara. A young girt tr. Will ID Parll to Moornl a l'ligll t..Non ...... tlUC ,_ .. hil thfOugtl and .... 09lllt • ~ tucrlllhl9 ~~·..- SATURDAY'S MOVIES JUL.Yte. •1 MON•eca lcOO Cl) "Mori~ Gr1lf... lltl" ( 1979) "°" Howard, PULeMat.After~ tlon, a group GI lllgll edlod Mandi~ the d111111 .. of adulllood ... Iha loclll _..... GI ti. 1tlOL 'PG' 1• (C) "A fOf09 Of One" " (1'791 a.. ......,.. ,,_. - ...~A._... .. ...,.. "" ..... on.a,.... .......... ......... ldllra GI flla adoptacl ... 'N' w•••• ...... TMDw-11" (1H4) H•JINay ................... ., .... , .. , ............... .............. ------· .. ........... ..., ..... ...... .......... ............. ._ ........ (1)·11:1"11~ l1'11t ........ ~ c.nn-. W...on '°"'· • Tax .. OMfttlJ·....,,. ... '-...... ................. •JI' ................ .................. ~ ........... '". -· ..... "TM L.811--0f .......,..,.., ..... ....... aw.. ~ ''"""· A cour.,.ou1 .............. ,,., .. IO,_.,.. ---..i aw. tllrlgirt. ........... HllT'Mloe'' ( tM) AlltlOtt and c:o.i- IO, Glr'"1 ........... LOu\fl' llillo .,.... .. ... ,......... tl.e(C)fl**"l'MYllUllSlll Hast" (1MI) DoullM , ........ "'·· ........ GodlPlrdi. A ••• ..._. ....., of CM! ....,,. -. .. aw • ..., ,.,. .... .riCYIOGN l ~ I I I • I l ·I t 1 ' I t I l I I . f . · '' I I t. 1 ! 1 ~F.~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~-· Don't let \ high intere_st rates stop your jtigh standard of living. ''Home improvements by Rosewood -the solution that doesn't compromise your style." By improving your home you can beat the high cost of buying a new home. Best of all, your home will be improved with the style and comfort you want today. And tomorrow you'll receive top dollar for your home should you decide to sell. At Rosewood Development we take great pride in our profe5sion. We offer distinctjve designs and quality construction for remedellng, addltioas, and new homes. For your free brochure or free estimate send us your coupon today or call us at 7tf/m-M2t. .------------------------~--------Rosewood Development. Inc. 177 Rlv.erslde Ave .• Suite F Newport Beach. CA 92663 I I have a representative call to set up FREE estimate • consultation I I send me a FREE brochure I I I . I I I I I • I I -------~State Zip___ : ~==~=~~~~==~m~•==~===~~~~~~---~-------------~-~-------· BEAS I • .WATllUDMMT DOLLAR •AYS SALE Alpha l Ma~8age Sy81em .... ,. :· ... ,. . * l 68 Sheet Set or Comforter . . . . . . . . . . . . • I ~8 3 pieee Padded A•ile .............. I} ee 6 Drawer Space Saver ..... ." ........ 'loo We'I p ,. .. _,. ome el the llhoTe for j..t o•e lt11ek wl .. tlae pa hu ol alaM peat ...._ 'Wew or _,. bed ill Ille etore ef ~-pefhn•elM. NOW ONLY 8289 ' , ii ALL BBD8 COllPIEl'E WITH MA 'ITRE88, BEATER, UNDAND PED1'81'AL-mAWER8orrJONAL OPEN TUES. tt.n FRI. 4zZi0-8 P .M. SAT. 10.· 6 P~M •. t 1 I t ' I t • l t f t I I f t l • • I f I I I j J > • "MM.le Gulde for the Week -- ---- -- --- ---- --------- - - ----- <From Pa1e 31) finding' tbe llllena' lending ...._.PO' 1:00 •••• "The I.Mt w.- on" ( 19H) AlcNlrd Wld.- IT\llfk, ~ F8tf. A~ «*Med IMO~ IO !he ,_ of W8QOfl tr.in --lllwfa follOwlng .,, lndlan attaclt. • *** "ftoConcfa" (1"4) Alelwd Boone, Slu- 8'1 Whitman. Fout men Mt out KIOM lh• Tu .. d9eWt en. the CM Ww lo recowr alolen Anny rtflee ~ed 10< ule lo the~ 1:300 ** ''Sl!yweyTo o .. 1h" (1974! Bobby Sherman. SW!lnl8 Pow- -Snow halnper1I ,_ .non. ...... p 1Q91- lllled ~ I~ It lnc;&C)edtated, 2:00. * *'-' "0..UI °'*9" ( 197 4) Edwlwd Alb9t1 Jr .• K•I• Jec:ltaon. Sevef"•I peopl8 laklng a CNIM on • luxurbM yedlt ,,,. .. i.metlc8illy murdered. (I) * * * "h'a Alweyt Fw ' Weather" ( t 955) Gerle Kel--tr. Den Oeill¥· A IOCll TV ller1eC declde8 to ~096- CMI a r9Ulllon of ttw.a WOftd Ww II Anny bud- die&. e "C:end•hoe'' 11em Jodie Foster, Oe¥ld NMln. A tOITlbely frOl'll ... lhet8 °' Loe Ang868I ..,,.,... • tat1.-.d Mllh ...... ·e· 2:30 CC) "The Cetemoe.m U. Ing'' Horat 8uchhCltz. Alwt WwdgNou1fl. Two people ....., ptotted • robb8r/ mwder the men tMy ,....,., ..,, .. crtlM. (8)~MdTM Blfte* ... (1M0> .... ...,_ .... ,,... GleMon. 8flertff 9ubd T. Jl'9llce CllllnlllilMo~ IWOlhen k> .., • ,... lloU:lt•r· .. ..,_., ,,_ ............ ~ ...,._.._.PG' ....... .,,.~. ,,..., loll Hope. ... "'-alt.~ .... .._.. .... Into .. ,.,..,, Oii an IEeleern--. • • •• "CNN Alofl8 ,,. ........ ,~.._ ,.,,--.~c. Mft, P'loMer ,.,_. ...... ..._.Ttll ...... , .. , ___ _ lft .. ftl a·•a •rW•. ••• ''Tiie Amllli'I Woftd Of,....,...__ IN" (tt71) Doot1:1u•1. ...,.,..... by AerMolld .,,.n. ... -.-.. ..... "' .. ....... lfl ~ .._ .,. = ''Thllft" (1 .... ) ...... .....,,.. Edlillnl ~ Tiie fll\AI ..... ,... ._an 1J11 1111111 I loolll"t tnte etrante .... -ma In .. ~o.at. .......... ,,..... Tiie ,..... Of ,... ,...,. (1trt)....., ..., •• Kiii! ......... ... .__ .... ...,..... hulwl ... -..... llll..-~ .... ---..... .... ................ ........... .-. .. ...... (J)"The .... ...... ~1t1tt ....... ~. ~0-..A .... ............ °"" ....... ..._ ... ................ ......... _, ... !!!. ......... .,.. ........... ...... (1tn> Yw .,.._, .._. ............... ....... IM>M .._. ................ .............. "'" .... **"" voic. o4 ua ~ Paul Lynde. Dorothy returns to lhll Land oC Oz end -.illtla the ...,., of tM wactced Witch of ttle Weet. 4:30 ®"Doc" ( 1971) Si.cy Keech. F9Y9 OUMwey. The legendaty Doc Hollldey lrawla beclt 10 Tomb- 11one, wtler'9 he vl8ltl hit litend Wyett Ewp end .... ,... with • proetltute he won In • poltw oeme-'PO' 1:00 •• *~"Smoky" ( 1Me) F-. Pertlw. Olene Hytend. A dotneetlceled ltalllofl 1urn1 on hit lt8lner't brother • • re.At of lnhu- ~ treetrNnt. •• * • "Clw.ldlne" (1974) OiMllnn Cltlroll. J•mH Earl JonH Romane:• t>lonomt ~ • down-end-out l'ltOltler of ... and • e-- 1>8Q9 collect°'. • "My FIM>t'lte Cer1oont" {D) "Slonet From A Flying Trunk" (11178) Mun~ Miil- WI, meml>efa of the Roy9I ~ Three H-Ctwte- tlan Anderterl llOtlea .,. brOught to ... lh«lugr\ !*- ..., !hie **" end .... tlon. (%) "The ldolrna!W' (1lllO) ~ SMtby. TCMlh Fe6cllhuf\. A ~ m•naoer uM1 verlou1 p1oya to C8UlpUll two ,.,,._ agers Into Poe> *l9lnu atardom. 'PG' GOING NOWHERE -Faye Dunaway and Oskar Werner play a distinguished couple in "Voyage of the Damned" Sunday at 8 p.m. on Channel 7. .- nle, l<Mll'I Oot. Extr•terr .... lrlal crMtUl'e8 plelt to UM hum•n emotion• lo conquer EMth. CC> "Shimmering Light•" 8eMI Bridgee. Lloyd B<ldg- ... A young mM droC)e out of ,. l•ther"• ~ WOf1d. (I) "Kilt Or Be Killed" ( 1980) ~ RyM, Ch8r· loll• ~ Two uv8Qe eqU80t of elte lt8'8l8 ch•mplon1 CIHh lor revenge Md MKViv81. 'PG' 1i:a-> ••• 'h "l.oc:utU" (1974) Ben Johnllon, Ron How•rd. A dlsctiuoeci WOfld W111 It pjlot lrlel to owrcome hit ,_ ot llytr1Q ..,.,, • -of looulta 8"¥eiope,. hom8. (Q)"P-T811t"(1979)"'1 element81 apklt lodgM ltMll In • young -Md lorC9I her Into com- prom181ng ettuatloM. 1:00. • * "8-lty And The Robot'' ( 1960) M81'1118 V8fl Doren. Tu..d•Y Weld. An .i.ctronlc br81n cllOOMt • bf1gtlt 1ttll>lNe8r lo run -~~of a college. • * * "Trog" ( 1970) J.oen er.wf°'d. MldlMI Gough. The 8frrry 1t411>9 In •It., • prlmlllw crMlur• 98Cepet from 8tl M lh<O- poklgist 8lwS go. on • r11111P1Q9. (8) "The HumM FflCt°'" ( 1980) Nicol Wlllwneon. John Gil6gud. An 8genl °' IN 8rftleh S«:fet SeMce le coerced Into glYlng 1op-l«lr.. lnforrnetlOn to hit Aull68ll ~· In the KGB. ·~· 1: 18 (%) "CatNrine & Co ... ( 1973) J-8inlln, Peltldl 0-.... A ~ gir1 tr. ..,._ to Peril lo beCOfM • high f Mtllon model but her plafl8 ,.. ttwough Md ... opel'9 • highly ~ pro8tlluttoft ._.,_._ 'A' t:21 • ''Wtlolly ........ ( 1HO) Oudtey "'°°"· LAnlne .......,_ In blbl- Cll Egwl, • ,.... propMt nlllMd Her9dMI -drope on a dMne convw- Nltorl .. .,._ end dadd9I ...... be .. one 10 11911 1111 pecipl9 out o1-...iy. 'N' 1:11•··~ ...... .... 8r81n" (ttM) w .... ICodl.-. ,,.,.., Ceh. A ...... o11Nnll "9dl ~ .... .... . ~ effort to ottn world C40UU1""~lllltillf><te ........ Mla'tlml ...... ••siertof ... ~ OU8S*lt. l:tO a:> ...... Ill LIM" (ml) ~ ......... hMll Alllpedl. A ..,,_, men ................... .,....'° ............. '"' (I) "Cftlr MllM" (1t11) Clofte l.eeotlfMll, AM ~A_. .... ...... ~NMIMc> .... Mil In AtMlleee end ende up • ftNMil ............... C4ll9Dnlle. 'N' ......... .,,. ... "-. 01151} Jin• W)'IHn, awtee LellgMOft. A 10M11 ,......., .. _ ., .... ~ ..... ~ •• dM9n'• ,...., -Ml•••""TN~ •0."(1'11) .......... 1MA. Liia .-. A~ ._ .. !Cid .... .. ., .............. .. .... .. ....... (J)•-n.car.t ....... (111t) ...... o., .... --0.-. A ....,._ .............. eor,e .... •• I ...... . .. ............ to .... .. ......,, .... .. ............ ....... ._...,.... . (1t111 --........ ....... ...... ,. ....... ...... .....,.. . .., . .• ,., .... ,.. -n:e ....... ... .... ... "''"...., IChoOlleecher hired .. a winter c.tellJt• 10< • remole. and app8r..,lly haUnled. ColO<ado hOlll ... snowbound Iller• with Illa wife 8tld clelrvoy8nl young eon. 'R' 4:00. * * "Wikfflf•" 11948) RObert StMle. Slerllng Holtyway 4: 18 (C) ·:A Force Of One" I t979) Chuck N0<rl•. Jen- nifer O'NMll A muler or lhe martl81 "1$ embark• on • rewnge-motlvlled -ell l0t the kMlers ol Illa edopled --.. 'PO' 4;.46 (%) ''Th8 ldolmal<er" ( 1980) Ray Shatkey. Toveh FelcHhuh. A menipullllw manager u1e1 v1rlou1 ploya tO c:a18J)Ull IWO IMn- eger& Into pop singing ttltldom. 'PG' SUNDAY'S MOVIES JULY 19, 1M1 MORHINO 8QOO CC) * * 'h "The Wreck Of Tlla Mtty Deare" ( 1959) G•ry Cooper. Ch•flloo Heaton. A a111p·1 otflQet I• e6ded by Ille lklpper of a Mlvagct boel In cieerlng 1119 n•m• of negllgenc:a ~-(I) "Bronco BIMy'' I 1980) Clint Eutwood, Sondr• Lodi•. A former ~ uleem8tl from New JM.., r..itt. Illa d-of per- forming In • Wiid w..i lhow. 'PG' l:OO CC) "Troc:aOwo Bia.I Cltton" (1978) Michael Shock. Anny Duprey. A 10- year~ boy .. amltWn w4ttl • llttl8 gir1 WhO r- beelde "*" 81 Troc:edero. (I) "0Mdrnen'1 Floel" 'G' t:IO CC> *. ~ "Of Humeo Bondage" (1H4) Kim Nov9.t...annoe~. e..s on the nowt t>y w. a-..~-A young medlcel atudent. .,itttl • aer1oua deformity .... ~In lcM wlltl. &).:.::;':-~~ v"ter ltellona, Telle Sift. Ant# loml'I .. bout ... .. wortd dlallliplon. anaMMlul*'-...,. ... ....... ~ .. ttla llele. 'PO'. ... * ** ''The,...... .. <*'t .......... --....... Celenllty Jene .,. .., .. ""° .. .... ... ....,. ........ 11• <I> •• "Ctla1I¥ Yen1dt" (1t13) w .... MilmlltU, Joe 0on ........... 111emen Md .. f1o1oe .,. bo4tl on .. .,.. "' ........... berlll foOber Wflo lnllilMr1-................. .... ............ n•• ••• ''ThtTNllOf 8egded" ( 1-..0) 9.0V, ""-OUSW-, A ... In old • .. ---la dreatlcatty cNnted .... i....-no • r. ..... .,,. .......... ,,.70) a-1- ton Heeton, Ger81dtne ~ w ... dlloO\IUed ......... ~ ,..,..In .. ~ "'......,.. ....... to ......... a:> ''T ....... (1tll) led ic.tolf, """' cnc.IJ. An ...._ honor......,. Illar .... to ,__ wlttl a WWI· --=-··~ ----· (J)•-n.car.t......,,.. ( 1111) "°'*' OllV•ll, ~bawler.A~ ... ,. --eori-....., ... dOnlemlla .... • .,... .......... to : .................. ....... . ............. . -~....-. ...... ,1t1t) Dura••· ......., b'I --~ M##A 11111 ......... ,., ...... -=' ~ JN, .. ., ... -. lk> .. _____ 41( 1 ' ~ t , j 1 I : I I I I t I I ' I I I I I I I I I ' L:.-..=::---- • in SEACLIFF VILLAGE SHOPPING CENTER Unique surrounding~ for the ' finest in home entertainment. Records, Tapes and Video ··See the music with concerts on · a six foot video screen. · ·-Continuous listening booth for new and unusual albums. ··Video ta_pe sales and rentals. ··Video club. ·-Record and tape accessories. ··Buttons. Posters and Cards. ' GOLDENWEST a YORKTOWN HUNTINGT0'1 BEACH f 11.fl'~go.s\ss ----·-- IEUIMIB: n..n .. 27 aWc feet .. I •1c ynt eo.,.... ow IMA pricff le ••111d • ......., -prices. s...... are .......... , . . r--------COUPON·-------, I Gllllen West Campest ..., 1 o.oo ... $ 7. 0 0 ~= I I CUllC I I ..... Soil .... I ~.00 .... $9 .00 YAU I I I I .... 16.00 •. $I 3.00 ~= I I 2 oc S9Uill I I .. ~ 2•· . . .. . . . . . '°°' I ,_ ______ ...UJULY ll, 1t11-------• Mo del•ery ~•loll .... of 6 c•lc yonls Or' more. Y sd Pick-Up w :Jolt Dell•ery 855-3066 559-40 I I .. SSIOM YllJO IRVIME YARD YARD 848-7792 HUNTIM&TOM llACH ....... 9• llt •W• ~Ill 0.....,. Co•ty SIHe 1957" F<11nily Owned If' Serving California ~ Since 7879 qjou k u4 ssuhattce o~ 2~ce QQe ttce ij i ' ' ' • . I , , PllolJ'\\og St """ ~ I . I· i i i i IJi!ll)JJIJ!!JJJi!Jliilfl!f illfi!(if~iij!liljll1ir1!~~1 ii1fJi111(!il!!ij!Ji 1 ll~!Jf lj(ll!fiflfE!~!lli ~J(f!J(il i if 1~1,,·i!~Ui:l!i J1·;:i1,:11i1 1,1'iH1:1i1i1rn1i1·i,!i:,1!1l!!Hf 1 l?t,!11 r1°11 i;i11~H!U ~!,;1~~1i iiH!Hi!u;:l:w~n ~ I~ .i~l 11fs~t~afi :Jf. t s _Ji' · la~aff Jf I_ '' I ltf-! I.&~ j f rl : lf1J 11 11 . ~1!~tJ 2 JlJI" ~2 -g 11. . I ··_ . : ~I--1 .. - -i ~~~. 1l'ffil1l!'p!ll,rif'tf U1JJll!~Jlniil!jl~UD;til'f~l!ttl!f1~!UUI' l~! ~ l•1,-i,0,t~_~11!1_ •1.f i1 ~i;l1!!f mi11~lii!11~i11!1111_ 1·1 1!1 11;11$1(1~1g, J !li11~!,i~'1il1•i iii I. , . -·~ II•. l.i > I I£> i l " 11 • f J s l i' i ~ ' 1 l ! p p I I !, '!-I -_if m J, _:,>jJ ' -g • j, _ . .I a I s. s > ~ ·' • . • . ~ • 9. • g • • ! IO '< .,, • ~ -I __ _,_, '< as ID I ' :~.,~ ~'. .. -i ~:·1• •. ·-I . ~c-s~ . -I ;•[ !lflff?-"!JL~ttr4'!1i"~ai:1~rpn~~!'~r1~m•1~nt'i!m11n!T 1 ~ii i''iif d 11~113 i•na lh!~!111huu ·1t11id 11n~1 n~u :;;11ni ~: ! tlt~li lh!!!11 hlhf~ lh~h~ um· a 1i' h1h ~•n · htrlf ~;~ ----~ -I . . B ii: -J ci i ~ -· "'"~, -.· ·-· -~ 1 -I -a:=· If ;ti !t 1~~ SL11·11•1.11•111 ~®• !!~H n 1' 1111!if11H t Ii i7f 11i1@1:1' I 1111un1 1 P ff ilr ·1111 li'l ' J 111 1~ rll f a:~-o i B > 11 .. 11 . ,,~~I >Ii Ji . I f I !l-<!1.sl ! I I ,. t· '.·~· u 1l1jcw1t1n ri !11 lt:~211 ,~1·1 . iih -~~111 n~·1! l!fil!H:t:• ~ HI li1r1 Ii ,.1 .1!itll''~i · ;f!tlt1 iti i 1i111i : ~Ji 0:1t,1i1 ltslf s·i I ~· ---I ~ i . . i I · i · . I -i i I ~ . ~ Wlll}llli~-11l(llf!lt '1li~J Ill iY~lil I (Ji f~~f Jll 1 1:~111 11·1~0 11~11 I lii'll il21'll ii~~· fl! I J~1: I~ !3 i~' '1 '11i!l1 11 i i~~'! 1111· • ··u11" •. : pi ":a ~(Pl-"f1~1tn ~(· Ja I 11111 i' g,~ 1~1 ~ f s.f'~1,1 1 l1:. 1s.ii~2~11eJ <··J''i '''~!'~ •'1· ;tr1ti•it11 11 11i!!il .• !!!ii ·;!hi; ii 1!!!1·1!1'!~n 11· i,i ~!!;h,i~f ,~11Hii1r1i!if j11~Uf ihf 1~! Wiilil1 1'iH ;1u ~i ~!;ii i .•. 1. J.I . ~-~. -ltlJI 1llf .• JI .: . lt.o . 1,1,1~-.. 1) •• 1;' .t.!i II' JI 'o·~; ellf~~' . I .t>' ~~l l t li 0 .... -~ ... ~ ~~ I\ (:l'• • -, • "'·--rlr C~.-1· .--• r:.,., 1·-_.. ·~, r -4 -,. Ff -~;.~ · --... I ... 8 •111!111~1,~11!1 !Jt111?111 !1r1;111J~~ I .~. ·•n-1·l1t11j~ •1i1 J~ .1,:J1m1~!i •;"")Ill~ I ~ll •111:-~11,11 I> t ~. il~ l ·i1i11fJ'i:1it! !; •. 1:. ll;;!J( 1,;i~ i i I I I i ; i t 11 111~;:_11~11!r111 !lfn~11u~111n!w1p!Ul ii~_~f 1 ~,,~~ I ~ ~~ JittJS~~11 l 0 9. I~ 1 t ~ r i Ii 11 • 1t· ~I! ! xi r . · 1 I 1-= i I H1 J r i i I I J I.~ ~ ~ z 0 I~ > 0 s ~ ! li!:dlfi!UJJJfi1,fi,jf ili!U!l!ii~!~ ~,~i HIJ !1f ~ta1 : H ! m5 ifil!!r!.· ~iit~ ~.11 ff ·~ f,.~~i I!!. !lf~s Ii ! stf.I~: lo J f;~ -~i !~i;2 l ;---· ----- -----------~-._-__ _ . DEN'S WHY , ALDEN'S , We show more than thirty manufacturer's carpet lines with approximately 3000 samples. We carry a~ut 100 rolls of carpet at special prices. In our remnant room are hundreds of remnants from tiny to room size. Every American manufactuer of vinyl ta represented in our vinyl display; Armstrong, Congoleum, Gaf, Mannington, Biacayne, and Amtioo. Rolls and remnants in stock at special prices. Our arapery department includes custom draperies, "Levetors", \\Oven Wood Blinds, Custom Bedspreads, and special treatments for unueual windows. We not only have a specialist in this department. but our own excellent installer as well. . . -·----------......-:--l 4 "' '.J . BERVEN "SIERRA SPRINGTIME" ~ 00% Dupont filament, a delicate interplay of blendjng shades with pinPoints of color contrasts. · S~~CE S 18!5~ BERVEN "FALL FESTIVAL" ~ 00% Dupont filament, a fresh innovative approach to multi-color. cut...foop, fashion emphasizing natural hues subtly blended. S~E:a;~CE $ 15!5,... TREND . "R YING COLORS'' Sculptured multi-color saxony, 100% DuPont Nytone, 5 year residential wear warranty. Regular $14.95 installed. s~ .. ~cE S 13!5 ~. TREND "RARE ATTRACTIONS" SoUd color pluih, 100% nylon, 5 year residential wear warranty protected with DuPont Tefton9: Regl{Jar $17.50 installed. ' $~!:~CE SJ 5!5~ TREND "CREATIONS" Subtle frosted tone• cloeely matched wtth a aettn luster, 5 year residential wear warranty, protected wtth DuPont Teflone. Regular 111.e& 1ns1a11ec1. S l SSO SALE PllCI =:.T:.-· 141-y4. .. i \ • • l I I ~ I I • • t I I • ' t ... (Fnm Pa1e 34) _,Betty Aaml't ..... -the.,... Ind ltlUIN of dllcov9r"•IO 8lle Mlbr.-t~ • 3:30. *•"A "Lolle Me Ten- d«" (1958) &Al PreMy, Alc:llerd EQln. "Two br~ .. lrom the 8oultl tight on GPPoelt• ... °' the "CM! Ww. (CJ "Tudl Ewl1Mdrlg" Fred Keller, Jo1eph MecOulre. A young glr1 rneetl .,, lmmonM lll'llly known .. the Tudtl. Cl) ''Bon Ve>ymge. a.tie &town'' (197'9) ~. Directed by 8111 Melendll. Snoopy end Woodleoc:k follow udlllnge ltvdlnt9 Cherie ·-· P9PS*mlnt P.tty, u.. end ...,de 4" en .,_..~ t-of ~Ind Fl'llllOe. ·o· 4;GO. "Sllatetown U.S.A." (1979) Scott Belo, Greg Btedford. A ~ young .... flll In~ at the locel roler-dllco rinlc, ,.,_. he II Clhllllengecl by • llrMt Ol'IO ...., In • cllemplonlhlp cont••t. 'PO' ~Cl) "Cendlelhoe" 119m Jodie Foe1et, Delltd ""-'. Atomf)oy~IM ....... of Loe Anom-'"'** • lltt«ed 8ritlllh ....... 'O' &:ao (CJ "KM Or Be K-r'1 (1NO) JoMpfl Ryen. CMr· lot1e MlcNle. Two M¥IQ9 ~ot .... urate champion• clHh ror r.-ige and_..., 'PO' EVENIG 9:00 •••• "Huc*leb9rry Finn" (1975) Aon Hwwd, • Jeck Elem. 8-.d on the atory by .._,. TW91ft. A young bO¥ and • ""*'81 .-.11eoome lrwoMd In. --of~Whlll ttealng down tfle t' I \ pl Ahw on •raft. 7tl0 CZ> ·oe.. EftcouMlrl Of Thi Tillrd Kind: ..... Ednlon" (tMO) NcNrct ~ Ff9rlOOll TNf- r.ut. NW llflMln9 ~ UPO. . .,.,...,~~ .. .,_,_ ........ . ftrdnO ........ llndlng .._,PG, , ........... Of Thi ,._... (1t1't ~ """" "I· GtMt Oood9we. A n. ~-roddlr---• ......... ,.. .... . loclll llero ......... . .,......., ... .... CC> ''AMMll Ale....,. ,..... ("71) Dool .... ..,.,. er.Mini of AlrtaM ......... 1n .. ~ ....... 'O. (DJ ...... M«Me'' (1t7't) OocJ-qy. .... by ,... oedftlld. AtdlMll fllm '°°'119 ~OI--Ille tl1-""""" ot .. u.a. .,_. pragr-.. .... Oft .. dr...-c ~ ,, "'°°" lendlne.'0' aeo••**"OulllllThl Sun" ( 1147) J..,""9f JoNa. °"90'Y ,._ A ............. , ... IMllmll glr1 ----otr -.... ................... 001919 IO llwlf In ....... of•-.c••••.,.. ........... .•.. " ............. . (1t14) ...... o.1ro.-. .,..., ..... r...... .. .,..... ..... ...... ........ _., ........ ................... ... ..,..,~. •••"Toplecne" (ttn) .. ~. Treay .._,, M AIMftoeft lrt ....... -'° .... °" In ........ llillllal\ to .... ,. ,_ fll .............. II)"~ ...... C .. -.... G1Q1 -.,..,:r ..... ~-· ..... -... ......,.. °' IMOCllllOe on"'* hl8h 9CtlOOI aredlr Mlon night. 'PO' Cl) ...... "Rio ...... (1958) John Weyne, o..i Mat1111. An Old cnppe, • form• deputy-turned· dtur*. a )'OllflO qyidlchw ~end•glri~• ll*fft fo oui-t-e pow. ertul rendler .elO _,... IO get Ml 11111« . ~otllef ,......, "°"' prieon. • "Ultlmate Tlvtl" Brttt Eldend. 8lrTy ._,, A parenold b118'""1ma11 becOlnea ~"' a..O of l'IUdw .and ~ 'PO' 1:tO. ••'11 "Of;, You....,_ UM Doi" (1Mt) Awta Hawr, Marti 8..,._ A c:feellcal ..... INll• a tran1lllon to popular mullc. 9:00 0 •• "Rebel Of Thi Aoed'' (1t7'9) ~ Hen- ry. Grant ~ A tra- Wlllinll hot rodder ...... "'*' town race wtcldl a locel hero has bMrl guw· ......., to win .• (R) CC) ·'The Stunt Min" ( 1980) Patw O'Toole, S'-Rellebec*. Wamacl by 1M polce. a dtetwbed ·~......,..Inda en uneure '-' on a nlOllle Mt wNl'a a World Ww I ~ .. belrlO llmed. 'A' (DJ ".JC.nedu'' (1MO) OIMe ~. Gena Kai)'. A~er111C,a.....,,,, tnl.a and ............ mllonair• join toroea to open up a hlioe rolw- dlaco~ 'PO' t:11 (%)••*'A •'tiobaon'I Qioloe" (11164) Jcftl ..... CMr1e1 Leugflfol\. A boot· maker ....,,.,.. to ,....,.. hie d*P eow. of teiSor I by pwww1•• hll ... ........... ~ ...... ~·~·· (1t72) Come! Wide. Jin.. ,,.., ..... °" ........ dlfi I W' i, en a•wopoeor. ................. ,,,..... by .. .., ..... creellne,. • ·•aronoo _.. (1MOI cant i.wood, ..,,.. Locfce, A ......, lfl09 ....,._ "°"' ... ...., . ,..... .... dr9MI of .... ............... "'°"·"°' . tMO® "Coal ..... .,... ..,..,*'> ... ........ TOMM)l&Ae...._.._. ....... L ...... _. ... ... _,. A ~ tfrt ...,..,,...._ ........ ~~·-­..., ... .,., -.... ...... ,,...~ Ill .. tlllllle ~.'PG' -(11)""9 ........... (1H0t ,_.., O'Too&a, ._,. 11111~ rel W...S by ....... ...., v....._.__ .............. ~ ............... ~ ............ "' 1t:tl CZJ "Thi kMI• ..... . ( ............. TCMll ,....,,.., A :u ..... ... ~-...... .. '° .......... .... -,.. .... _......,.. , .. (I:)..,...__.~ ,..,PWy. .... ~ A ............... ... .. ......... .. ...................... 111111181 ......... ~. & .... Cl) ·~ f • lilldi9 ( ............... °"""""· ,,. ......... • ........... $1 "'. ewentir '°""''Y oh* .... -......... ........................ ~==-,..,.. ............. ..,... ..... ... , ....... _ HORSEPOWER -Kristy McNicbol and Mark Arnold star in a mowe about a horse trainer reunited with his daughter in "My Old Man" Tuesday at 9 p.m. on Channel 2 .. '""-~~a UFO, • po.-OOffll/Jelrf ..,..,,,. .. bm:lolllel ........ wHh ftrdnO ........ le:ldlng llte.'PO' a:ao Cl) "Wmnie" 119m Mir mMed. DINcted .,,, Aelptl .....,lnawortdof .. Min, ~ pfeyl a IMP ro111 In ttce bett1ee of two or••• confllctlnt .,.,.... TUESDAY'S MOVIES .M.Yl1, W1 MON•tG ' ----...---..........-:---..... -~-I ------·------1 llm FfMlbee. A ~ .... out '° ... ~ .,.., .-... try.., .... ,. ~. 11:IO. • * * "Cell OI TM Wiid" ( 1936) Clatlt Oab68. -=* OMle. A )'OllflO "'*'· • glr1 and a ...... dog llnd 8dwnture In the "°" Mn~ ol the Ate-- tic. 12:00. * • i.t ''Top Secret Attelr'' (1957) Sul#! ~ ..ct. IOtfl OouQfea. A pub- ..,_ ....... to "°" • m8Jor oen-.e "°"' obtlfn.. llig ·~poet. ••• * "Doctor EM- ldl •• Magic lulllit" ( 1940) EdwWd Q. Aoblneon. Ruth Gordon. A 'doctor de¥otel hll ... to llndlnQ • cure for eodlll ....... (C) * • * •'The Young In ........ (1938) Oouol• Falrb8ntl1 Jr., PMNtta Goc:ldlrd. A ne'•-do-well tamll)I of C8fd IMrpt dlM'lll en Old lady who r9b'IM them. l:OO ... ~. (19751 Diana .._, Anthony Per· ltlnl. A young bledc ~ .,, ri-rrom ttce deplh8 o1 tha gNtto _, lnWnllllonll f-••IMHon~ end modal. 'PO' 2:IO CC) "A Force Of OM''. (1979) Chudt Norrtl, Jin.. niter O'Neil A 1N1tW of the~ atta ~ on a ~lwled -di for Ille kllerl of hit adopted aon. 'PO' a::OO 8 * * * ''WNN &glee OW." (Part 1) (19'18) Rlctl- ard Burton. ClnC EMI· wood. All Aiied oltlcer II rMCUecl lrom Nail by con'll'Ml ld09 dlagulaed .. 0.-.. acao • • * • "en.ti Dlft'' ( 1943) T)'n)M P-. Ame Suter. Two otrtcar1 ~In lllblMl1ne -- ·-In .. Norttt Alllntlc fall In ~ with 1he aana ~"o..dmen'1 Floet" 'G' ' 4:00 !> "Troc:8dero Blau atron" (1t71) MldlMI 8flOGk. AnlP/ ~·A 10-,,_,-411e1 bO¥ II Mlltt9n with ..... oll1 Who r1IOel Mllde him et Trocedlh. • "aoud Derw.w'' (1MO) DeWI c.n.lne, ....... 0 ' ..... A .. 11111nt .. ,.... ,,,. people wflO c:erw about NM In .. _. ""' pur'llM ol "" ....,.,. -sport. 'PO' .. Cl) ...... .....,.. (1971) Dom Delulee, 8UDMe ........... .,,.,.. ..... 0..-.... In CMt ..., .... """ .. nilb ..... IMlr UlidaCICNW tenclllt operllllon llaOOltlM OOlt-~MIC c I llM. 'PO' •<B> '-C::-t11hw" (1tT7) Jodie,...,, °"" ..... A ............ IOll'lbor from Loe AlltefM eufdenly flnda ,_...,Iha~ to a tat1erad l&lgllllh iNllOf. 'G' S....,,, .._.. O'Hara. "' ... 1810a. • beMltfful wOM•n from England lntfoducel Het9tord1 to the w..sem c:atu.-. • • ** "The Count c,>t Monte Crilto" ( 1975) Rich- ard CMmberletn, Tony CUl1il.. Baaed on Ille novel by Aladlldr• Dumu. An Innocent man unJu1tty lmc>rilOl led tor 20 yaer1 mlk• a dlf1ng ~ to wraafl rewnge on ,,,. men raeponelble. ®''TIMI Godllllle<" (1972) Miiion Btando. Al Paclno. 8ued on Ille noYel by Meno Puzo An aging Malloto -Ille blrrlerl ~ hi• lcfytllc lamhy lite and the hlrlll realities of 1111 ~"'Mk down a1 Ill• 1on1 become tncr...ingty llwolved In Ille violent working• of org•- nmd crime. 'R' • "t.Uhoglny" (1975) Clarie Roel, Anthony p.,. kine. A )'OUftQ blaclt wom· .,, 0-from tile deptlll ot tna ghetto to lntematklnll f-•• llltllon dellgnar 'enc! model. 'PO' t:OO (CJ "The T anent" ( 1977) Roman Polanlltl, IMbalta AdJanl. A man rent• an llC)ltlJMnt wher9 • P<9YI· OU1 1-1 convnltted IUI· c:ide and becornM I*•· nold about hie naigllbor'I. 'R' CZ> .. ~..,. .. (197111 Oocumenlar)I. Muelc by Mb Oldftald. Aldllvlll flm foollig• c:tlronklfea the trl· umplle of tM U.S. ~ program, kJc:u*1g on Ille drarilatlc A.,ollO 11 moon I.anding. ·o· 10:00cm .. ~.1tt111) Alan Bit•. Oeorva de .. PenL Triumph and tragedy punc:tUa1e .. 8'0fm)I r ... tlolWclp .,...._. tile gr~I Rurlllien belM ..,. and Illa s__... manaoar. 'R' (J) "IMezlrig Slddlel" ( 1t7•) CfM¥oll Uttle. Gene Wider. Dlreded by Mel BrookL A rlllltoad W0111er In tt1e Old Weet lllmoet Ilea more proeilem8 thin lie can hendll ~ he II appointed --of Roell Rldol. e IOMI pinpointed for dalltudofl .,,, a bull· l'llM~'R' • "The~. Part H" (1974) M Peotno. Rob- _, Duwl • ....,.... eor-. one .......-1111 lat• ,....., lhfOtia end po.- .. ... beooll"9 ... -Med of ........ llndlng ,,........ ..... rMll *>- lkl!la and ..... ~ oulhllr91f11 •• ,.. 10'M (Z) "Ceehaftna I Co." ( 1t7'1) Jena llrtlln, Patrtdl 0..-.. A~ -1 tr• .. '° .,.. '° become a hlGh l..nlon model but her pl8rll ,.. .._. end lhe °'*"a....,.~ °""'*°"' ........... 'R' 11:IO tS "Blume In I.OW" (197B) Oaorga 8ag•I, Suun Anmpedl. A dMlf'CeCI man ~e...-,.euttor. wytng to ........ bac:a. (;)"High 'lllln8 Dr1fter" (1171) Ctlnt lutwood, Verna Bloom. A namelMa atr•no•r re1t111 the ~ reric*lta of • w-.rn town to challenge tM Nltlfeal 91'111 wtlldl 1111 bMrl Mo:tltillQ them. .,.. tl:OO. **"Thi Trlfl'Qlllarl" (11181 Gordon Scott, ....... ~. A IOldla' ,.,,. .. hit ......, •• 'houel .,_ N Celfl War c--. .......... Wtefng ll'Olft .. ....... ,..,...,. ii ..... ,.,. ~· Ulle Wooct MenoJ" ( 1117) ._.. ....... ,__.,, ~.~allla•••• ......, "'°""'8in rwort ......... ..,_..... ........ °' .. "°""'" <ll''-'-"( ... ~ ( ........ , I J 1 5;gnature of ii Master : .. A.5 Distinctive as Wliere it can 6e fowu£ l I . ' I •Movie Guide for the Week bllrgh, Matti-Batry. Oult llCIUf9 8'I AtMrtc.n opera ""9er'• UllOl1tlodoJI attraction to ,_ ...,....., here*! addict --. 'A' (%) "The ldollMl!w'' ( 1NO) Amy Sllettey. TCMlfl • Feidlhull. A ~· manag., 11... varklll• • p1oya 10 catapult two ..._ aoar-lntO pop linglrlg stardom. 'PO' 12:15 cm "Garden°' 8-lty'' (1974) Y"'91 Merte ....._, Flof.-0.0C. A berllc • CWk ~ rol'llantle ,.,, ..... ~ the won'lelt lie INllta In .. -'· 1~· *** "TheCourtMar· tlal Of 811)' MMc:Nll" ( 1955} 11 , O.,y Cooper, CMrlel Bidtford. A men Ill pvt on trill when lie ....... tary bf.-In order to lhol1ln WOftd War II. 1;20 <JI) .. ~ And The Bandit 11" (1NO) 1uctl "9y· notdl, Jadlle ~ Shettff 8ulord T. .""'9o9 ... In .. two....,..,.. brotllerl to ... ,...,.., bootlegger, .. Bandit, from ll•lilPO'UrlO • '*'1 ........ 'PG. • ''Stone Cold Dead" (1979) Pu wma-. Alcft. •d Cr-. A oap and a emell-Ume a1IM boaa loin fotCl8 to llnd .. llWt '""'°' T'th tor ...... ot ~~·w 1:ao e •••·-w-iot llraw'' (11MI OIM Lolo- brtQld9. e..i c--y. A ~"*' ...... to gain eot*OI ot .. vnda'• tonuna .... Mlp of • .,..,....,...., (J:) "The IJfll Of ....... (197')~~ John a.... In .. .,.. oantury, .......... ., pt~ ........... and bacol.-....... of • gr9,...........,. mant80l*lllNI ....... 'R' l:OO (%) "8pacia McMe'' (197') Oocu1Mn18ry. .... ~ .... Okllllld. Atd/!llwl ... --. cftOI 1~1aa .. trt- llf'llPflt of .. u.a. ..,.. ptogram. fDcalllnt on IN drMlllllo Apolo 11 moon llndln9-'G' 2:IO. * •'41lle,,.... Klier'' (1911) Gaofla ~ nedy, Raymond 811rr. Polee .... -..... . .,.., .......... .. ....,. Clllflolo ........ 1:11 •··~·· ( 1952) Jotwt ..... Mine DaH. ._ e •14 ''The 01iant aw· (1957) M Morrow, Mars Cordey. .... ...,,..,. .. called In to ~ • mamrtlOOI. --bird ... .. "***IO .. ~ lion. a:ao a:> ''The T..,. .. 11tT1l "°""" Polantlel. ...... Adjmnl. A 1M1t ,.,. an ...,,,. ........ ~-out ..... I • ...,.._.,,. ddll ........... ... nold ..... .......... .,.. ' (J)•'More--.. .... ... (""' ""' .......-. PU Le .... Alt#.,.._. tloft, • .,. of flil'l ldlool fl'i.nda .......... ... ~--·••111111 .. aodll upMawlf of .. 1teOa. 'N ' (J) ''The car.. ...... • ( 1979) Robert Duvall, ..,.. '*"-· A ~ ......... ..,.. c.. ........ ....-... ................ ........ _, ..... ...... ...._ ..... ... *** '111111A .... __.. Cttlll ,,_.. _,,.... .... --•ht$ I ,.._, ,... ...... --- the ... wltti • yolln9 gift. WEDNESDAY'S MOVIES MYl2.•1 ~ 5:IO (%) "Calhlrtna. Co." ( 1973) Jana ~In. Patridl O.W.... A yGllllf gift Ir• Yell to Petti to become • lllgll lailblon modi! taut .. .. ... ""°""' and ... °'*" • ttWltf lucrettw ~~·"'' l:CIO a:> "Out Time" (1973> P8INla Sue Mertln. ,... s ... ..,. The ._ of two yo11ng couplH -oled et ptMlte ~ -chenOed ...., -of the -~ alle .. pregNnt. 'PO' 7:IO CC) "TlfOIU" ( 1tll) 8oftl 1<9rtoft, nm o·~. An agir'O llorror-nl0¥ta ..., utea to ,_ wlttl • mur· dlf'OUI ...... ~ ,,_..._.._ .. Cl> * * * "So;Mllody Up Thar9 uic. Ma'' (MM) PU ~ ,..., ,,.,... Aod!y Onidlno. • .... Yortl ..,. ~. ,.._ to ................ bolllW. NO CC) ''The Oeltlng Of wi.. dont" (1171) 9'•Wlllfl Fowta. In lllm of ...... tury ,....,..., • ~ woman trom IN OulMdl ,_ cMllGultt ....... to .,. .... ~of­ ..uhreglrte'adlOOI. 10:00 Cl> ''Men~ Graf. ..... (1t7') Aon HoMrd. ,... Le Mal AtW gr--. lion, • trOllP ot lllgll adlOOI "** ~ ... , c:Mlal .... of actMIOod In .. aodll upMawlf ot tM 1tl0t.'PO' 11:IO ••• ''t.oc*lnO F« Dan- , ... (1te7).,..., ... Otto Aaldlow. The ~ loM an M"'1 oooNng Pot lnNof11\Mtaa. (J:) * .,. "Ttw WNClll °' The Mafy o...'' (1151) Gary ~. OWtton ....._ A llllp'a aflloar .. ...... ~.,.·--of• NMgatlOalln ....... "•111• of neottoeno. c:e.,.. 11:ao• ··~·~Of Wl11f8" (1t5a) Kleron Moore, Jotln Grafaon. A eroupof....,_....,... to ptvtact • ,,...... bird brMk Into tM tligllly -palttlva tNdllnO lrldllltty, lll'oWlnO tN Wfettl of - penicUlar ...,.,.. "' tM ~·PO· l:IO (I:) "T.,_..' I 1MI) Boria l<artolt, Tim O'l<ally. An agir'O llorror..f'IWMa ..., lflat to,_ wlltl • mur· ct.'OUllrllPW••~ ,,_.......,_ MO 9 * * * ''Wtllr• EaQlaa Oete" (Pwt 2} ( 1Me) Alcn- lld lwton. Clllt EMl· ~ All Mlad oMcer .. r.ac:ued from Nata 11y oommanoo. dlagillMd .. OermaM. uoe **~ "f~" C1M7l Tony FfWldoM. Raquel Wtlld\. A Cl1mlnat '*-a •~•I• parechulltl 10 reoowr • ~-­of ~ Ulldw .... .,,.. _, IMI alle II lookAng tor • llafftb.~ .... Cl> ....... "" (1t7t) .NO, Ktfler\. Tom ....... A ~ wwlfan In .. ,.,. raal r~ cllacClWra ---~·-­........ d In ar1 than In i..'PO' • "C.ldllafloe" (1971) Jodie Foaw. o..td ... A IOIMoy from .. ..,_. ot Loa ~ '"'** • ~ 11r111t1......_ ·o· 4:00 a:> ''Tlla Gealnt Of wi.. dofft" (1971) ·~ fo*. In ~ tury Auafr'lla. • ~ -froni ... OUtbec* .. dlfllCMy ~ to IM ..... propttatp of an ...... glrte'adlOOI. l:IO. "Urtlan eowtlo(' C 1HO) John Trawolta, D*8 Winter· A~ .... WOl1ler wflo ..... hlfnMlf • moderfl-day ~ .... "'._ ... glftlle ..... ln•~ COUlltty-and •t•m t.. 'PO' IMCtUafy "°"' .. """· \' ............... ......... ~ .. N'IZUIOOH Nm. • * * • i+ "Sollndor In Tiie 0r ... •· (1M11 ~ Woocl. Warren Baatty. Two yollf'O pecpa _.. the painful and beallUlul .. OO'*Y of lo\le In • lfMll K.anllMIOWfl, a:> "Our Time" ( 1973) ,.,... SU. Mar11n, p ... s....,. The ._ of two yo11no couple• arvolled at private tdlOOlt are cNl'f9d ...., -of the glrtt ~ .. le pr9QMnt. 'PO' Cl> ''TheSNnlng'' (1tl0) Jack Hk:tlollon. ~ °""81. Olrected tiy Stanley Kubrick. A former ldloo'leedler l*9d ... wtnter c:at9takar tor • remote. and ~tty haunted, Cdorado hotel, .. anowbound it.. wlltl hll .... and dalrvoyant "°""" --.'A' • "Tiie Godfather. Part 11" (1974) N Paclno. Aob- ar1 DIMI. MlctlMI Cot»- -MaUmet .. lat• fattier'• ttwone and poww .. he becomet the new he9d of the Mella. llndlnt pr..,. wMtl tMI feo. tlarlaand ..... ~ out~ ralQft. 'A' NO•(l.)4* "ANewUle" ( ,..,., ,.,... '**--· Oanlon "'-tt. A ""*' llr\llllll8f to Nlluld .... ................ ......,.. no ....,Mlliol,, COi1111Q11a Ndda.(R) • <JI) "Wtl a• w'' (197') ~ AMonall. llWoalo ·-··••ril. The_ ... her ......... llM died Oft • ._.,_ .,_, '°"* • itl:itl wlr'9 mtrdlant'I .... out ot .. .abed'° ... ,,..,. .. """"*" of .. ~ ~·w C1IJ .. ~.,..,,,ear.'' (tNO) Jvllt De¥ll. ...., Nall.In~ ...... ,., ~ 8'I lndlpeil6--'°""' -.,.. to ...... _.., ... .,,., ..... aoclll ~ tor .. to "*'Y· (%) ''Tlle4reall 8aMlnl" ( 197t) AoMr1 Dl.rwall, llytfw o.Mal'. A ~ wf.4Mdy ....... ccwiie ___ .._..._..,..,. ................ to in.-.... .....,., ..... on Na fwlllly. 'PO' .. a:> ''Tareatt" (1Me) 8ortl l<.toff, nn O'~. All • ~ horrOr-fftCMI ..., trlat to ,....,_ ..... -· ............ ~ nlO'lle ..... . 10:IO(I) ..... ~,..-- Toed Ma"~..-.. and~,_ ace out .,.., ... and ...... 'A' 10:AI (II) "HOI•..-ale "°9'' <1N01 wma Nllloft. ~ ~ Mill on tow, • Tel!•• covntr.,. ... tern ...., ~ llMIMd .. .,.~--­.. of ......... ltlOUOfl .. .. io... .... ~..,_..-.·PO• 11:00 cm"™ ArM ....... ...,... cal'' (191SJ ~ w..m.. lt\IOe Klnlmll. A .,_. ~.,...._pro-........ .., ...... . -'" ........ ""°"°' ~ ....... OOlft8111111) In .. "'*''"' CID",,,.,,. ,,..,., TOlll -..,v.,..~n. CtW of • ~11al 11 .................. -~ ........... .., ...... ..., ................... ............... _...._ . ......,.., . ..., ..... • ''MlflOlllY' (1t71t Ollflll .... ~ .... ldM.A,......__.. ................. ................ ........... ~ ....... .,.. The Third IOnd. Special Edition" (1N0) Rldlard Oreyf\IM, Frencoit T111f· llUt. Afttr ligtl1lng a UFO, • poww company~ -.,__ obMaMd wlttl ll!ldlnG the ..... landing .,.._.PO. 11:30. Cl> •• ''Tiie ar.atest TI*lg Tllet Aalnoel .... !*led" ( 1977) Jimmie :~:i· = e:..-:: t1ar refuaat lo let an Ill- -stand bet..-1 "'"' and .,, lmpor1aM g91M. 12*>; * •• 'A "Tiie Plalna- man" (193el Gary~. CNt1e1 BIC*tord. A ttlo Of tamout Waattrfl c:Nr.::.- ter'I ,,., to ttop • ...,.. man from llllllrlO Q1#W to lndlant. Cl) "More Arnenc8n Oraf- tltl" (1979} Aon ~. P9UI Le Mat. AIW 91'.0U. lion, • "°"" of ,. ldlool lrlerlda axpetlenOa the dialangel of adUlttMlod In Iha IOdal ._... of .. 1980I. 'PO' 12:4f CC> "19'0" (1977) Robert DINlro, Ganlrd ~. 9-1ty year'f of "8llerl 1oc111 and polltlcal chanOat --ttwougtl .. ~ of two __.tty bMt ,,.,._ 'A' 1:eoe **"Only The Val-ant" I IN 1) GNgcwy Pa. ...,_l~A~ writ ,.....,. ""'*' lor ..... tlllder wNn ha .... 1...m frOtn en lndlaft ...... 1:,.. * * * * .. An Amertcen In,.,. .. (1961) Oerw Kt$- .,, Lalla Cerofl. Mulllcal aoor. ~ Oeotga and Ira ~All~ •41 lindla~ and ..... "' ..... 1:IO . ''The Goclfaltlar. Part 11" (1974} N Pec*lo, Aob- 91 OWll. ~ Cot»-____ ... ................ and powel' .. Ila IMoOiNI .. -head of ........ lndlno .,,.,.,._. .... rW flao. .... ........ ""°""'" Olllhlt,.....'A' ... 1:IO ••• ,. "Jo!Wly Coof'' (11a) Henry 8llw. Ellra- beltl MOl ..... •'I· An .... -~,.,... -. ~ .,.,,.. .. ..,. '° .... YOttl to _... ...... IOa on .. ...,... of an Alwan ........ Cl) "The ldcllrlllM(' I ttlO) "-IMrM'I· TCMltl Ftldltluft, A ~ man-o-UNa v.,lou• plo'JI to~ two,..,.. -.... '"'° pop lll9lg ~·PO· 1:11 •••~"Mr.~ Md the...,...... (1Me) ~ ...... Ann 81'/th. Wtlle fllHfW. • men ffom ~ °'*'* • lflS· melid, ...... hOIM ... -In love""' '*· -· •• "Cl_..ldl .. (1Ht) JoM ~ Ahon-, dla .....,._, A .... , °"'9 I ·~ .... .....,, ha ...... to r90CMr .. ..., ... and ..... l:OO. * * ''Couragaova Pf. CMltlM" ( 1'40) ...., .......,T•NMLA ==--~ .cs "'*' an aplidefNC ..,.... l:IO (I) * ........ ,,...,. ~ • WM!Mr" (1Hll Gelle~ fV, Dan Oeill¥· A IOOll lV ..... dlOldlt to ~ ~ • reun60n of .... WOrtd War N Afmt blld- ~* * .... ""°'*>ft't a.Mot" (tt64) JoM Miia, 0... .......... Aboot· ............ '°,... ..... IOllf'Ot of ..,.. -,....,.. .. _ ....... .......... ~ . ................... .. ,,.. .... 0... "' ....... ,. ....... ·---..... .............. ..... ........ _.. THURSDAY'S MOVIES JULY 1:1. 1•1 EVIHltG -.. (C) * * *.,. "8'1gldoon" (1954) Gene l<tlfl'J. Cyd Charl1M. Two lrl1no1 ~ \ll)Orl ertgadoon, • VIiiage In Illa Scottllll hlgh- landl, wNd't ~ 10 .... tor 1 111'Q1e day every 100 r:OO~f'odly U" (19751 s~ vHter Stallone, T1ll1 Shire. Anar loelng hll bout with Ille world Cllar'nCM<>n. an tmbltloul boxer tralnl for I ~ ct""°9 11 the tltla. 'PO' cm "Brubaker" ( 1980) Robert Redford. Yaphet l<otto. A rwiform-mlnded ~ uncowrw wtc»- llPfeed CONUPtlon wt*1 lie .,.,,.,.. hll newty Ullgned prl1on po1lng •• 1n Inmate. 'R' (%) "The ldolmakar" (1M0) Rey Sharlley. TCMh Feldatlutl. A manlpulatlve manaoer uM• v.,1ou1 ployt '° catapult two ~ I09"I lnlo pop linglrlg ~·PO· NO. 8 * * "T~Mlnuta Warning" Ct978) Chattton Hatton, Jotwl ~ To ~ llltlnllon from • planned ar1 heltl, • gang °' .....,.. plant • .,..,., In Ille Loa Mgtlel Collleum duttno • ~ football ~(A) • ..... "Hour Of The Gun" ( 1917) Jam•• Oat'IW, .._ Aobardt. • *** ''Tiie~ Man" (1917) 0-,,. c. Scott. lw L~ Aeon art- llt and an Atmt ~ '°"' torcae. and tM * man tlvel the boy a ooinetn•1,..nlflllng. • *M "Sliy Htlat" (1975) Doti MaNdlth. s ...... Power•. Lot AngalH ""4 UClgaliaft lake to the Sy In ......... lo tradl down a pelt of gold ...... (I:) "Up Alvw'' A )'OUl'O '*"*' ~ lnYOlved In ... and death~ ..... ~land t.on. Cl> "HclM'/IUClkle Aoae" (19'0) w.. Nttlol\, Oyen c.nnon. wtllla on tour. a Texu country·-•l.,n ... ...,..,_ moMd ........ Mduc:tl¥e daugll- -of ..... .,.lok ~ ............ fovea hll ..... .._ ...... PO' • .. ......,., The UMt" • (1tT1) Unduy er-. M Goedtllum. The an ,_..,._.. °' ifl "vnder· grwl'ld'' Botton ~ pet hew vwioul r'OINMiC aftd Jo11rnall1tlc tnoolll1tef9 Wllh aadl ottiar and .... 1Ubjact9 of their lltortaa.'A' lcCID (%) "lpege Movie'' ( 1979) ~-Y· Ml'* lly ... ~. AtcNval lllm IOo4eot cft Oi lldta the trt-~ oe .. u.a . .- pr.-, '8cllllln9 on the ~ Apolo 11 lnOOi'I laftdlnl,'Q' l:IO (J:) .. ,,._. .. (1979) Duatlfl Hoff in aft, VtnHH ......,... In London In ..... "' Ml8i'tcen ,_.. P8Sl8f ,...,., INllta and ...... lnvoMd """ ..... ~.,...,.,. .. aw... ""° ,_ llft her~ ........... 'PO' (II) "M 'n.t Jim" Ot7tl Aoy ...... ,,..,... Lente. The ...... ICNI .. °'•Pl oh•laNt...., le ...... "°"' ...... Oft IMatapto'*'°""Oft- -.•1111• -···~Of,....... l<lna" ......... Claildla ~ ,.. .... ............ In ........... .., ...... .. ........ of .... iii .......... . ' we search t11e 11atton · to find 1nore ~ 11Uye1ss fOr your home! Coldwe11 ·aan-er, A . -I mer1ca .• When you llSt your home for sale With a local RealtOr, hOW many prospecjive buyers can you read'I? A feW hundred? A few thOusancl, pert1ap5? comparea to ColdWell Banker, that's Just a handful I we CXNer the enUre nation cand more> to find buyer$ fol' your home. llVOugh COidweii Bankers Market Amer1cctprogram, the news • that VOll" hOme ts tor sale, can be trans- mlttecl to hunctreas Of COidweii Banker Offlees, spread from a>aSt to coast ... and even to afftllatect offtees In Clnadal Ask about our exclusive "CERTIFIED BUY" program! we find more QUaltfted t>uverS In every section of the countJV. Buyers a local . RealtOr Just cant reach. FamlleS WhO are • anxious to relocate and are genutnety Interested Iii t>uylng homes Hice Vol.I'S. Planning to sel your hOme? 'nllnk COidweii Banker ... Amertca I n.ere·s no reason to accept anything IS. COidweii aanker ... A11•rtca • The nation's largeSt, full service real estate company. When it comes to Real Estate, -you deserve the Very Best- call us today! • East Hunllnglon leech: (714) 982-5585 (213) 592-1525 . Weat Huntington Beech (714) 894-7521 (213) 591-3328 We cover America for you! I ·i l I J I I I I STARTING TODAY -------------- 'HILL STREET BLUll' Actr888 tells ~Y her role is so vulnerable In Pilot TV Log ( fHIUAY JULY 1 1'11i1 SINGING GYMNAST Will tlsteners f~ip over Cathy Rlgby's pop records? In Weekender TICKET FOR SUCCESS Great summer movies create box office boom Plus film , movie ~eviews • • • • • Ylll llllTlll llllY PIPIR OHAN C t C O U N IV L A L If Uf~NIA 2~ CENl S Son's letters still haunt grieving father 'I feel that I will make it home', he wrote from Vietnam By JODI CADENHEAD Of .. ~yl"ftMltaff Dear Mom: I joined the Army becaiue I believe in America The Army tried to put me in clerk ichool, btd J told tl~m I wanted to be in tt)e in· fantry. I thought I waa really doing 1omethfng /or my country. I will tell you, thu being unth your /mnd alive one minute and dead the nezt take• all the gung M ·neu otd of o ~r1on. Your loving .wn. Bob Only u few months before Bob bad chosen lo stay in Los Anieles with his father, w hile his mother . Marjorie Pickell, moved to Whittier. He was ada· mant about continuing at Fairfax High School where he was second in command of the school's ROTC program. fie was proud, his father re· called. Proud he was second. Jfhe stayed one more year he would be first. he told his dad. But next year did not come killer team. J ride an or pilot a very •mall helicopter al the top tevtl untU the enemy /ireaat iu. 1 /eel J am doing JOmething /qr the war e/f<n1, and maybe hurting amJW of lheu ~ople that have hurt m11 f rlenda. Love. Bob. ·'I gave him every argument in the world," recalled his father. "I wanted him to go to college. He told me if he siined up now he could be home for Christmas." He came home that Christmas and the next, spending about 90 percent of the time with his girlfriend, Grantham chuckled. Feb. 16-Deor Mom. I /eel that I will make it home. I only have a Jew month& of /lying Left Mom. if the army ever come1 to tell you I'm m111· Ing in action. it only mean& o~ tiring, J'mdead-theycan't/indmybody I 'll do my beat to stay alive, but I'm not a/ raJd to die J / I die I 'll be doing it for my country, friend• and family 10 that my brother or f rienda never have to come over here to 1ee what I 've aeen-I've aeen ao much dying Righi now, I have a feeling of empt1· neH like I've never had be/ore without purpose and /eel J need aomething but I don't know what that aometlring fl. Jn other word&, I'm o For most Americans the Viel· nam War came to a n end six years ago. But for Huntington Beach resident Preston Grantham, the war_ continues privately, quiet· ly in the back of his mind, where memories of his oldest son still live. Instead, the youth walked into his local recruiting office and signed up. Hi s best friend was already In Vietnam. And besides, it would be a way for him to earn- enough money to marry his girfriend, he argued. Now. so many a years later. her name escapes his father's memory. The certificates from infantry school, the military medals are 411 pasted carefurty In a red. while and blue colored scrap- book. The face that stares back from a photo. smiling from the open helicopter door. seems fresh, young. He's the one gri'n· ning, the only happy face in a sea of serious expressions. very mazed up Ind. • ~ ~ Your Loving aon, Bob HE BELIEVED IN AMERICA Mi.,ing GI Grantham The now retired. Los Angeles police officer tried lo slop his 17- year-old son from joining the Army. But there was no stopping Robert Eugene In the fall of 1969. Dear Mom My new job 1/ you ~nt to know I did oolunteer /or So~~ haa to do It. 1 am the hunter of a hunter Waste, Is the word Grantham usesoverandoveragain,whenhe talks about Vietnam. He is a man given lo quick laughter and pre· fers not to dwell on the past. "During W.orld War II we <Se GI, Page A2l 0., ................ GRIEVING F'ATllER HB's Preston Grantham I Israelis smash PLO nest in. Beirut o.ily ................. Poster in window of supermarket in Costa Mesa adviles customers they need not worry about tmying produce. Postal union chief • • cites scare tactic By AAJF HAJI or .. ....,,......,. An Orange County postal un- ion leader charged today that a Justice Department claim that postal workers can be arrested on felony charges in the event of a stdke Is nothing more than a scare tactic. "The way our Jall system ls now, there is no way they could arrest and1all 800,000 people," said Jordan Brown, president of Branch 1100 of the Letter' Car· rlers' Union based In Orange. mitled by the two largest unlons. the American Postal Workers Union and the National Assocla- li on o f Letter Carriers. To1ether, they represent 500,000 members, who earn an average of $23,000 yearly In wages and fringe benefits. Union leaders want pay raises and a cost of living allowance that would amount lo a hike of 14. 7 percent each year for the next three years. If the aMual rate of Inflation is In the 10 per-· cent range. "Medlfy • spraying goes on ~ LOS GATOS <AP> As five helicopters sprayed pesticides over 10 medfly infested com- munities this morning, Gov. Ed· mund G. Brown Jr. said t}'ie aerial assault had covered half the target area and predicted the whole 175 square miles would be sprayed In two to three days. Brown also appealed for rederal cooperation in the effort to combat the Cast-spreading M editerranean fruit fly, specificall y asking President Reagan to let the helicopters uae Moffett Field, an air base near San Jose. The use of the field already had been approved, a Moffett spokesman said. The choppers were spraying a sticky, pestlclde·laced ball over Mountain View, Los Altos, Sun· nyvale, Cupertino, Los Gatos, San Jose. Campbell, Santa Cl ara . Monta Vis ta and Saratoga today, the fourth day of spraying. "We believe we're going to control this pest," Brown said today on ABC's "Good Morning America." With five choppers airborne today, "we've covered just a bout half the area to be sprayed . . . and with any kind of luck at all we'll be able to finish this In two to three days .... Give us until Sunday night," Brown said. ln the first three days of (Bee MEDl"LV, Pace A2l IN DEEPEST SYMPATHY })))))))))~{((~~((((( the Boa120 o~ Supe12v1soQs this Oay A0JOUl2n€0 1n memo12y o~ ......... ........ e Orange County's memorial certificate• -costing the taxpayers more than 16() each time iuperviaora adjourn in memoriam. Supervisor says certificates costly By FREDERICK SCHOEllEJIL or .. .._,......,. Rarely a meeting passes that the Oran1e County Board of Supervisors doesn't adjourn In memory of some civic leader or other noteworthy Individual who haa died. -And the practice of sending • cerUllcate notJn1 the board's ac· lion to the famUy or the de· ceased ii C01tln1 Orange County 1overnment a tmall fortune, ·Supervisor Roger Stanton said durlna hearings Thursday on the county budget. Stanton said his office ls being billed more than S60 by the coun- ty's In-house reproduction and araphict department e ach time the name of the deceased person Is added to the pre-printed certlflcates. "The top prlce I paid was $65.81. Maybe t.h~re were more lt"tter• ln the name." Stanton Hld Wl')'l)', Branch 1100 represent.I 3,000 letter carriers In Orange, Los Angele1, Riverside and San Bernardino counties. • D. Lowell Jensen, a11l1tant at. ~rney 1eneraJ ln char1e ol the criminal division. said crtmlnal HcUonl of the U.S. Code could be enforced directly In tp• event of a strike wtlhou't. havlnt to flnt exha.-t clvll « admlnlttratJve remedie1. . ' New fights erupt at OC fair "Gee, If we're sufferlrl!C like that. what about other county departmenta?" Stanton asked. Stanton aatd be visited the co11nl)''1 print shop to learn first· band why the cc>1ta are 10 hlth. "It la apparent that any such ,. 1lrlke by Po1t1I Service employ ... wo.-ld have a alpifl· cant dttrlmeatal impact on UM nation aod ill ctt11e111," JenMn stated ta a meme. a copy ol •blell, ... otQlned by' Tbe Al· toeta&ed ...... . TIM memo wu dated Jul1 14, ...... w .. ..,.,auaafifa un.,.. oamract Mt.,.. tilt PDl&al lerwlow ...... .-... · ~N.-la&Aoa• Mt•••• Ute ................... •• ,.., ... a1t••.W1 UH taped °"" •••• ,..... ... tub- Police receive complaints of security lack at grounds • I~ ISUY CIAtJ8EN °' .............. Ft1hta erupttn1 ln the parkbl& loll at the Oran1e County Fair early thll momin1 prompgct U.. ldrnout of I tm .. I coatt leDt of Col&a 11 .. Police and r..WMd in OIM anwt lor 111ault. Tb• brawll, reported at l :JO a.m. aa crowdl milled lD P*R· la1 loU 8"-UM f atr ~loled. came amid complablUI to ,oltce bJ ..,,, fair vtlitGn .......... die ....... laelE ot MCUttty It UM fali'lrouiadt, • '* Drift, laColla-.U. .. ......... tM •letl• .... ............... a.... ..... brawl at tlle falrtroundt dU year rema1na critical and in • coma at Mercy General Hospital, Santa Ana. Steven Ronald Stelle, za. o1 Anaheim received Mriout bud injuries ln tbe IOUtheul HCUoa of th• parklftl area early Mon· day wben he and a trtend ,... PC>rtedly were attacked bJ a trOM.Pof ave or io beW1 ........ lnlllal reporU to Poliff lD· dicated 8telfe1W ..._ felled bJ a bottle and ..... lllded .. , ... tlm•• 11 ... 1u.m&Ud to rtN. lull11....,, c.ta ·-... .................. l. ha" .. cet•ea·-~ l'etaN,.. ............ ·:fnc• ,,.. ...• n• .. ~llaf...._ after polite 1ou1ht their tMlp throulh the Dall~ PUoti o.tedlvee Hid today the)' st.lit cannot nnd Stell•'• friend, Wllllam Paul SarrH, U , or Bueaa Park, who ftl9d initial re- port• followln1 th• Monday fraeu. And, bi=aton Md, MWCJ Oeaetal •utbOrtdli .... Nfullai, w1e tn1Cll'mauon re1•NJal ..... I laJ•rlll, I 1\and ~ ..... prjYIQ Ian. ...... ai ........ .... .ur ......... . .......... --... I ISi I ~ ..... ( ............. . l> j He found that it took three mlnutel for an c;Pperator to set the type on a ''dlal-a ·t)'pe. machine," 10 mlnulff to alltn• • the type and 20 mlnute• for the name to be printed on the certifteat.. Said Stanton. "Thal'• U mlnutee -or 25 percent of the· two boun (ol Um•> I've been 1ett1n1 char1ed for.·' ltuton 1ald U.al. •hen he quHtloned th• addUlona· alDOUlll ol bWed tJme, be wu told It lDvolved onrhea4 •· .,.._ii &he print lbop. If tbat'• nt"leHI, bt \old fellow IUftrYllOrt, U•• overbtlcl ....... u..t ... · -Tlit roaatal• Valley ., ... r"' .... Al) t Terrorist camp ruined? BEIRUT, Lebanon ( API - Israel pounded Pa lestinian stron gholds 1n Beirut and southern Lebanon from the air and sea today in the heaviest an- ti-guerrilla action since Its 1978 invasion of lhc southern border area. Police s aid more than 50 people were killed. but a radio station said the death toll was over 100. Israel said its warplanes -destroyed the headquarters of two Palestinian guerrilla move· menls in Beirut. and that all the jets returned s afely to base after the first raid on the capital in more than three years. The Palestinians disputed the claim that headquarters were destroyed and said one laraeli Jet was downed Israel said its planes attacked In at least two separate actions in the morning and afternoon and blew up thre~ bridges on the Litanl and Zahrani rivers -the Delphi, Arab Asllm and the Zahrani. On Thursday, Israeli planes destroyed five bridges over the rivers with t he aim of cutting the guerrillas from arms supplied in the north. The wail of ambulance siren~ echoed In the streets of Beirut 11 police reported more than 35 deaths in the capital and 15 In the port tlty or Sidon. ORAiia CUil 11111111 Fair ~hrough Saturday, but aome low clouds early Saturday momlng. Hl1ha 70 to 74. Low• tonight ee to 70. llllDITIUY The Norfh wUl bf Otd to 1top Soedh nmMng bock Dfno Bell Julr1 15 ot the #Ith anual ShrfM AU·ltor football "°mt ot tM RoN Sow4. Bl&t, rte. Edi,on Hlflh. 1tCMdout ~· lw'• reodfl to 61/md hu ,..,,,. )ltat•on ·of well 01 the te"°'>l'•· St• BJ for tM •torv. I \ _orange Coat DAIL y PtLOT/Fr1day, July 17, ,., $3 .3 billion.San Oiiofre· prio;ect 'could bankrupt Edison' By J091 NDDHA• °' ............ A repreMDtatlv• for tbe en· l'Ylronmentat 1roup l'rlendl ot ~e E...tb 1ay1 the public may ibe left -.din, tbe bal f« U.. re3.8 bUllon in cooat.fuctton cotta 'f>f two nearly completed unJta at -the San <>norre Nuclear OtMrat-~n1 Station. And a second nuclear criUc tclalma infant mortallty rat• ln communities hear San Onotr. are hJ,.,... than In areaa fartMt ••way from th~ plant. J. At a Sant• Ana pre11 '°". derence Tbunday, Don May, • le11I Intervenor tn on1olftl JAtomic S.ftty end LlffMh,I cBoard hearlnc• to dt\trmlM If l'tbe unlta ahoUld be UNnHd, takt rJ>oard ~mben an waU1lq 1 1tlgbtrope belween ri1kln1 a>Uhllc -health and b1nkruptln1 1n Onofre'• owners. Le1al lnttrvenora are rte· 1ogni1ed by UNI aattty board u ~he omclal tballenat-rt of t.ht . Uctmln& ol UM plant.a. Cit~ Milm9I01lcal data ~­lec ttd by opponent• of tbt r.laata' Ucenatn1, May aald U.e 1 a 1ood cbanH the unit.a wUl be ••PGHd '8 Mt ... Lbq"A.llt lOto 40 Umw atronatt,.ban they.,. upabte .ot wllhltandltll durtn1 thtlr Ufwthne. M •¥· an en1tnur. uld SOUthtrft Calltorn\1 !:dllon Co., m1Jorh1 owntr or th• San Oftolh faclllt,y, b•d comm.ltt.d ftltrb all lll nnan~l•I ....U to th ~ct.k:M\ ol Unlll 1 ud ll "U tbe Alomk Sift~ and lJHMlftl Board ICtl lO lil"Oteet publle";1 fi11lth end Hitt)' ~Y wllttbo,dln1 an opttatlnf · llrenM1 l\ •lll be lhrowln1 the uUUly 11~ ban•ruptcy, '' May ·~·· ' Ht aleo aald that a declalon to dtn~ llctn1ln1 or the plants would further compound lhe nnanclal problem• or San Dtt•o O 11 • £1tetrlc <..~., which owna ti moat IO "-rttnt o lft Onofre, Catalina Airl ines . $uspens.ion ordered LOS ANGELES (AP> _:.. An administrative law jud1e bas or- dered a seven-month auspeasioo of Catalina Airlines' pasaeqer eperations because of several violations of atr safety regula- tions. 1. Judge John E. Faulk also SUS· pended for four months the re· pair statio n certificate of Catalina's sister company, Briles Wing & Helicopter, lnc .. a •elicopter operatin1 and main- tenance firm. · ". The aifllne. which shuttled people between Catalina Island •nd San Pedro, was grounded #.prll 10 by the FAA after the llriles-0wned "Chopper 2" used by Los Angeles television station KNXT crashed shortly after ~ From Page A1 'COSTS ••• ,., supervisor didn't let the matter ndrop with discussion of the in- ' memory certificates. ,. When two cardboard direction ,signs were needed to direct a 11group of visiting scholars to tbe .,county Hall of Administration, Stanton's staff called the county print shop. Two signs were de· livered So ~as a bill -for $93.10, Stanton said. At Stanton's urgine. the board ~ordered a study of printing costs "by the county Administrative Of· ·flee and General Services ''Agency. ' Mexicans eyed I jn ca r the/ ts SAN DIEGO CAP> -U.S. authorities were pressing Mex- ico today to arrest 14 men ac· cused of stealinll at least 4,000 expensive American cars worth S30 million. Alejandro Rosas Romandia. Baja California attorney 1eneraJ, has said his office in· tends to help investigate the charies. l•keotf from S1ntu Monica Airport. Le" than two months berore tho.t · crash, In whlch the pilot was injured, a Catalina Airlines helicopter cruhed into the sea otr A va1on, Catallna Island, ldJI· lng two passengers and injuring six other people. Catalina and Brlles, 'both owned by Paul R. Briles, Inc. of Gardena. were found guilty of violating three Federal Aviation Administration air worthiness directives and 15 feder~I air regulations. However Faulk said he did not find any pattern of "contempt or disregard" for air sa(ety regulk· Uons that would justi(y complete revocation of the airline's car- rier certificate. Man rescued after b eing a drift · week A Nevada man who left Dana Point Harbor last month alone in a 24·foot saiJboal for the Mar· quesas Islands was rescued Thursday after being adrift for more than a week in the Pacific Ocean. 2.8>0 miles sou!hwest of Los Angeles. A Coast Guard spokesman identified the man as John Sorensen, 25, of Boulder City, Nev. Sorensen was picked up by a research vessel which was diverted from its course by the Coast Guard in Honolulu. the spokesman said. Sorensen's boat was disabled by ..a broken rudder. A . group of Southern California ham radio operators first received his dis· tress caJI July 8. Sorensen reportedly had suffi. cienl food and water onboard. and was in dally contact with the radio buffs while plans for his rescue were organized. J'~r turnstiles pass -~quarter millio n Total Orange County Fair at- tendance l•ped past. the quarter million mark Thursday and is ex- pected to toP-lut year's tUl'Ultile count w1-~fair.,. Sunday. Fair Gffielals reported 218.a:il · vial tors Thunday, up 2,583 from lait year. That brines the 227,989 attendance 1981 Lota1 to 113,12' s hort of last yur'a record· breaking attendance. Here's a list of Saturday's fair hl1b&l•: 10 a.m. Varloua demonstra- tions, Home Ar1I and Craft and Hobbles buildinga. nooo. \Q 6 p.m. Harmony com· petltDI. Orance&PdPavillon. 1:30 'PA. Klcli Cl8fttelt.I, Food Baaaar. 2 to 6 p.m. UDlcycle mhnea, srouldl. 2 :91j>.~Oran1eBloltomCloC· gers, COuntry Meadows . 3 p.m. Profesalonal rodeo, grandstand. 3:30 p.m . Diaper Derby. Heritage State. 5 p.m. Mltcbell Marionettes, mall. 5:30 p.m. Jee carving dem- onstration, Gourmet Gallery. Funs-A-Poppin circus. Circus Area. 6: U p.m. Norwalk Yquth Band concert, Country Meadows. 6:45, 8:45 and 10 p.m. Swaying Bil rot, amphitheater. 7 and 9 p.m. Rob Grill and the Gr111 Roots, amphitheater. 8 p.m. Profe .. lonal rodeo, araDdltand. 9:301.m. Nonoelna Polynesian Sltow, Rerita1e State. 10 J>.m. Vandermelde Lbe Hn>: notiat, Oran1elancl Pavilion. May 1dded that hla 1roup tears lbe board will act to pro- tect the nnabcial lntereat.a of th• two uUllt.lea by 1rantln1 a condi· tlonal Ucenae to operate the planta before llluM of Mlamic Hf tty and emer1ency planniJll are rao!ved. "Then," May Hid, "with t.be debt burden trlllaflrnd to the publle, tbt board cllll laa... act &o ttldnd the uc.-. learinc Ute publle holdta1 Ute ba1." He Wei Ed1.aon and Su Dlqo 011 • &lectrle reco•nl .. tbey rn1d1 a bid Investment lo con- tr•cU.., lhe two new planll our a potential earthquake aone, and want lo le11en tbelr llablllty before an operating llc.nn lJ denied for realOftl ol pubUe beallb and aafely. However, Edlaon officials say May la mistaken, and that Public Utilltlea Commission rules which aovern rates do not allow conatrucUQn Cotta to be pa11ed on to electric customers unleu power planta are ln opera lion. According lo an Edison 1pokcsman. rate payers cannot be c:baraed hi1her rates until Units 2 and 3 be&ln operaUng. and then only with commission approval. rr the operating licenses for the units were to be rescinded after the utilities were given permission by the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board to begin operating, any rate hikes re- s ulting from the startup of the plants would have lo be lowered. the spokesman said. A second legal Intervenor speaking at Thursday's press conference, Selma von Haden, charged that inf ant mortality rates in communities near lhe San Onofre nuclear facility are higher than in more distant areas. Mrs. Von Haden, a housewife, who is affiliated with the Al· Hance for Survival, another ~roup opposed to the li censing of · Units 2 and 3',' said the infant death rate was 26.4 per 1,000 Live births in FaJlbrook. a commuru- ty located 11 miles southeast of the plant. She said the rate was "star· tlingly higher" than other areas (arther away from ~an unotre. Cited were V-ista, with 15 deaths per 1,000 births, Oceanside, 11.6, Escondido, 11.4 and Del Mar, 1.2. ··Fall brook is directly in the path of prevailing winds from San Onofre," Mrs. von Haden said. She added that Fallbrook had a higher infant mortality rate than the 19.3 that was re- corded after the Three Mile Island nuclear accident in Pen- nsylvania. And while she said the statistics were "inconclusive," she said 1978 San Diego County health department data she used to compile the rates seemed to suggest a higher infant death rate near San Onofre. From Page A 1 .. FIGHTS. • • • •• o.itr Nit ..... "'ClllllfM -.r PEEK A BOO -This was how the moon looked at about 9:45 Thursday night, part way through a lunar eclipse over the Orange Coast. From Page A1 Gl'S VIETNAM LETTERS .• rouiht for somethioll." says the former Marine, his voice trailing Into a quiet whisper. "I feel the polltlclans used Vietnam and slabbed Americans in the back." March I-Dear Mom: I haue 135day! * ·• * POW horwrs set Saturday left before you see me walk through the door. My time is getting short. I hauen't much to aay. I Loue you all and mias uou uery much. Loue , Bob. The next message was a yellow, now 'wrinkled, Western Union te legram, dated March 8, 1971. The Secretary of the Army has cuked me to inform you that your son, Corporal Robert E. Grantham, has been reported mu$ing an action in Vu!tnam since 8 March 1971. Grantham and his former wife later received word that wit- nesses had seen their son's helicopter crash and explode. FromPageA1 MED FLY • • • 1prayln1. when leaa than 30 1quare m.Hes were covered, the hellcoptera failed lo "work aa well u we wanted,'' he aald. But two helicopter companies are now tackllng the m~chanlcal problems, that slowed aerial 1prayln1, he added. Brown on Wednesday uked the president lo declare three in· feated counties rederal disaster areas. Jn Washington, deputy While House preaa secretary Larry Speakes said today the re- quest "has finaJly been received after being missent" to tbe San Francisco regional office of the Federal Emergency Manage- ment Agency and "is under con- sideration." ·'This has to be a state. locaJ and a federaJ effort . . . and I appeal t.o the president" t.o let medfly workers use federal faclllties in the area. Brown said. The use of the Navy's Moffett Field as staging area for helicopter spraying operations was a uthorized Thursday by Defense Secretary Caspar Wein· berger. according to a Moffett spokesman. John Shackleton. public af- fairs officer at Moffett, said the staging area, now at a secret location in the Los Altos hills and at the San Jose municipal airport, probably would not be moved to Moffett before Mon~ day. . D.espite the governor's op- ttm1sm, the fruit fly, which al· tacks 200 varieties of fruits and vegetables. bas moved to within 20 miles of San Francisco and within 40 miles of the rich farmlands of the San Joaquin Valley, officials said. Man gets 20 days in Robbins threat l The Southern Cal i fornia c hapter of American Ex · PrisonelPof War will hest a patriot.ic program honoring war prisoners at 2 p.m. Saturday al the Los Alamitos Armed Forces Reser ve Center. Congressm an' Bob Badham (Newport Beach > will be the featured speaker, along with Susan Moreno. national director of Americans for Return of Serviceman from Vietnam. As a bitter irony Mrs. Pickett had to protest before the army would agree to pay Social Securi· ty benefits. Without a body they s aid. there was no proof he was dead. Asked if he thinks his son is still alive, Grantham sa ys, "I don't think there's any chance. It's nice to think about. but I'm a realist. SACRAMENTO CAP> -A man arrested last week in con- nection with telephoned death threats against state Sen. Alan ' Robbins has been sentenced to 20 days in jail. President Ronald Reagan pro· claimed today "Prisoner of War aJld Missing In Action Day of Recognition" to honor all war prisoners and their families. "I'll tell you something, though. if he hadn't been killed, he'd be an officer today. He had that much dedication. Everything he ever did he worked hard al. He bad a dream to be the best." Kenneth Travnik·ar. 30, of• Wo odla nd. pleaded guilty in Sa c ramento Munic ipal Court Thursd ay to mi sd e meanor cha rges of making annoying telephone calls. He was sen· tenced by Judge Arthur Eiss-inger ·~llM.--.. ~ .... ~ ................. ~.--.. ~•.J'o { i ~ t -~ • ' ' NOW thru July 31st al AMI,ING'S Newport ~unery and Garden Center 1500 e. coast highway 644-9510 new.port beach (next to irvine coast country club and newport center) L'. ' .,__ . - ... , . .,, "'-'·- All PLANTS . IN OUR NU.RSERY • 20%0FF OPINMON-IAT ltOTOND ·SUNDAYS ITOl:JO ' .,.1,..... Astronailt Bonnie Dunbar, left, talla with octreu Da~Ue Brisebois, 12, seated atop a 14-ton meteorite in a "space auit" in New York's Hayden Planetarium during space-related pro- gram. A,., ..... D~me f1argot Fonteyn. left, gets a hug from Carla FrocC'i at a dinner m New York, following tlwir appearance with the La Scala Opera Ballet in its North American debut . Fly ~.;,. .. , Bep aceeptance There was a fly lo the anointment when Jaraell Prealde.ot YU1hak Navoa conferred on .Prime Minister •ea••• Bella the tuk o1 rormln1 lsrael's next aovem· ment. Al Belin was makln1 an acc~ptance speech •in the cavernous receptJon hall ol the presidential mansion, an Intrepid fly aettled aomewhere between his shoulder and his ear. Navon. standing nut to him , watched the fly nervously, then reached to fllc.k It away. "Tbla doesn't come under my presldenUal authority," deadpanne<J Navon as TV cameras re~rded the event, "but I was afraid the fly was bothering you.'' Begin graciously thanked the presldent. Kevin Herman got a plum of a plane t.rip for peanuts. Fifty of ·em. To promote its service from Cleveland, Texas In· ternational Airlines . offered SO free pairs or round·trip tickets on any of the airline's flights. The airline began flights to Mexico City. New Orleans and Houston. The tickets were offered lo the first 50 people who pre· sented 50 of any of a number of items. includingjleveland plums. Clevelan Browns ticket stubs, or Texas yellow roses. At the head of the line was Herman, a Junior at Kent State University. who ar· rived with 50 peanuts. 50 hot p~ppers and a 50-foot chain of paper clips. Central Utah flooded Heavy rains threaten areas from Nebraska through Kansas Coastal forecast l'alr UVOUOfl s.turelay, 11<11 -low,_ .. ,,y s.t-y ..-ni,. CoHC.I low "· lnl-10. Czl llfOfl 70, lnl-74. Water 72. E lsewhera, OY•r out•r < Hlal waters lrom ""'"' Conc9911on 10 S.n Nl<OIH ·~and non""""' ··-u lo 10 ~nots w1tr1 J. 10 s-1-<ombiMcl MH. Over II• Inner ••I~'' light Yerfeble wind• nlOfll and morning l>oun IMcon\lftO •est to ....,tll•etl 10 "' " '--ne s.tu"'9y afler· _, S.OUV.-t s-ll -to two twt. Wind waws two lo 111,..e '"' Low c louel• IO<llQht end Set11roay "'ornlng be<O"'lng pertly sunny Salurdey .,,.,,_, V.S. ·summary Floocllng cauMd b'( Dl"'*rstonn1 hit parts ol c.enlral Utah -,, .. , l'IHr F'-1.111 . .Viz,, -ly -Y Heavy rains ca111H • tllrHt ol 11-lftO ffom Nortllwfft -Cenlral Htbruka Into Hortheasl KanHt Tll\lnder111D<ms atto rumblad across Net1"9est MlrwwlOla and "'°""""'"' WIKO<lsln Llttr loday 1110wers a nd thun· dtrlllo'tqn -• upec:lecl lo l>a ><•I· lered owr II• '"'"•' Plaln1 and "'Idelle Mlsaluippl Valley,•• well u IN souttwm Attanlk CN1t. WIO.ly scellend -rs tnd thVl'I· O.rsl'lowers were upectao to lall over Ow c"'lrat Rockies and Gr .. I laktl. Moll other areH Wiii "9Yt Wnslllne. ' Tem11Wal1Wt1 around ttw Ntlon •• mldnlgllt PDT rengeo fro"' 47 dtgrus In Houlton, Maine, 10 9S dtgreu In Blythe, Call! California Tlltrt's great -ather 1n '""'e 1~ beachto•rs this waekend, but Seutllarn c.tl!Of'ftlans In al"'°'I all """ .,... •Ill be 1-terlng. Tiit OUllOOll Is lor lelr wHtlwr ... ,_,. for -114• fllQllt """"" "'Id rnornlne •-cl-•I-IN coast. Tlla National we.iller Service h 1orecut1119 lllQM In coastal artH ranging from tN 70s al ,,,. beache1 lo lM 1111 and I-tos In IN COHiii 11laln eM II to 1oi In vellays. fiVtft IN ~M Wiii 9" In Oft IN heat, wltll Ill ... llA!lk• .. a to t1 In upper ...-ts, ta"""raturas will soar ID • ttl t•, Wllllt lowar dt•rts will roast wftll,,.... of 107 to 117 L-t..,..rl4WH INukl be » Ill 61 In c_..I.., valley.,....,, »to 45 In the ,,_....,.,._ ~ to 75111'1 UPI*' a.serts end n to 11 In IOWtr dtwrls. .. , .. ~ Temperatures All ante '1 1S All.,..11< City 1:1 '5 ea11im0f'e IO r, 80SIO<I • CherlHton WV IS u c ... .,.,,... '1 Ml Chl~go '1 .. Cine Inn.ii .. 70 Clrtetand 7' .. Col11"'bul ,, .. OallU·FOf't WOf'lh " 73 Denver ,, u DuMol,.., II ,. Del roll 1' .. Duluth 1S ,. f elrbanb .. S7 Hart lord 11 SI Hel_,a M s. H-lulu '1 71 Houslan ,, IO lndlanaPOlls M .. JaCkM>nvlll• 101 IO Juneau .. S2 K11>Ws City 90 ,, LHV-s " 1t Llllle•Roo t7 ,. 1.ouls•llle • ,. M<lmPlll• " a Mla"'I 94 11 Mllwaukae ,. n MPls·SI. Pe.11 IO M Nalllvllle '1 ,, HtWOrl_,.. .. 71 Htw Yon. .. .. Norfolll IO " Olllahoma Cltf " 15 Omaha • 71 Orlando ,, n Phlltdttllllie 13 M Plloenla 100 11 Pitt~'""' 1' u Portia/Ml, Me 13 Sl POf'1lllfld, ar. IS SI Rapid City 71 " R-tj 50 Rk ll!MNI 1' '1 s.111.au n " Seattle IO )i '* l.olll• IS n St Palll-T-t4 11 SUtaMlltle 74 SJ ~ .... a SJ T111w 10t II WMlll,..illfl ,. " Wklllll .. n CAU,-OCUOA a..erllflalct lo.J 71 llytfle 101 '° ... ,. .. S1 S2 ,.,_ 102 .. LelKAllltr .. ,, ~n B",,..."'"° ,, .. S...JOH n u $.entaA"" IM u $.ent• Cnu 1• s. Tahoe Valley .. .. CANADA Cal .. ry ,,l .. 01 fid"'o..lan 70 50 Montreal ., u 011••• 12 " R911IN 70 u Toronto II ~ V...cou-n " Wiftftl-71 ~ "'NAMaRICAN Aca!l"ICO II 71 .o.J 8erbadol .. "' 8er"'ucla IJ 1• I )f loOOI• " ,. 1• 'urecao n IO .. , .. pOrl t2 IO .. c ..... ,. Gua<lal•I•,.. " "' Guad•I-tO 12 Hevane • n Los Aneelft .. .. l(lng•IO<I n ,, ""-'"""'''• ,, S4 AMnl990B•Y .. ,, IJ Monterey SI S4 M•Hllen .. "' Needles 10. -AMrlde m 70 AM•lcoCllY O•-'-" Sf ,. SS PHO RCIOlft " Sl AMnter,..y ., 1l RH llutf 100 Naueu •1 7j .. S.nJuan,P R Redw-Clty 7) u t3 79 S.cra"'efllo " S4 SI KIIii .. 11 °' Salinas '1 Sl T911uclgalpa ., .. San Dl•QD 11 12 Trinidad tO 1l 07 San Fr-IKo S4 SI Y•r•cn" .. 71 Santa 9.,..,.,. IS 61 StoOtO<I u ;; Sun, n10011, tides Tiier"'•' Ill u-..h .. Sl 8•ratow IOS 75 TODAY Big BHr IO .. Second lllQll •.llp.m . " Bishop 100 '2 SATURDAY Catalina ,, .. "rst•-S·1t a.m. O• Lk Arro.l!Md 71 St "'" hlgll 11 41 a."' • 0 Lon1 lead! 17 ., S.cOftd low •C24 p.m J l MonroYI• " '1 5KO<ld hlgll 10•J2 p "'· •O Newport BNcll 11 ., S11n H1J 1:0. pm. IOCl<ly, rises S: ~ Onterlo .. ., •·"'· Sahnlay . Pal"' Sprl-110 ,. MOOft rllft I 0 P"' IOCl<ly, Hh PaMd...a tO 65 1 11 •·"'· s.turelay SU Rf RI PORT T-..c .. ,,. A ...... LAcaU.. ..... , . ..... Te .... Hllntl~an lluffs M --., Huntl't,,:' Pl.r M -10 Santa Rlwr .i.tty 1·2 , .. , ,, 40l11St.~ M lllr 71 H!lclSt.H~ 1 -71 l•lllOe Wedge t.J lair 71 RoOpUe, 1.aeuna I -., SlffPy Hollow 1 -., Tl'lella·•,_· M fair ., AlllO 9HCh .., -~ ~lier-M -70 DoMnylM<ll 0.1 -70 Poclle-C.,O IM<l'I CHai.ll'H .... l'tMe) M ..... .. SM Cl"'*"• Pier l..J tlOd 14 Tralal .. r CT·Slr"tl l·I '°°° 74 Cotten'• Point M _.. n Treslln ... 1J SMC>ftofn _.. n TOMORROW'S Tloas: Hltfl 11:• .. "'.Low 4:24 P·"'· Swell dlr.c•loft $olllll. Hl'°RTIHO AGl!NCIU: RI State,._ Hormel; HI City, 1111 Lolldell· NI IYd lltfft; UI, lef'll hyltric"'"'°• Jtdl Ot'Mf; Seit OW11, Nkk =·kll; Olf!M';, 0.. UllMecll; City, S4'W La......_; SC .... Ont Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Friday, Julv 17, 1981 H /~ Al Dlilly ,.... ... " P-.. CASUAL CRUISE -Four-year ·old Kathy Case of Santa Ana seems very relaxed near 18th Street Beach in Newport Beach, on her raft with chair. ·If her craft proves un· seaworthy, her father is close at hand. Accused cop slayer sent to Atascadero ' A former mental patient who was found innocent by reason or insanity in lhe murder of a San Cle m ente policeman has been committed to Atascadero State Mental Hospital. .,........--........., Judge frees suspect in plant blaze SANTA FE SPRINGS !AP> - A La Mirada man suspected or setting a fire in a chemical plant that sent toxins seeping through waterways down to Seal Beach has been ordered released pend· ing further investigation. George Dobozy, 23, was at· rested after witnesses placed him near the scene or the Friday night fire in a storage lot here. where steel drums containing chemicals exploded from the heat. But no charges were filed agains t him within the 48-hour maximum holding period, and the Los Angeles County District Attorney's office ordered him released while the investigation continues. a spokesman said. Chemical residue from the blaze seeped into t he San Gabriel River, and down to Seal Beach, where the shoreline was partiaJly closed after the fire Superior Court Judge Everett Dickey ordered James Richard Hoffer committed nearly three years after Richard Steed was shot to death as the officer was responding lO Hoffer's call for medical attention. Hoffer. 26, will be entitled to an annuaJ review or his sanity to determine if he should be re· leased. However, Dickey set the maximum commitment for Hoffer at life, and county pro· secutors are predicting he will spend many years at the state facility. Hoffer, who was charged with. and pleaded guilty to, first· degree murdet, was granted the insanity plea by Dickey earlier this month In exchange for his indefinite commitm ent In a s late mental hos pital. The arrangement was agreed to after two psychiatrists tes tified that Hoffer had suffered from severe mental illness for the past 10 years. Hoffer. who was judged unlit to stand trial in 1978, has spent ' much of his time since then at Patton State Hospital outside San Bernardino. Hoffer was well-known in San Clemente and was nicknamed "The Rocker" for his habit of rocking back a nd forth on his heels while standing on various street comers in the city. AirpQrt study planned. A special com mtttee 11 scheduled to meet l•ter tbi. month to examine pos1tble 1Ji. for a new general 1vtation airport, and Oran1e County Supervisor Harriett Wlede'r wants it to for1tet about Lot Alamitos air base. Mrs . Wieder and Congressman Dan Lund1ren II· sued a statement recently COO· talning an opinion from the Department of the Army that civilian-military use at lt• airfield won't work. Mrs. Wied er 's 2nd District constituents who live near the airport have been opposed to its expanded use. She said allowtna private planes would damaae a relationship where neilbbora and the military currently co- exist. ··I believe this finaJly lays to rest any Ideas of using the military base for a general avia· tion airport," Mrs. Wieder said. She may not get the same oplA· ions from the county's Gener~ Aviation Site Selection Commit· tee which is seeking a new place for private planes. According lo preliminart. studies, the county is interestecf in usin~ an 8,400-foot runway, one of several at Los Alamitos, for private planes. The Army currently operata- a bout 100 helicopters at Los Alamitos. Lundgren and Mrs. Wieder are basing their recommendl} lion s on a letter from Paul Johnson. deputy for installationa and housing for the Army de~ partment. "We have evaluated the joint military·civilian use of the airfield and find that civilian ust 1s not tompatible with military requirements," he wrote. The site selection committee is scheduled to meet July 30 to consider criteria such as wind and weather conditions, obstruc-- tions and hazards, development costs and air space availability. The committee is expected to issue its recommendations to tbe county Board of Supervisors by late summer. Besides Los Alamitos. five sites 'under consideration are: Santiago Canyon, San Juen Creek northeast of the San Die10 Freeway. the Prima Deahecha landfill off the Ortego Hlibway and Bell Can yon and Plano Trabuco in eastern Oran1e County. Hearing denied 'SAN FRANCISCO CAP) Fresno's plea to the State Supreme Court to force tbe state to complete three freeways there under agreements reached in the 1960s ran into a stone wall. The court denied without com- ment a hearing on a Court of Ap- peal decision that upheld a ru}. ing for the California Transportation Commission. Toy soldier brings $245 We're Listening ••• LONDON (AP> A 15th cen· tury toy soldier on a charger has brought a world record $245 in a sale or toy soldiers at Phillips auction house. The price was a record for a single lead model figure. The previous record. also at Phillips, was $168 paid in November 1979 for a model of a village curate. Whal do you like about the Daily Pilot' What don't you like? Call the number below and your message will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24-hour answering service may be used lo record let· ters to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors must include their name and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls. please. Tell us what's on your mind 642•6086 Cl•A• YIAR. SALll HAMMOND ORGANS SAVI '200 to '3000 WHILE T.HEY _~ST OPEN SUNDAY . L ·-· J ·~ 12 to 5 'SAVE '695 .••• '1691.00 HOW 5999" SAVE '1295 llG. 1J7tl.OO SAVE s995· llM.•21t1• Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, Juty 17, 1981 - · Senate approves tax indexing plti n WASHINGTON (AP> -Tbe Senate, adopUns one of the m01t sweepfnl tu chaoses in moden1 times, ls supporUn1 automatic annual reductions ln personal in· come taxes to offset the "6racket creep" caused by in· (lation. The "indexing" provision, ap· &>roved on a 57-40 vote Thursday. la supported ln principle by halt the membera or the House and by President Reagan, though he Jou1ht to keep it off a tax-cut bUI this year. Britiah soldier k illed by I IU BELFAST, Northern Ireland ' (AP) -One of three British soldiers wounded In a shootout with Irish Republican Army guerrillu near the border with the Irish Republic died today, an army spokesman said. The IRA's "provisional" wing claimed respons1b1Uty for the at· tack Thursday night on a military observation post near the village of Crossmaglen in the IRA s tronghold o{ South Armagh, one of the southernmost counties of Northern Ireland known to the British as "bandit country." Howe approve• m i litary budget WASHINGTON CAP> -The House overwhelmingly ap- proved a record $138 billion military authorisation bUI Thursday night after breaking a logjam of pending amendments. The measure, which permits the Pentagon to set aside money in the 1982 fiscal year tor pro· curement of weapons and equip- men t , operations and main· tenance and research and de· velopment. passed on a 354-63 vote. Japanese wanl inte rnment f ee . WASHINGTON CAP> -A Japanese-American demanded on Thursday that the United States pay at least $25 ,000 redress to each of the survivors amon1 120.000 r.eople of J apane1e descent nterned ln World War II. But a eon· 1reaaman lnlbted the eountry wouldn't support that. ;•we Japanese Americana de· mand Justice," Bert Nakano, spokesman for the National ~oalitlon for Redreaa and Reparatlooa, told a panel •tudY· Ing the mus imprisonment that took place nearly 40 years a10. Nucle ar plant sabota ge p robed SOUT.tlPORT, N.C. CAP> - Carolina Power & LJ1ht Co. says an investisaUon into what mJ1bt have been a second attempt to sabotage Its Brunswick nuclear power plant "is too premature to arrive al any conclusion." Plant manager Charles Dietz announced Thursday that "foreign metallic chlps" were discovered last week in the bear· lngs of the turbine driven by the Unit 1 reactor at Brunswick and said sabotage was not ruled out. He did not say how long the probe would last. Po licy read ied on immigration WASHlNGTON (APJ -The Reagan administration is close to announcing its long-awaited immigration policy, but the president has yet to approve several options presented to him, Attorney General WilJiam French Smith says. And Smith told reporters after a 90-minute Cabinet meeting Thursday -the third on the politically sensitive topic in the last two weeks -that one more Cabinet session m ay be needed to iron out details. Nonetheless, the attorney general said, the new policy may be announced "in the next day or two." Canal cleanup WASHINGTON <AP) -The Environmental Protection A.gen· cy will use about S4 million of "superfund" money for cleanup projects at Love Canal in New York, the agency announced Thursday. . ............ REACTION TO DEATH -Two fans at Eisenhower Park in East· Meadow, N. Y ., Thursday night react to the announce~ ment of the death of pop singer Harry Chapin. Chapin, 38, due to appear in a free c90cert at the park, was killed in a highway collision with a tractor-trailer on the Long Island Expressway. Watt won't talk on faith question WASHINGTON CAP> -In· terior Secretary James G. Watt, s aying hls religious beliefs are none of Congress· business. re· fuses to explain how his fun· damentalist Ch ristian faith might affect his policies. Invokmg his First Amendment r ight. to freedom of religion, Watt refused Thursday to anwswer questions about a com· ment he made earlier this year about Judgment Day. •·I do not know how many future generations we can count on before the Lord returns," Watt had responded to questions about preserving natural re- sources for the future. That remark has been cited by environmentalists as evidence o( Wall's lack of concern for pre- serving resources for the futw'e. Thursday's exchange came in a stormy confrontation with Rep. James Weaver, D·Ore., who said the re mark raised questions about whether Watt "was not reaJJy concerned about the environment because we don't have much lime left." The questioning brought cries of outrage from Republican members of the House Interior subcommittee on energy and the environment, who contended that the subject was improper. Rep. Don Young, R·Alaska, asked the c hairman, Rep . Morris UdaJI, D-Ariz., to declare Weaver's questioning out of or- der. a request Ud~I refused. Young later told Watt: "I apologize for this committee." U~S. Navy said . not up· to task . LONDON (AP> -America baa "a one·and·a·balf ocean navy atrlvlng lo carry out a three-ocean job" while the 1row- ln1 Soviet fieet paces the U.S. Navy in an era of emergency, the new edition of "Jane's Ficht· ins Shipe" warna. The 84tb annual survey of world warahlpa, published Thursday, said Western navies are pla1ued by low budgets, bureaucracy and political in· decision "at a time when there are 1rave dan1ers inherent in the naval situation." The authoritative survey said the Soviet Union is quickly buildin1 dozen s of mighty warshipe u the United States and Western aJlies struggle to replace aging fleets. "This present era is an emergency for the U.S. Navy, described clearly (by American naval leaders) as a one-.and·a· halt ocean navy striving to carry out a three-ocean job," wrote Jane's editor Royal Navy Capt. John Moore. Jane's, which has close links with Britain's navy, has often warned of a Soviet nava.I threat and called for increased defense spending. Jn the last two years, the So· viets completed 40 naval vessels while the U.S. Navy got 18 and the British navy ordered one, lhe survey reported. The Reagan administration bas pledged to increase the U.S. fleet from 400 to 000 vessels. Unofficial estimates ind1cate t hat Soviet defense spending runs between 12 percent and 14 percent of the nation's gross na· tional product, compared with 5.5 percent for the United States, 5.2 percent for Britain, 4 percent for France and 3.3 percent in West Germany, Jane's said. The survey said new Ruuian w arships include the first nuclear aircraft carrier to be built outside the United States: 30 ,000-ton "Typhoon ·• sub· marines, the world's largest, with 20 intercontinental nuclear missiles; and subs with torpedo. proof titanjum hulls. Western navies are sapped by delays in plaMing and building, Jane's said, and ships often take 10 years lo pass from design to completion, becoming outdated before they are ready. While NATO navies often spend half their budgets on pay and benefits, Russia pours most defense money into ships and weapons. Meanwhile. a fleet or Soviet, Pollab and EHt German crulaera, destroyers and supply ships 1>e1an re\llftlinl tbrou1h t.be Danish straits Thur1day from week-1001 mapeuvers ln the North Sea, Danl1b, naval authoriUes said. , The joint maneuvers were seen by Danbh military sources as another indication that the Warsaw Pact's naval fqrces in the Baltic Sea are movln1 their forward defense line -so far believed to be the northern mouths of the Danish s traits - Into North Sea waters between Den·mark, Norway a•the British Isles. Mobil eyes takeover of Conoco NEW YORK (AP) -Mobil Corp., the nation 's second· largest oil company. today joined the bidding war for Conoco Inc.. the ninth-largest U.S. oil concern, with an offer it said was worth $7. 74 biJlion. Mobil said it Is offering S80 a share in cash for 43.5 million Conoco shares -or 51 percent of its outstanding common stock - for a total cash offer of $3.92 billion. Mobil said it then would offer Mobil securities worth about S80 a s hare for the r e maining Conoco shares. The offer exceeded bids by chemical giant Du Pont Co. and by Canadian distiller Seagram Co. Ltd. But it could run into an· Litrust problems because both Conoco and Mobil are major oil companies. But Mobil Chairman Rawleigh Warner Jr. said the combination ·'should not encounter antitrust difficulties because it meets ex· isling merger guidelines of the Department of Justice." Vince Robertiello, a Conoco spoke~man, said his company had no immediate c(llmment on the Mobil bid. Conoco has accepted the Du Pont offer of $95 a share for 40 per cent of the stock and 1.7 Du Pont shares -· now worth about $80.33 -for the remainder. The total value of that offer is about S7 .4 billion. Girl, 4, rescues • parents 10 water SPECTACULAR MID-SUMMER Al thru the month of July INSURANCE CLAIM IN COURT SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES CASE #284340 VICKSBURG , Miss. CAP> -Gerald Myers says be and his wife were "going down for about the last lime" when one of their 4-year-old daughters came to the rescue after a weekend boating accident. Myers, a 23-year-old welder. said Thursday that he and his wife were thrown into the water from their motorboat Sunday during a family out· ing on a lonely stretch of Bayou Pierre in Claiborne County. The Myers' twin daughters, Windy and Cindy, were left alone in the boat as it continued at a slow speed away from the struggling couple. I "I had just about given up and I was holdlDI up my wife because she couldn't hit a lick in the waler," Myers said. "I figured this was it because nobody was within seven miles of us when this happened." He said the accident had occurred when he at- tempted to turn over the controls of hiJ 14-foot fishlng boat, powered by a 25-horaepower motor, to 'his wife, Becky. "The boat made a sharp turn -.,,ci we were both thrt>wn into the water," he said. ''Tbal let\ Windy and Cindy alone, sitting on the bottom of the boat." . Myers said that as be fought~ stay on the sur· face, he realized that "there was no way my· wlfe and I could reach the bank and the only way 6ut of lbe situation waa to get the boat. back." • He said be called to the 1lrls to "Get ,to the back of tbe boat by the mot.or'' ud that Windy reached the COl)lrols first. "Every time we'd come up, Gerald would call out what to do," Mra. Myen .. id. Sbe said Windy guided the boat in a sweepln1 turn and brou1ht 1t back alonpide the couple. "We couldn't 1et back into the boat so we juat 1rabbed the side and rode it to the bank,'' Myers said. "The 1irl11 were really scared and we swallowed a lot of water. The~ cal.nM!d down when •we told them we Juat went for a swim." He said that after beln1 examlQed at a Vickaburl holpltal, the family waa allowed to re· · turn home. "Windy knows now what she did and 1be'a proud of benelf, lllyen said. "And we're proud of I both of ......... !Rare bird sighted SAVINGS FROM ·S0°/o to 70°/o or more. .. .._ _ _..._ ..... ,...., .......... h .... Md. ....., .... -WtH w .... • llW , ....... .. ... t Y.WMIU .... 1 ef .. lfwW1•• .......... .. .......... ",... .......... .--•. ELEORI( •IHI LllHTllll m Victoria st ... et, Costa Mna IAcrw.,_._ .. ,.. .... .__.,,. ftw ~46-3737 /646-8194 '"'*Fashion Island ewP<>rt Beach FORCED PUBLIC AUCTION A1 tN ewMt1 of ,,,_. fOOdt ~ not y" ,....... •• ,.......,'°Oft froM tM ...,....,,.,_ ...... Y. et.y h-. ....... t.fc;M 10 ,...._ ,...,-dMind• .. ,._ ~V to"" --HANDMADE ORIENTAL RUGS l"C-....... _._ ............ "' ... .._ -................ _ ""_..,. --All -., _-. -tt-. A C..,,ftUte of Awt-te<CY w~I .. -... -.... -· FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE, THE AUCTION WILL TAKE PLACE : SATURDAY, JULY 18 AUCTION: 2 P.M. MARRIOTT INN 900 NEWPORT CENTER DR IVE NEWPORT BEACH RUGS MAY IE VIEWED ONE HOUR PAIOA TO AUCTION T.,_: Ceih/Chedc A, A • A Llquldeto,.AUC11oNef'I I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, July 17, 1981 H /F '11r~t deed fraudS t:~ld Strike force files..,charges against mortgage-loan 1firms LOS ANGELES <AP) -State officials have announced a cnctdown on truat deed frauds, Hyin1 thousands of California conaumen are ln danger ol to.- in& their investmenti. State Business, Tl'ansportation and Housing Secretary Lynn Schenk appeared at a news cop. fereqce Thursday with Depart- ment of Real Estate Com- m iuioner David Fox and Corporations Commiuioner Geraldine Green to announce the formation ot a strike force to deal with trust deed frauds. More than 140 enforcement ac- tions involving $2:iO million and 16,000 investors have been filed against mortgage loan broken this year, Ms. Schenk said, with elderly penona account.inc for more than halt of those vic- ttmiaed. "These are not people who were trylnt to beat an intla- tionary real estate market," ahe. said. '"Ibey are people who were Just trying to mate ends meet." Ms. Schenk said strike force officials have filed char:1ea against Civic Home Loan, Coast wide Investment Co., Inc., Crest Servicing Co. and Martin Keith Goldstein, all operaliJll in West Los Angeles. More than Sl2 million and 1,000 lnveston are involved, Ms . Schenk aaid. A woman answering the phone at the offices of Civic Home Loan who declined to give her name said the firm was going in- to reeelvenhlp. ~ Schenk said, r:t trust deed frauds Include common ele- menta: -Repreaentlqa 3rd throu1h 9th truat deeds a• l•t or 2nds; -Mloppro~riatina trust fund1; -Fractiooall~g notes and trust deeds so m Uple invdtora are ,unknowi gly pooled together; -Us\flg inveatc>r funds for in· tereat payment~ to prior in- ve,tors inatead of1for loan funds to borrowers u prpmised; -Falsifying property ap- praisals, locat~ons and-or ownership; -Falling to displose the true ri~ks faced by lnve;tors. $7.5 UC fee increase urged . SAN--FRANClsco (AP> -Tbe University of California would increase fees for state resident students by $75 a quarter start- ing in January 1982 under a rec- ommend a lion adopted by a Board of Regents -comtnittee. · The fee incre,se recom- mended by the finance commit· lee is i;cheduled to be considered by tfae full board .Friday. · · .. The increase would boost ed14cation fees to $175 a quarter for California undergraduate students and to $195 a quarter for graduate students next year. 'frain deraiu . campaign staff in the midst of a probe by the state Fair Political Practices Commission. TRUCKEE <AP) -An east- bound Southern Pacific frei1ht train derailed in the heart of w s Hospital sold Sierra Nevada rail center, near- ly forcing the evacuation of the PERRIS CAP) -Community town's 1,500 re~idents. Hospital of the Valleys, closed by state authorities after 25 P. robe 'welcomed' mysterious deaths there earlier this year, has been sold to a Sun LOS ANGELES <AP> -Gov. City coupfe Wednesday after-CRACKING DOWN -Governor Brown holds legis1:ri~~he Edmund G. Brown Jr. says he noon, the hospital's bankruptcy welcomes an investigation by trustee said. Kevin and Jean just signed into law increasing the penalties for desecrating the Los Angele's County district Walsh purchased the Perris p~aces of worship and cemeteries during a ceremony at the attorney into why 3,000 name hosp it a 1 for $1. 7 m ii Ii on. Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles. With him (from and address cards w e re bankruptcy trustee Tim left) are Assemblyman Mel Levine, LA City Councilman I Robb·ins to. be less 'brash' ., • VAN NUYS (AP> -state Sen.' Alan Robbins says his sex-with· minors trial will makd him "len brash'' because he learned what It's llke \0 be ln a aitaation' beyond his control. Robbins, D-Van Nuya, poured champa1ne for reportera at ~ district office Thursday while" celebrating his acquittal of nine· felony charges of havin1 sex with two 16-year-old girl1. He mused: "It'• a bell of a, way to have it happen, but I think it's made me less braah, more subdued, probably ln aome- respects a JitUe leas ferocious." . ''For 10 months of my life I was placed in the position of be, ing in a sense in the lowest posi., lion you can get· in, being a criminal defendant facing six years in state prison." be said. Realtors to list sales 'by-owner' LOS ANGELES CAP) Jn, what could be a precedent-, setting move. the San Fernando. Valley Board of Realtors re- portedly plans to list properties· that are being sold by in-" dividuals acting as their own brokers. The houses be ing sold by' owner may be allowed to be list- ed in the Multiple Lis ting Services s tarting .within two weeks, pending final action by the board on the new rult: July 30, the Los Angeles Times re- ported in today's editions. destroyed by member$ of his Donovan said. Zev Yaroslavsky and Rabbi Marvin Hier. .. ,-~-:--~-:;;iiiiiii~-;;;;:::=-~--===~~""::::=iiiii.:-~~~===:--~~-:;;;;~~~~:--~~~--! Suit arbitrator savings clllim SANTA MONICA CAP> -California's new program of sending suits for $1S,OOO or less to an arbitrator instead of a judge hasn't saved much time or money so far, lbe Rand Corp. bas re- ported. The study by Rand's Institute for Civil Justice gave mixed reviews to the first year of the arbilra: lion program, saying it bad been well accepted by lawyers and court officials but was not providin1 . the savings advocates bad hoped for. . "It does not appear to have major promise aa the 59lution to court congestion and risin1 court costs," the report said. But it added that there could be SOm4J savlqs if tbt program's dollar limits were lncreued ancl if some court-created delays were removed, two steps lbat would be taken by pending legislation. The program was started in July 1979, by a bill backed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. Employed in the 13 largest counties, it requires all civil damage suits for $15,000 or less to be beard by a lawyer or retired judge, acting as an arbitrator. The evidence is presented in a private office, mainly in writing, without calling witnesses. The loser can appeal lbe arbitrator's ruling to a court, but could be required to pay additional costs if the court agreed with the arbitrator. Supporters said the program would provide a quick alternative to the clogged civil courts, which now lake as long as five yean, in Los Angeles, between the start and end of a case. More than 24,000 suits .were sent to arbitration in the program's first year, about six times the an- nual caseload of the previous voluntary arbitration program, the study said. But the total is only about one-fifth of the civil cases before those courts, which also include large numbers of divorce, probate and other proceed- ings not covefed by the arbitration program. The report said the courts could reduce their Jury trials by 200 to 400 a year, or 10 to 20 percent, from the program. But the savings will be less than that," because judges spend more than half their time in non-jury trials, and because they must devote some lime to the arbitration program itself, the report said. January's Nall Worlcs ..-.s,.cw~ •40--....... ~ .... ~hll Z4"W.C.........._. ,... A. ..... 641-)4ti ~ Auto & Homeownws ' ~· Ouoces By Phone fall--... 1....Ul4 ., IJl-J4J7 ........... c .......... C.tl 142-H71. • Put a few word• toworll for You can MIO your ne.....- carrler collect et tlmH ~toyou~~ Your money reedy to the Cln'ler -.on't h,w to call Die*. 8ra• lh6' young ""°" II In butfneu for hlm. .. f or ....... .-..... ---Wiier. thll "° .... ue which ---Think~." '1TH• WORLD'S LARGEST SPA DEALER'' ALL SPAS COME COMPLETEI FEATURING ENCON PORTABLES NO MONEY DOWN Take your choice from $ BUY TODAY -USE TONITE CUSTOM DECKS ."$2§9 .. 0 .A.C. I \ I I i .. OC budget depends .on federal tr.immings t A pall of uncertainty ls hana· lng over Orange County 1ovem· ment's current hearings on lta proposed $7S> million budget for the fiscal year 1981. This uncertainty comes from Washington, D.C., where mem· bers of Congress, anxious to stay on the goo(! side of President Reagan and the electorate that put him in office, are making drastic reductions in the federal ·budget, reductions that, despite the thousands of miles involved, ·will hit locally·. And with con- siderable force. Orange County budget analysts believe the county will lose about $3.5 million in federal subventions for health, welfare and social services programs. The federal government will tighten the flow of money to the state which, in turn, will tighten the· fiow to the county. Analysts cannot make ac- curate predictions, of course, because the exact type and size of cuts still must be acted on by both houses of Congress. But the county's legislative ·advocates in )Vashington have made It clear that the House and ·Senate versions of th'e budget are sJmilar, and . closely ttflect the president's initial propoaal1. Cuts are OD the borizon, no mat· ter who wins. What concerns county of· ficials ls whether the federal and state governments wlll reduce the county's many mandated responalbUiUes (such u provld· ing medical care to indigents) at the same Ume the fiow of dollan ls slowed. Orange County -and coun- ties throuaJhout the state and the nation -could end up with millions in extra costs if the man- dates are not lifted. Locally generated revenues would then have to be applied to programs that once were funded by money from distant sources. All of this bodes ill for the county, which, as budget hear- ings opened, was looking at a $14 million deficit. It may be able to erase that deficit before the bear- ings conclude late next week. But that will only be the end of round one. This fall, when the federal budget figures are known, Orange County may likely find itself much deeper in red ink. Turnarou11:d typical Gov . Brown 's political ·switch-around in the current con· troversy over the spraying of malathion in an effort to rid California ·agriculture of the Mediterranean fruit fly is rather reminiscent of his earlier abilities in reverse-posturing. Brown has gone at it on the fruit fly poison issue about the same as he did when Proposition 13, the Howard Jarvis property tax cutting initiative, was placed before California voters. Many voters will remember when Proposition 13's campaign opened, Brown was dead against it. He predicted dark and dire consequences if it was passed in- to law. He actually stumped around the state, urging its de- feat. Then some public polls came out that suggested Proposition 13 was headed for approvaJ by the voters. Pretty soon, the governor was saying be was really neutral, and willing to abide by the will of the people on the issue. And by the time Proposition 13 swept to heavy victory at the polls, Gov . Brown was hailing it as a great victory for the people. By now, he sounded like a sup· porter all along. For people who remember all of that, Gov. Brown certainly sounds like the same Gov. Brown today. "' First, he addressed the Med- fly issue by seeing grave dangers in aerial spraying of the poison malathion on the sticky-footed lit- tle blue-eyed flies. Then on July 8 he ordered a ban against aeriaJ spraying in the Santa Clara Valley. Next, the U.S. Dei)artment of Agriculture declared it would quarantine 200 diffefent kinds of fruit and veget'ables from California unless aerial spraying was used to eradicate the Medfly . Brown angrily denounced the federal goverpment for in- terference in California a!faJrs and '•holding a gun to our heads." On July 10, the governor re- versed himself a·n~ ordered th~ aerial spraying. And where does Gov. Brown stand tOday? Now, he's asking the federal government for aid in fighting the fruit fly invasion and demanding that President Reagan declare three of our northern counties' disaster areas. Thus 'our governor executes another of his dizzying 180-degree flip-Oops, going from denouncing the federal government for in· terf erence to now demanding emergency federal aid to help pay for his bungling. The Daring Young Man on the Political Trapeze isn't exact- ly what you'd call a class act these days, folks. Robbins v ictory empty Most Calif omians can prob. ably understand the sense of re- lief that came to State Senator Alan Robbins when he was ac- quitted of all nine felony charges of sexual misconduct involving teen-aged girls. His smiling victory coun- tenance appeared on television screens and newspaper pages • following the jury verdict. " While the process of justice may have been fairly served, at considerable expense to the tax- payers, it was far from a bigh point in California political his- tory. And the entire episode hardly leaves Senator Robbins a hero in his own time. Op1n1ons expressed 1n the space abOve are those ot the 0•1ly Pilot. Otner views ex· pressed on tn1s page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment 1s lnvi t· ed. Address The Datly Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. L.M. Boyd / Lone Ranger Maybe you didn't realln t.bat the Lone Ranter and hi• true friend Ton· to durinl tbelr fint year &otethtr alway• rode double on one hone. Swift u the wind tbey raced, the Ranger, bent devoutly toward bis purpoee, faithful Tonto puled oa b1t back, c~k •1alA1t lboulder blade, arms around wai1t. Tben what with . tbe Ranpr's bone getlln1 UNd and . public optn.lon and all, that tb.1nc • cJ>an1ed. u all tbin11 do, and Tonto . 1ot h1I own bone, Scout. . : Q. You •aid Mark Twain WU the •lint proleaAonaJ wfitv to •ubmlt to a publhber a typ ewr itten man .. pt. How mucb dld Twaia pay for hll typewriter? · A. The •liable aum tben at fl.25. Am now advlled further it wu the firat typewriter ever sold, too. A Remlncton Model I. Q. How much does workl·famous heart 1ur1eoo Chrl1tlaan Barnard ol South Alrica charge for a transplant operaUon? A. No cbar1e by him. He'• Mlarled by hl1 bolpltal. Tbe hoapltal bWI tbe patient about -. • Writer Trum1n Capote l• 10 persnickety about 1ccur1ey in b1t manuscriptt tbat be Nim• to s.t 1 HCretar)' type eveo blt ftDal *-"'· Tbomll P. Haley Publl...., .. ERA not j11St for women On the same day that President "Many women whose own power in Reagan appointed a woman to the the executive suite or political arena Supreme Court, the Wall Street Journal arose rrom the women's movement for ran a page one story on how few women equality in a sense that they have he has appointed tp high places. forgotten or never acknowlf:!dged in Sandra O'Connor, the conservative their own careers will most assuredly lady from, Ariiona,. will be the 42nd lose that power. Women who were woman appointed to a position requir· ' -- ing ·Senate confirmation -about 1/lOth ra-'. of such appointees. 1 AJ flo Y Even as the appointment was being ~ andounced, municipal workers in San a,· Jose were out on strike (Qr equal pay ror yg11 HOf f 11 .. women doing comparable work as men. II II The term comparable Is a bit misty but the overall fact Is that women earn 59 cents for every dollar men make. The woman mayor of San Jose has re- peatedly said she sympathizes. but short of cutting the men's wages, something the union is not !llriking for, wher.e ls the money to come from7- WHILE ALL THJS is going on, the an- ti -feminist w.omen . the Phyllis Schlaflys,· are crowing that they've killed µte Equal Rights Amendment. Given that there are but 11 months left to get three more states to ratify, ERA's enemies may be right to have begun their back slapping self- congratulations or however it ls that women in print dresses and brooches felicitate themselves. What will it be like when El\A of· ficially goe, down, probably not to be re-enacted for the next 20 or 30 years? Will the strikers in San Jose have to stack their picket signs? Wlll we have seen the rtnt and l•st woman on the Supreme Court? Betty Friedan, who can justly lay claim lo being the founding mother of the modern feminist movement, pre- dicts that: -.. persuaded that the ERA was against the ramily, and that all they needed was a man to take care or them for the rest of their lives, will have reason to fear financial disaster in divorce." The recent decisions of the Supreme Court suggest that women may not have to wait a year for the great roll-back to begin. The court has ruled that wives or ex·servicemen are not entitled to any of husbands' pension money in the event of a divorce. IT IS ASTOUNDING that ERA hasn't long sinl:e sailed through to ratification. Friedan attributes the failure to a "sex- ual politics" which has fostered "the raise polarization between feminism and the family." The ·majority of women \Jnderstand that ERA isn't anti-family. They un- derstand it well enough so that less than SO percent of women voters chose Ronald Reagan to Carter or Anderson because of the ERA issue. But a very large minority of women have been badly frightened by the sex· ual politics that Friedan talks about: "The sexual politics that distorted the sense of priorities or the women's move· ment during the 1970s made it easy for the so-called Moral Majority to lump ERA with homosexual rights and abor· tion into one explosive package of licen· tious, family threatening sex." Friedan couldn't be more right. If ERA is to be save<tit "1ust be separated out in the public mind from the abortion fight so that people come quickly to see that there is nothing anomalous about being pro-ERA and anti-abortion. MORE DAMAGING VET, since a ma- jority in the country do favor some sort of access to abortion, is the absurd con· neclion between ERA and the homosex- ua l clamor. To the degree that the homosexuaHsts have been able to vamp and exploit the women's movement, it has been a political disaster. The thought of women failing to gain a rundameotal guarantee of equal treat- ment particularly in the work place is frightening Unlike what happened in 1918 and again in 1930 and 1945 when the labor shortages evaporated, women can't be sent home. There is no home to send them to half the time. where there is a wage-earning hus band he seldom makes enough to support both of them. and lastly, what the deuce would women do once they got back home? Check the size of the fast-food industry. Women haven't been taught the distaff arts. They don't have their grandmothers' skills. If you chained 'em to a stove they wouldn't know how to use the contraption. A word processor, now that's a different matter. For weal or woe, the modem family is part time, full time, shared time or flex time -a two-wage earner family. We might think of passing ERA as a way to strengthen it Tourist digests a little culture too . PARIS -Americans are always curious about how the U.S. stacks up with other countries. France is ahead of UJ in bread, art, prices and fashion. It's behind u.s ln telephones. hardware stor es, hous ing and giving up cigarettes. WHEN OUll FRIENDS heard we were taking a trip to France, they want- ed to know what we were going to do there. I was evasive. I hedged. I even lied a llWe. I made up places we were going lo see and cultural event.a we hoped to attend. The truth of the matter ti that when. I come to France, I come to eat. Any museums I walk through or cathedrals I'm draeged into are strictly extra. When 1 do any slght-aeein&. I'm really just whiling awa)' the hours until it's time to eat again. David Schoenbrun, a network television correspondent in France for many years, once said. "In the United States, it's hard to find a good restaurant. In France, It's hard to find a bad one." The French have a different attitude toward food than we do. They don't wolf down a hamburger or a peanut butter sandwich to stay alive; they stop every· thing else they're doing and pay 100 perceQt... attention to preparing and en· Joying a meal. NO AMOUNT OF recipe reading in our newspapers and no amount of por· AIDY RllNIY lng over a library filled with cookbooks seems to produce anything like the same results for Americans. The French are so good with rood and we are so bad with it that we ought to be ashamed of ourselves. Cooking seems to come to the French as easily and as naturally as their language. We've been here juat two, days now. We've eaten five meals and each seemed incredibly better than the last. The French honor each ripe tomato, each strawberry. They don't slide them toward you over a counter, they present them. They take obvious pleasure in putting something good to eat that they have prepared in their kitchen in front of you. They put it down and smile with pride. We had breakfast in our hotel room this morning. A good breakfast in a nice hotel room is the ultimate in civilized luxury. You can stay in your pajamas until after your thjrd cup of coffee and then go about doing all the things you have to do to get ready to go out and face the world. Not facing .the world before breakfast is a quiet joy. Jn most American hotels, breakrasl in the room is a thing of the past. They can 't handJe it. and if they do. you can't eat it: A bad breakfast for two can cost $12, and you're lucky if it comes before lunch. TODAY AT NOON we ate at a table with linen on it outside a ca!e on the other side of the Mver. I thought eating In what Gertrude Stein, Ezra Pound. Ernest Hemingway and those other ex· patriate American writers called The Lert Bank might give my writing some class. After I nnish the column, I'm goin1 to the Louvre for a while. There's nothing like a little culture between meals. Facts not always as factual as they seem I Can a 1tatement be true and decep- tl ve at the .same time? Of course. Propositions are not true or falle in IYlllY 01111 t.bemlelves, but only in relaUon to tbelr context.a. "Jobn ii • tall boy" may be true ln Korea, but not lD Kanau. Toq much advertllln1 takes ldvan-tac• ot tblJ loopholf ln lofic. On• ol the m0tt common and nasrant examplet ia t.be 1t.1tnMDt that a certain be.Uebe r•llMdJ "eiaatalna t.be IDlndMnt most docton recommeod." TBll I NGaS DISNT la 1lmtle Uj»lrln, wbleb aJmOlt aU bud.ache Nm• •d lea coetalD. But tbe lnfernce la \bat 6.ott cloeton reeommtnd till• partleular ~ ctru,, wbleb la aot true. Dodon loD•t eare whleb bread JOU~ to buJ. A...._ NIMd1au..-.tt11 ••more powerN" beeaw ll nmti'N IDO lD· 1tHd of IOO mLUJ1r•••· lu\ a~l maa.r...._ eu make ~ larlW pW and put more aspirin in lt. There is nothln1 "stronger•• about it ln any meanin1fu1 sense; what is important is how much you are paying for the medicatlon per ounce, as compared with others. This important Information la rarely avallable. For instance, the highly respected New England Journol of Mtdic:N recently ran a comparison test on 20 antacid branda, tlndinC that thelr value varied mwr••I~ with COit. Somethln1 called Ampbotel. which eo1t nearly 8 cent.a per 10 mllUir1m1, neutr alized. only hall aa much stomach acld u did 5 mUllarams of Maalox, coatm, lea tban 2"' cent.I. How 11 the con1umer 1uppoeeft to know thla? Gnerallr we ueume that tbe more expensive bund ii more eff ec· ttve, or 1t le11t provides tome f>h11 value. But when ao much of tbt COit ol a drur soes lnto promotion and pac:kalinl end advertl1ln1, lbere ls no f\larantee of th!J. WR EN YOV BUY AN El Dorado Cadlllac, C .,. ptUna prtltJ muet. &be HIM e ear u die purcbu.r ot an Oldlmobile ~ or 1 Buick Rt.teta. '-an PUtna ~IDdl ol dollan mo...-m0ttly for I n coe- metlc remodelings and. of course, the Cadillac marque. Many people have thought they were getting a "better" engine, whatever that means; ba· it was revealed a cour,te of years ago that <JeneraJ Motoi:a enc nes were Interchangeable. A "fact" is not as factual as we think it is, and truth in advertising depends on a &ood bit more than stating a fact ill isolation. In a two·car race between Americans and Ruaal1n1, Pravda once reported! "The Ruulana came In second, while the Americans were next to last." True -and deceptive. -· Dtd Richard Nixoa bave •ecret lDforma. U. about San Onofre lo C:HM him to moH tboulandl of mllea away? a.s. .. Delty~IUH.._.. Ben Gouin (left) and Chris Christie of the Mola Development Corp. celebrate completion of their job of cleaning up the Huntington Beach chemical dump. Chemical ~ump dig ends in Huntington By PATRICK KENNEDY Of .. Deify,.... MMf Worker,s cele brated with champagne Thurday as the $4 million excavation of an aban- doned chemical dump in Hunt- ington Beach was completed after 13 weeks or digging and several hundred complaints from nearby residents. Stale health omcials recom- mended last year tha\ the three· a<.'re dump b e excavated because toxic oil refinery wastes dumped there in the 1940s could eventually contaminate the ground water. Mola Development Co., which plans to put 288 condominiums on 12.5 acres including the dump, was required to excavate the contaminated soil and truck it 35 miles to a haurdous wast~ landfill in West Covina. The digging released pungent. gas-like odors into the surround- ing community and several hun- dred complaints from residents Teen held in stabbing of father A 15-year-old Huntington Beach youth who allegedly stabbed his father in the chest with a 6-lnch hunting •knife has been placed in Orange County Juvenile Hall on suspicion of as- sault with a deadly weapon, police reported. The father. Rodger Rhinehart, 37. of Huntington Beach, was re- ported in serious but sta~le con- dition today at Huntington In· lercommunit'y Hospital, r e - covering from a wound in the right lung. Police said the incident oc- <.'urred at 7 p.m. Tuesday. when the boy. whose name was withheld, ran away from a fami- ly counselor's omce. Rhinehart followed his son to Mesa View Schooo, where he was st•bbed when he tried to force his son to return to the counselor's office, police said. poured into Huntington Beach city hall in recent weeks. County officials placed a nurse in city hall to answer questions and stale health officials con- ducted numerous air quality tests to assure residents that the sickening odors might cause headaches ~nd nausea but wouldn't create longterm health problems. "Everyone's just relieved," said Chris Christie. excavation supervisor. "The preasure's off." · During the excavation about 5,100 truckloads or contaminated soi I was taken to the BKK landfill in West Covina. Christie said. That amounts to about 61,000 cubic yards or 86,000 tons or soil contaminated with chemicals such as benzene and toluene. both suspected carcinogen.s. Some of the excavation pits reached depths of 40 feet, Christie said. Today, the site, on Bolsa Chica Street south or Warner Avenue. is being graded and concrete and trees are being re- moved to make way for con- struction of the condominium development s cheduled to begin in February, Christie said. Mo-ped crash • • IDJUres man A Huntington Beach man was injured today when his mo-ped struck a curb, and he was catapulted into a light pole. Police traCfic investigators said the man, Edward Allen Simpkins, 22, of Florida Street, was not wearing a helmet and suHered head injuries in the ac- cident. A spokesman for Huntington lntercommunity Hospital said Simpkins was in surgery this mQrning. His condition was not available. The accident occurred at 4:40 a.m . on Beach Boulevard just north of Chrysler Circle in Hunt- ington Beach. Road projects dtie . Alternate routes pushed in Valley Four f'OM construcUon proj -A venue to ~ poiat 2,000 feel eels tb~t may res\llt in in-north. Conatrucllon will take creased traffic congestion have place ln Ute rlgbt fane on the been announced by Fountain east side of Euclid, beginnlne in Valley public works officials. September and continuing for City officlala have atked about ellht weeks. motorilta to uae alternate roads -lnst.allaUon ol a storm drain durlnc the construction periods on Slater Avenue from L~ lo help minimise traffic pl'Ob-Alamos Street to San Mateo · le1na. &lreet aod conUnuial north on The reed .nJ.at are: Sen M.-for 800 f •. Const.rue· -....._ of' llate1 AYetNI lion wlltflell• lfl sr,:r lld front lucUd'lt.reet ie-. ._. coatlnUI.,.. ...,, w . Alla alYft from two laatl to -Reeonll..rudlon or • four. CohatrmUon will be1ln manboles on Euclid Street north A•I· t• aild eonUnue thn>u1h of Ellla AvtDUe in • Jotnt project Neveiablr. Tbe approach to the of Lowery .\NOtiatet aad the brtdce MIO WW be widened. Orante CcM=Sualta&ioD • r. IMtallation ot a atcwm draln trid. Tile wm ....... on Suelld Street from ~'.El+W·•~lml U.. milri. FA I DAY, JULY 17, 1981 FEATURES COMICS BS 89 1-. Actor Laurence Olivier says he's fit as a fiddle .. BS Valley names new scliool chief Trustees unanimously approve William W. Fisher By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of .. Del"" ........ Concluding a six-month search for a new cblef administrator, Fountain Valley School District trustees have hired William W. Fisher as the district's superin- tendent. Fisher, 58, has been superin- tendent of the Orinda School Dis- trict near Oakland for the past 12 years. He received a doc· toral degree in education at UCLA. His appointment was ap- proved unanimously by trustees Thursday night. Fisher has been given a four- year contract. lijs salary will be $51,815 annually, plus a fringe benefit package and mileage al- lowance. "Fountain Valley has a good reputation for its schools," Fish· er said after his appointment. 'Tm interested only in dlstncts Hardware robberies probed Huntington Beach police are invesligflting two local hardware store robberies this week they believe were com- mitted by the same gunmen. The more recent incident oc - curred at 6:25 p.m . Thursday, when two m en brought merchandise to a register at Ace Hardware, 18501 Main St., then displayed a h andgun, police said. Lt. Jim Walker said the men forced three people into a rear office and took money from cash registers and the office. When a customer walked in during the robbery, the pair tied up tbe man aod took $8 from his wallet, he said. • The men gathered merchan· dise la store bags belo~ fieeinc, Walker' sald. He said the loss totaled $1,a>O in cash. $1,000 in merchandise. Walker said police suspect this holdup was committed by the same two men who robbed the American Building Center. 19240 Beach Blvd .. at 8:30 p .m . Tues- day. tn that incident. two men dis - played a h andgun and took S2.000 from a cash register and a safe. police said. Before fleeing. the gunmen tied four people in the store with electrical extension cords. police said. The bound victims were able to free themselves after the pair left and had not been otherwise harmed, police sald. The suspects were described as white men with sandy red hair. Car hits post; driver killed A 22-year-old Fullerton man died early today after his car jumped a curb and struck a lighl post on Euclid Avenue in Anaheim. Huy Due Ly was pronounced d e ad at Anaheim Memorial Hospital soon after the 1 a.m. accident, said police spokesman ·Victor Dominguez. that want quality education." Fisher said he 's familiar with many of the problems facing Fountain Valley schools, includ- ing a tight budget and a declin· ing enrollment. He said he s upervised four school closures and other cutbacks in Orinda. "Someone's got to do it," Fish- er said. "I have the confidence that it will get done right. I want to keep the cuts away from the classroom, away from the kids." The new administrator said one of his first goals will be to improve relations with district teachers. These relations were strained last year when Foun- tain Valley teachers went on strike during contract negotia- tions . Fisher said the Orinda dist e'- had separate elementary arh middle schools. He said he plans to study Fountain Valley's K-8 single -school arra ngement before deciding whether to rec- ommend middle school s locally. District trustees said one of Fisher's strengths is In school curriculum. He is the author' of a series of geography textbooks used na- tionwide and is currently work- ing on textbooks in math and spelling. ... "Th~ '3 Rs' are essential," Fisher said. "A child who isn't well grounded In these is severe- ly handicapped. 1 "But education goes beyond the '3 Rs.• It should include things like history, geography, ,music, art and PE (physical education ). These are by no means frills.'' Born and raised in a suburb of Cleveland, Fisher served with the Marine Corps in the South Pacific during World War II. NEW SCHOOL CHIEF William W. Fisher ~ Huntington library boosters named TOP ART -Chris Barela, 9, of Fountain Valley shows his first place and division win· ner clay cow he entered in the crafts competition at the Orange County Fair. Lectures set on talk ways Differences in the way men and women use words. body language, conversational pal· terns and non-verbal signaJs will be explored in a free three-part lecture series beginning Monday at Golden West College in Hunt- ington Beach. The session will be from 7 to 9 p.m . in the college's community center. The workshop, entiUed "Com· municalion between the Sexes," will be led by Dawn L . Ohlen- d or C. an in structor in in- terpersonal communications. Participants may register at the door . A committee of HunHegton Beach Library boosters.hopes to pick up where tax dollars leave oft in supporting book acquisi- t l<>ns, expanded programming ·and beautifi c ation in the 200,000·volume system . The committee was appointed this week by people interested in raising funds for the library system, which has operated on a tight budget since passage of Proposition 13. Library Director Walte r Johnson sajd the centraJ library- Super 80 jet • service set for airport Republic AJrlioes wlll befin DC-9 Super 80 service at John Wayne Airport Aug. 14. a com - pany official said today. According to spokesman Walt Hellman, the Minneapolis-based carrier will take delivery of the first or 14 of the newt jetliners sometime between Aug. 1 and Aug. 10. ·'In terms of noise i:doduction and fuel efficiency. it'f the best plane available," Hellman said. Republic now operates 12 flights per day from the airport, serving Las Vegas, Phoenix and ·more djstant destinations in its nationwide system. Republic is the nation's fifth largest air car- rier. AirCal, which oper ates 25 flights each day from Orange County, has talien delivery of two or the new $20 milJion aircraft, manufactured by McDonnell Douglas Corp. Hellman said Republic expects to receive one Super 80 per month between August and November, 1982. He said the carrier will con- tinually Increase Super 80 service al John Wayne Airport as more of the new planes are received. "We want to use them in noise sensitive locations,·· Hellman ex· plained. Frontier Airlines, which opera'teS two flights each day f~om Orange County. also is purchasing the Supe r 80s. Western Airlines, the fouk"th car· rier now serving Or ange County. is not purchasing th e new aircraft. Uder. bUilt'pJjy eq._t for handicapped ctaUdnn l&Clapp &d6111 'fer hil e_roJect. He II a 16pbamore at Huntlftston B"ach Hllh School. Marshall Brimer, son of Mr. and II rs . Eu1ede llrumer, reharbllhed claHtooma at-temple ...... He ia a senior at Hunt!qton .... ~School. cultural arts center and the three branche s will receive enough funds to maintain basic services during the year. .. But we're looking down the road," Johnson said. "The cen· tral library is now operating al subsistence level. but we want to turn it into the best facility we can for the people of Huntington Beach." Re said the central library 's decorative fountains were turned off several years ago in the wake of Proposition 13. He said the fountains cost about . $30,000 per year to operate. Also, the local library system has reduced · branch employees and eliminated a bookmobile in recent years. Johnson said. The new oommittee of library boosters will meet July 23 to discuss which improvements to focus on and how to raise the necessary funds. Huntington Beach attorney Larry Curran. a member of the fund-raising committee. said some residents are Interested in beautifying the central library grounds and perhaps adding a wing for additional cultural arts activiUes. He said the committee hopes to raise funds for improvements the city cannot afford to provide. Other m e mbers of the committee include 'Don Shipley, Roger Slates, Norma Gibbs, L'oi s Mitc hell, Marguerite Oa venpor'l, Wilma Stevens, Linda Melton. Tom Zmak and Betty Wardell. SOap boxers to race in Laguna Hills Southern California Soap Box Derby championship races will be held Saturday and Sunday in Laguna Hills beginning at 9:30 a .m . on both days. The racers are divided into junior and senior divisions representing 60 entrants from throughout the area. One wumer from each of the two divisions will win an expense paid trip to. Akron, Ohio to compete in the All American derby race Aug. 15. The sponsors of this year's race are R .G . Canning Diversified Companies. a Los Angeles based promotional firm and Avco Finance. · The races will be held on Aliso Creek Road at Yosemite Street in Laauoa Hills. The public ls welcome to attend and cheer on lhe racers. ·For more informa- tion, call Jim. Garrison at 538·958S . Couple seek restoration A Lq\ma Beach couple filed a law1uJt Thursday seeklnl ... 1 , mUUon ln damaees from t.beit back fence oei1hbora and a court order to trim trees aod sbrubbfry the1 1ay bave blocked their p....,..19111.-iui view sin~e April. , Rlebatd and Vlct~rl Hawt.bome, wbo live ln T the Work!, ••id in their ault ln Oranp Oount.1 Qaperi9r Court that they have politely aned nei1hbora Ronald and Linda Karta to trim the lope of tbtir tnta lllkl lbnlbl. · 1'laeJ claim ua. &artMI NIUMd. Oranoe Cout OAILV ftlLOT,,rlday, "uty 17, 1111 • • dry,pess of water HOW DRY IT 18 .•• It wa1 absolutely amalin1 to pick up the paper only yesterday and team that one of our brlaht, informed and veteran clty of. flclals here alone the eout la actually aeeldna another elective olftce. The peraon in~olved la Norma Hertzog, two-term Costa 11 .. dty eoun· cllwoman, first woman to ever have served on the Meaatown council and the city's first female mayor. Earlier, she had an· nounced that tbh aecond term will be ber last on the municipal body politic upon the Mesa. .. , . .,. . . . , .---,~, -· ~- Now, however, we .... ,... . learn from news dispatches that Mrs. Hertzog has aspirations for lower office. She wants to get herself seated on a water board. Do you know what dlrectore do on water boards? WELL, THEY SIT AROVND in meetings and take one of the wettest ~ ~\ TDI\ MURPHlll ,~it s ubjects there is and turn it into something so dry it could crack. You labor through a water board meeting for about slx hours and after the first 20 minutes, your mouth feels like you've been chewing on cardboard. Water board meetings are so dull that you can sit there and drift off into the Land of Nod faster than Samuel I. Hayakawa. Directors at these meeting.s drone on about capacities in acre feet, linear re· quirements for pipelines, rates per 1,000 gallons, bond sur charges and good heavens, that's all the exciting stuff. JUST WAIT UNTIL they get down to the routine matters, like reading the minutes of the last hoer and bummer. It develops , however, that the Mesa Consolidated Water District currently has a vacancy upon its Board of Direc· tors. This was created when the presi· dent of the board, Eugene Bergeron, re- signed at the first of this month to take a post with another water outfit in the San . Joaquin Valley. Bergeron obviously likes water sub· jects. County's interesi, $132 million Orange County Tax Collector·Treuurer Robert Citron had some int~resting figures for the county board of supervisors. In bis annual report to the board, Citron, tne man in charge or investing the billlom that now through the county treasury, said thll week that more than Sl.32.7 million in interest eamln11 were realized during the fiscal year that ended June 30. The average yield on funds held by county 1ov· ernment and lhe 170 other taxint aaencies (cities, school districts, etc.) that use the treuury was 15.09 percent, more than two percentaae points higher than the previous year, and four points hl1her than that realized by state 1ovemment. Citron said interest accrued durin& fiscal 1980 was about $38 million more than accrued ln fl.lcal 1979. Citron said about $19 billion flowed throu&h the treasury in fiscal 1980, about S2 bUlloo more than the previous year. Citron said lhe treasury worked with 31 security dealers, 21 banks and seven aavin11 and Joan as- sociations in maldnc investments. Citron noted that, by swapping certaln aecuritlea before their maturity dates, about $5 milllon more in interest was realized than would have been if the swaps were not made. Fly detection in Oregon low-key SALEM, Ore. (AP> -Oregon bu opted.for a low·key approach to po11ibJe infestaUon from the marauding Mediterranean fruit fiy cboollDI only &o check papers of fruit-haulen combl1 blto tbe state. Meanwhile, California officials lntemllled ef. forb &o annihilate the fruit·deltroylD1 lnMct tla.at baa infested an area of San Fraaclaco. John Valtena, spokesman for tile Ore1oa Department of A&riculture, said U.I. l>efu'UDeat of Alriculture lnapecton wen &o cbea ~ of truckers at ports of entry at Aalllaad aad Klamath Falla in Southern Ore1on, beliDalD• al noon today. ''When a truck comet in to be ~ and la carrylnl fruit or produce, a USDA 8'P'!lat.ee wW be looldq at the trucltel''s bW ol llldlJll. wbicb be must ba",'' Valtena ••Ad. "It wUJ ll!MlfJ nat be la bauUn1 and wbert' It came trom. ••JI It 11 comln1 from UJ of UM tllr•• (Callfomia> couadll under UIDA ........... M will a1k for a eerUflcat1 or 1ta•• from a1rlcultural lnapecton~ ....._. It II cleared few movement .,...._ tt bM bleD • 1pected cw fumu1ated or tbe .....,.. ... fruit fty.' "U tbat'I tbe c .... tbl Crud• toee oa lldl WIJ 11 norma.I.'' bl wd. "If Ultr• ls no proof of l_a~eeetaoa or clearuee," tbe lnl~ wW proballlr INI tM load ..... _.,, the •Plll'Ollri&U ~ Ill ~ dlttlaeU.." Tbt Mill llMn ,rotieblr WGUld be ,....,.... and ............ v ............ "ll'I Mt a ~ ,..... ll'I llGt a ba8 ti tnatt ............. " M 1ald. But when the top mu prealdtnt of your water board leavn town, ttiat oucht to live Y<* aome kind of clue. CUTAIN O•EaVEU ol Harbor Area pol.tucal affaln mlabt suspect Mn. Hertq ls motivated to seek appoint· ment to the water d11trict poet beeauae she Qnce advocated conaolldatlnl . the water outfit with city 1ovemment. But t he aay1 Ulla la now a dead luue. It mllht be mentioned that a water district 6oard member 1et1 paid 50 bucks per meetin1. But I'm aure th1t'1 not what motivate• Mrs. Hertzo1 either. That's like aayln1 you're wllllnl to take $50 to endure four houn of the Chinese water torture. '1 that word water a1atn. I tblnk Norma. wants w•"loM'u 1ood of the community. 11i It. That MUST be lt. Water dlatrtct dlrector1 labor 1way without applause. Few people know they exlat and fewer people apprecl1te the lon1...11Pura and tedloua dutlea they perform ao we can all shave, 1hower or do the d.lahes. · THE ONLY TIME moet of u1 even think about a water district 11 when • 1u1her appears outalde in the 1ldewalk or when we crank on the tap and the stuff that cornea out looks yellowl1h and smells kind of funny. · Pardon me now but I think J've 1ot to 10. My mouth f eeia like cotton and my Ups are startin1 to crack. . . • • . .. ,, ... 1 .. • ......... ~ • 2 I' c 1 g r '! • .. n ·program backed Caunty approves $13 million output for improvements 8y Fausa1CK ICBOl!llEHL -' .. ....,......... ' A a. T mlJUon project for de- •l•n ol a new, much·tnlai1ed p111tn1er terminal beads the ll1t of John Wayne Airport budatt ltema autborlaed by U\e Oran1e County Board of Supervt.lort. The boud, without debate, 1ave tentaUve approv•l Thurt· day to 1 t11.3 mllllon 1_pendln1 pro•ram that wlll finance airport actlvltln durln1 the Ill· cal year &bat be1an July l. A• propoeed ln the recently approved alrport m11ter plan, tne new termlnal would con1lat of about ata,000 tquare feet and wouJd be 1paclou1 enou1h to handle 8.1 tnllllon p111Hn&er1 by ltlO. The Hl1tln1 termlnal, about on1·sl1tth the alu of lht pro· poltd f aclllty, la conaldered eJt· lrtmely ov1rcrowd1d by con· l•m purary alrpt)n 1t1nd1rda. · Jt w11 dnl1ned to accommodate aboui fli00,000 pH1en1era annual· ly. About :u mllllon p111en1en used the airport durlna IMO. Jn 111 , the boud fave ap· proval w te.e million n d•llfl and contlructlon work. Included w11 1 tu mllllon project to In· atall • new 1lr'1eld dralna1e 11y11tem that will be part of a lu1tr project tu exten~ the 1lrport'1 Je{ runway 737 feet to the nonh. The runway la now 5,700 feet Iona. Extension of the runway wllJ .,_rmJt Jet.a to lift off at a dl1t1nce farther from homea south ot the ·a.t.rport, and thus, help reduce nolle lmpacts, ac· ·cord Ina to airport olllclal1. The board authorbed $128,000 for detllft of the runway ex- tension; tll,000 for deal1n of atrenflbeninc the runway <a proJeet neceuitated by the in· trodueUon of the new, Jess nolly but heavier DC-9 Super 80 Janie Arnold on county women panel J anle Arnold of Newport Beach, a civic activist and mother of four, hu been named to the Oran1e County Com· mla1lon on the Status of Women. Mre. Arnold was appointed by Supervllor Thomu Riley u 5th District representative to the 1roup. She replaces Vivian Clecak of Laauna Beach, who rtcenUy resl&ned. An ll·year ruldent of Newport Beach, Mrs. Arnold has for tht put two years urved u executive director of New DI.rec· tlon1, a residential raclllty in Costa Meta for care of female alcoh0Uc1. The Commission on the Status ot Women ia a county-aponaored or1anlzalion that examines women's iaauea in Orance Coun· ty and recommends policies to the board or supervisors . Jetllnert); '213,000 for detlsn of new parkln& f aclUtJet ln tM ao-called "clear zone,. north ot the runway and the San Dleto Freeway; $295,000 for detlsn of a new trafic clrculatlop system 1urroundin1 the airport; '375,000 for deaitn of taxiways and private aircraft Uedowna that would be located on the airport's west aide, and other dealfn ex- pendJtures for related, but rel· aUvely minor, projects. Accordin& to budaet docu- ments, about $6.8 million of the $13.3 million in expenditures will be off set by fees the county col· lects from commercial air car· riers and concessionaires at the airport. The board also approved addi- tion or one position to the airport's ext.Ung 2S·member staff. The airport operations supervisor will work with prlvate pilots, fixed base operators who provide repair service and pilots' schooling, and the commercial alrlinea. The budget for fiacal 1981 is about Sl million less tban the $14.3 million that was authorized for fiscal 1980, according to budget documents. Hospital to pay STANFORD CAP> -Follow· ing a federal audit that found overcharges and double billinp, Stanford Universitf' Medical Center bas agreed to repay Sl.S million in Medicare fees, it was revealed Wednesday. DMly~IUft....._ Ben Gouin rleftJ and Chm Christie of the Mola Development Corp. celebrate completion of their job of cleaning up the Huntington Beach chemical dump. (:hemical dump dig ends in Huntington By PATRICK KENNEDY Of .. Oelf't ,... ,.... Workers celebrated with champagne Thurday as the $4 million excavation or an aban· doned chemical dump in Hunt· ington Beach was completed after 13 weeks or digging and several hundred complaints from nearby resident!. State health orricials recom· mended last year that the three· acre dump be ex(:avated because toxic oil refinery wastes dumped there in the 1940s could eventually · cont a mina te the ground water. Mola Development Co .. which plans to put 288 condominiums on 12.5 acres including the dump, was required to excavate the contaminated soil and truck it 35 miles to a hazardous waste landfill in West Covina. The digging released pungent. gas·like odors into the surround· ing community and several hun· dred complaints from residents Tee n held in stabbing of fathe r A 15·year -old Huntington Beacfl youth who allegedly stabbed his father in the chest with a 6·inch hunting knife has been placed in ·Orange County Juvenile Hall on suspiclon of as· sault with a deadly weapon, police reported . The father, Rodger Rhinehart, 37. of Huntington Beach, was re· ported in serious but stable con· dilion today at Huntington In- te r c() m i:nunity Hospital, r e · covering from a wound in the right lung. Police said the incident oc· curred at 7 p.m. Tuesday. when the boy. whose name was withheld, ran away from a fami· ly counselor's office. Rhinehart followed bis son to Mesa View Schooo. where he was stabbed when he tried to rorct bia son lo return to the counselor's o((lce, pollce said. poured into Huntington Beach city haU in recent weeks. County officials placed a nurse in city hall to answer questions and state health om cials con· ducted. numerous air quality (ests to assure residents that the sickening odors might cause headache s ~nd nausea but wouldn't create longterm health problems. "Everyone's just relieved," said Chris Christie, excavation supervisor. "The pre~&tlJ!e's off.'' During the excavaiion about 5, 100 truckloads of contaminated soil was taken to the BKK landfill in West Covina, Christie said. That amounts to about 61,000 cubic yards or 86,000 tons of soil conta minated with chem icals such as benzene and toluene. both suspected carcinogens. Some of the excavation pits reached depths of 40 feet, Christie said. Today. the site, on Bolsa Chica Street south of Warner Avenue. is being graded and concrete and trees are being re· moved to make way fo r con· struction of the condominium development scheduled to begin in February, Christie said. Mo-pe d c rash • • IDJUres man A Huntington Beach man was injured today when his mo·ped s tr4.Ck a curb, and h e was catapulted into a light pole. Police traffic investig'ators said the m an. Edward Allen Simpkins, 22. of Florida Street, was not wearing a helmet and suffered head injuries in the ac· cident. A spokesman for Huntington Intercommunil y Hospital said Simpkins was in surgery this morning. His condition was not available. The accident occurred at 4: 40 a.m. on Beach Boulevard just north of Chrysler Circle in Hwtt· ington Beach. ROad projects due Alternate rou_t es -pushed in Valley Four road construction proj- ec ta that may result In In- creased traffic oongeslion have been announced by Fountaln Valley pubUt work• otficials. City ofticial1 h ave asked motorilU to use alternate roada d\frinl the eomtruclion perioda to belp minimize trafllc prob· lema. r~are; of Slatet Aveae from ~ eet to u.. a.ta Aaa llY.er from two lues to four. CoDatructiOG will be1ln A••· f •cl eontlnue throu1b Ntwemtilr. The approach to t.be bl'tdC wW be wt4ened. ,_ •Uoe ol • ltonD drain om &ucJkt .,._t from 81a"'- A venue to a point 2,000 feet north. Construction wlll take place In the right lane on the ~ east side ot Euclid, beginning ln September and c:ontinuin1 for about debt weeks. -Installation of a storm drain on Slater Avenue from Lo• Alamos Street to San Mateo Stteet and continuiq north on San Mateo for IOO feet. Construe· tlon wlQ lest• In SllMmber IDd CODtiftut for about t0 wffb. -Rec!Onatruetlon of sewer manbolee oa Euclid Street north of Elllt Avenue lft a Jomt proteet of Lowery Allocia• and tbe Oruse , SanltaUoa ~ trtct. 11le "': eet wtll beliB ln ,. .... .,... laaltaar .. --.. FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1981 FE ATURES COM ICS BS 89 Actor L aurence Olivier says he's fit as a fiddle BS Valley names new school chief Trustees unanimously approve William W. Fisher By PHIL SNEIDER MAN 0( .. Deity ...... , .... Concluding a slx·month search for a new chief administrator, Fountain Valley School District trustees have hired Wllliam W. Fisher as the district's superin· tendent. Fisher. 58, has been superin· ten(tent of the Orin<Ja School Dis- trict near Oakland for the past 12 years. He received a doc· toral degree in education at UCLA. His appointment was ap· proved unanimously by trustees Thursday night. Fisher has been given a four· year contract. ~is salary wlll be $51 ,815 annually, plus a fringe benent package and mileage aJ- low ance. "Fountain Valley has a good reputation for its schools," Fish· er said after his appointment. ''I'm interested only in districts Hardware robberies probed Huntington Beach police are investigating two local hardware store robberies this week they believe were com· milled by the same gunmen. T he more recent incident OC· curred at 6:25 p.m. Thursday, wh e n two men brought merchandise to a register at Ace Hardware, 18501 Main St.. then displayed a ha ndgun, police said. Lt. Jim Walker s aid the men forced three people into a rear office and took money from cash registers and the office. When a customer walked in during the robbery Ure pair tied up the man and took $8 from his wallet, he said. The men gathered merchan· clise in store bags before lleeinc, Walker said. He said the loss totaled $1.~ in cash, $1,000 In merchandise. Walker said police suspect this holdup was committed by the same two men who robbed the American Building Center, 19240 Beach Blvd .. at 8:30 p.m. Tues- day. In that incident. two men dis· played a handgun and took $2,000 from a cash register and a safe . police said. Before fleeing, the gunmen tied four people in the store with electrical extension cords, police said. The bound victims were able lo free themselves after the pair left and had not been otherwise harmed, police said. T he suspects were described as white men with sandy red hair . Car hits post ; drive r kille d A 22-year-old Fullerton man died early today after his car jumped a curb and struck a light pos t o n Euclid Ave nue in Anaheim. Huy Due Ly was pronounced dead a t Anaheim Memorial Hospital soon after the 1 a .m. accident, said police s pokesman Victor Dominguez. tha t want quality education." Fisher said he's ramlUar with many of the problems facing Fountain VaUey schools, lnclud· ing a tight budget and a declin· inc enrollment. He said be supervised four school closures and other cutbacks in Orinda. "Someone's got to do it," Fish· er said. "J have{l.he confidence that it will get done right. I want to keep the cuts away from the cfassroom, away from the kids." The new administrator said one of his first goals will be to improve relations with district teachers. These relations were strained last year when Foun· lain Valley teachers went on strike during contract negotia· lions. Fis her said the Orinda dist~ had separate elementa ry arh middle schools . He said he plans to study Fountain Valley's K-8 sin g le·school arrangem ent before deciding whether to rec· ommend middle schools locally. District trustees-said one of Fisher's strengths iJ in school curriculum. He is the author of a series of geo1raphy textbooks used na· lionwide and is currently work· ing on textbooks in math and spelling. "Th~ '3 Rs' are essential,'' Fisher said. "A child who isn't well grounded in these is severe· ly handicapped. ''But education goes beyond the ·3 Rs.' It should include things like history. geography, music, art and PE (physical education ). These are by no means frills." Born and raised in a suburb of Cleveland, Fishe r served with the Marine Corps in the South Pacific during World War JI. NEW SCHOOL CHIEF William W. Fisher Huntington library boosters named -A committee of Huntington Beach Library boosters .hopes to pick up where tax dollars leave off In supporting book acquisi· U.ons, expanded programming and beautification in the 200,000·volume system. The .committee was appointed this week by people interested in raising funds for the library system, which has operated on a tight budget since passage of Proposition 13. Library Director Walter Johnson said the central library· Super 80 jet • service set for airport Republic Airlines wiU begin DC·9 Super 80 service at John Wayne Airport Aug. 14. a com· pany official said today. According to spokesman Walt Hellman; the Minneapolis-based carrier will lake delivery of the first of 14 of the new, jelllners som etime between Aug. 1 and Aug.10. TOP ART -Chris Barela, 9, "In terms of noise production o f Fountain Valley shows his and fuel efficiency, it's the best first place and division win· plane available," Hellman said. ne r clay cow he entered in R e public now operates 12 the crafts competition at the fifghts per day from the airport, 0 Co t F · • • serving Las Vegas, Phoenix and range un Y air. ·m ore distant destfnations in its Lectures set on talk ways Differences in the way men and women use words. body language. conversational pal· terns and non.verbal signals wiU be explored in a free three-part lecture series begi,nnlng Monday at Golden West CoUege ln Hunt· ington Beach. The session will be from 7 to 9 p .m . in the college's community• center. The worbhop, entitled "Com· munication between the Sexes," will be led by Dawn L . Ohlen· dorf. an ins tructor in in· terpersonal communications. Participants may register at the door. nationwide system. Republic is the nation's filth largest air car· rier. AirCal, which operates 25 flights each day from Orange County. has taken deli very of two of the new $20 million ·aircraft, manufactured by Mc Donnell Douglas Corp. · Hellman said Republic expects to receive one Super 80 per month between August and November,· 1982. He said the carrier wiO con- tinually increase Super 80 service at J ohn Wayne Airport as more of the,newplanes are received. "We wani k> use them in noise sensitive locaUons,' • Hellman ex· plained. Frontier Airlines. which · operates two flights each day from Orange County, also Is purc hasing th e Super 80s. Western Airlines, the fourth car· rier now serving Orange County, is not purohasing the new a ircraft. " ' cultural ar ts center and the three branches will receive enough funds to maintain basic services during the year. "But we're looking down the road," Johnson said. "The cen· tral library is now operating at subsistence level, but we want to turn it into the best facility we can for the people of Huntington Beach.'" He said the central library's decorative fountains wer e turned off several years ago in t he wake of Proposition 13. He said the fountains cost about $30,000 per year to operate. Also. the local library system has reduced branch employees and eliminateji a bookmobile in recent years. Johnson said. The new committee of library boosters will meet July 23 to discuss which improvements to focus on and how to raise the necessary funds. Hunting ton Beach attorney Larry Curran, a member of the fund·raiaing committee, said some residents are interested in beautifying the central library grounds and perhaps adding a wing for additiona l cultural arts activities. He said the committee hopes to raise funds for Jmprovements the city cannot afford to provide. Oth er members o r the committee include Don Shipley, Roger Slates. Norma Gibbs, Lois Mitc he ll , M a r guerite Davenport, Wilma Stevens, Linda Melton. Tom Zmak and Betty Wardell. I Soap boxers • to race in Laguna Hills Southern California Soap Box Derby championship races wtll be held Saturday and Sunday in Laguna Hills beginning at 9:30 a .m . on both days. • The racers are divided into junior and senior divisions representing 60 entrant~}rom throughout the area. One "'inner from each of the two divisions will win an expense paid trip to Akron, Ohio lo compet e in the All American derby race Aug. 15. The sponsors of this year's race ar e R.G . Canning Dive rsified Companies, a Los An1eles based promotional firm and Avco Finance. The racea wlU be Held on Aliso Creek Road at Yosemite Street ln Lapna Hilla. The pubUc is welcome to atte~ and cheer on the racers. ·For more lnforma· lion, call Jim Garrison a\ . 538·9585. Couple se~k restoration A Lquna Beach couple filed a lawsuit Ttuanday see"-ln1 $&.1 mllUon ln damaaes trom thelt back fence nei1hbon and a court 'Order to trim trees and 1brubbety t hey say h ave bl~ted t.helr panoramic ocean vlew since April. Richard a nd Victoria H•wtborne, who live lri Top of tbe WGl'ld, Hid lrr lbelr lull Ned lJ1 Orance County?il Court tb1t they have ..., nei1hbora Rona d ~ k"r\I to lrilD Ult Of ...... treM ..... . fttiellUD ... & ..... refllled: Orange Cout DAtLV "LOT/1'rld1y, July 17, 1111 d~ess 0( water rt program Wicked County approves $13 million output for improvements BOW DRY IT 18 ••• It wa1 absolutely amazina to pick up the paper only yesterday and learn that one of our bright, informed and veteran city of. flciala here along the ooaat la actually aeekin& another elective office. The person involved 11 Norma Hertzog, two-term Coeta Mesa dty coun- cilwoman, flnt woman to ever have served on the Meaatown council and the city's flnt fem ale mayor. Earlier, she had an- nounced that tbh . second term will be taar last on the municipal body politic upon the Mesa. Now, however, we •• ,.. learn from news dispatches that Mrs . Hertzog has aspirationa forJower office. She wants to get bersell seated on a water board. Do you know what directors do on water boards? WELL, .. HEY SIT AROUND In meetings and take one of the wettest ~ I"'-' TOM MURPHlll ,~~ subjects there is and turn it into something so dry it could crack. You labor through a water board meeting for about six hours and after the first 2n minutes-; your mouth feels like you've been chewing on cardboard. Water board meetings are so dull that you can sit there and drift off into the Land of Nod faster than Samuel I. Hayakawa. · Directors at these meetings drone on about capacities in acre feet, linear re- quirements for pipelines, rates per 1,000 gallons, bond s urcharges and good heavens, that's all the exciting stuff. JUST WAIT UNTIL they get down.to the routine matters, like reading the minutes of the last hoer and bummer. It develops, however, that the Mesa Consolidated Water District currently has a vacancy upon its Board of Direc- tors. This was created when the presi- dent of the board, Eugene Bergeron, r~ signed at the first of this month to take a post with another water outfit in the San Joaquin Valley. .> Bergeron obviously likes water sub- jects. County's interest, $132 ntillion Orange County Tax Collector-Treasurer Robert Citron bad some interesting figures for the county board of supervisors. In bis annual report to the board, Citron, the man in char1e of investln1 the billiOQI t.bat now through the county treasury' said um week that more than $132. 7 million in interest eaminp were realiied during the fiscal year that ended June 30. The average yield on funda held bJ county 1ov- ernment and the 170 other tax1na apncies (cities, school districts, etc.) that use tbe treuury was 15.09 percent, more than two ·pettenta1e point.a higher than the previous year, and four point.a higher than that realized by atate 90venunent. Citron said interest accrued durtn1 fiscal 1980 was about $33 million more than accrued in fiscal 1979. Citron said about $19 billion flowed throu1b the treasury in ftScaJ 1980, about SI bUlloo more than the previous year. Citron said the treasury worked with 31 security dealers, 21 banks and seven .. vinl• and loan u - aociatlons in mak.in1 investment.a. Citron noted that,.by 1wappln1certa1n1eearities before their maturity dates, about $5 mWlon more ln interest was realized th-.o would have been if the swaps were not made. Fly detection in ·Oregon low-key SALEM, Ore: <AP) -Ore100 bu opted for a low-key approach to possible infettatlon from tile maraudina Mediterranean fruit ny cboolLD1 only to check papers of fruit-haulen comlq 1nto the atate. Meanwhlle, CaJ1fomla official• LDtm.iftecl ef. forts to annihilate the frult.datroyjD1 IDHet Uaat baa inf •led an area of San Francisco. John Valteraa, apokeaman for tbe On100 Department of Aarteulture, said U.8. o.partmeat of Alriculture lmpectors were to c~tpaJ!tl'I ol truckera at ports of entry at . M~ and Klamath Falla ln Southern Oreaon. bijiaaln1 at DOOn t.oQy. ''"'-1 a Uuck com• to be...._,. Ud la carryinl fnalt or produce, a USDA ..,._ ... wW be looldn1 at the trucker'• bW at la_,. Wbleb be mu1t have,'' Valtena Hid. "It wlU IPHUJ wbat be i1 baulinl and wlMr• it came from. ''If lt 11 comln1 froal any of Ute Ulree (Callfonda) countie1 under USDA •uraatlDe, be wlll aek for a ~•rtlHeat• or stamp from aliieQltinl . lnlpedon 1.-etbtu n.u. tt II cftand for lllOYement and wlMtbir 1t bal ..._ Ill· 1peeted or fwlaucated for the llladlterTMMD fruit fty. ••u UlM'• the cue,~ truck•.,... bll •81 .. saormaJ,'' 111..W. 11 If tbue la ao proor of la1ttetloa . or clearance." till ~ Wiii ,.,...lifr ...a tM load .... DGUf) ... ~ .... .;. at .... •t1Dllkm." • ,.... hit ...... ,.,... ....... ,.....,.. .ma eh1r;.I,.. ..a. V...,.. uld. .... , Mt a ~ ..... D'1 Ml a --ii fritt .............. be Mid. - But when tbe top man pneldent of your water board leaves to"'1l, that ou1bt to If ve you some ttnd of clue. COTA.IN OBSEaVEU ol Harbor Area political attain mlcht 1uapect Mrs. Hertq ii motivated to leek appoint- ment to the water diatrict poet because she once advocated comolldattn1 the water ouUlt with city aovemment. But she says thla la now a dead issue. It mlJht be mentioned that a water district board member aets paid 50 bucks per meetlna. But I'm sure tbat'a not what motivates Mrs. Hel'UOI either. That's like aayin& you're willlnl to take $50 to endure four houn of the Chinese water torture. There'• that word water thfn-:1· I Norma wants the job for the good of the community. That has to be it. That MUST be it. Water d.latrlct directors labor away without applause. Few people know they ex lat and fewer people appreciate the Iona hours and tedious duties they ~rform so we can all shave, shower or do the dishes. THE ONLY TIME moet of us even thlnk about a water district ls when a gusher appears outside in tbe sidewalk or when we crank on the tap and the stuff that comes out looks yellowish and smells kind of funny. · Pardon me now, but I think I've got to go. My mouth feels like cotton and my Ups are starting to crack. By F&EDEUCK.ICBOIUIEJIL ................ A $2.7 million project for de· alan of a new, muc1\-entar1ec:1 pa11en1er terminal headl the Uat of John Wayne Airport bud1et ltema authorised by the Oranae Count~ Board of Supervilon. The board, without debate, 1ave LentaUve approval Thurt· day to a $13.3 million 1pendln1 pro1ram that will finance airport acUvlUea durlll1 the ft•· cal year that be1an July 1. A1 proposed in the recenUy approved airport master plan, the new terminal would con.al.st or about 213,000 square feet and would be spacious enou1h to handle 6.1 million passen1er1 by 1990. The exiaUn1 terminal, about one-sixth the size 9f the pro- posed raclllty, ii considered ex· tremely overcrowded by con· temporary airport standards. It was destined to accommodate about 500,000 pa11en1era annual· ly. About 2.5 mllllon passengers used the airport during 1980. In all, the board 1ave ap· proval to $6.8 million In dest1n and construction work. Included was a $1.5 million project to in· stall a new airfield draina1e system that will be part of a larger project to extend the airport's jet runway 737 feet to the north. The runway is now 5,700 feet long. Extension of the runway wiU permit jets to lill off at a distance farther from homes ··TllHr~~« :A.LLIGR."ll C.VEK'' aoutb ol tbe airport, and thus, help reduc. nolH lmpacll. ac· cordlnt to airport omc1111. The board authorized $128,000 for dul1n of the runway ex· t•n•ioo; Stl,000 for dealan of 1treoathenina tbe runway (a proJect oeeeultated by the in· troduct.ioa ol the new, leu nolty but heavier DC-9 Suptr 10 Janie Arnold on county women panel J ante Arnold of Newport Beach, a civic activist and mother of four, has been named to the Orange County Com· mlJsion on the Status of Women. Mrs. Arnold was appointed by Supervisor Thomas Riley u 5th Diatrlct representative to the group. She replaces Vivian Clecak of Laguna Beach, who recently resigned. An 11 -year resident of Newport Beach, Mrs. Arnold baa for the put two years served u executive director of New Direc· lions, a residential facility ln Costa Mesa for care of female alcoholics. The Commission on the Statua of Women is a county-apon.sored organization that examines women's issues in Orange Coun· ty and recommends policies to the board of supervisors. Jetllnen>; PlJ,000 for de9len of new parktns faclUtJet 1n thl ao- called ''clear rone., north ol the runway and the San Dte10 freeway; ~.ooo for dealp of a new traffic clrcuJatlon •Y•~m 1urrOWMllna the airport; '3'75,000 for design of taxiway• and private aircraft tiedowoa that would be located on the airpart'a west aide, and other deaip ex· pendjtures tor related, but rel- atively minor, project.I. Accordin1 to budaet docu· ments, aboµt $6.1 mUllon ol lbe $13.3 million ln expenditures will be offset by fees the county col· lects from commercial air car- riers and concessionaires al the airport. The board also approved addi· lion of one position to the airport's existing 25-member staff. The airport operations supervisor will work with private pilots, fixed base operators who provide repair ser vice and pilots' schooling, and the commercial airlines. The budget for ftscal 1981 is about $1 million Jess than the $14.3 milllon that was authorized for fiscal 1980, according -to budget documents. Hospital to pay STANFORD <AP) -Follow- ing a federal audit that found overcharges and double billiDgs. Stanford University Medical Center baa agreed to repay $1.5 million in Medicare rees, lt Wa! revealed Wednesday. -·--. - NY E COMPOSITE TRAN ACTION OVOTtTICNd llltC\.UOI Tlt ... UOll tMf •611lllYMC, •1•UT1-4'C"IC, l'IW. IOUOH. OlfROIT A .. 0 CINClhATI $TOO IXCMt.HMIANOltlPOUlbl YTM -~4UIDllt\TINlf , Books tell times Altted A-l(D,opf, one ol the moat pre•t18ioua names lo American publiahiftl, wW be CMat thll fall wtlh a new book by Joumallst David Halbenta1D, "The BreaXI of UM Gam•." Halbentam'• p,..ivlou.s two book.a were • The Powen Tbat 8-, '' lndalve pro-m ea of media 1lant1. and "Tbe Beat and Use 8rl8tl...._ .. a dev11tattn• analysis of the Euten estabUabmeot types who led U1 lnto lhe Vietnam ad· venture. And "Tia• Breakl ot Ute Game"? lt'1 a book about pro buketbell. It's com• to that: basketball as a metaphor of life. Knosif calls it "Kalberstam'• most powerful, re· vealin8 Ud rlvetina book.·· Also coming from Knopf is the 11th annual "Kahlil Glbran Diary.'' always a hot seller. Knopf baa high hopes too for Its "1982 Mias PlUY Calen· dar." Knopf, ln-~ cidentally. is lr. part of Random ;-i r e. House. _which In 'l' '\-\ 1 turn 1s now A~ o w n e d b y ::_:;:;m.__,.._.._ ____ _ ~ueb~cha~l~:s~ lllJll lllUIRZ having been transferred there last year by RCA. which tired of the publishing business. The books issued by publishers clue ua in to the tenor of the times. Here's a sampllng of other tiUea coming your way this fall : -"World·of-the-East Vegetarian Cooking." by Madhur Jaffrey, another entry from Knopf, which 81· sures us that this is the book vegetarian epicures have been waiting for." -"Betty Crocker's Microwave Cookbook," Crom Knopf's mother. Random House. Just what you would expect since nearly 20 percent of American homes have been equipped with microwave ovens. -"Feasting on Raw Foods," edited by Charles Gerras and featuring 3!!0 menus that use only raw food <look . Ma, no cooking>. "Treat your children to this novel way to boost nutrition in the family diet," urges the publisher, Pennsylvania's Rodale Press. home of Prevention magazine and such exciting books as .. A Practical Guide to Small-Scale Goalkeeping,'· "Gourmet Gardening'' and "Goodbye to the Flush Toilet. .. -"What Are You Using?" In case you haven't guessed, this Dial paperback is a birth control guide for teen-agers. DiaJ, incidentally, now belongs to Doubleday, which owns a lot of book clubs and the New York Mets. -"The Genuine Texas Handbook ," by Rosemary Kent, who's described by her publisher, Workman, as "a fifth-generation Texan and a Camp Mystic alumna." This is a straightforward attempt to crash the best-seller lists the way "The Official Prep· py Handbook" did this year. -"Pills That Don't Work," by Dr. Sidney M. Wolfe and Christopher M. Coley. From Farrar, Straus & Giroux. this invaluable guide will give you names of 610 prescription drugs which simply don't work even though they're still sold. Just what we needed to make us feel better. !They won't even let us have the placebo effect.) -"Same Time. Next Week?" by Paul Nelmark, a guide to "why. when and how to leave your therapist," published by <;onnectlcut's Arlington House, home of nostalgia and conservatism (among their many winners are "Karl Marx: Racist," "The Conservative Decade," "The Hollywood Beauties" and "The Beautiful Bronx"). -"Creative Marriage," by Mel Kraotzler. published by McGraw-HUI. Kraotzler. a psychologist, wrote the best-selling "Creative Divorce," but be knows how to work both sides of the street. STOCKS IN THE ~SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES Nl.W YOllUC(APl l'INI Dow..._ •ves tw T~rtdey, Jul. 1'. NEW YORK (AP). Selea, '"""· p<l<e STOCIC Mi WW CllM Cllll -net chellll9 of llw llft•n m«Kl •<11.,. JO 1,,.. °n:u n tn.11 tSSA+ 1.33 Hew Yon Sl«k E11<11enoe luues. 211 T -.m o tt CM.Of •11.ll + •.J2 tt.01"9 nellonally at ITICft lflan.11. .,.. u ur.' 1-... 1a1.ts 101.•t 1a1.1~ o.• · =olnc m~ ...... ! iv. U Stll J11.14 J7S.06 M .10 Jn.It+ i.~ s. n:"G'o sn.oao ".. -.. lndu• • . . • .. ... . .. .. . . . • . NU·= ~nMlft •7'.JOO "" -"" Tren · · · • · .. · · · · · ·• 's1s'.100 I.non t • 432 700 :M'11 • .. Utl la · · · · · · ..... ' ... ' . . . . . S 061 000 Pwon&ell •12Aoo 4'\lo + 1-'I. U Siil · ...... · · · · · · .. · .. · · .. · • • I=\~'t' ~:!: li~ -"· WHAT STOCKS DID Clllassvo 344, 5¥4 -J"" PhlOPtP.i :SUl1 42"' -~. llM 3:M, Jtlh -I'\ Mo«lil • -322 ,, + ... c.tilalCP / 31•,100 """ + J1-US Air • *·!OOoo ?!~ + '11 Rayltleon J lit,+ ---"' ~ERICAM LEADERS •Ew YORK I•"'>· Selft. Thun. P'lce and ntl c~ ti tM litn mosl ectlve Amel'lnn I Stoc• Exche119e luuet, 1111 nationally •I mor~lhin ''· •Plfl t IUAOO ~ + l't ro11 n ;100 12" • " ITr 121.tOO 1• •.. • W"'9 I 11,,700 JI + '11 rilll 811-not IOt.100 S" -l"I Ar .. Ptrl a 77,tOO 1•1h •I Gvlfc.tl u tOO lAvt • I.\ Jo 65:100 2•'1 ...... erm • "3,700 l• + 1" etOH '2.IOO Ulh + 'Al NEW YORK (AP) Jul. 1' T..,z. m 1m " JJ NEW YORK (AP) JUl 1' Mvenced OedlMCI VncNnVtd To .. 11-• New 111911• .... i.ww Toda,/o 2'1 121 m 10 la METALS T..,.., Prev. lUiJo lA5 1'6 171 • n ~...-ll'IMSC*lba ~. U.I . eHt1.- llot1a. Lff4 Jtcent•• PoU"d· llm 4'111 cenu a pound, dell~•· Tl• ... 1*Mtteb-~te Ii.. Al-'-1'"40 CtfllJ a,.._, N. Y . ....-CwY MID.Oii per 119111, ~ ... 001"6,oi., N.Y. .. ----~--"'·----...._--~---...--r----' Orange eo .. t DAILY PILOT/Friday, Juty 17, 1981 Fountain V 81ley landscapers big winners at awards banquet ·r Southwind& Land&caping'a award winning landlcaping of the Davia relidence NEWPORT BEACH -Southwlndl Land1cap- ln1 of Fountain Valley waa one of the bis winners in the 23rd annual BeauUflcatton Awards, which were presented durin1 a Newport Beach banquet by the California Landacape Contractor• Assn. of Loni Beach and Oranae County. Forty award• in 18 re,War and four special categoriee were presented, according to Frank Berry, chairman of the prosram held at the Mar· rlott Hotel. Awards were presented by television personality Regis Philbin, boat of KABC-TV's "A.M. Loe An1eles" and entertainft,lent editor of Channel 7 "Eyewitness News." " Landscaplna projects entered in t~e compeli· tlon represented nearly all communities in the Oranae County and Loni Beach areas. The Sweepstakes Award, highest dlaUnctlon 1lven by the CLCA chapter, representing the beat overall landscaping project of the year, went lo David Lee of David Lee Landscape Co., Placentia. for the Hooper residence in Santa Ana. Th.e Presidents Award, 1lven to.the beat over- all re11dentlal project of the year was preeented to Frank Berry of Southwinds for the Sullivan res- idence ln Cowan Heights. The Jud1es Award, representing the beat over· all landscape maintenance project of the year was won by Jim Lane of Total Landscape Care. Orange, for the Kessler residence in Laauna Hilla. (Total Landscape Care was the bi11est winner of the banquet, with four other first place and achievement awards in addition to the Judaes Award.) The Excelsior Award, representin1 the year's beat landscaping project submitted by a new CLCA member, was presented to Steve Lancaster of Lancaster Enterprises, Costa Mesa, for his work on the Countryside Condominiums In Oran1e. Other major winners of the evening were two Orange County landscape contractors who each won four awards. They were Southwinds and Habco Landscape & Irrigation, Inc .• of EJ Toro. Winning three awards each were William Van- dergeest Landscape Care, Santa Ana, and Craig Pauley & Auoclates, Tustin. 1'hose who won two awards each were Richard Cohen Landscape. M lssion Viejo ; Village Landscape Co., Irvine; Ralntree Landscape Co., Laguna Hills; Plant Control Corp., Irvine; and Mission Landscape Services. Inc., Costa Mesa. A record 80 landscapin1 projects were entered in the 1981 CLCA competition, according to Berry. Judges were John Hourian, a principal of Lldyoff Hourian Landscape Architect.a, Orange. and Keith French. a principal of EDAW. Inc .. landscape architects. Newport Beach. Tropical plants may be answer to world hunger · By RON STATON ._ .............. WABIANA~ Hawaii -Some ordlnary- looking cornfields and a grove of spindly lreM in a remote section of this small. rural town are help· ing fight world hunger and restore the world's tropical forests. The cornfields and leucaena grove are two key projects of the 130·acre University of Hawaii College of Tropical Agriculture Experiment Su· lion, located on a narrow stretch of land between the mountains and the sea on the windward aide of Oahu. . Scientists here are working to develop corn varieties that will produce results as dramatic as were achieved with rice. "'Ibe focus of the green revolullon wu to find varieties of rice with more uain and less leaf." said Dr. James L. Brewbaker, profeaaor of horticulture. "We are trying to do the same with corn; we are trying to increase grain yield on a smaller plant," he said. "We are beginning to find, as the rice people did, that some of these varieties wlll be good anywhere in the tropics where light and heal conditions are similar. "It ls possible to breed in Hawaii hybrids that will be eood in other parts of the world, .. Brewbaker said. Even South Korea. a country outside the Fuchsia group slates slww Th·e his tory of koi fish will be dis· cussed by Terry McNay in Sherman Library and Gardens Saturday at 9:30 a.m. The program is free and open to the public. For more information call 673-2261. THE LAGUNA Beach Fuchsia Society second annual Blossom Show and Plant Sale is set for Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Lum· beryard Mall, 384 Forest Ave .. Laguna Beach. The large red and white fuchsia, Swlngtime, will be among the favorite plants offered for show and sale. For more information call 494-2126. THE ANNUAL Fem and Exotic Plant Show. one of the largest of its kind in the country, is set for Saturday and Sunday in the Los Angeles Coun- ty Arboretum in Arcadia. This is the 18th annual show, and hours will be 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day. Visitors from across the country will be on band to see the ferns, orchidl, bromeliads, begonias. fuchsias, carnlvorou1 plants, aroids, palms and other exotic plants of. fered for show. BOB GRIMSHAW will present an Illustrated talk on the culture of the epiphyllium Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the California Cooperative Extension, 1000 S. Harbor Blvd., Anaheim. The talk is sponsored by the Horticultural Society of Or ange County, and sales and refresh· ments will also be offered. For more information call 526-6713. VISSEa 'S FLOKIST and Greenhouses will host the monthly meeting of Executive Women In· ternational Tuesday in their Anaheim racilitie1. For more information call 540-9380. THURS. lam -lpm FRI. lam -lpm SAT. tam -lpm SUN. lam-lpm A number of things to check • If you haven't done so already, go ahead and cut off the dried, dead foliage of any spring blooming bulbs you have. • Keep training and supporting tomato i>lants so they won't sprawl on the around and get their fruits dirty. · • When any of your annuals start lo fade. you can quickly replace them with fresh plants tropics, is producing some of the world 's highest corn yields with hybrid seeds from Hawaii. "Half of the world's corn is grown in the U.S. and half in the tropics," be said. "But the yield In the U.S. is five times higher than in the tropics. We feel challenged to find out wt\y yields in the tropics are poor." Three goals, he said, are to develop varieties more resistant to insects and pests; to find cheap ways to replenish nitrogen in the soil, and find plants that u.se nitrogen efficiently; and to find varieties that can produce large yields with less light. One way of replenishing nitrogen may be or ask your nurseryman If they would respond to a little pruning and fertilizing for more blooms later on. • Remember to cut off the runners of your ~trawberry plant.a before they root. • Frequent trimming of hedges promotes new green growth and full , dense look to the foliage. through use of the leucaena, rich in nitrogen, as a fertilizer for such crops as corn, beans and cassava, Brewbaker said. Leucaena, known as lead tree in the southern llnited States and considered an undesirable weed In Hawaii, also is rich in protein and is a high.quality feed for animals. The main interest in leucaena is as a fuel wood, but Brewbaker and his associates also are looking at other wood uses. especially paper and pulp. ''Leucaena is a tree of very rapid growth, and few trees in the tropics can match it," Brewbaker said . "It is a deep-rooted tree and has no problem LLOl'D•!i I • gardensho AMERICANA MODEL 4. #100Chair • 1, #1 42 Table S?lece Set Example: The best set shown above --42" Table and 4 Chairs Retail $428.00 MOW '24600 ADJUST AILE CHAISE LOUNGE MARIGOLDS Pony Pak Ideal Sun Color (Black trays excluded) Reg. $1.09 NOW '.69 ... O ... N MOH THl'IJSAf 14. IUN M.aODPlflli f·tMl ,,..,.. LLOYD'S NURSERY AND LAN.OSCAPE CO .. INC. 1 n~ 2028 NeWporf Blvd. (at Boy St.J Costa Meta, CA 92627 I 14 ~7«f1 · llAL SHRUBS I Ill • • . .. ..... ........... , getting water Even in the tropics there Is often a problem with drnuaht "We are talklna about Instant forest.a these trees will mature in five year1," he said. "They can grow In small areas and grow back quickly art.er being cut. "Our tropical forest.a are dbappearin1r and we must replace them ," Brewbaker said ... At the beginning of th1A century. there were 16 billion acres of forest In the world By the end of this renlury, there will be only 7 billion acres. and the disappearance has been almost exclusively in the tropics. due to increasing population. "The immediate impact is that there is no wood lo bum The impact of that is that food doesn't get cooked well and there will be more disease. · ·'The replaceme"t of forest wood by kerosene I and other liquid fuels is unlikely. It's not an · economic option," he said. "Other sources. such as coal. are limited, ·and the people of the tropics wi ll have to rely on wood. "Those of us working with plants fe el that. ultim ately. we have to harness the sun's energy. But we must figure out how to utilize light more efficiently," he said. Some 800 var ieties of leucaena are growing at the experiment station. and Brewbaker and associates are trying fo find the species that grows the fastest. They have sent seeds to some 80 countries ' ~ Property Being Sold NURSERY Liquidation Sale All Speci~s Subiect to Supply on Hand .. SAVEUPTO 70°/o . ' - SIE RRA GARDE N S !{URSERY . YOUR CHOICE ·' IMPATllMS. COMPIOSMA SMOWIAU VllUIMUM ................ SJ69, YllCHll •AIDIMIA 16"t PIOSTUTI. SIA •IHN . SIUPIAY, SAM JOSI 'TAM JUMIPUS ................. ·IHMISHt OUY, AIMSTIOt ... 'f•OLD M>LD, ~LD ntTZll PIOSTUTI. SAM JOSI TAMJUMIPllS I ............... l • 2070 ... ., .... It.cl.. c:..e.Me-.CA 714-14MIJ7 I , I I I llllll BllCH /lllTH ClllT 1111J Plllt FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1981 FEATURES BS COMICS 89 • • Actor Laurence Olivier says he's fit as a fiddle 85 Laguna niust decid~ on new tna:yor Mayor Wayne Baglio's an- nounced departure from Laguna Beach and its politics later this month leaves the City Council with two issues to be resolved in rather rapid fashion. In a position paper released by City Manager Ken Frank and Ci· ty Attorney Marc Winthrop, the pair outlined alternatives the re· maining members of the City Soap box racers warm up Southern California.Soap Box Derby championship races wiU be held Saturday and Sunday in Laguna Hills beginning at 9:30 a .m on both days. The racers are divided into junior and senior div isions re presenting 60 entrants from throughout the area. One winner from each of the two 'divisions will win an expense paid trip to Akr~n. Ohio to compete in the All American derby race Aug. 15. The sponsors of this year's ra c e are R . G . C a n·n in g Diversified Companies, a Los Angeles based prOl')lOlional firm and Avco Finance. The races will be held on Aliso Creek Road at Yosemite Street in Laguna Hills. The pubUc is welcome to attend and cbeer on the racers. For more informa- li o n , call Jim Garrison at 538-9585. Open s pace LB topic The issue or open s pace around Laguna Beach will be discussed at a meeting of the North Laguna Community luJ. sociation at Unitarian Hall. 429 Cypress Drive. at 7:30 p.m. Fri· day. M ayor W ay n e Baglin , representatives of the Irvine Co .• the Laguna Greenbelt, Friends of the Irvine Coast, and Orange County Supervisor Tom Riley's office have been invited lo speak. Discussion will be on the plan fo r developm e nt between Laguna Beach and Corona del Mar and along Laguna Canyon Road. The public is invited. For more information call 494-5425. Bloodmo bile due A Red Cross Bloodmobile will visit Crown Valley Community Park, 29751 Crown Valley Parkway in Laguna Ni guel July 31 from 9: 15 a.m. to 2 p.m . Council may lake In filling the vacancy left by Baglln. They will have to decide on a new mayor, and a means of fill- ing the seat on the five-member panel. In hls three-page letter to the City Council, Frank said Mayor Pro Tem Kelly Boyd wiU ex- ercise the powers and <tuties of the mayor following Baglin's res- lgnation, expected at Tuesday's council meeting. But, the memo states, Boyd does not automatically become mayor. He will serve as mayor pro tern "and continue to do so ~ntil another mayor is elected." The issue of filling the vacan· cy on the council is a bit more complex, with the remaining· council members having three ways to go. · o.ltl Nll ......... Water truck f foreground ) wets down portion of fire acceu road juit bet.ow Top of the World communitM in~ BeOfh. • Fire road to link • • two communities Earthmovers are finishing the rough grading for a mile-long emergency fire access road that will link two hilltop communities in Laguna Beach. Subcontractors will be relocat- ing portio~ of a water line next week, and fine grading of the 12·foot wide roadway will be done after that. A three-inch layer of asphalt will be appUed to the roadway, a nd electronically-controlled ~ates will be placed al both ends or the fire road The $160,000 project, being completed by the Griffith Co. of Irvine, s hould be completed by late July or early August, says Terry Brandt , director of municipal services for Laguna Beach. When completed. fire equip- ment from the Top of the World community will be able to respond to fires and emergen- cies in Arch Beach Heights in less than three minutes. T een h e ld in stabbing of fathe r A 15-year-old Huntington Beach youth who a llegedly stabbed his father in the chest with a 6-inch hunting knife has been placed in Orange County Juvenile Hall on suspicion of as- s ault with a deadly weapon, police reported. The father, Rodger Rhinehart, 37, of Huntington Beach. was re· ported in serious but stable con- dition today at Huntington In- le rcomm unity Hospital, re- covering from a wound in the right lung. Police said the Incident oc- curred at 7 p.m. Tuesday, when 1 the boy, whose name was . withheld, ran away from a raml· ly counselor's office. Rhinehart followed his son to Mesa View School, where he was stabbed when he tried to rorce his son to return to the counselor's ofClce, police said. llo1p ital awarda acholarah ip • Six. Daoa Hilla Hilh School ,raduates received schol•nhlpa rom Minion Commun ity' Hospltal'• •wtill•ry to continue their education in medJctne. Tbet&udeal1..,.._ ....... to reHlH a lotll1 al a11t Hi 1ctaolanlllp haad1 ral1e4' bJ vohan...,. at the Mlulon Viejo hospital. Dana HUis IJ'•duatet nttelv· tn1 cub 1ward1 Andude &Uubedl......,J11......._, ..... °""'.,... .. ~ .... ,,._. ... IC......,._ ....... If the council wishes to ap- point a fifth member to serve until Baglin's term expires next April, It must do so before Aug. 20, according to the government code. That means an aPPOintment could be made Tuesday night, or at regular council meetings July 21, Aug. 4, or Aug. 18. The COUD· cil could schedule a special meeting to make such an pn.. polntment before the deadline. Holding a special election to fill the vac ancy is also an alternative outlined by city of· ficials. It could be held Nov. 3 in conjunction with local school board elections, and City Clerk Verna Rollinger said the cost would be in the neighborhood of $5,000. But that would le~ve a vacan- cy on the council until the elec· ti o n , and the new c ouncil member would only serve five months until he would stand for re-election. The deadline for the council to call for such a vote would have to be made no later than Aug. 5. The third alternative would ~ to leave the seat vacant until next April when Baglin's term expires Citizens to voice views Group to seek changes in Irvine Co. plans for coastal land By STEVE MITCHELL Of ... o.lly ...... MM! Armed with a position paper on the Irvine Coast, a coalition of seven organizations will be in Los Angeles Tuesday to seek major changes to the Irvine Company development plan. Representatives of the Coali· lion of Concerne d Coastal Citizens, an organization formed specifically to address concerns about transportation problems on the Irvine Coast, will ride a bus to the State Coastal Com· mission meeting Tuesday to pre· sent alternatives to the plan. Commissioners in June gave the company a month to come up with solutions to four con- cerns raised by the commission staff about the 9,400 acre coastal strip between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. The land use plan, as en· visioned by the Irvine Company, includes up to 74 percent open space; 2,000 dwelling units; a four-lane road at Pelican Hill ; four lane road at Sand Canyon, 2,000 hotel rooms. commercial buildings and offices. Commission officials want to see Sand Canyon become a two- lane road and they want less ~......._ 4evelopment. They say they alao want guarantees on dedication of open and resale controls on affordable units. But~~ of the ettlaena' coalition say they have more concerns they believe should be addressed Tuesday. They will urge the commission to reject the Irvine Company plan and return it to the county for major modifications. Specifically, the organization fears parking on Coast Highway in Corona del. Mar and Laguna Beach will be eliminated to al- low six lanes of traffic through those towns. ''1 This, despite assurances from the Irvine Compa ny that re· moval of parking is not recom- mended. The group also suggests only 400 hotel rooms be constructed, instead of 2,000; Sand Canyon Road be two lanes instead of four ; no offices or conference center be constructed ; com· mercial development be limited to 160,000 square feet. instead of the 550,000 square feet proposed; and that the height limit be set at 36 feet instead of up to 10 stories. The coastal commission will meet at the Amfac Hotel, 8601 Lincoln Blvd.\ near the airport, beginning at 10 a.m. The Irvine coast land use plan will probably n o t b e h eard until mid - arternoon. The coalitioQ is composed of members from seven organiza- tions, including Laguna Green· bell, Inc.; Friends of the Irvine Coast ; Village Laguna; Stop Polluting Our Newport, Inc. <SPQN>; Coalition of Laguna Be ach Neighborhood Associa- tions !CONAJ; South Laguna Civic Association, and Broad- moor Homeowners Association. Laguna couple sue for 'loss of view ' A Laguna Beach couple filed a lawsuit Thursday seeking S4.l million in damages from their back fe nce neighbors and a court ·order to trim trees and s hrubbe r y th ey say h ave blocked their panoramic ocean view since April. Ri c hard and Victoria Hawthorne, who Uve in Top of the World, said in their suit filed in Orange County Superior Court that they have politely asked neighbors Rona ld and Linda Kurtz to trim the tops of their trees and shrubs . They. claim the Kurtzes have refused. The Hawthornes allege that the trees and shrubs that have grown 20 feet high in some places have caused a loss of view, light and air worth $1,000 a day. Asi<Je from seeking other types of monetary damages, the Hawthornes say they need a court ruling to determine their rights to an easement to pre· serve the view they've enjoyed for the pa~~ five years. The Hawthom es li ve on Alta Laguna Boulevard. Their view formerly extended from the Palos Verdes Peninsula to the southern coastline, said William Hart, their Newport Beach at· torney. Hart said the legal question of the Hawtho rnes ' rig hts is critical "since it is such an inte· gral part of their property value and , of course, one of the rea- sons they bought their horru:.:: He said they believe 1965 restrictions on the residential lots prevent shrubbe r y from blocking views, but he said they still need a decision from the courts. Republic Supe·r 80· jets debut Aug. 14 · Republic Airlines will begin DC-9 Super 80 ser vice at John Wayne Airport Aug. 14, a com- pany official said today. According to spokesman Walt Hellman, the Minneapolis-based carrier will take delivery of the first of 14 of the new. jetliners sometime between Aug. 1 and Aug. IO. "In terms or noise production and fuel emciency. it's the best plane available," Hellman said.• Republic now operaleit 12 flights per day from the airport, ser ving Las Vegas, Phoenix. ~d more distant destinations In its. nationwide system. Re public is the nation's fifth largest air car- rier. AirCal, which operates 25 flights eac)l day from Orange County, has taken delivery of two or the new $20 million aircraft, manufactured by Mc Donnell Douglas Corp. Hellman said Republic expects to receive one Super 80 per month between August and November, 1982. He said the carrier will con· tinually increase Super 80 service at John Wayne Airport as more of the new planes are received. "We want to use them in noise sensitiVe locations," Hellman ex- plained .. Frontie r Airfines. which operates two fli ghts each day from Orange County, also is purc has ing the Supe r 80s. Patiflc Southwest Airlines, which is authorized to begin ser vice in Orange County Oct. 1, has Super 80s in its fleet and has promised to use them exclusively on Orange County routes. Use of the Super 80s, which are considered quieter than the older DC-9-30s and Boeing 737s, is a cen· terpiece of county government's plan to reduce noise impacts on persons living beneath jet de- parturetracks. .. HOW D&Y IT 18 ••• It w11 absolutely 1muin1 to pick up the paper only yeaterday and team that one of our brtaht, lnformed and veteran clty of· flclals here atone tbe cout 11 actually 1eekin1 another elective office. 1he person Involved la Norma Hertzotr, two-term Cotta Meta city c:oun· cllwoman, fint woman to ever have served on the Meaatown council and the city's first female mayor. Earlier, 1he had an· nounced that thil aecond term will be her 1&1t on the municipal body politic upon the Mesa. Now, however, we .... no. learn from news dispatches that Mn. Hertzog has aspirations for lower offlce. She wants to get herself seated on a water board. Do you know what directors do on water boards? WELL, THEY SIT. AROUND in meetings and take one of the wettest ~- I"-\ T-Dll_l_U_RP-Hll-1,~lt subjects there is and turn it into something so dry it could crack. You labor through a water board meeting for about six hours and after the first 3> minutes, your mouth feels like you've been chewing on cardboard. Water board meetings are so dull that you can sit there and drift off into the Land of Nod faster than Samuel I. Hayakawa. Directors at these meetings drone on about capacities in acre feet, linear re- quirements for pipelines, rates per l,000 gallons, bond surcharges and good heavens, that's all the exciting stuff. JUST WAIT UNTIL they get down to the routine matters, like reading the minutes of the last hoer and hummer. It develops, however, that the Mesa Consolidated Water District currently bas a vacancy upon its Board of Direc· tors. This was created when the preal· dent of the board, Eugene Bergeron, re- signed at the first of this month to take a post with another water outfit in the San Joaquin Valley. Bergeron obviously likes water sub- jects. County's. interest, $132 nrlllion Orange County Tax Collector-Treasurer Robert Citron had some interesting figures for the county board of superviJOrs. In bis annual report to the board, dtron, the man ln charge or investine the billions that flow through the county treasury, said tbia week that more than $132. 7 million in interest eamin1• were reallied durin1 the ti.seal year that ended June 30. The average yield on funda held by county 1ov- ernment and the 170 other taxin1 a1encie1 (cities, school districts., etc.) that use the treasury was 15.09 percent, . more than two percenta1e points big her than the previous year. and rour points higher than that reallied by state 1overnment. Citron said interest accrued dw1q tiacal UMO was about $33 million more than accrued ln fiscal 1979. Citron said about $19 bUllon flowed lkrou1h the treasury ln rascal 11*>. about '2 bllHoa more than the previous year. Citron aald the treasury worked wttb 31 aecurlt)' dealers, 21 banka and seven savlnss and loan aa- aoclaUons in makine investment.a. Citron noted that, by swappin1 certain securities before their maturity dates, about S5 million more in intaest wu realized than would have been it the swapa were not made. Fly detection in Oregon low-key But when the toe man president of your water board leave• town, that ou1bt to live you some kind of clue. CERTAIN OBSERVERS of Harbor Area political affairs might suspect Mrs. Hertq la motivated to aeek appoint· ment to the water district post because she once advocated consolidating the water outfit with city government. But she says tbia is now a dead issue. · It might be mentioned that a water district board member gets paid 50 bucks per meeting. But I'm sure .that's not what motivates Mrs. Hertzog either. That's like saying you're willing to take $50 to endure four hours or the Chinese water torture. There's that word water again. I think Norma wants the job for the good of the community. That has to be lt. That MUST be it. Water district directors labor away withou( applause. Few people know they exist and fewer people appreciate the long hours a nd tedious duties they perform so we can all shave, shower or do the dishes. THE. ONLY TIME most of us even think about a water district is when a gusher appears outside in the sidewalk or when we crank on the tap and the stuff that comes out looks yellowish and s mells kind of funny. Pardon me now~ but I think I've got to go. My mouth feels like cotton and my lips are starting to crack. • • rt program hacked County approves $13 million output for impr,ovements By F&EDERfCK SCROEMEHL O( .. Oelty.......... .. A $2.7 million project for de· alan of a new, mucb-enlar&ed passenger terminal heada the lilt of John Way ne Airport budset items authorised by the Oranae County Board of Supervilors. The board. without debate, gave tentative approval Thurs· day to a $13.3 million spendln& program that wlll finance airport activities durln& the flt· cal year that began July 1. As proposed ln the recently approved airport master plan, the new terminal would conallt of about 213,000 square feel and would be spacious enou1h to handle 6.1 million passengers by 1990. The existing terminal, about one-sixth the size or the pro- posed facility, is considered ex· treQ'\ely oyercrowded by con- temporary airport standardf. It was designed to accommodate about 500,000 passengers annual- ly. About 2.5 million passengers used the airport during 1980. In all, the board gave ap- proval to $6.6 million in design and construction work. Included was a $1.5 million project to in· stall a new airfield drainage system that will be part. of a larger project to extend the airport's jet runway 737 feet to the north. The runway is now 5,700 feet long. Exten&!on of the runway will permit jets to lift off at a distance farther from homes south of the airport, and thua, help reduce noise lmpacta, ac· cordtn1 to airport olllclal1. The board authorized $12.8,000 tor deslen of the runway ex- tension ·b $91,000 for deslan of strenst enlne the runway <a project necessitated by the ln· troduction of the new, less nolly but heavier OC-9 Super 80 Janie Arnold on county women panel Janie Arnold o f Newport Beach, a civic activist and mother of tour, has been named to the Orange County Com- mission on the Status of Women. Mrs. Arnold was apP.Ointed by Supervtaor Thomaa Raley as 5th District representative to the group. She r eplaces Vivian Clecak of Laguna Beach, who recently resigned. An ll-year r esi dent of Newport Beach, Mrs. Arnold bas for the past two years served as executive director of New Oirec· jetllners}; '213,000 for d ... ,.., or new parkinl taclUUet ln the ao- called "clear zone" north or the runway a nd the '6an Dte10 Free1.iay; $295,000 for deslp or a new tramc clrculatlon system surrounding the airport; 1375,000 for desian ot taxiways and private aircraft tiedownt that would be located on the airport'• west side, and oth~r design ex- penditures for related, but rel· atlvely minor , p'roject.a . According to bud&et docu· ments, about $6.6 mUUon of the $13.3 million ln expenditures will be offset by fees the county col· lects from commercial air car· riers and concessionaires at the airport. The board also approved addl· lion of on e position to the airport 's existing 25-member staff. The airport operations super visor will work with private pilots, fixed base operators who provide repair service and pilots' schooling, and the commercial airlines. The budget for fiscal 1981 Is about $1 million less than the $14.3 million that was authorized for fi scal 1980, according to budget documents . tions, a residential facility in Hospital to pay Costa Mesa for care of female alcoholics. STANFORD lAPl Folk>w· The Commission on the Status ing a federal audit that found of Women is a county-sponsored overcharges and double billings, organization that examines Stanfqrd University Medical women's issues in Orange Coun· Center has agreed to repay Jl.5 ty and recommends policies to million in Medicare fees, it was the board of super visors. · revealed Wednesday, All PurpoM Table Set Stamng a laminated butcher block table by Wallace 0 measunng 24 )( 32" u~ It for drahing. crafting or (.. use 11 as an easel The table 1s supported by a concern (.I porary chrome ba!>e R•g 54 95 S38.88 Folding (.. chair. Reg 12 95 S9.88 Complete the cast wnh (.. dll ar1ist'~ flex lamp Reg 28 95 S 12.88 Total p<1ekage. Reg % 85 Aaron Brothen Featured Special S 58.88. ~~~~~~~J~~~~J~~~J" ..., .... FRIDAY, JULY,,, 1981 FEATURES COMICS 85 69 Actor /.:aurence Olivier says he's fit as a fiddle .. B5 ·Coalition seeks coast ·plan changes By STEVE MITCHELL O{ .. o_, ........... Armed with a position paper on the lrvlne Coast. a coalition of seven organizations will be in Los An1eles Tuesday to seek major changes to the Irvine Company development plan. Representatives of the Coall· tlon of Concerned Coastal Citizens, an organization formed ' specificalJy to address concerns about transportation problems on the Irvine Coast, will ride a bus to the State Coastal Com· mission meellni Tuesday to pre· sent alternatives lo the plan. Commissioners In J4ne gave the company a month to come up with solutions to four con· cerns raised by the commission staff about the 9,.00 acre coastal strip between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. The land use plan, as en· visioned by the Irvine Company, includes up to 74 percent open space; 2,000 dwelling units; a four·lane road at Pelican HHl; Sewage plans opposed by • supervisors Cla iming that concerns over sludge may hamper their efforts to locate a new landfill in Bee Canyon north Qf Irvine, the Orange County Board of Supervisors has agreed to op· pose plans for a sewage drying racility there. The 582 acres of rolling hills northwest of the Marines El T or o Air s tation has been labeled a potential site for a treatment plant by the Orange Co unty Sanitation District. But the county, which is un· deriaking condemnation pro· cedures to buy the land from the Irvine Company. can refuse to accommodate the plant. Supervisors said they fear New, mayor vote rerun July ~8 The Irvine City Council will attempt once again to select a new mayor at its July 28 meet· ing. In the meantime, David Sills will remain as acting mayor. a position to which he was ap- pointed May 19 when Art An· thony resigned as mayor. An· thony decided to continue as a councilman. It was Anthony 's absence Tuesday that resulted in a 2·2 council deadlock over the ques· lion of whi~h council member should be a ppointed to the politically important r ole or mayor . Anthony was on his way to Monterey in a mobile home while Mary Ann Gaido backed Larry Agran for mayor and Bill Vardoulis backed Sills' bia for . the year.tong mayoralty. The vote ended in a deadlock when Agran and Sills voted for tttemselves. Anthony is to be sentenced Ju· ly 22 in Harbor Municipal Court on tbe misdemeanor assault con· viction arising from an attack on his wife, Elaine. He is now at· tending a league of cities con· venllon in Monterey. He races a possible $1,000 fine and one year in jail. Anthony has said that he will resign fr:om the council if sentenced to jail. The council terms of Anthony and Agran extend through June of next year. T he high·vislbility role of mayor is considered valuable in a re·election campaign. Agran and Anthony have not yet re· vealed whether they intend to seek re-election. Some thing's fishy about the report ~n Irvine woma n, ala.-med Tburaday night when she couldn't find her expensive pet fish in her pond, called the police and filed a grand theft riah report. But. u 10me police house waa• joked, &he report wu proven ftlby thltm~. • J oyce Gutafaon called the poUce utlon this mornlnC and told them to cancel the 1rand tbell repon._ lbe had found her 150 1oldlllla IDd ..... • JEoi Rab oar .. toldftlll). TbeJ are worth II.•. ......... Mra. QUltalaoa 1tUl doetn't kitiw * •couldn't flnd tbem TllunW ........ When 1bewmtout to UM Uoat Mp pond to feed u.em . .... .,..&MJ ..... b6dlDI ..... "-~·"•&Mlri... - .-contro\l'ersy over the sewage treatment plant could endanger their chances for building the landfill. "l am cpncerned that if we do not go on record against at least the sludge operation that public pressure will force us to reopen our public hearings on the Bee Canyon landfill site and possibly cause us lo lose it," wrote Supervisor Thomas Riley in a memo to other board members. The Irvine City Council has long opposed the Bee Canyon project but has n o direct jurisdiction in the matter since the dump is to be built on unin- corporated county land outside city limits. Riley admitted that mounting pressure from Irvine residents -especially those who Ii ve in the Northwood section about three miles from the proposed site -caused hil'Q to reeom- mend opposition. The residents stepped up pres- sure after a May 28 hearine with SfDilaUon dlstrtct ,...-.en- lalives who said Bee Canyon was· a possible Sile for a sewer treatment plant. They said the sludge, or wastewater residue, could be economically disposed of by burying it in the adjacent landfill. Since then, on June 10. the dis- l r i ct 's board of directors clarified its policy. Members said they are also considering other means or disposal, lnclud· ing burning sludge for energy recovery and deep sea disposal. County officials don't want to lose the Bee Canyon site because it is intended lo replace the heavily used Coyote Canyon landfill -a lso near Irvine - when It fills in about four years. rour lane road at Sand Canyon, 2,000 hotel rooms, commercial buildings and offices. Commission officlaJs want to see Sand Canyon become a two- lane road and they want less commercial development. They say they also want guarantees on dedication of open and resale controls on affordable units. But members of the citizens' coalition say they have more concerns they believe should be addressed Tuesday. They will urge the commission to reject the Irvine Company plan and return It to the county for major modifications. Specifically. the or ganization rears parking on Coast Highway in Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach will be eliminated to al· low six lanes or traffic through those towns. This, despite assurances from the Irvine Company that re· m oval of parking is not fecom· mended. .., t ... \/ft .# The group also su11ests only 400 hotel rooms be constructed, Instead of 2,000; Sand Canyon Road be two lanes instead of four ; no offi ces or conference cente r be constructed ; com· mercial development be limited to 160,000 square feel, instead of the 550,000 square feet proposed; and that the height limit be set at 36 reel Instead or up to 10 stories. T he coastal commission will meet at the Amfac Hotel. 8601 Lincoln Blvd., near the airport, beginning at 10 a. m. The coalition is composed of members from seven organiza. lions, including Laguna Green· belt, Inc.; Friends of the Irvine Coast; Village Laguna ; Stop Polluting Our Newport, Inc. <SPON>; Coalition of Laguna Beach Neighborhood Associa- tions (CONA>: South Laguna Civic Association. and Broad· moor Homeowners Association. ,. Delly Pltll ,._ llJ LH ~-1 FAMOUS ROCK _; In case you were wondering, this is the boulder for which Irvine's Turtle Rock Community got its name. It's just east or University High School, near the in· tersec~on of Campus and Turtle Rock drives. Some say it looks like a turtle, others aren't so sure. The fence is to dis· courage would·be Turtle Rock-climbers. New jet1=ffit;f due at airport Aug. 14 Republic Air lines to inaugur ate DC-Super 80 service flights at Wayne Republic Airlines will begin DC·9 Super 80 service at John Wayne Airport Aug. 14, a com- pany official said today. According to spokesman Walt Hellman, the Mlnneapolis·base.d carrier will take delivery of the first or 14 of the new. jetliners sometime between Aug. 1 and Aug.10. "In lerft!s of noise product.ion and fuel efficiency. it's the best plane JlVai lable," Hellman said. Republic now operates 12 flights per day•rrom the airport, serving Las Vegas, Phoenix and more distant 'de&linations ln its nationwide system. Re public is the nation's fifth largest air car· rier. AirCal , which operates 25 flights each day from Orange County. has taken deli very or two or the new $20 million aircraft. New civi c center urged for Irvine The rapidly growing City or Irvine would be betler off fman· cially by investing in a large new Civic Center rather than continuing lo lease space to ex· pand the present one. accordini to a report submitted to the Irvine City Council. Assuming a 5 percent inflation rate, lbe city will spend $52.7 million in leasing costs by the year 2009, according to the re· port submitted Tuesdav niaht. On the other hand, a Civic Center meeting all of the city's future space needs could be built for $38.8 million, according to the city-commissioned report of the Blurock Partners hip, Newport Beach. The city is considering build- ing such a Civic Center to houae t h e expanding municipal bureaucracy near the lntenec· Uon of Jeffrey Road and Barran- ca Parkway. FundirJg for the facility hasn't been completely identified. However, city financlnc olftciall are investl1aUn1 1harin 1 t.be ce>1t of the f aclllt.Y with otben that mipt wapt to participate hi the bulldln1 and use of tbe faelUty. Tb• city also would u.e money from the sale ol the preMftt etty· ball on Jamboree JloH to t&md the project. l rvlne cUf voten will 1et a cbance to 11ve their opinion on th proJlft durins a Nov. I ad· ·~ eWeUen oa the snau.r. Tiiie ~ wu aubmlu.d I.a Tuetday. manufactured by McDonnell Douglas Corp. , Hellman said Republic expects to receive one Super 80 per month between August and November. 1982. He said the carrier will con· linually ir\crease Super 80 service at John Wayne Airport as more of the new planes are received. "We want to use t hem in noise sensitive locations." Hellman ex· plained. Frontier Airl i n es, which operates two flights each day from Orange County, also is purchasing the Suoer 80s. Western Airlines, the fourth car· rier now serving Orange Co11nty, is n ot purchas ing t he new aircraft. Pacific Southwest Airlines. which is authorized to begin service In Orange County Oct. 1, has Super 80s in its fleet and has promised to use them exclusively on Orange County routes. Use of the Super 80s, which are considered quieter than the older DC ·9-~ and Boeing 737s, is a cen- terpiece or county government's plan to reduce noise impacts on persons li ving beneath jet de· parturetracks. , Orange Cont DAIL V PILOT/Friday. July 17, 1981 HOW DRY IT 18 ••. It was absolutely amui.n1 to plck up the paper only yesterday and learn that one of our bright, informed a.nd veteran cliy of- ficials here alone the cout II actually seeking another elective offtce. The peraon involved la Norma Hertzog, two-term Cotta 11 .. city coun- cilwoman. first woman to ever have served on the Mesatown council and the city's first female mayor. Earlier, she had an- nounced that this second term will be her last on the municipal body politic upon the Mesa. Now, however, we .... noo learn from news dispatches that Mrs. Hertzog bas aspirations for lower office. She wants to get herself seated on a water board. Do you know what directors do on water boards? WELL, THEY SIT AROUND in meetings and take one of the wettest ~ /'w\ 111 IURPlllf ,~If subjects there is and turn it into something so dry it could crack. You labor through a water board meeting for about six hours and alter the first ~ minutes, your mouth feels like -you've been chewing on cardboard. Water board meetings are so dull that you can sit there and drift off into the Land of Nod faster than Samuel I. Hayakawa. Directors at these meetings drone on about capacities in acre feet, lineAr re- quirements for pipelines, rates per 1,000 gallons, bond surcharges and good heavens, that's all the exciting stuff. JUST WAIT UNTIL they get down to the routine matters, like reading the minutes of the last hoer and hummer. It develops, however, that the Mesa Consolidated Water District currently has a vacancy upon its Board of Direc- tors. This was created when the presi· dent of the board, Eugene Bergeron, re· signeq. at the first of this month to take a post -.yith another water outfit in the San Joaquin Valley. Bergeron obviously likes water sub· jects. County's interest, $132 nilllion Orange County Tax Collector-Treasurer Robert Citron had some interesting figures for the county board of supervisors. In his annual report to the board, C.,'itron, the man in charge of investing the billions that flow through the county treasury, said ttlia week that more than $132.7 million in interest earnin111 were realized during t,he fiscal year that ended June 30. The average yield on funds held by county •ov- emment and the 170 other taxlnl agencies (citleJi"' school districts, etc.) that use the treasury was 15.09 percent, more than two percentage points higher than the previous year. and four points higher than that reallied by state government. Citron said interest accrued 'during fiscal 1980 was about $33 million more than accrued ln fiscal 1979. Citron said about $19 billion flowed through the treasury in fiscal 1980, about S2 billion more than the previous year. Citron said the treasury worked with 31 1ecurity dealers, 21 banks and seven savings and loan as· sociations in makinl investment.a. Citron noted that, by swappin1 certain securities before their maturity dates, about $5 million more in interest was realized than would have been if the swaps were not made. Fly detection in Oregon low-key SALEM , Ore. (AP> -<>re1on hat opted for a low-key approach to poalble bal11tiaUon from the maraud1n1 Mecliterraneu fruit Ry cjloolin1 only to cbeck papen of fnllt·bau.len coming into the state. Meanwhile, California oftlcla11 intemlfled ef· forta lo annihilate the frult-dMtro)'lnt Insect that hH lnl•ted an ..-ea of San Franclffo. Jobn Vattena, 1pollnman for the Ore1on Department of A1rtculture, •aid U.S. 0eper111M11t of Aotculture iDlpect.on wen to ched ,Papen of traeien at port• of Hl'1 at . A1,hland and Klamath Palll in Southern OfetGD. bqlnntnc at DOOll toda)' . .. WblD a truck eo .. la to be..._.. and II carrrllll fndt or pnduce, a UIDA •Ha II• wW be ....... at .... tnaekrl 11111 ot ............ ... mlllt llne," Valtena 111111. "It will .peeuy wbat be fl ••,"••and wllerW ft came from. • U It II comln1 from an1 of th ..,_ CcalllillU> eountlll .W UIDA .......... lie will ull for a certlftHl• •r IU•P from ........................ ..,, ........ ,t .. ~ .............................. ... r.-s· ~'* ..... ....,....hit ·• U tllat'• ta.. cue, t.bl trieker '°" on bit way .. normal," be laid, ••If tb•r• 11 no prMf of laapecUon or ............. lMpeetior ·~·•ib' Mil tie _. = 8Dllf1 u.e w•1-s ... , Ill u.e .... _" ftil ,,. ... ,,..., ................ 1Mel11 .. far .... ,V...._NIAL ............................... ,, fntt k 11dm'E,'' ... said. of water ·Airport program hacked County approves $13 million output for improvements But when the top man pre,ldent of your water board leaves town, that ought to give you some kind of clue. CERTAIN OBSEllVEllS of Harbor Area political affairs might suspect Mrs. Hertmc ls motivated to seek appoint- ment to the water district post because she once advocated consolidating the water outfit with city government. But she says this is now a dead issue. It might be mentioned that a water district board member gets paid 50 bucks per meeting. But I'm sure that's not what motivates Mrs. Hertzog either. That's like saying you're willing to take $50 to endure four hours of the Chinese water torture. There's that word water again. I think Norma wants the job for the good of the community. That has to be it. That MUST be it. Water district directors labor away without applause. Few people know they exist and fewer people appreciate the long hours and tedious duties they perform so we can all sh.ave, shower or do the dishes. THE ONLY TIME most of us even think about a water district is when a gusher appears outside in the sidewalk or when we crank on the tap and the stuff that comes out looks yellowish and smells kind of funny. Pardon me now, but I think I've got to go. My mouth feels like cotton and my lips' are starting to crack. ly FREDERICK SCHOEMl!HL Of .. CWly,.... ..... A $2.7 mUUon project ror de· algn of a new. much-enJareed passenger terminal heads the list ot John Wayne Airport budset items authorized by lhe Orange County Bolrd of Supervisors. The board, without debate, gave tentative approval Thurs- day to a $13.3 million spending pro gram that will finance airport activities durlne the fis· cal year lhat began July 1. As proposed in the recently approved airport master plan, the new termlnal would consist of about 213,000 square feet and would be spacious enough to handle 6.1 million passengers by 1990. The existing terminal. about one·sixth the size of the pro- posed faciJlly, is considered ex· tremely overcrowded by con· temporary airport standards. It was designed to accommodate about 500,000 passengers annual· ly. About 2.5 million passengers used the airport during 1980. In all. the board gave ap· proval to $6.6 million in design and construction work. Included was a $1.5 million project to in· stall a new airfield drainage system that will be part of a larger project to extend the airport's jet runway 737 feet to the north. The runway is now s, 700 feet long. Extension of the runway will permit jets to lift off at a dis tance farther from homes south of the airport, and thut, help reduce noise impacts, ac· cording to airport officials. The board authoriied $128,000 for design of the runway ex· tension; $91,000 for design of strengthening the runway (a project necessitated by the in· troduction of the new, less noisy but •heavier DC·9 Super 80 Janie Arno-d on county women panel Janie Arnold of Newport Beach. a civic activist and mother of four, has been named to the Orange County Com· mission on the Status of Women. Mrs. Arnold was appointed by Supervisor Thomas Riley as ~th District representative to the group. She replaces Vi vian Clecak of Laguna Beach, who recently resigned. An 11 ,year r esident of Newport Beach, Mrs. Arnold has for the past two years served as executive director of New Direc· tions, a residential facility in Costa Mesa for care of female alcoholics. The Commission on the Status of Women is a county-sponsored organization that examines women's issues in Orange Coun· ty and recommends policies to the board or supervisors . jetliners>; $213,000 for deslsn of new parking facilltlu in U.. IO- called "clear zone" north o( the runway and the San Oie10 Freeway; $295,000 for desl1D of a new traffic circulation ayalem s urrounding tbe aJrport; $315.000 for dealen ot taidways and private aircraft tledowna that would be located on the airport's west side, and other design ex· penditures for related, but rel· alively minor. projects. According to budget docu- ments. about $6.6 million of the $13.3 million tn expenditures will be offset by fees the county col· lects from commercial air car· rlers and concessionaires at the airport. , Ttte board also approved addl· lion of o ne position to the airport's existing 25-member st a rt. The airport operations s upe r vis or will wor k 'with p r i v a t e p i l o ts . f i x e d base operators who provide repair se rvice and pilots' schooling, and the commercial airlines. The budget for fiscal 198.l is about Sl million less than the $14.3 million that was authorized for fis cal 1980. according to budget documents Hospital to pay STANFORD IAP> -Follow· ing a rederal audit that found overcharges and double billings, Stanford University Medical Center has agreed to repay $1.5 million in Medicare fees. it was revealed Wednesday. oooo ~oo ooJod~J~~~~~~oooooooovooooJ~o~ooooJ~o~~ c 0 c Fold l+.-v ArttR'e Set All Purpoee Table Set O Featunng a completely ad1ustable and foldable 24 x Stamng a laminated butcher block table by Wallace () 30• la mrnated butcher bkx:k 1able by Hash llle measunng 24 x 32" Use 11 for drafting. crafting or sturdy steel base has a brown baked enamel finish (..I USf? 11 as an easel The table 1s supported by a contem (..; Reg. 44 95 $34.88 Classic folding cha11 In match· () -~~~l~~~li~~~fl~~~~~ porary chrome base Reg 54 95 S38.88 Folding ing brown and other colors too Re9 12.95 19.88 (.. chair. Reg 12 95 S9.88 Compl~e the casl wrth Art1St0s flex lamp also in brown and other colors (.. an arttSt\ flex lamp Reg 28 95 S 12.88 Total Reg 28 95 s J2.88 Total package. Reg 86 95 , . A Cast of Paintings at lf2 Price package. Reg 96 85 · Aaron Brothen Featured Special S54.88. ~ Aaron Brothen Featured Speclal SS8.88. ~ O O \,;) O Q O O ...; >.J ..J ,.) 0 ..J ..J .J ~ ..J (. Presenttng paintings at a pnce both cnllcs and viewers will ap· ( ~ ~ ~ ..J ~ ..J ~ ..J ..J ~ ~ ..J ~ ~ ..J ..J ..J (.. (.. prectate Now you can purchase these onginal pain11ngs. framed C. ~ "'1-f/11 •-"'• or unframed Im 1ust 1·2 the ongtnal pnce And 1f you select an un (. ft)Na~Wf: (. framed painting 1ust ftnd a frame to fit and the frame 1s yours fOT ~ " • I L 1 l pnce too (. · (. The troupe of pa1n11ngs ts huge. and the cast of characters in· '- • J, I. ID (. eludes seascapes landscapes s11ll ltfes. abstracts and many more ( bi::I,...__~· (. From big to small you"ll ~e them all (. (." This 1 2 pnce painting specl<'Cular ts 1n tic; final days. so hurry on over to Aaron Brothers Th ts ts one featurt-you won ·1 want 10 mlSS1 l. (I (. (; (I ~ ~ '-vv..J 0 .J 0 ;) ..j .J ~ ..J ,J ~ ~ ,.) ..J ..J ~ ..J ~(., .::=::::;-;====:;;::==:::;;;;;;:==:;;;;;;:::::::::;::::=::!., .. ' ••-~ I_,,..• • ""-\# ....... - IUlll l:l llT By STEVE MITCHELL 0( .. 0..., ........... Armed with a position paper on the Irvine Coast , a coalition of seven organizations will be In Los Angeles Tuesday to seek major changes to the Irvine Company development plan. Representatives of the Coali· lion of Concerned Coastal Cltizena, an organization formed specifically to address concerns about transportation problems on the Irvine Coast, will ride a bus to the State Coastal Com· mission meeting Tuesday to pre- sent alternatives to the plan. Commissioners In June gave the company a month to come up with solutions to four con· cerns raised by the commission staff about the 9,400 acre coastal str ip between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. The land use plan, as en· visioned by the Irvine Company, includes up lo 74 percent open space; 2.000 dwelling units; a four-lane road at Pelican Hill; FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1981 FEATURES BS COMICS 89 four lane road at Sand CaJlyon, 2,000 hotel rooms, commercial buildings and offices. Commission officials want to see Sand Canyon become a two- lane road and they want less commercial development. They say they also want guarantees on dedication of open and resale controls on affordable units. 6ut members of the citiiens' coalition say they have more concerns they believe should be addressed Tuesday. Employees-seek clout Newport city workers disgruntled over stalled talks By STEVE MARBLE ot .. Dellyflt ........ Members of two Newport Beach e mployee g roups that represent nearly 250 wol\kers to- day were threatening to seek as· sistance from "heavyweight un· ions" lo settle pay disputes. The Newport Beach Employees League, represent· ing blue-collar workers, and the Professional and Technical Employees Association. consist· ing or planners. engineers and librarians, are the only city groups that have no signed con· tracts with the city. Edward Burt, president of the 185-person blue-collar group, claims his members are "ir· ritated and disgruntled" by stalled pay talks. He said some members want to bring in outside help, possibly a union that would agree to as· sist the workers. Chris Gustin. president of the professional group, s ays his members a re .. so upset they're out looking for other jobs and talking about quitting ... Parking r e served on Newport Island The 89 street parking spots computed to exist on tiny N ewpdrt Island are soon to be reserved for residents only. Parking permits will be print- ed and sold lo residents on the triangle-shaped Island that juts into the west end of Newport Harbor. St.ins telling tourists and be~hgoers to keep their cars out will be erected at the en- trance lo the is land. These moves were agreed to this week after island residents complained that sightseers and tourists are taking all the island parking spots. William Aldridge, president of the homeowners' group, says when island dwellers come home at night, there's no place to park. Nobody in the city, though, is quite s ure why tourists or b'eachgoers would want to end up on Newport Island. "There is some mud along the water out there that could be called a beach,'' says city traffic engineer Rich Edmonston. "I suppose someone might want to visit it." Residents on the is land. though, claim that during the summer months visitors are so anxious to get to the ~aches along the peninsula that they'll park anywhere. Game arcade due in Mesa d espite ban Chuck E. Cheese wlll s lide his electronic games into Costa Mesa soon despite a pending urgency ordinance banning in· stallation of such devices in the city. Planning Commissioners this week approved a permit sought by Pizza Time Theater, Inc. or Encino to open a combination pizza palace and family game arcade in the Harbor Center sbopplnc plaza. The franchise operation " features 8-fool, mascot rat: Chuck E. Cheese. It will be a fam ly entertain· ment center combining a restaurant with token and coin· operated games and amuse· ments, plannen reported. A slmllar center operates in Huntiq!Gn Beach at Edwards SU'eet md McFadden Avenue. Citr=cll memben voted uaa.n ly June 15 to ban in· stalladon of all electronic 1ames . ia arc-. or other busl1M118 until a new ordinance 1ovemln1 tlaeir operaUon la .drafted and approved. · The four-month ban could be ••tended if llaff memben fall to draft tbe proposed new laws wlu.tn .. D9l'tod pswertbed, of. ftct&la..a. Pl....._Co_...._. ... dint.ell · tiat appronl of ttie a.~ ~·•• operatloD at mo w •"· la not tubJect te au ea •Ill'• ..,. beca .... .,. U.. IW die fadlllJ ..,. lor to ar••DCJ or· ...... '" . Newport city council members agreed to try the resident-only parking system for the re· m ainder of this summer and next s ummer. Visitors would be allowed to park if they have proper permits. Several council members, though, suggested it likely will be only a period of time before the Coastal Commission learns of the parking scheme and com- plains. Councilman Don Slrauss, a res- ideqt of Lido Isle which has parking p·roblems of its own, suggested the commission might see the parking move as a way of malting the island private. Mayor J ackie Heather pointed out that the commission also might force the city to get coa stal permits to erect the signs. She says the commission u sually feel s that s ign s represent ·•new structures." Several years ago the com- mission put bags over a series of street signs that city officials in Huntington Beach had erected on the beach along Pacific Coast Highway. When the city threatened to take the matter to court. the commission removed the bags and dropped the issue. Similar fights. said Newport City Attorney Hugh Coffin, have erupted over street sweeping signs on Lido Isle and volleyball poles on the beach in West Newport. Alth,ough the 00-member pro- fessional group has not signed a new pact with city negotiators, city council members this week approved a resolution giving members or the group a 9.5 per· cent increase in salary and benefits. Only Mayor Jackie Heather voted against the resolution. City Manager Robert Wynn says that as far as tbe city is concerned, negotiations with the pro fessional group are at an end. Wynn says the group re- fused to seek arbitration on the dispute. Gustin says he is irritated by the city's move. "The city got what it wanted," he says, "negotiations were just a joke. They never took us seriously and it never really matteted what we wanted." He claims that, technically his group does not have a contract.. But he agrees that negotiations ar e finis hed and there is no bargaining room left. "We got shafted." he says. "It's that simple." With both groups, the area of dispute Is identical. The groups argue that the city is improperly interpreting a city policy that says employees will be paid comparably with the three top- paying cities in the county. Newport officials selected Huntington Beach, Santa Ana and Anaheim for their yardsUck. But members of both groups contend the city's salary survey was not accurate and did not survey enough job classifica- tions . City negotiators respond that the salary survey was done as it has always been done. They point out that the associations representing police. firemen and other workers h ad no com · plaints. Burt, the blue-collar leader, says his group hired a private firm to run a salary survey and di s covered that some job classlficalions in Newport are as mu c h a s 25 p e r cent below similar pos itions in the other three cities. The· blue·co llar group is scheduled to meet next week with city negotiators in an at- tempt to iron out differences. The group has been offered a 9.1 percent increase in salary and benefits but is asking for a total package of 11 percent. They will urge the commission to reject the Irvine Company plan and return it to the county for major modifications. Specifically, the organization fears parking on Coast Highway in Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach will be eliminated lo al· low six lanes of traffic through those towns. This, despite assurances from the Irvine Company that re- moval of parking is not recom· mended. Actor Laurence Olivier says he's fit as a fiddle .. 85 The group also su11ests only 400 hotel rooms be constructed, instead of 2,000: Sand Canyon Road be two lanes instead of four; no offices or conference center be constructed; com- mercial development be limited to 160,000 square feet, instead of the 550,000 square feet proposed: and that the height limit be set at 36 feet instead of up Lo 10 stori~. The coastal commission will meet at the Amfac Hotel. 8601 .. Lincoln Blvd., near the aii-.,ort, beginning at 10 a .m . The coatltion is composed or members from seven organiza· lions, Including Laguna Green· belt, Inc.; Friends of the Irvine Coast; Village Laguna; Slop Polluting Our Newport, Inc. (SPON); Coalition or Laguna Beach Neighborhood Assoeia· lions (CONA); South Laguna Civic Association, and Broad· moor Homeowners Association. SWINGING AT FASHION ISLAND -It was wall to wall with swing music lovers who turned out 12,000 strong Thursday night to hear the music of Les Brown and his Band of Diiiy ...... P..-• CMrtM..., Renown. Free summer concerts will be held at the Fashion Island stage court on Thurs- day evenings through August 20 so the swing- ing has just begun. H e r tzo g w on't run f o r water board Costa Mesa City Coun · cilwoman Norma Hertzog has taken her hat out of the ring. Mrs. Hertzog said Thursday she won't seek appointment to the Mesa Consolidated Water District board seat vacated when former district president Eugene 0 . Bergeron resigned to take a job out of Orange County. <See Just Coasting, Page B2, for earli er comment). ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Supe r 80 jets due in August Republic Airlines will begin DC-9 Super 80 service at John Wayne Airport Aug. 14, a com- pany official said today. According to spokesman Walt Hellman, the Minneapolis-based ~arrier will take delivery of the first o_f 14 of the new, jetliners sometime between Aug. 1 and Aug.10. ''In terms of noise Production and fuel efficiency, it's the best plane available.•· Hellman said. Republic now operates 12 fligh_ts per day from the airport, serving Las Vegas, Phoenix and more distant destinations in its nationwide system. Republic is the nation's fifth largest air car- rier. AirCal, which operates 25 flights each day from Orange County. has taken deli very of two of the new $20 million aircraft. manufactured by McDonnell Douglas Corp. Hellman said Republic expects to receive one Super 80 per month ~tween August and November, 1982. He said the carrier will rnn. linually increase Super 80 service al John Wayne Airport as more of the new planes are received. "We want lo use them in noise sensitive locations," Hellman ex- plained. Frontier Airlines, which operates two nights each day from Orange County, also is purchasing the Super 80s. Western Airlines, the fourth car- rier now serving Orange County, is not purchasing the new aircraft. R ex Bar tle tt rites set for The councilwoman 's action followed advice from Costa Mesa City Attorney Tom Wood, she said, who warned that dty law indicates ~he could not !\old her city post and sit on lbe water board. · his home city "If I were challenged," she said, "I could lose my council seat, he advised." EarUer, Mrs. Hertiog said she had been told by other officials she could hold her council seat, up for re-election next April. and the waler board post simultaneously. Six other Mesa Verde a1 ea res- idents 'of Colla Mesa now vie tor the post vacated by Bergeron. The four remaining wat&' board members wUl select one of those six applicanu for the post following public lnterviewa with the candidates on July 23, 1aid Karl Kemp, dislrlct na1er. be succaaf\d candidate will tbe vac•t.ed 8'at· unW No- bet' wbeli he or 1he mutt 1tand for election under 1ute law1. · T!le winner of November't ballotlnc will 1erve out . ....,..,,.,· ..... m tba .. Funeral services for long-time Newport Beach realtor Rex ·A. Bartlett, who died Wednesday at -Hoa1 Hospital al the age of 88, will be held this weekend in his hometown of Oklahoma City. Bartlett, who lived on Lido Isle, bad real estate offices in Polly~. Rancho Miraee and II\ 'ili resort town of Incline ,flu~•. Nev. • A )ormer presldeni of the Hollywood Real Estate Board, Bartlett recently bad been te-*" real estate classes at taae· ~o4l•1e of the Desert in Rancho Mira1e, wbere he owned a hou.e. GancMcJates seeking \he b9aJ'.CI -Jot, ~Cb pays $50 a meew, -·~·· . -Richard Christman, '2, vice president and general man.,er of Cal·Quip Co.; -Mark Sloate, a ~:~lliul~k•ell International • 57, av. t an ~~r the~~ Ci tz;1C9m~ Branin, 41, PNlldebt of 0 . W. Maintenance Inc. f)f Santa Ana; An aviatk>n bUff and the.owner of '9Veral planes, Bartlett wu an avtator d'*""C World War II and later aerved •• director ~ m1ht tr.udnl for FIJlnl TlPt Unes. He 11 aurvl•ed b' IUI Wile Em· ma; a brOIMI', To• of Nft York Cit)'·ead .,...,...., ..... Gocke ol Olll ... • ~;, Ht alllolllt~tl ad~, Carole ._. ,;•4: tU.• I I 1 I I • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, July 17, 1981 BOW D&Y IT 18 ••• It was abtol~lln1 to pick ur tbe paper · only y y and learn tha one of our brt1b~ lnfonned and veteran city of. ficltJa here along the cout ii actually 1eeiln1 another elective omee. The person Involved la Norma Hertq, two-term Cotta ...a city eoun- cllwoman, first woman to ever have served on the Mesatown council and the city's first female mayor. Earlier, she bad an- nounced that tbil second term will be her last on the municipal body politic upon the Mesa. ... I • f -"~ 't -t I • ... Now, however, we Ml•TUe learn from news dispatches that Mn. Hertzog has aspirations for lower office. She wants to get berseU seated on a water board. Do you know what direct.on do on water boards? WELL, TREY SIT AROUND in meetings and take one of the wettest ~~ l"w' lDI lllPllll ,~r, • subjects there is and turn it into something so dry it could crack. You labor through a water board meeting for about six hours and after the first 20 minutes, your mouth feels like you've been chewing on cardboard. Water board meetings are so dull that you can sit there and drift off into the Land of Nod faster than Samuel I. Hayakawa. Directors at these meetings drone on about capacities in acre feet, linear re- quirements for pipelines, rates per 1,000 gallons, bond surcharges and good heavens, that's all the exciting stuff. JUST WAIT UNTIL they get down to the routine matters, like reading the minutes of the last hoer and hummer. It develops, however, that the Mesa Consolidated Water District currently has a vacancy upon its Board of Direc- tors. 1bis was created when the presi- dent of the bQard, Eugene Bereeron, re- signed at the first of this month to take a post with another water outfit in the San Joaquin Valley. Bergeron obviously likes water sub- jects. County's interest, $132 nilllion Orange County Tax CoUector-Treuurer Robert Citron bad some interesting figures for the county board of supervisors. Jn his annual report to the board, Citron, uie man ln cbaree of investing the billions tbat now through the county treasury. aal4 tb1I week that m9re than $132. 7 million in interest earnings were reallied~ the fiscal year that ended June 30. The averai\ yietd on funds held by county gov· ernment and the 170 other lnlnl acendn (cities, school districts, etc.) that UH the treasury was lS.ot percent, more than two perceataee points hlaher than. the previous year, and rour points blaber than that realized by state aovemment. Cilnlo said interest accf\Md du.rial filcal 1980 was about $33 million more than accl"Ued in fiscal 1979. Citron said about $19 billion fiowed throu1h the treaaury In faacal 1980, about S2 billion more than the previous year. Citron sald·the treasury worked with 31 security dealers, 21 banks and seven aavlnCs and loan as- aoclatlonl in makinl inveatmentl. Citron noted that, by awapplna certain seeurtttes before their maturity datea, about $5 mllli&i more in interest wu realized than would bave been if the 1wape were not made. But when the top man president of your water board leaves town, that ought to Jive you some kind of clue. CERTAIN OBSEJlVERS of Harbor Area political affairs mieht suspect Mrs. Hel'llOI is motivated to seek appoint- ment to the water district poet because she once advocated consolidating the water outfit with city government. But she says this ts now a de'a<l issue. It might be mentioned that a water district board member gets paid 50 bucks per meeting. But I'm sure that's not what motivates Mrs. Hertzog either. That's like saying you're willing to take $50 to endure four hours of the Chinese water torture. There's that word water again. I Utink Norma wants the job for the J.OO<I of the community. That has to be 1t. That MUST be it. Water district directors labor away without •applause. Few people know they exist and fewer people appreciate the· lone hours and tedious duties they perform so we can all shave, shower or do the dishes. THE ONLY TIME most of us even think about a water district is ~hen a gusher appears outside in the sidewalk or when we crank on the tap and the stuff that comes out lookS yellowish and smells kind of funny. · Pardon me now, but I think I've got to go. My mouth feels like cotton and my lips are starting to crack. Fold -.Y Artl9*'• Set Featunng a complet.ely adjustable and foldable 24 x ;30• laminated butc~ block table by Hirsh The ~urdy steel base has a _broW(I baked enamel flnlsh. rt program hacked County approves $13. million output for improvements lb Fa£DERJCK SCHOEMEHL °' .. ..., ........... A S2.'7 mllUon project for de· sign ot a new. much·enJarged paasencer terminal beads the list of John Wayne Airport budaet items authorized by the •Orange County Board of Supervisors. . The board, without debate, gave tentative approval Thurs· day to a $13,3 mUllon spending program that will finance airport activities durlng the fia· cal year that began July 1. As proposed In the recently approved airport master plan. the new terminal would consist of about 213,000 square feet and would be spacious enough to handle 6.1 million passengers by 1990. The existing terminal, about one·sixth the size of the pro· posed faclllty, is considered ex· tremely overcrowded by con· temporary airport standards. It was designed to accommodate about S00,000 passengers annual· ly. About 2.5 million passengers used the airport during 1980. In all, the board gave ap· proval to $6.6 million in design and construction work. Included was a $1.5 million project to In· stall a new airfield drainage system that will be part' of a la rger project to extend the airport's jet runway 737 feet to the north. The rWlway is now 5,700 feet long. Extension of the runway will permit jets to lift off at a d istance farther rrom homes south of the airport, and lhua, help reduce noise lmpacta, ac· cordlni to airport officials. The board authorii~ $128.000 for design of the runway ex· tension; $91,000 for desicn of stren1thenlng the runway (a project necessitated by the In· troducUon of t.he new, leas nolsy but heavier DC·9 Super 80 Janie Arnold on county women panel J anle Arnold of Newport Beach, a civic activist and mother of four, has been named t o the Orange County Com· mission on the Status of Women. Mrs. Arnold was appointed by Supervisor Thomas Riley as 5th District representative to the group. She r eplaces Vivian Clecak of Laguna Beach, who recently resigned. An ll·yea r r esid e nt of Newport Beach. Mrs. Arnold has for the past two years served as executive director of New Direc· lions. a residential facility in Costa Mesa for care of female alcoholics. The Commission on the Status of Women is a county.sponsored o rg a nization that examines women's issues in Orange Coun· ly and recommends policies to the board of supervisors Jetliners); $213,000 for dealp of new parkin1 faciUtlea In ~ '°" called "clear zone" north \he runway and the San D e•o Freeway; 1295,000 for deaien of a new traffic circulation l)'l~m surrounding the airport; $316,.080 for desisn of taxiways and private ajrcrafl tiedowns .chat would be located on the airport's west side, and other deaian ex· penditures for related, but rel· atively minor. projects. According to budget dq,:u· ments, about $6.6 million ot the $13.3 million In expenditures will be offset by fees the county col· lects from commercial air car· riers and concessionaires at the airport. The board also approved addi· lion of one pos ition to the airport's existing 25·member staff. The airport operati9ns supervisor will work with private pilots, fixed base operators who provide repair service and pilots' schooling, and the commercial airlines. The budget for fiscal 1~ is about $1 million less than the $14.3 million that was authorized for fiscal 1980, according to budget documents. Hospital to pay STANFORD <AP> Follow· ing a federal audit that fo\&lld overcharges and double billiJ)gs. Stanford University Medical Center has agreed to repay Sl.5 million in Medicare fees, it was revealed Wednesday AU Purpoee Table Set Stamng a laminated butcher block table by Wallace C measuring 24 x 32" Use 11 for drahmg. crafting or (.. () use 1t as an easel The table is supponed by a contem· 0 (; porary chrome base Reg 54 95 S38.88 Folding -~~;:3!~~~t:J~~~~~~~l::~~_J (. chair. Reg 12 95 S9.88 Complete the cast With (. Reg. 44.95 134.88. Classic folding chair In match· Ing brown and other oolors too Reg. 12 95 S9.88 Artist's flex lamp also in brown and other colors Reg 28 95 U2.88. Total package. Reg 86 95 A Cut of Paintings at lf2 Price '- . A.on Brothen Futured Spedal 154.88. . (... an an1st s flex lamp Reg 28 95 S 12.88 Total (.. 1 package Reg 96 85 O (,) O O O O O v ..J v ..;> .J ..J ~ ..; \,,,) (. Presenung paintings at a pnce both cntics and viewers will ap-(. (.. preciate N0\1.1 you ciin purchase these ong1nal paintings framed (... ""'-/III .... ., or unframed lor JUS1 1 i the ongmal pnce And 11 you select an un lntna~'r:: (.framed painting 1ust find a frame to ftt and the frame 1s yours for '- ~ • • I (... 1 2 pnce too '- . '-' Thi? troupe of paintings ts huge . and the cast of characters 1n-'-~ • '-I.. ID (.. eludes seascapes. landscapes. sllll hfes. 11bs1Tacts and many more (. 'I~~~~!:' (. From big to small. you'll see them all (.. Jiii (.' This 1 1 pnce painting spectaculcY ism us final days. so hurry on '- (... over to Aaron Brothers This is one feature you won't want to m1.SS1 (J ~ ~ ~ Aaron Brothen Featwed Specl-1 SS8.88. ~..j,J~~~~~~~~..J~~~,J~ (.. l,j 0 ..J ..) 0 .J v ~ ,J ..J .J .J ~ ,J .J ..; ..; ..J ..J ..; ..; (., .'.:::~==~;:::=:::::~;;:::::::;;;~=:::;;::'.==::::.. n ' .... _. __ _.,._. __ 0 ' ......... ·-.--.----- N Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, July 17, 1981 ,,_ ____________ _._ ___________ ~-----------------:-1" NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS I OUOTATio-t INC~'-'01 Tit ADI, ON fMa MIW 'fOll•, MIOW"l,T, 11'~1,.C, ,IW, IOITON, DITltOIT A•O CtltCl••ATI "OC• ••c• ........... o ltlf'OltT•o •• TMI ....... NOINHt•U ' DOW Jori8S Final Up 3.42 Cloalng 951.90 ' Books tell times Alfred A. Knopf, one of the mosl presti,ioua names la American pubJilhinJ, will be out this fall wlth a new book by Journalist David Halberstam, "The Breaks of the Game." Halberatam'a previO\a two boob were "The Powers That Be," lncillve pro- files of media aiantJ, and "The Beat and the Brightest," a devaatatin' analyala of the Eastern establishment types who led us into the Vietnam ad· venture. And "The Breaks of the Game"? It's a book about pro basketball. It's come to that; basketball as a metaphor of life. Knopf calls it "Halberstam's most powerful. re· vealing and riveting book.·· Also coming fr,om Knopf is the 11th annual "Kahlil Gibran Diary," always a hot seller. Knopf has high hopes too for its "1982 Miss Piggy Calen· dar." Knopf, in· ~ cidentalJy, ls lr. part of Random -;i" o House, .which in 'i _' -! / ~:, turn as n ow ~~ o w n e d b y ::::11-. ... .._ _____ _ ~ueb~:a~i~~s~ lllTll 111 .. ITZ ha ving been transferred there last year by RCA. which tired of the publishing business. The books issued by publishers clue us in to the tenor of the times. Here's~ sampling of other titles coming your way this fall : -"World-of·the·East Vegetarian Cookine," by Madhur Jaffrey, another entry from Knopf, which as- sures us tbat this is the book vegetarian epicures have been waiting for ... "Betty Crocker's Microwave Cookbook," from Knopf's mother, Random House. Just what you would expect since nearly 20 percent of -American homes have been equipped with microwave o~ns. -"Feasting on Raw Foods," edited by Charles Gerras and featuring 3SO menus that use only raw food (logk, Ma, no cooking). "Treat your children to this novel way to boost nutrition in the family diet," urges the publisher, Pennsylvania's Rodale Press. home of Prevention magazine and such excitina books as "A Practical Guide to Small-Scale Goalkeeping," "Gourmet Gardening" and "Goodbye to the F1usb Toilet." -"What Are You Uslng?" In case you haven't guessed. this Dial paperback ia a birth control euide for teen-agers. OlaJ, incidentally, now belonis to Doubleday, which owns a lot of book clubs and .the New York Mets. -"The Genuine Texas Handbook." by Rosemary Kent. who's described by her publlsher, Workman, as "a fifth-generation Texan and a Camp Mystic alumna." This is a straightforward attempt to crash the best-seller lists the way "The Official Prep- py Handbook" did this year. -"Pills That Don't Work,'' by Or. Sidney M. Wolfe and' Christopher M. Coley. From Farrar, Straus & Giroux, this invaluable guide will eive you names of 610 prescription drugs whkh simply don't work even .though they're still sold. STOCKS IN THE SPORIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES · N:FYOl',C!APl FINI°'*..,,_' •VVL. NaW YOl'K (AP)· .... ._a I>·"'· llll'lc.t for y, Jul. 16. ilftd Ml ~llGlt Of 11w llft_,. "'°'I 4K11ft IT U. a.. ~ ,... vort Slodl f.•<N~ lows, 0.. .._ .,..,.,,. IWllloNlly •t more !Mn SI. JI! IM tsf,.U *·$2 '47.11 tSSA• I. T~lf • I 121 100 $1... -fl. » Tm m· •11.1' *-Of •11.Jll + •.n l'illlli>tl'91 '103~ '5 +2-. IS Ull I .... ,.,ts 107 ... ICll.16-o.a E ol"c .os;ooo ...... -1-. ~ Stll .2A J7S.G6 *-10 172.1t+11 liM Stlm .,.IOO ~ • "' llldws • ••••.• ••• •••••••••••. J,116 •. ~ I • 429.oao '°"" -.. Tra" . •• .... ••... .. . .. . . .. I~ s'100 TMll\r • .,..., ~ .1 Utll• ••.......•..••.•••.... 5 ~·000 I.a.on I Jn,300 M\4 -.... u SOI • . • • • • • .. .. • . • . . . • • .. • • • • l-olle9f SM,*lO 70 -_., """•'"' ' m .loo ".,.. • -WHAT STOCKS DID ~uCM°l .=:= :ff:~.: ~ '°" . . ..... I , 1\4 + '-Corp • ~ -..... AMERICAN LEADERS • HEW YOl'K IAPI Jul 16 HEW YOl'K (&Pl Jul. It 11:1 METALS 221 m 10 IJ C...., .,_.. c ... 11 • lllOUft4, U.S ... ..,_ ''°" .. L.HfO~• ........ ... -~ C1911t.1• '°"""· ............ , .. ...-MfUl1W..-c-...ito 11t. ,......._ n.tOc.,tso~, H.Y • .......,, .... ~,.--­~...,.lloy •. , N.Y • 1 . ' Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT /frlday. July 11, 1111 ,. Fountain Valley landscapers big winners at awards banquet I -' 1 Southwinds Landscaping'~ award winning landlcaping o/ tM Davia rel1dence NEWPORT BEACH -Southwlnda Landacap· lng'of Fountain VaUey w11 one of the bit wiMers in the 23rd annual BeauuncaUon Awardl, which were presented durlnt a Newport Beach banquet by the California LandJca~ Contractors A11n. of Loni Beach and Oranae County. Forty awards ln 18 reeutar and four special cate&oriea were presented, according to Frank Berry, chairman of the program held at the Mar· rlott Hotel. Awards were preaented by television r.ersonallty Regis Philbin, host of KABC-TV'a 'A.M. Los Angeles" and entertainment editor of Channel 7 "Eyewitness News." Landscaping projects entered ln the competi- tion represented nearly all communities In the Orange County and Long Beach areas. The Sweepstakes Award. hi1hest distinction given by the CLCA chapter, representing the beat overall landscaping project of the year, went to David Lee ol David Lee Landscape Co., Placentia, for the Hooper residence in Santa Ana. The Presidents Award, given to the best over· all redidentlal project of the year was presented to Frank Berry of Southwinds for the Sullivan res· idence ln Cowan Heights. The Judges Award, representing the best over· all landscape maintenance project of the year was won by Jim Lane of Total Landscape Care. Orange, for the Kesaler residence in Laauna Hills. <Total Landscape Care wu the bluest winner of the banquet, wltb four other first place and achievement awards in addition to the Jud1ea Award.) The Excelsior Award, repreaentin1 the year's ' best landJcaping project submitted by a new CLCA member, was presented to Steve Lancaater of Lancaster Enterprises, Costa Mesa, for his work on the Countryside Condominiums ln Orange. Other major winners of the evenln1 were two Orange County landscape contractors who each won four awards. They were Southwinds and Habco Landscape & lrrigaUon, Inc .. of El Toro. Winning three awards each were William Van· dergeest Landscape Care, Santa Ana, and Craig Pauley & Associates, Tustin. Those who won two awards each were Richard Cohen Landscape, Mission Viejo ; Village Landscape Co., Irvine; Ralntree Landscape Co .. Laguna Hills; Plant Control Corp., Irvine; and Mission Landscape Services, Inc .. Costa Mesa. A record 80 landscaping projecta were entered in the 1981 CLCA competition, according to Berry. Judges were John Hourian, a principal of Lidyoff Hourian Landscape Architects, Orange, and Keith French, a principal or EDAW, Inc .. landscape architects, Newport Beach. Tropical plants may be answer to world hunger By RON STATON ~le ... ,,_ Wl1elir WAIMANALO, Hawaii -Some ordinary. looking comflelds and a grove of apindly trees in a remote section of this small, rural town are help· ing fight world hunger and restore the world's tropical forests. The cornfields and leucaena grove are two key projects of the 130-acie University of Hawaii College of Tropical Agriculture Experiment Sta· Uon, located on a narrow stretch of land between the mountains and the sea on the windward aide of ,Oahu. Scientists here are work.ipg to develop corn varieties that will produce resulta as dramatic as were achieved with rice. "The focus of the green revolution was to find varieties of rice with nfore .irain and lesa leaf." said Or. James L. Brewbaker, professor of horticulture. "We are trying to do the same with corn; we are trying to increase grain yield on a smaller plant," he said. "We are beginning to find, as the rice people did, tltat some of these varieties will be good anywhere in the tropics where light and beat conditions are similar. "It ls possible to breed in Hawaii hybrids that will be good in other parts of the world," Brewbaker iaid. Even South Korea, a country outside the Fuchsi~ group slates slww • The history of koi fish will be dls· cussed by Terry McNay in Sherman Library and Gardens Saturday at 9:30 a.m. The program is free and open to the public. For more information call 673-2261. THE LAGUNA Beach Fuchsia Society second annual Blossom Show and Plant Sale is set for Saturday from 10 a .m . to 4 p.m . in the Lum· beryard Mall, 384 Forest Ave .. Laguna Beach. The large red and white fuchsia, Swingtime, will be among the favorite plants offered for show and sale. For more information call 494-2126. THE ANNUAL Fem and Exotic Plant Show, one of the largest of ita kind in the country, is set for Saturday and Sunday ln the Loe Anaelea Coun· ty Arboretum in Arcadia. This is the 18th annual show, and houn will be 9 a .m. to 5 p.m. each day. Vlaitors from across the country ynU be on hand to see the fem•, orchids, bromelnds, begonias, fuchsias, carnivorous plants, aroids, palms and other exotic plants of. fered for show. BOB GRIMSHAW will present an illuatrated talk on the culture of the eptphyllium Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the California Cooperative Exteuion, 1000 S. Harbor Blvd., Anaheim. The talk Is sponsored by the Horticultural Society of Orange County, and sales and refreth· ments will also be offered. For more information call S26-6713. VISSEll'S FLORIST and Greenbouaes will host the monthly meeting of Executive Women In· ternational Tuesday In their Anaheim facilities. For more information call 540-9380. . A number of things to check • If you haven't done so already, 10 ahead and cut off the dried, dead foliage of any spring blooming bulbs you have. • Keep training and supporting tomato 'Plants so they won't sprawl on the ground and get their fruits dirty. • When any of your annuals start to fade, you can quickly replace them with fresh plants I . tropics, is producing some of the world's highest corn yields with hybrid seeds from Hawaii. "Half of the world's com is grown in the U.S. and half in the tropics," he said. "But the yield in the U.S. is five times higher than In the tropics. We feel challenged to find out why yields in the tropics are poor.'!. Three goals. he said, are to develop varieties more resistant to insects and pests; to find cheap ways lo replenish nitrogen in the soil, and find plants that use nitrogen efficiently; and to find varieties that can produce large yields with less light. One way of replenishing nitrogen may be or ask your nurseryman if they would respond to a little pruning and fertilizing Cor more 'blooms later on. • Remember to cut off the runners of your strawberry plants before they root. • Frequent trimming of hedges promotes new green growth and full, dense look to the foliage. through use of the leucaena, rich in rutrogef\, as a fertilizer for such crops as corn. beans and cassava, Brewbaker said. Leucaena, known as lead tree in the southern United States and considered an undesirable weed in Hawaii, also is rich in protein and is a high-quality feed for animals. The main interest in leucaena is as a fuel wood, but Brewbaker and his associates also are looking at other wood uses, especially paper and pulp. "Leucaena ls a tree of very rapid growth, and few trees m the tropics can match it," Brewbaker said. "It is a deep-rooted tree and has no problem LLOYD•s I '--' . :-1 .~ l-- gordensho AMERICANA MODEL -· 4, #100 Chair 1. #142Table 5-...C• Set Example: The best set shown above --42" Table and 4 Chairs Retail $428.00 NOW '24600 MARIGOLDS Pony Pak · Ideal Sun Color (Black trays excluded} Reg, $1 .09 NOW'.69 ... OP'l.N MON T.AI &Af': P• IUN. ...., Di'iMl f 4:Ml •ar..a• LLOYD'S NURSERY AND LAN-OSCAPE CO .. I NC. 1 "'~ 2028 NeWport Plvd. (at St.fC:O.to Mesa, CA 92627 1 .. 646-7«11 • 3-i W1LD SAL£· DAYs / THUH.lam -apm Pll. lam-lpm IAT. lam·lpm SUI. lam· 1'"" ( t ..... .......... t '· . .... ... . getting water. Even in the tropics there is often a problem with drought. "We are talking about instant forests -these trees will mature in fi ve years," he said. .. They can grow in s mall areas and grow back quickly after being cut. "Our tropical forests are disappearing and we must replace them," Brewbaker said . "Al the beginning of this century, there were 16 billion acres of forest ir\ the world. By the end of this rentury, there will be only 7 billion acres, and the disappearance has been almost exclusively in the tropics, due to increasing population. "The immediate impact is that there is no wood lo burn. The impact of that is that food doesn't get cooked well and there will be more disease. · "The replacement of forest wood by kerosene and other liquid' fuels is unlikely. It's not an economic option,'' he said. "Other sources, such as coal, are limited, and the people of the tropics will have to rely on wood. "Those of us working with plants feel that. ultimately, we have to harness the sun's energy. But we must figure out how to utilize light more efficiently,'' he said. Some 800 varieties of leucaena are growing at the experiment station, and Brewbaker and associates are trying lo find the species that grows the fastest. They have sent seeds to some 80 countries Property Beine) Sold NURSERY liquidation Sale All Specials Subiect to Supply on Hwl SAVE UP TO 70°/o ON ALL ADVE .. TISED ITEMSU ' -SIERRA GARDENS !{URSERY . ii YOUR CHOICE ,~ . I IWATIIMS. COMPIOSMA s J 69, SMOWIALL YllUINUM ............. , YllCMI •AIDIMIA 16 .. t PIOSTIA1'1. SIA ..... SIASNAY, SAN JOSI ,. 'TAM JUMlf•S .............. SJ79_' . !' WISHI OUY, AIMSTIOI .. '1 OLD eoLD, .OLD MIW PIOITIA1'1. SAM JOSI S695 TAMJUNIPlll .........