HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-07-28 - Orange Coast PilotI LH ~ll A 'I JlJL Y .·11 1'Iii1
,.,. .......
Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer snuggle in this informal
·photo taken by Lord Snowdon. former husband of the groom's
aunt . Princess Margaret
..
• * * * • •
-11111111 ., PIPll
ORANGECOUN TV . CALIFOHNIA 2~ CEN TS
Prince Charles 'expects to cry'
Lady Diana chuckles during interview before their 'wedding of century'
LONDON CAP> -Prince
Charles says he expecta to cry at
his wedding, while his bride,
Lady Diana Spencer, says they
would not meet on their wedding
eve because ·•we might quar-
rel."
The coupie spoke last Thurs-
day in an interview recorded by
the British Broadcasting Corp.
and Britis h Independent
Television, the nation's two
networks. The interview was for
broadcast Tuesday evening in
Britain, hours before they were
due to marry at St. Paul's
Cathedral in a ceremony British
newspapers were calling the
•·wedding of the century."
Diana, showing no sign of last
weekend's pre-wedding nerves
-she burst into tears before
cameramen -chuckled often
and interrupted her fiance with
affectionate humor.
Charles said he chose most of
the wedding music -ranging
from Edward Elgar's, "Pomp
and Circumstances March No.
4," a great symbol of Britain's
imperial past. to the hymn
"Christ Kas the Sure Founda-
tion,'' by the 17th century
master Henrv Purcell.
Of Purcell's hymn, Charles
said: "I find it very moving. I
shall, I think, spend half the
time in tears."
The 32-year-old heir to the
throne said he always longed for
a musical wedding.
"So I can't wait for the whole
thing," he said. "I want every-
one to come out, you know,
having had a marvelous musical
and emotional experience."
(See related story Page A4.)
Lady Diana, 20, laughed as he
said ''stirring, dramatic and
noisy music" was necessary for
the 31h·minute walk up the aisle
of the cathedral.
''Because if you hav e
something rather quiet, you
start hearing your ankles crick-
ing, you know what I mean?."
he said.
Diana said she chose only one
of the hymns, "I Vow to Thee
(See WEDDING, Page AZ>
The Royal Wedding at a glance
TM <19t.e: Wednesday July 29 •
Tt. piece: St Paul t Caihedral. London
TM gllfft list: 2.500 1rw1ta11ons. alloted thus
Lady Diana Spencer 100
Lady Diana's mother 50
Lady Diana's lather SO
Pnnce Charles 300
Queen Ehzabeth 2.000
The ~Ion: Breakfast. we<Jd1ng cake ano cnarnpagne tor at>ou1 100 guests at
Buckingham Palace follow1ng the ceremony
Prffldlng: Of Roben Runcie ArchboshOC ol Can1ert>ury
Tti. honeymoon: In the Canbbean at:>oard lhe royal yacht Bntannoa
~T-G<"°""
10% gas price hike seen by mid-1982
Market strike
deadline near
LOS AblGELES (AP> -As a
midnight deadline for a strike by
clerks at some 1,300 Southern
California s upermarkets ap-
proached, efforts to reach a con-
tract agreement continued amid
a total news blackout.
'•All I can say is our meetings
are still going on," said Dale
Brown, spokesman for the United
Food and Commercial Workers
Union. He said bargaining with
the Food Employers Union,
representing 21 supermarket
chains, was scheduled to resume
today.
A strike by the mo.re than 73,000
unionized clerks e mployed at
1,277 stores would affect an
estimated 14 million shoppers
from as far north as San Luis
Obispo and Mono countles down to
the Mexican border.
The supermarkets have been
recruiting thousands of tern·
porary workers to man the cash
registers in case of a strike.
By mutual consent of both
sides, a news blackout has been in
effect since talks resumed over
the weekend. Negotiations had
broken off last Wednesday with union o(ficials who had sought a
56 percent pay and fringe
benefits increase over three
years urging members to reject
management's offer of a 22 per-
cent wage and benefits hike over
the same period.
Results of the balloting, which .
ended Monday. were due today,
but indications were that subse-
quent revisions in proposals by
both sides would make the vote Ir·
relevant.
The Food Employers Council
said it made the union a new offer
early Monday that includes im·
proved wage and benefit pro-
posals. But council president
Robert Fox said the council ls ag-
gravated that union members
continued to vote on the initial
proposal.
"We deplore the fact that we
have made an important offer to
the clerks and the union won't tell
its members themselves," Fox
said. He sald the new offer In·
eludes an increase of more than 30
percent in wages and benefits
over the next three years, worth
about$3.30 per hour more.
Joe Lench, a union spokesman.
said he would not comment on the
new offer because union officials
had not reviewed it.
Senior clerks currently earn
$9 .10 and hour plus fringe
benefits worth an additional
$4.12 an hour. However their
earnings lag Sl. 74 an hour
behind those of their Northern
California colleagues.
Drinking and drugs
b e fore killing told
A day of drinking and ~g
taking preceded the night
Stephen Claconne, a Garden
Grove drug dealer;. was re-
peatedly shot with arrows In a
Huntington Beach oil field, .a
participant in the slaying has
testified.
Laurie Aguirre, 20, who
pleaded guilty to voluntary
manslaughter , said her
estranged husband, Joe AguJ.rre,
36, was among those at their
Gothard Street residence who
was drinking heavily on July 18
1980, when the plot to tlli
Ciaconne la alleged to bave been
made.
A1uJrre and James Robert·
Marvin. 24, are facina murder
and con1plr•cy cbar1H ln
Oran1e County Superior Court bl
connection with the death of
ClaconM, wbo wat liviDI lem·
porarUy at tbe Apjrre home
while attemptiq to hlde from
narcotlca lnve1U11tor1 and
former CUltolQel'I.
Clacoane waa amoa1 u.oie
drlDkJq wbillreJ Ga Ule day ;of
bit deat]a, Mn. Apirn ........... .
... aJao took ....... ta ...... of
Ule dnal Quaalude. oun.., ... claJ, ... told ....
Jur1 l• .luct1• It....,.. LH'1 ~ourtroom, Claco••• ••• ....................
ar1umeat Ua1t ea••• w•H Mania wa1 pulled lnto UI•
bathtub. As for the cause of the
argument, Mrs. Aguirre said,
"Steve was telling Bob, 'You're
alwayJ doing this to me, taking
the girls away'."
Under cross examination from
Deputy Public Defender Michael
Beecher, her husband's at-
torney. Mrs. Aguirre recalled
only portions of her previous
testimony for the prosecution
about events that took place ln
the oU field where Ciaconne was
slain.
She ~uoted Ciaconne, who wu
stumbling alona a dirt trail, u
1ayin1 be knew it wat to be "tbe
lut niel)t of my Uf e.' •
Mra. Afuirre aald 1he told
Claconne "not to think that
way."
Under further quHtionin1,
Mn. AcWrre conceded tbat she
was attempttq to aaln a favora·
ble outeome ln her 0"1l crtmlDal
cate b)' te1U1Jtn1 a1alut her hutl!and IDd MarVln. "ft'• fair to IA1 you don't want
to do ~ to dll,.._. ll&m
(Deputy Dllbiet Attar'DeJ ht
Geary)?" B11ew Mked at -. pobat. •• •tz:t, •• Mu. A1atrre .......... ...... ,. '° be .. , .... ~pl• to m-1•1111•,
tM Clllltcolae ol die tl'lal.
be faee1 a two to 1l•·1ear pnaonterm.
~ . .
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An Irvine policeman photographs the scene of a Jeep acct.dent which killed a Corona del Mar youth
near MacArthur Boulevard and Ford Road.
New lawsuit filed
in religious flap
A new lawsuit has been Ciled
Monday aimed at preventing
Christian student groups from
meeting in school facilities dur·
ing lunch periods al Mission Vie-
jo High School and other Sad-
dleback Valley schools.
The lawsuit, filed Monday in
Orange County Superior Court,
is sponsored by the American
Civil Liberties Union and is
brought by a group of
clergymen, parents and a
teacher In the Saddleback
Valley Unified School District.
It is the same group that tried
unsucceasfully in June for a
court t>rder barring the student
groups from meeting in such
places u MJaslon Viejo High's
litUe theater.
Supnior Court Judge Luis
Cardenas denied that request.
Lawyer Richard
Petherbridge, art ACLU volun-
teer, said the new lawsuit
represents a chance to "spell out
more clearly bow we think the
present system amounts to an
establishment of religion."
A hearing has been set on Aug.
27 in Judge Cardenas' court.
Petherbridge said the group
needed to clarify in their suit
h ow the school district has
become involved in the religious
education at Mission Viejo Hi1h
by allowing its little theater to
be u sed and condoning
lunchtime visits from a local as·
sistant minister.
''The group feels everyone is
entitled to his own religion, but
not ln school," Petherbrldge
said.
The policy to allow religious
groups to meet on campua was
approved by the school district's
Board of Trustees. Board mem·
bers claim their policy is one of
non-Involvement.
• Sizable souvenn-
35-f oot tequila bottle stolen
While more than 400 voUeybau
entbu•iaata celebrated below,
tomeone atole the 15-foot plattic
Cueno Gold tequila bottle from
the roOl of the TortUla l'Jata
restaurant ln La•una Beach ear-
ly Monday.
The theft of tbe m•cal moma·
ment eame Ju.at boun after the
conclu1lon of tbe two day
U.,una BMch Open Pro Beach
Volleyball Tournament,
.,... .. in part by tbe eu.rvo
~---WIUAUJ r..-. tbe laUll alr.ftUed t.qUlla boWe, .tllblil froil Coliit ...... ., ....
l•I UM eompetltloa at Mala 8eae11Pn.
Polin Hld owner1 of tbe
................. loaadlftet· .. It ........ the HmpetltloD,
tlMrD ... lllftlllild lt OD tbe rocl 'of
the Mexican restaurant prior to
a late nipt party at Uiat loca-
tlon at tbe aoutb end ot town.
Steve Levlnaon, wbo owns tbe
restaurant, said tbievea •P·
parenUy denated the coaUy bot·
U• wblle celebrantl were aUU ln
th• bulldlni. •• Everyone WAI partying and
bavln1 a •ood time," Levtnaon
aald. "Wbo would know aomeone
WH tteallnl the botUe?"
Police aald oae wttnea, -a
r•t.aurant emplOJM -11w two men on tbe root euuer IA tbe
•eventq.
Ttre pair, OM dHcrlbed 11
blond wttb curl1 hair, lb• otMr
wltb dark wa•J laalr' '°°' only the plHtlc: lnflalable bolUe,
leariftl beblnd a 1111all motcil'
uect to pump air mto the llqp
balloon.
I rvine J eep
cr ash fata l
to youth, 1 8
A Corona del Mar leen-ager
was fatally injured Monday af·
ternoon in Irvine when lhe Jeep
in which he was riding rolled
over in a field near MacArthur
Boulevard and Ford Road.
Glenn Richard Van Dyke, 18.
of 310 Iris Avenue, was thrown
into the path or the vehicle when
it rolled.
Louis Francis Glatcb III, 18, of
No. 5 Point Loma, Corona del
Mar. the driver oJ the vehicle.
was arrested on suspicion of
felony drunk driving after being
treated and released from Hoag
Memorial Hospital., Newport
Beach.
The other two occupants of the
Jeep -Richard Paul Van Dyke.
15, the brother of the fatally in-
jured youth, and Chad Martin
Sanborn, 17, of 334 Paseo de
Cris tobal, San Clemente -
weren't injured.
Irvine police Sgt. Robert
Kredel said that the three youths
who escaped serious injury were
wearing seat belts. Glenn R.
Van Dyke, wasn't wearing a
seat belt, he said.
After the Jeep rolled over at
about 3:40 p.m., the three youths
ran to MacArthur Boulevard in
an attempt to get help for Glenn
Van Dyke. They eventually ob-
tained assista.nce from the
driver ol a delivery truck.
Officers from the Newport
Beach and Irvine police depart·
menu converced on the accident
scene, which was pinpointed by
the Newport Beach pollce·
helicopter.
Glenn Van Dyke was pro-
nounced dead at the scene.
Wor kers ex~
GltEl:NVILLE, S.C. <AP> ._
Fln... worken at tht OCODee
Nuclear Station were con·
laminated with radioactive
water earUer lhil month chains
rehlellq operatlonl, Hcord.lns
to a federal~.
N ati on's
a verage
• g o ing up
WASHINGTON I AP ) -
Motorists face an increase of up
to 10 percent in the price of
ga soline by mid-1982, the
Energy Information Administra-
tion of the Energy Department
predicts.
In its "Short Term Energy
Outlook," the agency said Mon·
day the average cost of a gallon
of gasoline would reach $1.47 by
next June. compared with Sl.34
a gallon last January.
The report als o said the
decline in U.S. petroleum con·
sumption since 1978 could be re·
versed in 1982 if the economy
improves and there are no sharp
boosts in the cost of crude oil.
During 1981 , U.S. use of oil
will drop from the 1980 level of
17 million barrels lo 16.6 million
barrels per day. In the first six
months of 1982, oil use may rise
to 17.1 million barrels daily, the
report said.
D'mestic production of oil is
expected to continue dropping,
from 8.6 million barrels per day
in" 19tl> to 8.5 million barrels in
1981 and 1982.
Electricity generated through
nuclear power will rise by 8 per-
cent this year, the first increase
since the March 1979 accident at
the Three Mile Island plant in
Pennsylvania, the agency said.
The report predicted the in·
crease in output would be even
more substantial in the first hall
of 1982. registering a 16 percent
gain as new reactors begin
operating.
The report said U.S. coal con·
sumption will continue rising
this year. reaching about 75Q
million tons, 45 million above
1980. It noted that mainly due tQ
the recent miners' strike, 198l
coal production is expected to
decline slightly to 828 million
tons, while coal exports remain
level at 93 million tons.
DRAllif COAST WIATHll
Low clouds ln late night
to mid-morning hours.
Otherwise sunny t.hrough
Wednesday. Little change
in temperatures. Highs
from mid·70s at the
beaches to mid-808 inland.
Lows tonight 60 to 66.
llllDI TllAY
Cftittna f Hl to fer wlwrt
polfctmfn walk beot11 a
Police li"oundaUon ttud11
fsnd1. ~e •torJI Paf/f Al.
11111 ,..., ......... .., ....... ..., === ~-: =r.Ll E ==-• == 311 = ..... .• .. •au.. II .-.c..-.. ..
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••
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tue1day, July 28, 1981 ,
New study ties pot use tO sexual desire
..........
W ASRlNGTON (AP) -Oc·
caaional u.se of marUuana can
enhance sexual desire, but
cbronJc smokers may find their
sexual functions impaired, a
new ttudy aaya.
Researchers at the Unlverstty
of Texas said Monday that new
animal studies appear to resolve
the contradiction between what
marijuana u.sen said they felt
and what scientists meaaured.
"I'm as guUty as other animal
scientists in the last few yean in
neglecting what people were
saying about their experiences,"
said Dr. Susan Dalterlo. "We
weren't seeing in animals the re-
actions people were talking
about because we waited too
long after administration to
measure them.·•
The acUve t.naredient ln mart·
Juana, tetra!lydrocaonabinol, or
THC, hu different effects on
male sexual hormones in a abort
period of time, lbe acient.1.ats
say.
Initially. THC cauus rapid in·
creases in the levels of
testosterone and other sex
hormones ln mice, considered a
good animal model for human in
teats wtlb marijuana. But after
a abort time, these levels plum·
'met far below normal , Dr.
Dalterto said. '
Male mice receiving low THC
.doses maintained hiah levels of
testosterone, a hormone pro·
duced primarily in the test.es,
for more than an hour. the re-
searcher said in a telephone in·
terview.
However, mice getting high TO WED -Susan Atkins,
.oconvicted murderess serv·
ing a lite sentence for the·
1969 Sharon Tate murders
by the Manson Family. will
marry wealthy Texan
Donald Lee Laisure, 50, on
Aug. 30 in a prison chapel
ceremony.
Israel claims PLO
breaks truce again
Viet veteran
pleads guilty
SAN DIEGO (A P) -A dis·
abled Vietnam War veteran with
the Distinguished Flying Cross
and other medals has pleaded
guilty to four bank robberies.
"I'm here as a bank robber,"
Fernando Robert Valdez said in
a stale court Monday.
Valdez , a former Army
sergeant, lost an eye and h.is
right arm below tfle elbow and
suffered a leg injury when h.is
helicopter was shot down over
Vietnam in 1970.
In the years since, he has been ·
in mental hospitals 14 limes.
Valdez told a federal jury in
April that he suffers from post·
traumatic stress syndrome as a
result or his war experiences. a
delayed reaction to mentally
devastating combat.
P esticide to Cuba
W ASHJNGTON <AP> -The
United States has authorized the
shipment to Cuba of pesticide to
combat the spread of a Dengue
fever epidemic Cuban President
fide! Castro charges may have
been started by the CIA, the
State Department says.
TEL AVIV, Israel <AP> -
Israel accused the Palestinians
of two more violations of the
cease-fire along the Israeli·
Lebanese border today despite a
report that a radical PLO leader
had agreed to observe the truce
after rejecting it earlier.
There was no immediate com·
ment from the Palestinian com·
mand in Beirut on the Israeli re·
ports of new firing . But
Lebanon's state radio said
Israeli jets new reconnaissance
missions over Beirut and other
Lebanese cities today, drawing
anti-aircraft fire from guerrilla
positions.
The Israeli military command
said Palestinian guerrillas fired
two rounds of rockets, the first
about dawn and the second two
hours later, toward Kleiya, a
south Lebanese village occupied
by the force s of Israel's
Lebanese Christian ally, Maj.
Saad Haddad.
It was the sixth such violation
reported by Israel of the cease·
fire agreed to by it and the
Palestine Liberation Organiza·
lion last Friday after two weeks
of cross-border warfare in which
more than 4SO Arabs and six
Israelis were reported killed.
The Israeli command said its
gunners did not return the fll'e,
and sources in northern lsrael
said Haddad's men alao did not
retaliate. However, Israel Radio
reported a CJ'OUP of five guer·
rillas infiltrated a zone con·
trolled by Nigerian troops of the
U. N. peacekeeping rorce in
south Lebanon and opened fire
from there on some of Haddad's
militiamen . Th e radio's
northern correspondent said the
militiamen returned the fire "in
self defense," not in defiance of
the cease-fire.
In Beirut, meanwhile, Palesli·
nian sources reported that PLO
chief Vasser Arafat met with
Ahmed Jebril, the head of the
Popular Front for the Liberation
or Palestine-General Command,
and Jebril agreed that his guer·
rillas would observe the truce.
The PFLP·GC rejected the
cease.fire last weekend, con·
tending that Aratat agreed to it
without consulting leaders of the
other guerrilla groups in the
PLO. It admitted responsibility
for three of the rocket attacks on
northern Israeli towns and
Lebanese Christian viUages in
south Lebanon since the cease·
fire.
Aratat and JebriJ after their
meeting Monday night issued a
joint statement saying they "re·
affirmed complete unity of the
position or all Palestinian groups
in the military and political
spheres," the Palestinian news
agency WAFA reported.
Palestinian sources, who did
not want to be ldenWied, said
this meant Ara!at and Jebril bad
reconciled, and the PFLP·GC
would booor the cease-fire.
Male model shOw nixed
Santa Ana cancels 'hot' photo session at museum
By JACKIE HYMAN shock to Reilly Rhodes, direct.or
A_ .. .,.,....,.. o f the city-owned Bowers
"Model Shoot: Co me photo· Museum.
graph our bot male models in "I couldn't believe that this
the courtyard of historic Bowers actually happened," Rhodes
Museum in Santa Ana. Ladies said Monday in describing the
only.'' ad, which ran the day before in Tha~ advertisement, which the Register newspaper's enter·
featured a picture of a bare· tainment magazine . His
chested man and ran above an museum, located in a pictures·
ad for Chippendale's male strip· que Spanish-style building, cur· rw;:d·· ;~. r~~;::~~···
or fatal crash
CIUDAD CHIHUAHUA, Mex·
ico <AP> -A sudden wind shift
was believed to have contributed
to the crash of an Aeromex:ico
jeijiner that killed 31 people, In·
eluding two Alabama men, of.
ficials said today.
. Thirty-four people were in·
~ured and one was missing.
The DC-9, believed to be car·
rylng 60 passengers and a crew
9f six, crashed Monday night,
bursting into flames alter strik·
tng the ground and rolling on Its
wheels for some distance, of.
ficials said.
A paasenaer lilt was not lm·
mediately available. .
"We dJdn't find any bodies
putaide the fuselage. They were
tyrlng to get out and were plied
bn top of each other," said
rireflfhter Ernesto Alvarado,
pne o the rirst rescuers on the
acene.
; Jose Baaterra a nd Jaan
l\ldrecht, members of the Mex·
lean Pilots Union which help ln
crasti lnveatigalions, said the I
O"A COAST
wind bad been coming from the
east at six knots as the plane ap-
proached from the south.
"We think it was the wind
here when the pilot was making
a final approach," Basterra
said, adding that a sudden wind
s hift apparently shoved the
plane away from the runway. I
·'The normal position would be
to make a go-around, that is,
climb again and circle the
airport," be said.
"But it happened so fast,"
Aldr ecbt said, · • abd it wu so
dramatic a wind shift that even
ii they attempted a go-around,
they didDOt have lime.''
In Birmingham, Ala., Ray
Stroup, sales mana1er for Joy
Manufacturing Co., said two ol
the company's ser vicem,a died
in the crash. He identitled the
employees as Jim BuUer. 43, ol
SprlnaviUe, and Sam Reid, 34, of
Nectar.
"They were on their way to
Chihuahua to service some
drllll," 5a'oup Hid.
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ThomN P Haley ~wCIW,_""40lt-
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MtchMI p. Harvey ----~ L. Kay Schult& Dllwllrtl ow-
~ M Godd.,d Jr. cw..i..~
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I
MAIN Off'ICI
UO WHI a.¥ M , Cate MeMI, CA
Mell....,_ ... '*· C .. le INN, CA. ntlt
cient Peruvian textiles, one on
Orange County's Japanese
heritage, and another of Pueblo
pottery.
·'The Chippendale ad looks
somewhat tasteful compared to
the one that's just above it,"
Rhodes said.
The n\odel shoot, which had
been scheduled for Aug. 15, was
canceled Monday by the Santa
Ana city man•ger.
Rhodes said the museum had
approved an application from
Romanoff Productions, which
has a studio In Garden Grove
but a malling address in Orange.
'·What the application said
was 'Amateur photograpben to
photograph live models in the
rustic courtyard setting, .. said
Rhodes, adding that colleges
and art schools often schedule'
photo sessions at the museum.
In addition, he said, it bas
been used for ads for General
Motors, Datsun, and the I.
Magnin and Bullock's depart·
ment stores.
Rhodes said the project as
described in the advertisement
violated city policy both by dis-
criminaUng -against men -
and by charging a fee. The ad
stipulated a $25 advance re·
servation charge.
A spokesman for Romanoff,
wbo asked that his name not be
used, said the event will be held
the day scheduled al an UD·
publicized private location.
He defended the planned
event, saying that it would not
have been discriminatory, that
he was not informed it •was
against city rules to charge a
fee, and that the event would not
have been as risque aa the ad lo·
dicated.
T he spokesman described UM
ad as "a takeoff on Chlppea·
dale's,'' and said that alu.ou,b
the eveirt wu aJmed at women.
"we wouldn't have excluded
anyone."
He aald thole not paylq tM
fff could have taken plctur•,
l>u( ''peopJe wttb a~ ad vance
realslrat.loo would have been
areeted by one of our male models ID tuedoe, wltb a k111 on
the cbeet maybe and a Carol·
Uoa. It Would baft bMD I dally
ftftl.
Tia• apokffman said male
modela la ••rk>u• eoatum•, ,_...., illcl9diq blklal ntm
tr9ak1 '•t also laeludla1 Weit_.. wear, were to bave
poaed, w'I'-' cwtume ehut•
eYet"Jballboar.
doaea lhowed dnmaUc drops in
teato1terooe to below normal
levels ln ao minutes, abe added.
Dr. Dalt.erto previously report·
ed that copulatory behavior in
male mice dropped sharply
after they eot THC.
But she found recenUy that the
mice perform well "if the
female ia introduced immediate·
ly rather than one to four hours
alter drua administratioo."
"A UtUe bit (of THC), without
walling too Ions. can enhance
sexual performance," said Dr.
Dalterio, an assistant professor
of pharmacology, obstetrics and
gynecology at the university's
Health Science Center in San
Antonio.
Dr. Dalterlo said chronic
marijuana users, those who
smoke three to five joints a day,
report impaired 1exua_l lunc'1oo·
ina. Theae people are rouably
equJvalent to hilth-dose mice in
studJes, she said.
ID human terms. the low-doee
mouse group that got lnlUaJ HX·
ual enhancement with THC are
more like people who have one
marijuana cigarette occasional·
ly, she added.
In females, the sexual effects
of marijuana apparently have
less to do with hormones than la
the case with males. Animal
studies done al UCLA and other
institutions, Dr. Dalterlo said,
show marijuana enhances
female reproductive behavior by
affecting the brain and reducing
inhibitions.
Dr. Dalterio, with colleagues
Andrzej Bartke and Denise
Mayfield. said in a report
published in Science maautne
that she measured levels of
testosterone and lutelnllln1
hormone, LH, within the firat
hour ot feecllne Uquld THC to
mlee.
LH , which ii produced by the
pituitary &land In the hue of the
brain, atlmulatea testosterone
release durtn• ·sexual arousaJ.
And when testolterone levea. 1et
high eoouah. the pituitary ·
senses it and shuta off LH pro-
duction.
The researchers found that
heavy THC doses Interrupt lhil
cycle by causing h.iah production
of both hormones at the same
time. When this occurs, the body
apparently shuts down the entire
system, sending hormone levels
into a dive, they said.
The path of the royal couple toward their big event Wednesday 1s chronicled m this
overview of the ceremomal parade
From Page A1
WEDDING • • •
My Country," by the nationalist
20th-century English composer
Gustav Holst.
Envoy to Arabia
reportedly fired
But Diana, an earl's daupter
once litt.le known outside her im·
mediate privileged circle.
bee a m e more serious whe1
asked lf. after six months of be·
ing engaged to Charles, she was
adjusting to life constantly in the
public eye.
"Just," she said after a pause.
Looking at her fiance, she said
he bas been .. a tower or
strength," but then quipped: "I
bad lo say that, because you're
sitting there."
Charles was raised from
babyhood amid what be
described as the problems of
"cameras poking at you from
every quarter and recording
every twitch you make.
"You can get used to it to a
certain extent . . . I thin1t it you
don't try lo work out in your own
mind some kind or method for
existing and surviving this kind
of thing, you would go mad."
The young woman who Wed·
nesday becomes the third lady
in the land· behind Queen
Elizabeth II and the queen
mother described herself as an
"average cook."
"But you h aven't tasted
anything because I won't let
you," she told Charles.
Both appeared delighted by
the 100,000 letters. 3,000 gifts and
messages of affection received
since their Feb. 24 engagement.
New he art b e ating
HOUSJ'ON <AP > -A human
heart transplanted into a 36·
year-old man to replace an
artificial heart was beating
"strongJy and steadily" and doc·
tors were "guardedly OP ·
timistic" about bis condJtion. a
hospital spokeswoman said.
WA S HINGTON CAP ) -
.Robert G. Neumann, the U.S.
a mbassador to Saudi Arabia,
has been fired, an informed
State Department sour ce said
today. Another administration
source said Neumann had run
afoul of Secretary of State AJex·
ander M. Haig Jr.
Both sources requested
anonymity.
An announcement was expect·
ed later in the day from the
White House that President
R eaga n had accepted
Neumann's resignation because
of an ilJness suffered by his wife,
Marlen.
Neumann, who became am·
bassador only in May, bad been
the director of Reagan's State
Department transition team
during the interim between the
president's election and his in·
auguration.
Blaze closes
highway
in Newark
NEWARK I AP >
Firefighters stood by as a rup·
tured railroad tanker filled with
a toxic chemical burned for a
second day today, forcing part
of a nearby highway to remain
closed to traffic, offi cials said.
Conrail spokeswoman Pat II·
luminhei said late Monday it
s till was impossible to de·
termlne how much of the
estimated 27,000 gaUons of liquid
ethylene oxide remained in the
55,000-galJon lank. But she said
officials thought the fire would
burn out this afternoon.
If one Isn't enough, come see
t us. We have diamonds by the
handfUI set in beautiful 14 karat
yellow gold rings. A. •1.•J010
~ '1.240» c. '07s<*l
S LA:'1;1 C K·s ,..........,.. ....... .,
Neumann is in Washington to
lobby for the proposed sale of
five sophisticated radar planes
to Saudi Ara bia.
When Neumann, 65, left Saudi
A.rabia for Washington seteral
weeks ago, he was quoted in a
Saudi publication as saying he
would press hard for the pro·
posed sale.
The Reagan administration
has withheld formal submission
of its plan to sell the Airborne
Warning and Control Systems
planes to Congress because of
Capitol Hill opposition stemming
from a feeling the planes would
be used against Israel.
According to some reports.
Neumann both criticized Haig
and complained that the am-
dinistration should have taken a
tougher line against Israel for
the bombing of Iraq's nuclear
reactor and Palestinian guer·
rilla headquarters in Beirut.
Although Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger , Deputy
Secretary of State William Clark
and other administration of-
ficials bad criticized Israel early
last week ror the Beirut bomb·
ing, 'Reagan later ordered a ball
to the condemnation of Israeli
Prime Minister Menachem
Begin as the administration
focused on arranging a cease·
fire between Is rael and the
Palestinians.
Prior to his appointment,
Neumann was senior associate
at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies at
Georgetown University, from
which the administration has
made a number or appoint·
men ts.
Neumann, a native of CUiver
City, CaJit., had also served as
ambassador to Afghanistan and
Morocco.
,
,.....,.._ lllaftd, Nt~ c.n •. N.wport Beed\, 71~.-0
Wt •' ...., 11.ApM Miit / ,,.._ Vllto/,...._ 0..,. t n. C., u.c .............
Allie c-.r t.. ~I,... '*ID I Liit v... I u._., ....... _.... ......... .-.-.. ..... ~ ..... Oilljl.
,.._, r. ~ a.111
'
Betty Ann luca of CMahire, Conn., i$ ahown during tM 12th annual M~tual Un~enJified F~Y1"f/
Object Symposium Mld at tM Maaaachusetta lnatitute of Technology an Cambridge. Mass .. wath
representations of two extraterrestrial creatures SM claimed SM encountered. Luca reports sfu?
was abducted aboard a UFO in 1967.
New York m ayor
chokes o n food
New York City Mayor
Edward I. Koch has said he
"almost choked to death"
when a piece of food became
lodged in his throat at a
Chinese restaurant.
He was saved when a
fellow diner. David Margolis,
president of Colt Industries,
performed the "Heimlich
maneuver," Koch said Mon-
day.
"It does slacken your ap.
petite." Koch told r eporters
in his City Hall office.
T he mayor said he was so
m oved by Sunday's ex-
perience that he will suggest
to Schools Chancellor Frank
Maccblarola that students in
city schools be taught the
life-saving technique .
Koch said he was eating
sauteed watercress when "I
s uddenly realized I was chok·
ing. I coughed and I ~ouldn't
breathe."
Koch turned to Margolis,
"tapped him on the shoulder
and mouthed the words, 'I
am choking.• " the mayor
said. Margolis then grabbed
Koch around the lower chest
and squeezed. The mayor
sa id be does not k now
whether he ejected the piece
of food or swallowed it, but
suddenly he found he could
breathe again.
The Rev. Biily Gralaam
will be a featured speaker at
the four-day Ame rican
Festival of Evangelism ln
Kansas City, Mo.
Also expected al the con-
ference is Charles W. Colson,
a one-time aide to former
President Nixon. Colson
served seven m onths i n
prison for obstructing justice
after the Watergate scandal.
The festival, which is ex-
pected to draw about 8,000
people, opened Monday. It is
sponsored by 150 denomina-
tiona I a nd interdenomina-
tional churches nationwide.
Graham plans to address
the conference Thurs day
night and bold a news con-
ference Wednesday morning.
During his official visit to
the United States next week,
Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat will stop in Plains,
Ga., for a private dinner with
former President Carter, the
Egyptian Embassy bas said.
Sadat is t o a rrive in
Washington Aug . 4. He will
confer with President
Reagan, Secretar y or State
Alexander M. Haig Jr . and
other administration officials
and members of Congress
during the next two days.
He will go to New York
City on Aug. 7 where he will
meet with former Secretary
of State Cyrus Vance and
with Jewish leaders.
Kansas, Missouri soaked
Heavy downpour causes f loodi ng; homes evacuated
Coastal f o recast
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pale<lll-..... SCllltNrll FlorlOe.
Merblt•,.lztd !tell tell ebout 20
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tueaday, July 28. 1981 s
Projects 'threatened'
County fears withholding of federal highway funds
By GLENN SCOTT °' .. ...., ..........
Although prediction• are
sketchy, Orange County olficlala
say $43.S million ln major
highway projects could be
postponed in the next five years
unless rederal clean air sanc-
tions are lifted.
The rederal Environmental
Protection Agency imposed
restrictions last December in
which rederal highway funds are
withheld to areas that don't
com ply with the Clean Air Act ol
1977.
One or its requirement.a ia an
annual vehicle inspection pro-
gram ln areas such as Orange
County where air pollution sur·
passes acceptable federal stan-
dards.
However, a bill lo impose a
statewide inspection system car-
ried by Robert Presley, D·
Riverside, was defeated this
summer on the floor or the state
Senate. Proponents say it is un-
likely that the legislation could
be r evived this year .
Without the inspection pro-
g r a m -or without
Congressional action to modify
the Clean Air Act -Orange
County is subject to a project-
by-project review of highway
improvements.
The review includes not only
federally funded projects, but
any that would add capacity to
str eets and highways.
Among those likely to be de-
layed because of the s anctions,
according to the commission,
would be two important coastal
projects: widening of the Pacific
Coast High way in Newport
Beach from Bayside Drive to
M acArthur Boulevard , $6 .4
million; and exte nding and
landscaping the Corona del Mar
Youths place
in patriotic
• • compet1t1on
Orange Coast youngsters
placed among the top 30 contes-
tants intheannualpatriotic slogan
contest or the Americanis m
Educational League in Buena
Park.
RobertSchuppe of El Toro High
School won the contest with the
slogan, "Derense is Expensive
... But Freedom is Priceless."
Lori Nadeau finished second
with "Freedom ... America's
Great.est Natural Resource" and
"Freedom -Bought and Paid
For." Jesaica Kass finished 17th
with, "Americans are Free-Ex-
amples: You and Me ." They both
attend Huntington Beach High.
Finishing third in the contest
was Robert S. Samuelian with the
s logan, ''Promote Free En-
terprise -Get a Job." Frank
Cornelia finished 14th with the
slogan , "Free Enterprise +
Defense = Freedom." They both
attend Edison High School m
Huntington Beach.
J err McKnight of Fountain
Valley High School finished 28th
with the slogan,•.' Reduce Govern-
m ent to Uoveming."
Freeway to MacArthur. $11.6
million.
Concerned with the loss of
badly needed road conatrucUon,
the Orange County Transporta-
tion Commiaslon sent a letter
late last week informing county
legislators in Sacramento or the
situation. The letter was signed
by new Chairma n Thomas
Riley.
Nancy Coss -Fitzwater, gov-
ernmental affairs coordinator
for the commission, said Mon-
day the cost predictions are ten-
'
taUve because EPA omclalt
miaht approve some project.I 11
they could be interpreted to re-
lieve conaeation, hence vehicle
emlsslooa.
She also noted that the delays
are difficult to predlcl consider-
ing that tunds for financlns the
project.a still are uncommitted.
In tota1, the commission iden·
Ufied eight state projects and
eiabt other rederally funded pro-
posals that currently are subject
to EPA review.
Licensing hearing
for San On of re due
A special evening hearing con-
d u cl e d b y the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission 's
Atomic Safety and Licensing
Board will be held Wednesday at
7: 30 p. m. at San Clemente High
School.
Public statements concerning
the proposed licensing of San
Onofre Nuclear Generating Sta-
tion Units 2 and 3 will be re-
ceived at the hearing.
The session was scheduled by
the licensing board because
many people who attended a Ju-
ly 11 hearing in San Clemente
were unable lo speak before the
meeting was adjourned .
Those individuals wilJ be
give n priority We dnes day .
Others will be heard if time
permits.
San Clemente High School is
located at 700 Ave. Pico in
San Clemente. The hearing will
be held in the school auditorium.
EvidenUary hearings dealing
with seismic issues around San
Onofre resumed Monday in San
Diego. Those hearings are ex-
pected to continue for about two
more weeks at the Stardust
Hotel and Country Club, 950
Hotel Circle.
New heart beating
strongly in patient
HOUSTON (AP> -A retired
bus driver who has lived on
three different hearts -includ-
ing a man-made one -in five
days may not have s uffered
brain damage during the
transplants. hospital officials
said Monday.
However, doctors said 36-year·
old W. A. Meuffels, of The
Netherlands. who is responding
to some commands, was still in
critical condition Monday, one
day after the artificial heart was
replaced by a heart from a
human donor.
His new hear t was beating
s trongly, officials said.
''It is a very crucial lime for
him and will be for at least 48
more hours," said Hazel Haby or
the Texas Heart Institute.
After the artificial heart was
i mplanted Thursday, doctors
worried about the possibility of
brain damage, since the heart
failure which f orced th e
transplant of the plastic organ
h ad interrupted the normal blood flow to his brain.
"There have been intermittent
periods or semi-alertness and
doctors are rather hopeful about
this now," she said. "The doctor
will say, ·squeeze my hand ,
move your left foot.' and he has
followed instructions."
A problem with blood-clotting
also improved Monday, Ms.
Haby said.
"Doctors are delighted with
the coagulation factor change
and the fact that he has been
responsive lo verbal stimuli, ...
she said.
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THE SIOREKEEPER
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s Orange Coast DAIL y PILOT/Tuesday, July 28, 1881
Wedding awaited
by royalty lovers
Police set security along route
LONDON (AP> -On lbe eve
or the eve or the areal day.
ardent royalty lovera already
were camplJll out In central
London for the wedding or
Prince Charles and Lady Diana
Spencer.
·'If you are going to be a
fanatic, you might as well do a
good job of it," observed Staf-
fordshire automobile salesman
Ste ve Tinsley Monday as he
found his spot on The Mall for
Wednes day's wedding pro-
cession.
Police made a security sweep
along the two-mile route from
Buc kingha m Palace t o St.
Paul's Cathedral. Manhole cov-
'Preparations
have now
r eached a
crescendo.'
ers, drains a nd scaffolding were
checked for explosives with the
help of bomb-sniffing dogs, and
police marks men got their final
briefing.
The ScoUand Yard assistant
com missioner in c har ge of
security for the wedding, Wil-
fred Gibson. said preparations
"h ave n ow r eac h ed a
crescendo."
Police said they were relying
on ordinar y bobbies stationed
every four paces along the wed·
ding route as the front line of de·
fense against any terrorist at·
tack Wednesday.
Despite elabor ate precautions
for the British royal family and
50 heads of stale. kings, princes
and dukes invited, police also
are relying on the watchful eyes
of the crowd.
Up to l million fl a1-w1vtn1
loyal s~bjecta, standing 20-deep
from The Mall and Trafal1ar
Square to The Strand and Fleet
Street, were asked to "adopt a
policeman" and report anything
s uspicious.
"We can't do it on our own,"
Gibson said at a news con·
ference. Much of Britain was
bedecked in Union Jacks a s
royaJ wedding enthusiasm grew.
•Wearing a red-white-and-blue
homemade paper hat, 55-year-
o Id Evelyn Firn of York
staked out a prime viewing
position behind a barrier outside
St. Paul's and told a reporter: ''I
think Charles is wonderful. The
whole royal family ar e."
On The Mall near Tinsley's
spot. Somerset schoolteacher
Averil H a rri son and b e r
daughter Rosemary, 18, set up
camp.
''We a re h e r e f or t h e
atmosphere. You see a lot more
on the television but you miss
actually being involved." Mrs.
Harrison said.
When it was announced last
week that Gibraltar would be
the embarkation point for the
couple's two-week cruise of the
Mediterranean, it reignited his-
lor i cal wrangling b etween
Britain a nd Spain over
ownership of the territory. King
Juan Carlos, a distant cousin of
the British royaJ famfly. decided
to boycott the wedding.
Despite this snub, the queen's
press secretary, Michael Shea.
told reporters that greetings
"from virtually every country in
the world" were flooding into
the palace, whe r e "the
atmosphere is one of happy
anticipation."
The event wiU be covered by
more than 900 journalists and
watched by at least 600 million
people worldwide.
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Her terror was no lie
Mystery surrounds death of nearly blind woman, 87
~
FOUND DEAD ON BED
Sigrid Bergind.e , 87 ·
CHICAGO (AP) -Hard of
hearlna and nearly bllnd. Slarid
Barclnde llved the laat two
months of her 87 y11ra ln terror,
pleadlna with police to believe
her story of telephone taps,
assawta and 1tran1er1 lurklnl
in her darkened house.
One officer on the beat 11ld
police bad Just be1un to believe
her tales and had beefed up their
checks on her s mall brick home
on the South Side when her body
was found face down on her bed,
her hands bound behind her
back with a scarf.
There was no sign of forced
entry, police said. There are no
suspects and her death remaina
a mystery.
The police theory is that Miss
Barginde may have died of
naturaJ causes a(ter an intruder
bound her and le(t her on the
bed.
Miss Barglnde said the terror
began in April after she awoke
on the living room couch one
n ight after falling asleep
watching television, which she
could see only through thick
glasses from 10 inches away.
She made out the shadowy
figures of three strangers as she
moved through the dark house
toward her bedroom, she told
police. She said she screamed,
they threw a sheet over her, biL
her on the bead and threw her ln a closet.
She s ho wed officers Bill
Melmine and Larry Viles the
bloodied sheet and her black eye
the next morning, but they found
her story hard to believe,
especially her whispered fears
Children die in sitter's care
Four succumb to illness; events make her outcast
PERRY, Fla. (AP) -In the past 17 months,
many of the infants and smaJI children attended
by babysitter Christine Failings have contracted
serious illnesses and four have died, according to
health offi cials, who call it an apparent
coincidence.
Two died of myocarditis, an inflammation of
the heart muscle, health officials said. Another
died or encephalitis, a brain in·
fl ammaUon , and the other died
in Mrs. FaJlings' arms after re-
ceiving inoculations against
polio, diphtheria and tetanus.
"There's something wrong
somewhere, but I don't know
wh e r e," sai d Georgia
Strickland, nursing supervisor
at the Taylor County Health
Department.
Dr. Flora Wellin gs of PAW1t01
Tampa ran tests on Mrs. FaJlings, 18, and con·
eluded "she's not carrying typhoid. As far as we
can tell, she's not carrying any viruses. It seems
to m e this kid is just a victim of circumstance."
A 3-year -old boy she was babysitting contract·
ed meningitis and survived, officials said, and a
pair or brothers she cared for went into con-
vulsions and recovered in a hospitaJ.
Mrs. FaJlings s ays the events have made her
an outcast. When she was 15, a year after her mar·
riage broke up, she moved in with relatives. but
now lives near this poor rural town southeast of
Tallahassee with a woman who pitied her and took
her in.
"People look at me wherever I go," she said.
"Sometimes I wonder if I don't have some kind of
spell over me ... "
The latest child to die was her stepsister's
daughter, 8-month-old Jennifer Yvonne Daniels.
who died July 14 after receiving the s hots.
Preliminary autopsy findings said the girl did not
have an adverse react.ion to the drugs. said a r e·
port by the county health department.
Mrs. Failings herself suffers epileptic seizures
and taxes drugs to control them.
Following the death of the Daniels' girl,
severaJ mothers called the health department,
fearful that Mrs. Failings had been near their
children.
Shirley Morris said she took in the teen-ager
because "her own family wouldn't take her in
because they have children.
"1 have children here. If I believed all these
rumors, I wouldn't have my children here."
that the phooe wu tapped and
the house bu11ed. They lound oo
signs of forced entry.
Liter, M111 B1r1tnde com-
plained she had to 10 1crou the
street ind uae a neighbor's
phone because no one could here
her when she talked into hen.
When Melmine and Viles took
the phone to be repaired, they
were told two pieces or the re-
ceiver had been ripped out.
"That's when I started to at
least half-believe her." Melmlne
said. "My partner and I eot her
a new phone and screwed the re·
ceiver on so tight even I couldn't
get it ore. A ~ek later, she
called us from the neighbor's
house and sure enough, the parts
were missing again. So we used
super-strong glue to stick the re-
ceiver cover on. After that,
someone pull ed the receiver and
t h e cord out o f the phone
altogether."
On June 18, Miss Barginde
was mugged on her way home
from the bank. But she held onto
her purse. refus ing to give in.
A few days after the mugging,
nothing was heard from the old
woman The telephone man, who
also had befriended her, got no
answer when he stopped by for a
visit. On June 26, police found
her body.
"It's still under investigation
al this point, and there's no in-
dication" that the intruders who
tied her up killed her, said Sgt.
Tho m as Fe rry of the police
violent crime unit. An autopsy
revealed nothing, Ferry said
this week, so the body went to
th e Cook County m e dical
examiner's office for chemicaJ
analysis
"Generally speaking, when
th e investigation goes to a
toxicological test. there's no ob-
vious foul play involved." Ferry
noted. "There were no bullet
wound s. n o marks o f
strangulat10n "
In the house she left behind
lay the telephone -its cord and
receiver ripped out again.
The su.n's ri sing, and as it rises so does the
demand for electricity. As the day grows hotter,
air conditioners and other appl iances click on in
homes, stores and factories . The electric load soars ...
far beyond normal demand. You can help lighten charge it~-by phone
From South Laguna & North County
call 540-1220 toll-free. this load -and delay building expensive new generating facilities -by
clicking off appliances during afternoons, when demand peaks.
Famous Bedroom Ensembles
at 2 0°/o Savings
Headboards -Bedspreads
Draperies -Boudoir Chairs
Complete Interior Decorating S.Nlc••
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t
Please.
Give your appliances
the afternoon off~'ctick'.'
\ •
' I
Southern California Edison
•
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Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Tuesday. July 28. 1981 s
Loads latest drug fad
Doriden-codeine combo another 'mind blower'
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Some fads, llke hula
hoops, make a quick circuit of tbe country and
tben twirl away, leavin1 only amusln1 memories.
Others, in particular lhoee concerning drua use,
may put u quietly but often leave a trail of
human mlftry.
The latest fad to turn up here. where drug
trends often begin. is someUUna called "loads," a
combination of a sleeping pill called Doriden and
tbe widely availabJe palnkWer codeine. Although
both are prescription drugs, authorities aay they
are easily obtained, either by viaitine two physi-
cians and obt.alning two separate prescripllona. or
by bu)i.na them from street IOW'Ces.
• 'Tbb is popular any place heroin users find
heroin quality poor and concentrations low.'' said
Dr. All Khajawall, who runs the drug detoxifica-
Uon unitit Metropolitan State Hospital. "With loads.
they claim that the quality is assured because the
pllls are the same ones that come out of the drug f ac-
tory and they can verify the dosage just by looking at
thepllla."
One dose of the drug combination cos ts
between $8 and $16, a low price on the drug
market. \]sers describe the effect as similar to
heroin, although Dr. Herbert Kleber, director of
the drug dependence unit of the Connecticut Men-
tal Health Center in New Haven, expr esses skep-
ticism.
"Do you remember banana peels?" he said,
referring to a hoax in the late 1960s in which drug
users were advised to smoke dried banana peels,
and although the rumor turned out to be a prac-
tical joke, many who tried it reported that they got
high a s a re11ult. "People become convinced
they're getting somethlna. juat becauae of the
reputation.·•
While no exact figures on drul use are avaUa·
ble, loads admissions to Metropolitan State
Hospital were reportedly five people in June, then
13 In the first three weeks of July . And, accordlnt
to Khajawall, since the hospital in suburban
Norwalk accepts only the most serioua cases, the
admissions Indicate a potentially serious street
drug problem.
Laura Mitobe, a counselor at Behavioral
Health Services, an outpatient proaram in
Gardena. said she first observed the problem
about a year ago. She said it ia most prominent in
the South Bay area of Los Angeles, composed of a
number of s mall beach communities.
One matter of particular concern to doctors is
that Doriden, which came into widespread uae in
the 1960s as a possible replacement for some
powerful barbiturates, has been found to be more
difficult than any other commonly available
depressant to purge from the body.
Khajowall said patients sometimes go Into
fata l convuls ions without warning during
withdrawal from Doriden, whJch Is corusidered
even more djfficult than withdrawal from heroin,
uppers or downers.
He said his loads patients range in age from 18
to 35. are nearly two-thirds male and nearly 90
percent white.
He helped draw public attention lo the loads
problem by writing a letter , with pharmacologist John J. Sr;,tmek, to the New England Journa1 of
Medicine, warning that the situation will worsen
before it gets better.
Here's Good N ew1I NO MORE FLE~Sll On Your ~et o r In Your Home l
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..... w •• w. co•t1••n y .. r pest preltl .....
l:.9:°ri.~ wltlle .. .._k•lsl
AGAINST:
Typewriter, desk. hat. tea cup and kettle of William Saroyan wer e among displays at a celebration of the
life and works of the author who died in Fresrw May 18
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F r esno honors favorite son, Wi ll iam Saroyan
FRESNO (AP> -William Saroyan might
have bad the time of his life if he had been there
when the people of Fresno celebrated his life and
works.
He would have loved the celebration part, be·
ing the kind of man who searched for the
fascination, the uniqueness, the human comedy
and human tragedy within each person he met.
He wouJd have wanted to ask each of the 2,000
or so people questions about who they were. what
they believed, always searching for another idea
for another story.
But, being William Saroyan, he probably
wouldn't have shown up at all Sunday night, even
if he had been alive. He avoided attention. de<:ree·
ing before bis death May 18 that there be no
funeral ser vice .
"U he were here now to bear me prattle about
his virtues, he wouldn't be William Saroyan," said
one spealter, poet and university professor Philip
Levine.
But Fresno, the bot Central California farming
city Saroyan made famous in stories about the
wonders of growing up, felt it was only right to
honor its most famous son somehow.
And so, those wbo remembered this man with
the cragg)( face framed by a walrus moustache
came togethe.r in a modern theater only blocks
from the Armenian neighborhood where he grew
up and about which he wrote with such affection.
The crowd began arriving an hour early to
peer into glass cases, trying to feel the rtavor of
samples from his works encased there.
"His writings celebrated life· in positive and
joyous affirmation." said Charles Garrigus ,
California's poet laureate. "He wrote oftentimes
the still, sad music or humanity."
One display showed a drafting table, bis
typewriter, chair. straw hat. tea kettle and
ceramic mug. letters from here and there, the
tools of Saroyan's trade, so to speak. To one s ide
was the bicycle on which he pedaled around town.
Journalism professor Roger Tartarian r e·
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<o/iew§ On ®' ,,,-~~ ~ental HealtJi\~/L··f
Ir GERALD WINKLER, 0 .0.S. ~
TONGUE THRUST PROBLEMS,
Every pers on
swallows some 2,000
times a dar . During
t hat swal ow , the
tongue can exert one to
six pounds of pressure. During the correct
1 .,aJlow. the Up of the
tongue presses with the
force allahlly beh1nd the top teeth. The matn r:essure ol the tongue
against the strong
palate. Tbla is 1ood.
Durinc an Incorrect swallow, the ton1ue force l1 exerted fully
•1a1nlt the troftt teeth.
Tb• teeth are not
equipped to wtthttand
tbla type of prH1ure
and mar a. NW out el al&llUIMftt. 'Alto, It .. , ........ ~
m.::ci~y. Jnto correct tbls 1ltuatlon.
Myofunctional Therapy
(sometime s called
tongue-thrust therapy)
is uaed for both children
and a dults . T his
therapy is desi1ned to
retrain the muscles ol
the ton1ue, lips and
cheeks to property
perform u to strength and placement; to
t•acb correct
swallowing patterne;
and to Instill a
permanent, correct
swallowlna pattern.
Ton1ue lhruat can be
overcome, but It requires full
cooperallon by the patient.
membered Saroyan, the young author. visiting a
college class where Tatarian was a young student.
"You must, he sa id, write with spontaneity,"
Tatarian recalled.
The program included photos of Saroyan
shown large on a movie screen with bis recorded
.voice pouring forth his philosophy of life. There
were tributes from some who knew him and from
Soviet Armenia.
There were excerpts from his Pulitier Prize-
winning play "The Time of Your Lile" and "Hello
Out There" and a rendition of the song he helped
write, "Come-On-A-My-House.·• ·
The back of the program cover reprinted the
preface to "The Time of Your Life,'' ending with
t.his example of Saroyan philosophy:
"In the time of your life, live -so that in that
wondrous Ume you shall not add to tbe misery and
sorry of the world, but shall smile to the infinite
delight and mystery of it."
Q_~H~~
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l
". Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/TueMjJy, Juty 28, 1981
Cheery budget news
may be short-lived
When hearings on Orange
County government 's fiscal
budeet opened two weeks ago, of-
ficial s warned of doom and
gloom tor the ens uing financial
year.
The $780 million budget -on
paper at least -showed a deficit
approaching $14 million.
When the budget hearings
drew to a close last week, the
once-dark faces were bright with
s miles . The deficit had been
erased ; in fact , the budget
showed a slight s urplus.
One might be left with the
impression the county Board of
Supervisors ran roughshod over
budgets s ubmitted by county gov-
ernment's various agencies and
departments. Hardly. With the
e xception of the vast Human
Services Agency. major county
budget units ended up with sub-
stantially bigger budgets than
they had during fiscal l~.
How did it happen? Simply.
the board dipped heavily into
present and past entitlements of
federal revenue sharing funds to
bring the budget into balance.
The revenue sharing dollars.
combined with budget cuts, most
of them relatively minor, added
up sufficiently to erase the
deficit.
Well and good. Unfortunate-
1 y. county government, like
many other local jurisdictions,
has come to re!y on revenue
s haring more than is probably
prudent. The word from
Washington D.C., is that revenue
sharing likely end in two years.
A s Supervisor Bru ce
Nestande pointed out during the
budget hearings, the board, at
some future date, is going to
have to face the fact that revenue
sharing is a temporary solution,
at best, to budget crises.
The gloom may have lifted
for this year. Rest assured it one
day will be back.
Boards seek trainees
Since registration ior Selec-
tive Service was resumed, of·
ficials have been trying to put
together local draft boards
qualified to rule on requests for
deferments, s hould a military
draft be resumed.
They're not having much
luck in Southe rn California ,
though there have been more ap-
plicants for board service than
needed in most of the rest of the
country.
Changes in the draft law
made in the early 1970s eliminat·
ed deferments for students and
those based on agricultural and
other occupational obligations. So
the principal duties of new board
members would be to establish
criteria for deferments of con-
scientious objectors and hard ..
ship cases.
Selective Service officials are
anxious to receive applications
from women. minorities and
young people and would like to
ha ve at least one woman on each
fi ve-member local board.
They need to establish 187
boards in California, but applica-
tions are running behind need in
the Southland, especially in Los
Angeles and Orange Counties.
Applicants, who must be U.S.
citizens between 18 and 00, will
be interviewed by military re-
servists, after which names will
be submitted to Gov. Brown and
then to President Reagan, who
makes the final choices for each
board.
Orange County residents who
would be willing to be trained as
board members may call either
(213 ) 653-6208 in Los Angeles
County or (714 ) 233-3500 in San
Diego County.
While we must hope a new
military call-up will not be
necessary, if the draft should be
reinstated it is of utmost im·
portance to have qualified local
residents ready to handle prob·
le ms that may face the young
draftees. This is a way to be of
service to the nation and its
youth.
Free rides for seniors
Senior c itizens along the
Orange Coast should be pleased
that free public bus fares have
been reinstated by the Orange
County Transit District.
Bus rides are free again to
alt riders aged 65 or more who
board a bus any time except rush
hours, which are, according to
the district, from 6 a .m. to 9 a .m.
and 3 p.m. to 6 p.m . At those
times, the fare is 35 cents.
The lowered fares (they had
been 50 cents during rush hours
and 10 cents during off -peak
travel times) were created after
the county Board of Supervisors
voted this week to spend MSS.000
in federal revenue sharing funds
to subsidize seniors' bus travel.
The decision to raise the
•
county subsidy was made
because studies showed that
significantly fewer seniors were
riding buses during off-peak
hours after fares were increased
in June. Although a dime doesn't
seem much, officials speculated
that many seniors were confused
about the new fare rates.
Nothing is easier to re-
member than a free ride, though,
so officials are hoping that they'll
see older riders boarding buses
once again in larger numbers.
Now it's up to the seniors who
are getting the added govern-
ment subsidy to start using the
buses more often to substantiate
the arrangement made on their
behalf. We trust they will.
Opin ions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Otner views ex:
pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invit-ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714)
642-4321 . •
L.M. Boy d/Hitler stamps
Am asked if Germany ever put out
any postageatamps with AdoU HiUer'a
likeness imprinted on them. Certainly. '
As might be expected. What's curious
about it, though, is Hitler demanded
and received • royalty payment on all.
such pottage stamps. It wu penooal
tncomeforbim.
Our i.u.uage man says that word
"ahebanl" -used here from time to
time-wu a common namein the Old
West fOf' a roadhouse. The lriah lmmJ·
grants must have started that one.
Their word for an Ulegal drinktnt
establllhment was' 'she been.••
Certain baslc queatlom deb•ted
violently many •ener•Uona •Co were
never talHd in the public scboolt t.batl
remember. For l.Utance, nobody ever
asked out loud': ta it coacetvable that
Abrabam UncolD was a tool who
should not have eet out to dJctai.
money morality to tbe South. Or: la it
possible that the FederaJ Government
OR ANGE COAST
llilJPilat
had no right to force Utah to live up
polygamy for statehood? Come on, you
know this is no vote for slavery or
polygamy. It's just a note of curiosity
that the legitimate queationa of one
century become unacceptable even aa
questiooa in time.
First Lady Nancy Rea1an recently
said her husband Ronald Reqan was
just getting out of the abower "'*' he first learned he'd been elected Preai·
dent. Interesting, but not Vf//r/. John
Tyler tint learned of bll election wblle
on bis handa and kneea playlD1
marbles.
No dieter should forset tbat bow
much food you actually nMCl dtPeC)I,
too, on your clotlJ.ln1. A lolaelcldaaatlve
in tbe troolct requln8 food dellJ. An
Arctlcnatl" lD full la* udturca 10 wit.bout food for allDOll a ..._ You
milbt ll911p um ID mlad lf JOU wut to
loee ~by burnlq calort•: Tue
off• few clbthel.
Tttomas P. H•tey
PubllSher
.nem.A". _,,.. ....
Editor
BarMraK ....... cft
Edltarlal P• l!Cfttor
.,_
~-···-_-__ ..f.:_:\_ ... _·_-___ -::----.........
Carter crew went first class
W AsmNGTON -Throuebout his ill· st.arfed presidency, Jimmy Carter as-
sidueusly cultivated an image of
Purilanic parsimony -carrying bis
own luggage, selling the presidential
yacht, installing bis cousin Hugh Carter
to nurse nickels and dimes on White
Houae expenses.
But once the Carter crowd was re·
tired by the voters last November, the
barefoot boys from Georgia began
traveling first-class at the taxpayers'
expense. The General Accounting Office
bas lotted up the post-election bill, and
it tUlll#S out that the Carter administra·
tion went out, not only with a whimper
but with a roar -the roar of jet planes
taking off on junkets that served little lf
any useful purpose to the public that
paid for them.
ACCORDING TO internal GAO files,
more than 300 Car ter appointees
traveled about the world between Elec·
lion Day and Inauguration Day, for a
grand total of 798 trips. The total bill for
these junkets came to $454,000.
To be sure, many of these trips were
justifiable. But many were not. The dis·
turbine feature of the lame-duck travel
itch that afflicted Carter's crew was the
number of outgoing officials who ap-
parenUy felt it necessary to go in style
before they were snatched untimely
from the public trough. Here are some
of the more glaring examples:
-Then-Energy_ Secretary Charles
Duncan's trip to Paris for an interna-
tional enerJY conference last December
has already been well publicized. He
chose to take the premium-priced
supersonic Concorde. Not publicized
G
-JA-Cl-A-ID-IR-SD-1 -~
was the fact that his deputy, Lynn
Coleman, who also flew the luxurious
Concorde to the conference, bad flown
to Paris a couple of weeks earlier and
spent about 10 days there.
Leslie Goldman, then an official or
DOE's international division, also made
the Paris scene twice within a month.
He insisted that the preliminary trips he
and Coleman made were essential to
lay the groundwork for the December
meeting. Duncan's retinue on the
December trip included a secretary and
a public affairs adviser. They did not
take the Concorde, however.
-THEN-LABOR SECRETARY Ray
Marshall betrayed a fondness for first·
class travel -al least during bis
peripatetic last three months in office.
The GAO mes show that he made first·
class official trips to New York,
Chicago, San Antonio, San Francisco
and Atlanta, as well as a tour to China
and Japan by way of Paris.
Aides who accompanied Marshal on
the Asian jun.Itel also went first·class.
They included Nike Edes, his deputy
under secretary for legislation,
although the chances of the Carter ad·
m inistration getting any legislation
through the new Congress in less than
three weeks before Inauguration Day
were remote.
Dale Hatha way, former under
secretary ror international artairs and
commodity programs at the Agriculture
D e partme nt, fl e w fi rs t -class lo
Adelaide. Australia, for a meeting of
grain-e xporting countries . "I didn't
want to go,·· Hathaway told my as-
socia te Lucette Lagnado, .. but the
Australian government wanted a senior
policy official."
I N FACT, FIRST-CLASS accom-
modations were practically a condition
for Hathaway's making the trip. He
s aid he had "an agreement" with
Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland:
"If I was going, I would go first-class."
He pointed out that the 15-and-a-half-
hour flight was "miserable" -though
presumably less so in a first-class seat.
-Dr. Jesse Mccorry, an official of
the Health and Human Services Depart·
ment, spent four days in scenic Mon-
treux, Switzerland, in December. The
purpose of his visit was to take part in a
conference on "use and abuse of social
services and benefits ...
Newspaper readers creatures of habit
When I'm on vacation I can go for
days witbout watching television but J
hate to miss my newspaper. I'm spend·
ing this part of my vacation 30 miles
from the nearest big city and it's a ma-
jor trip to get the paper. I don't want
just onv paper, either. I'm an om-
nivorous newspaper reader. I like my
own bed, CnY own chair in the living
room, my~ place at. the dinner table
and my owi newspaper.
Reading ~ strange newspaper is like
being in the hotel room you're usually
in when yob do it. It may be 1ood. but
you're not at bome with it. In the hotel
room you can't find the bathroom in the
middle of tbe night, and in tbe
newspaper you don't lrnow where they
hide the sports pages.
ONE WAY or another, I manage to
get the paper on vacation. Durine th~
eight days we recenUy spent in France,
I didn't see an American newapaper at
all -with the exception of one isaue or
the Paris Herald Tribune. M. a result,
there's going to be a bole in my ln·
formation.storage system for the rest of
my llle. I know because I have some
others. juat like it from times put when
I've missed the newspaper.
"What do you mean, he's dead," I'll
say. "When did be die?"
"Must have beeo a year ago. Last
summer. Sometime in July.''
Then it aU dawns on m e. The movie
star, the sports figure or the poet
passed away on one of those days I
never got to read the newspaper.
There are going to be all sorts of little
stories and events about which I'll be
ignorant because of having missed
I~''
-AID-Y-RDD-11-Y -~
those eight days of history. It's OK to
say you can go to the library and look at
the mes of the old papers but you don't
get at doing that any more than you get
at reading those parts of the Sunday
paper you set aside to read later.
ONCE YOU GET familiar with your
own newspaper, you know how you
want to read it. The trouble with a
strange newspaper is, you have to read
it the way the editor intended you to and
that'• no way to read a paper, as we all
know. Fortunately, newspaper editors
are too worldwise to have their hearts
broken by readers, but it must hurt
them to see what people do with their
day's work. Readers ignore stories
they've spent a lot of time and monev
What can $500 billion buy?
In the Ume It will take you to read
this column, the people of the world will
have spent another million dollan for
the purpoee o( alaugbteriq each other.
It ia a depre11in1 trut.b that tbe
human al)ffies ia lbe only creature
111111111
• dedicated to ita own mu1 extermtu·
Uon. It 11 a ...-.1n1 trutb 11npbubed
by a nPort. from t.M Stockbolm lntwna·
Uoaal l'eace Releareh lntUtute. . .
Tbe report 4eta1JI an atl·tlme blah ot
S500 bilUaD a,..t lut year OD wupona
ol wu. ?bl major m...cbaat8 ol deatb
lD tM ..w betml u.. UilW •••
...... llDd Prue,. Y•, 1'tt I lmow, 1
a m a Dalve, 1ood1 two·abon, hl
......... wttb DM fOt a JD0CDmt Wbal
I
I '\
$5oo blllloo dollars could do to help peo-
ple Uve better.
How many schools, bospitalJ, and lr·
rt1at1on projecta could be built with $S>O
bUllon? Wbat could it mean to the lives
ol tbe poor? $500 billion a year works
out to $114 for every penon oo the
1lobe. 1bat la more spent oc murder
weapons than many people Uve on for a
wboleyearl
Conalder what an extra Sll4 a year
would mea n to the peop le of
Althan.latan wbere tbe averace annuaJ
Income per person la $125; or ,
Bantlade9h, where it I• $85; or, Chad,
'73: or, India, SUO; or, China, with one·
fourth ol tbe world's people and an
aver.,. per capita lneome ot t:m.
Because the people of lb• eartb 1pend
ao mucb on uma, many = in poor countries will dle of 1tan and w.
.,.., IDd, aom«lQ, man1 '"'°"' ta rlcb
countries will die in a auelear ~Ult. I wonder wbo ..W ., tM
utlelt.
on, and readers have their own ideas
about which are the most important
stories.
Editors try to assemble a newspaper
in some logical, orderly way for an ii·
logical, disorderly public. We ignore the
editor's order. We don't read the stories
they think are important first and then
proceed to the dessert. We go right for
the cake and ice cream first and come
back to the meat and potatoes if we
have time. A lot or times we don"t have
time. Each reader re-edits the paper bis
own way.
I OFTEN TAKE A train to work when
I'm working, and there are important·
looking executives going to town to deal
with the world who g~t on, sit down,
open the paper to the crossword puule
or the ball scores and never once look at
page ooe. The world could have come to
an end during the night but they aren't
going to know about it until they get to
the office and their secretaries tell
them.
Editors know this, or course, but
there's nothing they can do about it.
They can't lead the paper with the
crossword puzzle because even the man
who is most interested in that wants the
news on the front page whether be ever
reads it or not. Buying the paper gives
him the feeling he's read It.
In some ways I'm careful with
money, but when it comes to buying
newspapers, I'm profligate. Saturday
mornings I buy two copies of the same
newspaper. It costs me SO cents instead
or a quarter but may save our mar·
riage. I used lo bate it when J bad to sit
there waiting for my wife tD finjsh one
section of the paper so I coU.ld read the
jump of the story I'd started in the other
section. And when I settle down with the
paper, it spolls the pleaaure of it foe me
when someone says, ·'Can I see a att·
lion of the paper?" I want the whole
thlng or none of It.
Now I have to make that damn 31)..
mlle drive.
The tlme It lakH to brlDI aome crimlnall to trial 1ua-ta JUltice II not
onb' blind but 1uff.tq rr.. pu-al1ab
u well. r .1t . .... , .. __.._...__..,......,, .... .
----.-..-~ ............ ,_ ... ................ ~ ...
' ....._ .......
QUEENIE.
"Love your new ten.nil drell ... fault, dear!"
car
'As is'
defined
DEAR PAT DUNN : Do you have any
protection when you buy an "u is" u.sed car?
I've found a car that bas a good price, but it's
being sold "a.5 is," and I'm not sure what
that means.
K.W., c.o.ta Mesa
Tbe UmJta of you pro&ectloe mlC)at be
described as wbat one salespenoe calls u
"Oldalloma Warruty": 31feetor31 aecoads,
wlalcllever comes first. "As ls" asaally
meau &bat &be dealer Is no& le1aUy respoul·
ble for aay repairs needed la&er.
To many consumers, "as ls" means the
Hme WAI as "as equipped." In otller words,
tile car comes with tile acceuortes already
• H -DO more ud no less. J;ome Uatak "as
.... means &be dealer won't ao aay more re·
cotldlu.ial before delivery. oe.htts Uatak
&bat H means the car comes wttll &be defeda
&bey've been told about. They tb1nk any llld·
dea defects would stUI be covered by tile
dealer. Tlley're all wrong. .
Also, a.aJeu a consumer IDsl.lts, he or site
1eaerally will aot receive any detaUed war·
raaty coverage Information uaW after the de·
clslon to buy bas been made. When tbe deal
ls clOMd you must sign a number of papers
all at •tt. An "as Is" warruty claue ls
often hidden ln the contract or clls,...ued la
ufamlUar legal terms. For eumple, the
claaae mlpt read: "As ls" <Mercllaat X>
hereby expttUly disclaims aU wuraatles
eltller upressed or Implied, ladlMllal .. ,
Implied warranties of mercllutabWty or ftt·
nest for a partJcalar parpc>H, and aeitllu H ·
sames nor aatllorbes any other penoa to H ·
same for (it) liability In couedloa wl&b &be
sale of da1I vellJcle." This ltatemmat really
meau, "We won't make any repairs after
tlle ear leaves tbe lot."
Wilell yoa bay a aaed car, looll for an "u
ls" statemeat or any otller statemeat wlllclt
dlsclalms aU warranties. Ask the salespenoa
to er-CMI& &lie "as ls" statemeet, ,.& Ills or
lier bddala by It, ud give yoa a clear, writ-
tea warnaty. Tills way, yoa will ltave a wrlt-
te• warraat)' to allow tile Jaclge If &here's a
problem wit.II tbe car that eads up belal set·
tied la c:oart.
Label not required
DEAR PAT DUNN: I bought a vinyl coat
and it didn1 have a care label inside of it. I
asked about this, but the sales lady told me it
wasn't required by law. ls she right about
this? I thought all wearing apparel had to
have care labels.
B.S., Fountain Valley
Siie WH right. Care labels do aot llave to
be .. daded IOI' leather. suede, far, plaatlc or
moat YIJlyl garments or fabrics. All otber
wearlag apparel (except bats, gloves and
shoes) mu.st bave care labels.
• "Got a problem? TMri write to Pat ""l D1mn. Pat wfU cut rrtl tape. getting
"" tht a~ra and action you need to
10lve inequitit1 in gowrnmtnt and
buline11. Mail your ~Jtaoru to Pat
Dunn. At Your Service, Orange Coan
DatlJI Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Meso, CA 9%626. Aa
man11 letter• cu poilib~ wiU be aM«Ttd, but phoMd
inquima or Letters not including tht ~r'• full
name, oddrtH and bulintu hour•' phoM numbe?'
cannot be coruidertd. Thu column appeara dailJI t%·
cept Stoldous."
30,000 Scouts, .
leaders rally
FORT A.P. HILL, Va. (AP) -The loth
11aUonal Boy Scout Jamboree hu belUD at tbiJ
71,000-Kn Army bue for more than 30,000 scout.
a.Del adult leMerl from all ov• tbe llobe·
The IC!OUtl are spendlnc a week llvtnf lD tenta
and punuiq such activitl• u archery, canoeinl
and campwide 1ame1 at lbe bue near
Fredericbbur1.
Vlalton will be allowed on lb• Jamboree
~ Wednelday.
"It's impoulble to tell ID a few words aU tbat
... ,.,.. al a Jamboree," aakl J .L Tan, cblef
1coul executive, ln a. m=•a to aeouta. "From arc::hery, C end I UOop He 'D'
do to campwide sames ud a merit b1d1e
mJdway, U..'1 tomeWns llO&lll oa all tbe Ume. &very ICOUt lld.ll a. pradlHcr or.....__ .....
.. ...._ ... , tbe belt part of= to a JambOne
la ,..._ rau'n put ol 10mtt rMllJ Ml 8ild ............ v ............ .,~,.,
Hiii~ .. all aboat -:..z: ...... W If 18 ldl· ...,. oa ...... IOID .... , ... ..., M a
Amerta. dtllm, too,'' Tarr said. la 1 HUm to HOUla ,..._ ..,_. tM Uldted
...... ....-; ., ......... frolil • eountrl• ................ ,.. ....... .
. .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTueeday, July 28, 1981 ·
Public likes walking cop on beat
WASHINGTON (AP) -Cithena have leas fear
of crime ln areu where policemen walk beata
even lbou&b foot patrols do not actually reduce
crime, accordlnl to a new study.
And 1enerally foot patrolmen like their work
more than thole who ride squad can.
These flndlnts were contained ln a study re-
leased Sunday by lbe Police Foundation, a private
noo·pralll or1anbatlon.
In the lar1eat analysis ever of foot patrols ln
lbe United States, lb~ foundation looted at foot
patrols In Newark, N.J., and 'Z1 Other New Jeney
cities from February 1978 tbrouah January 1979.
The finding• are primarily baaed on an extensive
experiment conducted in cooperation with the
Newark police department.
With fear of crime ranking near the top of
Y ou've decided you
want the lowest tar
menthol available.
But wtththe "lowest"
claims betng tossed around
by d![f erent brands, the
search has become quUe
conjustng.
Some tar
conscious
I
citizen concerns ln most polls, Newark Police
Director Hubert Williams said the study 1bow1
that foot patrol, in a mix of 1trate1les,
"measurably and •itnlficantly affect.I cltlaens'
feelin1s of safety and mobility In their
nei1bborhoods. Thia is somethlnt that no other
police stratety bu been capable of doln1, a fact
of great importance in urban·America."
The researchers found that the presence or
absence of foot patrols had no slgnificant effect on
crime u measured either In reports to the police
or in lntervlews with resldenta to uncover UD·
reported crime.
But they found ''consistently, residents in
beats where foot patrol was added see the severity
of crime problems diminishing In their
neighborhoods." The report said residents
smokers think they're smok-
ing the lowest tar menthol.
When. inf act, they only
think they are.
We've done some-
thing to end the confusion.
perceived the greatest crime reductl.om in street
diaorders, attacks on the elderly and auto theft,
"all of which are street crtmea potentially coo·
trollable by foot otftcen."
Cithem in areu where foot patrol wu added
also perceived their personal 1afety and mobility
bad increased, the report said.
Of the difference between lbe perception and
the actual Impact on crime, Police Foundation
President Patrick V. Murphy said, "Citizens have
associated the officer on the foot beat with a time
when crime rates were low and they fell secure ln
their nei1hborhooda."
In the United States, motorized patrols be1an
to replace fool patrols in the 19309 as a means of
extending the officer's ran1e and his contact.
through two-way radios, with b1a supervisors. '
C ftltl •I .. '"'°'M •C*AC(O CG
We've set out the tar
numbers, side by side,
in the chart below.
The chart wtll tell you
who s the Wtra Lowest Tar1"'
brand of all menthols.
Theres only one-Now.
NUMBERS DON'T LIE.
NO CIGARETTE, IN ANY SIZE,
IS LOWER IN TAR THAN NOW.
menthol menthol . 85's lOO's
NOW lmg 2mg
CARLTON lmg* 5mg
TRUE 5mg* Bmg
All tar runi>ers are <N per cigarette by FTC method. ex~t those asterisked 1i
v.ti1cti are <N per cigarette by FTC Report May '81
SOfT Mel 864t. MENTitOL 1 mg. 'W', 0.1 me.--. SOFT PACK Ws.
MENT1t0l1 2 Mg. ..... 0.2 rng."'9COtN. IV. Pl' .. "' Flt """*'· ·'
' •
I
-,------....... -~~--· -----~-
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuelday, July 28. 1981
Local stages offer variety
Bevy of new offerings alights at community theaters
By TO• TITV8 Blll Purkiss 1-direct· °' .. ...,,......., lna tho cou.nty premiere
And now, 11 they aay. ot "Runaways" tor
for aomethlne complete-Oran1e CoHt C0Ue1e,
ly dlfferent. . . and the 1how'1 run bas
slon VleJo (831·48~).
Curtaln tjme 1-8 o'clock
tonieht throuah Satur·
day and 3 p.m. Sunday.
Three other abowa
continue thelr respective
runa:
-"Greea Grow Ute
Liiac•" al the
Weatolinster Commun!·
ty Theater, 7272 Maple
St .. Wes tminster
0 HUGB.Y BfTERTAININGI " ·~ •MM ~i-.:,.--~ ~· [!!-,
ISAAC STERN I~ CHINA
......... a...c. Three 1ta1e produc· been extended to 10 days
tlons raise their curta.ln.I -Wednesday throu1b
along tbe Oran1e Coast Sunday of this week and
thla week _,each a local next.
"tiral" -while the The musical about
second annual Orane& teen·a1ers on their own
County Comm unity in the streets. written by
Theater Auoc:lation one-Elizabeth Swados, wlll
act festival 1ears up for be reatured 1n the OCC
a four-day weekend in auditorium at 8 p.m .
-••Pure •• Ute
Dr I Yea Saow•' at the
Saddleback Valley Com·
munity Theater. 25741·C
Obrero, Mission Viejo
(830·9252>, playing Fri·
day and Saturday at 8
p.m .
( 995 ·4113 ) , playing; ~~~~!=:$~;;;!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~ Fridays and Saturdays .:::
Newport Beach. Re1ervatlorus 556-5527.
Bowtn1 in Wednesday The OCCTA festival
wlll be Ira Levin's com-will be staged Thursday
e d y t h r i 1 I e r through Sunday at the
·'Deathtrap" with· Newport Theater Arts
Edward Mulhare in the Center, 2.501 Cliff Drive,
leading role at Sebas· Newport Beach, with
ti an 's Wes t Dinner three theater groups on
Playhouse and a pair of stage each night.
original one-act plays, Curtain time will be 8
.. Match Point" and p.m . Thursday through
"Dead Heat," at the Saturday and 2 p.m.
L a g u n a M o u 1 t o n Sunday. Tickets may be
Playhouse. obtained at the door.
0 r a n g e C o a s t Four local stage pro-
College's annual sum-ductions ring down their
m e r m u s i c a l • curtains this weekend.
"Runaways," launches they are:
an expanded 10-day run -"On Golden Pond"
Thursday, while the OC· by the Saddleback com·
CTA restival -involv· pany Theater at Sad·
ing a dozen local com-dleback College in Mis·
m u nit y theaters -":.iiiiiiiiiiijiiii~~~-~I starts the same evening
and runs through Sun·
day.
M ulhare, who starred
in the TV series "The
Ghost and Mrs. Muir,"
plays a mystery writer
who would kill for a
fresh new play in the
Sebastian 's s how .
Others in the cast are
Dan Verry, Amelia·
Laurenson, Jacque Lynn
Colton and Jean Norton.
Performances will be
given Tuesdays through
Sundays at varying cur-
tain times through Sept.
13 at the dinner theater,
140 Ave : Pico, San
Clemente. Reservations
492·9950.
"Match Point" and
"Dead Heat" both were
penned by Lagunan
Mary Jane Roberts,
with the former winning
regional honors at a re·
cent international
theater festival. Craig
Fleming directs the
playlets, which feature
Barbara Edivan, Robert
Kokol, Jack Rein, Nan·
cy Mc Kee, Michae l
Bi e litz , R ic hard
Rodge r s and Deena
DriskeU.
The double biU runs
Wednesdays through
Saturdays at 8 p.m . for
two week s at the
Moulton, 606 Laguna
Canyon Road, Laguna
Beach. Reservations
494-0743.
Nightclub
hearing
concluded
LOS ANGELES (AP>
-The sex discrimina·
lion hearing against a
nightclub that only ad·
mits women customers
to its male striptease
floor show concluded
Monday with the club's
owner contending that
suspension or bis liquor
license would put many
of his e mployees on
welfare or unemploy-
ment.
Administrative Law
Judge M.A. Maron, who
conducted the two-day
bearing into whether
Cheppendale 's bad
vtolated the terms of its
liquor license by exclud·
ing men from its "male
exotic dancers·' s how.
ordered attorneys for
both sides to submit
final briefs by Aug. 21. A
decision is expected
shortly thereafter.
T A!11ZA111. TitE M'E MAii (RI 1 :00 3:20
5:40 1:00 10:20
I ._........tllf_LMI
AR (f'Q) In 70mm
I.
1 I :Jb 2 :00 4 :J O 7 :00
. t :JO. NoEtonomy
" •n Brooke Sh1elcb in
EMMfmUJVE lRI 12:302:506:10 7:30. 9:60
I a www ii (Mi
11 :1$ 1:SS4:2S 7111 t :IO. 70mm.
No ...... « Eoanarny ~!
Boll M urr1y 1n STR.OIRI 1:00 3:20 6:40 8:00 &
10:15
llw9i1No~
..._Fa(Rl And The Shining RI
Donlld l1ttherland GMIRI AIRPLANE IPGI
I !!E'!JR~~ E~:ml~ator (R)
I Offney~ ntm f'OX a TIS NOUIJD IQ) Tit1 •1ae1c Hole (~)
CJlld\ ""'-
~
Brooke Shl•lds 1n
QPM -LOVE IRI Plus! FOXES IRI
Biil Murr1y In
STR•RIRI
Wholly MOMS (PG)
DRIVE·fNS OPEN 7 :3(>
UNDER 12 FREE UNLESS •
BLAKE EOIVARDS'
-
-"Grea1e" by the
San Clemente Summer
Theater at San
Clemente High School,
700 Ave. Pico , San
Clemente < 492·5101 >, on
stage Thursday through
Sunday at 8 p.m.
-"Tom Sawyer" by
the Fountain Valley
Community Theater at
Los Amigo s High
S c h ool , Heil and
N ew hope, Fountain
Valley (847-1108)."' run·
nlng Thursday and Sun-
day at 2:30 p.m., Friday
and Saturday at 7:30.
at 8:30 through Aug. 1.
-"Murder In tbe
Ma1noUaa" at the Hunt-
ington Beach Playhouse,
on Main Street at
Yorktown Avenue, Hunt·
ington Beach (847·446S),
on stage Fridays and
Saturdays at 8 :30
throueh Aug. 29.
-"Tbe Wll," continu-
ing its summer long run
at the Harlequin Dinner
Playhouse, 3503 S.,
Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana
( 979·5511), running
nightly except Mondays
al varying curtain times
unlil further notice.
"Hurrah and hallelujah!.
-Shella Ben&cn LOS NG:LES TM:S
of th•
W~tr /Jfl~N-•~ c .. ,.:~,~1~1 """"'-.... NOWPLAYINO
•-..,... CUIT ... ..a PU1A PIClflC'l IOITI COUT lc.t.Meu 5A9)3~ 8'1i1~Z9~ l .... llaKft•94 t~U -•u•aaca ·~ ... ,.c.
l• t•o !Ii' seeo tOranvt 63• 1m =.~~·:,0
•:::::, ~lmWUT • , .... M:al'lB ,_ tm m'llPYT
•tllM+PMf , ...... ._111pfMf
"COITAMIU
8rlSlcM
!>40·7444 581·S880
COSTA MUA Hart>of 631·3501 OflAIKI( UA C•ly C1nem.i 634 3911
~!!!J!!!!!!!!C!!!l!!.!!i!!!'J r·:--,..-,-.~-;;--, --J ·m --iliiiDr
AllC OIWMll MAU °''"91 637 0340
ERAMI IOITII COUT
Cosll ,..,, !>49·33!>7
-~ w.n ..... l83-0S4I --C ... CllllU Cosll .... 979-4141
BO DEREK ·RICHARD HARRl5
......
A"'htlm Or1~1n 879·9850
CNTA MllA
South Coast
!>46·2711
THEN£.~
MGM 0. Umt;d' Arttsll
NOW PLAYING "
ll TOllO lAGUP II.ACM OUIMll ~ltbaek South Coast Clntdome
581 ·5880 494·1.614 634-2~53
fOUITAl•taLUY ~ • . •
Fount1ln V111ty ~Daly st --.-1
839·1500
Al.AN ALDA
CAROL BURNEIT
c.. .......... ,..., ..
brookc shields
martin hewitt
~ ...._ A UftiYenal Rei.ne ,. ........................• , ... '*......,,.,, .... ..,
I • I I:.• .. .. .' • I •
~1i~1~
L--------·~ -----
J
•BARGAIN MATINEES •
Monday thru Saturday
All PerformencH before 5:00 PM
(Excetit Specill Enp....-1 aftd Hollcl1ys)
lA Mll!AOA MAll Mirodo ot l o aecrona
LA MIRADA WALK·IN 99 ... 2 .. 00 llO----"TARZAN
THE APE MAN" 1111 •rte. ... ._ .... ,.., ....... ..... ~-....... ~. "'UCA.PE FROM NEW YOAK .. (R) ...... •1:1' ~ ......... ---···-· •u..1: ........... --.... ____ _
"ARTHUR",.. ,.-. ........ -.... -
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALK·IN ----"SUPERMAN II" -•.t::a .... , "·· -.... tt• -·--"WOLFEN""' •k•-•:a.r•.-
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WALK IN
Focutty Al Def Amo
213/6M·9211 --·--· "RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK" tPG) ····--·-'i'•
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IMPORTANT NOTICE! CHILOAIM UNDER 12 fRH!
Her ... aol Wt! ...... '"'' f11 •:JO • S.I h• Hiii& •.OO ,Iii
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8111 NA P.All~
BUENA PARK DRIVE IN
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121·4070
IUUNIA1N
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
DRIVE· IN
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"CAVEMAN" (PO)
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"EYE OF
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----.. SUPE .. MAH 11"' (POI -'°" 0te90 '""' ot lloot"""I (So )''AHY WHICM WAY YOU CAH"' (PO)
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The most fun
money can buy
-·
1
,
_J
r I \
Daily Pilat ..,
D TU ESOAY, JULY 28, 1981 Oil firms prepare
COMICS 83 for Gulf Coast 0 BUSINESS 84
TELE~ISION 88 coal boom ... B4 ...
I
Prote~ting the powerful: A new driving school
.... ~
Chauffeurs learn how to avoid
terrorists with tricky maneuvers
THOMPSON, Conn. (AP) -
The scene seems out of the
Mideast or South America. A
screeching car chase, a sudden
roadblock and determined look· ing men armed with handguns.
But instead of a terrorist kid·
napping or an assassination at-
tempt, it's another day of class
at the Scotti School of Defensive
Driving, a company that trains
chauffeurs of the rich and
powerful how to protect the man
in the back seal.
·'In the last year there has
been quite a bit of concern that
the terrorism we've seen in
other countries is coming here. I
say it's already here," says An·
thony Scotti, a former elec·
tronics engineer who runs the
school.
Scotti says he has trained
som e 700 drivers at racetracks
in Thompson and Hollywood,
Fla. His staff of eight ace
drivers and former policemen·
has traveled around the world,
training drivers for eight heads
of stale and many business
leaders.
double next year , thinks ter-
roris m will increase in lhia
country. These acts will not au
be political in nature, he said,
and attacks may come from a di sgruntl e d e mplo yee or
so meone in t e res ted only
in ransom.
•·Most people think of ter·
roris m as a nalionalislic ques·
lion," he said ... But I think that
no one can argue that violence in
this country isn't getting out or
hand."
Scotti said 42 companies listed
among Fortune 's top 100 have
sent drivers to the school, which
charges $1 ,650 per person for the
four-day course.
Scotti and his instructors
begin with classroom instruction
on what cars can and can't do in
chases. Students are taught to
look for explosives, and instruc-
tors keep them on guard by
planting s mall booby.traps in
their cars.
The stude nts . many pro·
fessional racecar drivers, are
taught how to drive al the
Thompson Racetrack, a ~-mile
cou rse on the Massachusetts
border. They run obstacle
courses and learn how to lake
curves and corners al a max-
imum speed in a minimum dis-
tance
Cap gun-wielding instructor Edward Mastrocola simulates a terrorist attack at his Connecticut school.
The school's techniques are
being used during the seven-
n a tion s ummi t m eeting in
Can ada, where strict security
protects lhe assembled heads of
slate. The man who trained
chauffeurs for t he Western
leaders studied al the school.
Scotti, who expects business to
"People don 'l think it's much
when you show them how to cut
a couple or seconds off a turn,"
said Fred Stafford, an instructor.
··But if you can gain a second's
advantage at 40 miles an hour,
that's six feel. If you can do that
a couple times, that's 12 to 15
feet between you and the guy
chasing you and that's all you
need to survive."
Are ghosts
'haunting'
art school?
SEATTLE (AP) -Doors
s lam . Footsteps p atte r .
Furniture is dragged across the
floor. Weird happenings lake
place.
No, this isn't your office. It's
the Booth Building in SeatUe,
and many people think it's
inhabited by a ghost.
Jess Cauthom, director of the
Burnley School of Professional
Art housed in the building, said
he first beard mysterious noises
in the building in 1960.
"You'd hear t hese dra wing
tables being dragged across the
floor upstairs." he recalled.
He said it appeared desks had
been moved, but he couldn't
prove it.
"There was something going
on in this building. and there
wasn 't any ev id e n ce of
anything."
Two fl oor s below al the
Capital Savings and Loan office,
assistant manager Willie McGee
recalls mysterious computer
breakdowns. One Friday night
in 1978 bis balance sheet was 4
cents off and he worked late
trying to track down lhe error.
He failed, but when he opened
the branch Monday, ·'there were
four pennies laid out, evenly
separated on my desk. Nobody
could explain it."
The 71·year·old building baa
changed owners a number or
times.
Rumor has it a high school
student met violent death in the
: building and came back to haunt
I the art school. But there are no
\ known records of such a death,
.' Cauthom said. I
So, does be believe in ghost.?
"I ref"'-'e to answer that," he
s a i d . "I 'm j ust terribly
impressed."
Damages set
in slwoting
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Chinatown's Golden Dra1on
Restaurant, alte of a bloody m7
gan1 abootlna which left five
penooa dead and 11 wounded,
baa •areed to pay a total of
$450,000 in dama1es to the vic-
Uma.
The a«Uement, which will IO
to two persona who ••re
wounded in the attack and the
, relatlHI of three more who
were sunned down comes ta the
wake ot a $1.5 mlllkMl civil ault
they filed a1aln1t tbe reetaur8Dt.
TIHI reet.aur•t a la.~
Jett Lee and Bt1 Hml H1, md
· tM Hap SIDI Tona. which on1
tb• buUdiDI tbrou1b a real
~ 98tate boldln1 com~11 wn
acriHd ot fallilll to tu• ,.... .............. Ute,..
101 au.ck m lePt. 4, 11'71.
Simulated action turns to the real thing as student swings into a " J turn" and knocks Mastrocola off his feet .
Chancellor
de/ends .drop
in trans/ers
SACRAMENTO (AP> -A
study says the typical student at·
the state's two-year community
colleges takes only one clus,
but the chancellor says a decline
in full-time, university-boqnd
students ~·t the colleges• fauJt.
Birth-rate declines, a demand
for J~related clutea and in·
creased recruiting by four-year
school.a are mainly responsible
for a gradual drop in the number
of community college atudeots
traniferring to the Uiliventty of
California and other acboola,
community coUe1e Chancellor
Gerald Hayward aald.
He wu apeaklnt to the
California Po1t1econdary
Education Commlnion, which
heard a report 1u11eatin1 that
the two-1ear colle1ea were
atrariu from their tradlUonal
roles fl pnpartn1 atudenta for
four·year acbools and Jobi.
Tbe report, by commllaion re-
aearcw Dorothy Knoell, aaid
about tllne-fow1bl of eommml·
t7 eoDlfe atadeata mroll put.·
Ume, ud tbe typical atudmt
tat• C1D1J one coune.
Gr aduation day comes with a
realistic chase, wh ere the slu·
dent tries to keep pursuers
behind his car. Al one point the
student must evade a roadblock
with a "J ·turn," a tire-s moking
maneuver that allows the driver
to back. turn and flee in a mat-
ter of seconds.
The student must escape the
roadblock before an instructor,
riding in lhe chase car, can run
up and fire a cap pistol through
the windows.
··E verything they've taught
me here was new." said one stu-
dent. a chauffeur with 30 years
e xperience. ·· 1t makes you
think They tell us lhe driver is
going to be the one they take out.
That encourages you to learn.
After all, I have my own life
too."
Big flag OK'd
BOONE, N .C. (AP) -Hill
Greene can keep a giant star-
spangled banner waving over
his service station. the Boone
Town Council has ruled.
"It happened because the peo-
ple or Boone were 100 percent
behind me," Greene said.
The dispute began June 17,
when zoning offi cials gave
Greene 10 days to re move the
20· by.3().fool fl ag from his
gasoline station or face a fme
and 30-day jail sentence. Greene
vowed to go to jail rather than
pull down hi s nag.
l I
Orange COut DAILY PILOT!Tuetday, July 28, 1981
MARCHING SLOWLY BACKWARD
-Got a call just yesterday from a very
nlce anonymous lady from Huntington
Beach who would like to see civilization
slip back to the old-fashioned
pusbbroom. Her story gives you an idea
wily .
"I just want to complain about an in·
fernal machine that's supposed to
replace the pushbroom for sweepjng out
~·
----------------~ Tll IURPHlll .W !t
places like carports and parking lots,"
she explained.
"It's a very noisy, motor-driven
blower type thing which does nothing
,more than blow the dust around.
~ "I work at a night job and you just
ilry getting some sleep during the day
lwhen one of these machines goes into ac·
lion ... " -WELL I CAN TELL you I really
sympathize with that one. Noise and
racket seem to be a major bedevilment
of our supposedly advanced civilization
these days.
Consider the phonograph, for exam·
pie.
When Thomas A. Edison first invent·
ed the phonograph, you could barely
hear it over the scratchings of the needle
across the cylinder. Then somebody im·
proved it so it didn't scratch so much
and you could hear it all across a big
parlor for dancing.
So do we leave well enough alone?
We do not. We continued to "im-
prove" old Tom E 's machine by adding
mor e power, multiple speakers and then
more power again.
Today, you couldn't hear a Tom
Edison's needle scratch if it did scratch.
Stereophonic, multi-quad speakers and
all blast out the sound with enough dee·
ibils to deafen dogs three blocks away.
And in my neighborhood, 3 a.m. is
the prime time for this kind of thing.
Alas, unlike the frazzled nice lady
from Huntington Beach, I am not sup-
posed to be a night worker. But I'm not
much of a night sleeper these days
either, thanks to the improvement on the
original invention.
NO WONDER THE LADY wants to
re-invent the pushbroom. Few people
• noisy
have ever been-awakened by one, unless
somebody was beating on you with the
business end.
Also pushbrooms, when applied to
the regular task, tend to pile up the
debris at the end of the strokes so rou
have to do something with the rubbish.
Like pick it up and haul it away.
And she's right about the new
blower gadgets. They just get the stuff
airborne so it becomes somebody
else's problem when it settles back down
again.
It 's like the rollers i n m y
neighborhood with the stereo. It's
somebody else's problem after the
crazed sounds blow out their windows.
ONCE, AROUND THE Newport
Beach, Costa Mesa and Irvine areas,
they had jet aircraft flying · overhead
that lots of folks thought were ve('Y
noisy. So they re-invented a less noisy
"She uw quiet, Zeb, before they put that engi~ on
one and now a lot of people think it's
noisier than the noisy ones were.
It's very confusing, all this progress.
Years ago , we so improved
automobiles that they were getting 29
miles to the gallon. Then we wanted to
get rid of noxious fumes so we fixed
those cars so they got 14 miles per
gallon. Now we've fixed what we fixed •
and autos are back up to 29 miles per
gallon again.
Sometimes it seems like progress is
one step forward and three to the rear.
Sagittarius to make new start
Wednnday, JuJy Z9
By SYDNEY OMARR
TAURUS (April 20-May 20 ): Restrictions are re·
moved.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20>: Be wary when it comes
to afCixing a!gnature to legal document.
AR.It ES <~arckh 21-April 191' Opportunity exists to CANCEJl <June 21-July 22>: You could win populari·
correc past mtSta es. ty contest.
• LEO <July 23-Aug. 22): Famlly member confides Patterning help needed a ·~c::~o (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22 >: Aura or romance
· domlnates scenario.
VOLUNTEERS are needed to help a brain·
htjured youth through patterning exercises 30 HOROSCOPE
minutes twice a day. Hours can be arranged. Contact
Jack or May Beresford at.631·3404 for more informa-
tion.
COMMUNICATION FOR COUPLES with Joyce
JDd Robert Simpson will be heJd at 7:30 p.m. Tues·
day ln Santa Ana. For information, call 532-5646.
WINNER AND LOSE&S: That's Us is the theme
of a free workshop sponsored by the. Mental Health
Association of Orange County at 9: 30 a. m. Friday in
Santa Ana. For information, calJ 547 · 7559.
PLANNED PAREN1'H00Dof0range County is
ieeldng volunteers to take part in a countywide
telephone survey in August. For information, calJ
t'73·172'1.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Emphasis oo promotion production, liming and intensified relationship. '
SCO&PIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21 >: Longstanding project can be completed.
· SAGITfARIVS CNov. 22·Dec. 211: You 'll make new
start In new dir~tion.
CAPR.JCOllN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19>: Emphasize caution
meUcuJous attention to details '
AQUAIUUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 181: Perceive situation In
It.a entirety.
PISCES <Feb. 19-March 20): Doors open and you
have opportunities ror creative endeavors.
·-·RUFFELL 'S
UPHOLSTERY . I PROBLEM SOLVING is the topic of a discussion s..e .,._., _ ..-DAILY PllDT
CLASSIFIED ADS
642-5818 Jed by stress specialist Murray Oxman at 10:30 a.m. 1t22 HAllOl llYD~
!Saturday in Newport Beach. For information, call ,COSTA ~ISA_-::J!l.::111~
~(213)936-!91~7~6.~~~~~~~~~~~~.1!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-J
SHUTIERS CUSTOM QUAUn SHUTIERS
Designed,
Finished
Installed
~·~-·· ~ --
.
At the Laguna Beach
Museum of Art were
r top from le/tJ Mrs.
John 8 . Parker, Mrs.
Richard Newquist, and
Dr. and Mrs. Norman
Nixon. At the Newport
. Harbor Art Museum
were fphoto at left from
leftJ David Steinmetz,
Margarita Shaw, B.J.
Richter and her husband
George.
Receptions are artsy
by MARY .JANE SCARCELLO
Of Ille D•ty ...._. SIMI
T he Laguna Beach Museum or Art hosted
a private reception for Blue Ribbon
Sponsors who contributed to the Junior
Council's Art Education for Children
before the opening of "Southern California
Artists: 1940·1980."
Contributors, who each gave $100 or more,
were presented with a specially designed blue
ribbon for display at the museum's entrance by
Janet Eggers, the museum's fund-raising
chairman.
Guests enjoyed classicial guitar music, a
hosted bar and hors d'oeuvres while viewing the
exihibit, curated by Maudette BaJI or Newport
Beach.
The hon d'oeuvres, served on the patio, were
prepared by Kay Pastorius, director of the
School of International Cuisine. Her husband is
sculptor Hal Pastorius.
Mrs. Pastorius, assisted by Kathy Dou,lass
and their committee from the Junior Council
prepared such gourmet delicacies as poached
salmon with dill sauce, c urried stuffed
mushrooms, Italian sausage quiche, campignon
pate and assorted fresh vegetables with a
spinach dip.
Among the members and guests at the party
and opening were Ken and Marla Bird Norman
and Virginia Nixon, lrmeU Desenbe;g, Cindy
P rewitt, Mr. and Mrs. Nick 8 . Williams, Arlene
Isaacs, Jim and Wendy Wood, Dr. and Mrs.
Richard Newquist, Tom Enman and Adrian
Kuyper.
N ewport Harbor Art Museum's opening,
held the same evening, attracted the
rest of Orange Coast's art world.
Mark Boyle's "Journey to the Surface
of the Earth" reproduced chunks of terra ft.rma
from alJ over the world. evoldn' cobblestones,
vacant lots and meadows in fiberglass.
Museum members set aside wine glasses t-0
travel through "Bram's Very Own Fault," an
architectural sculpture creating passageways
for exploration. ·
Artist Peter Berg took 12 days to install his
work, and a scale model on the waJI gave vis·
ilors an overview of the project.
Among the viewers wer e· Betty Turnbull and
HAPPENINGS
Victoria Kogan, who also had attended the
Laguna opening.
Rumors in the art world are that the two
women may open an art gallery together which
will feature only California artists.
Other guests were Bill and Bobbie Stabler ,
Laurie Brown, Tom and Ginny Haley, David
Steinmetz with Margarita Shaw, George and
B.J . Richter, Andrew and U~ula Cyga, Steve
and Judy Strauss. Max and Carolyn Dunn. Cora
Baldikoski, Harry and Charlotte Selling and
Snoozie Ullman .
Bomb group slates reunion
A reunion committee for the 345th Bomb
Group, a bomber outfit that flew B-2Ss in the
Pacific during World War II, is looking for thetr
comrades for a September 1982 r eunion in
Colorado.
Retired Col. C. V. True, reunion chair, said the
committee knows the whereabouts or onJy 1,000 of
the 8,000-member group.
Committee omcials are requesting squad
members or anyone knowing the whereabouts of a
member to call 886·2169.
$1,000 or,,..,._ 8, 12 weeks
Amrufll Hulr
Todayk intel't'st rat~ ~rantet'd for
the term by
Amt'rican Savinll'S
American Savings pays high interest with safety.
Ille~ ellralllnl I...,• .. twla 1 ... 1 r1~1lr••••lll
Becked bySec:uritieaofthe U.S. or U.S. GoYemment ~ THl80BUOA'nON 18 NOT A SAVINGS
ACCOUNT OR DEP081T AND IS NOT INSURED
BY nf£ P'IDIRAL 8AVING8 AND LOAN
INSURANCE CORPORA'nON.
Principel plus intereat paid by American Savinp at
rnaturlt~ NO FEE. NO SERVICE CHARGE. Available
to CaHfomil reaidenta onl)L Interest ratea are eetJlail¥._
8rln1 an1 bank or .. vtnp pulbook. We'll tranafer
thet\tnde.
· l
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tut1day, July 28, 1981
MARCHING SLOWLY BACKWARD
-Got a call just yesterday from a very
nice anonymous lady from HuoUngtoo
Beach who would like to see civilization
sllp back to the old-fashioned
pushbroom. Her story gives you an idea
why.
"I just want to complain about an in-
fernal machine that's supposed to
replace the pushbroom for sweeping out
' ~·
r.\
Tll IURPHlll ,~It
places like carports and parking lots,··
she explained.
"It's a very noisy, motor-driven
blower type thing which does nothing
.more than blow the dust around.
l "I work at a night job and you just
lry getting some sleep during the day
1when one of these machines goes into ac-
tion ... " -WELL I CAN TELL you I really
sympathize with that one. Noise and
racket seem to be a major bedevilment
of our supposedly advanced civilization
these days.
Consider the phonograph, for exam-
ple.
When Thomas A. Edison first invent-
ed the phonograph, you could barely
hear it over the scratchings of the needle
across the cylinder. Then somebody im-
proved it so it didn't scratch so much
and you could hear it all across a big
parlor for dancing.
So do we leave well enough alone?
We do not. We continued to "im-
prove" old Tom E's machine by adding
more power, multiple speakers and then
more power again.
Today, you couldn't hear a Tom
Edison's needle scratch if it did scratch.
Stereophonic, multi-quad speakers and
all blast out the sound with enough dec-
i bils to deafen dogs three blocks away.
And in my neighborhood, 3 a.m. is
the prime time for this kind of thing.
Alas, unlike the frazzled nice lady
from Huntington Beach, I am not sup-
posed to be a night worker. But I'm not
much of a night sleeper these days
either, thanks to the improvement on the
original invention.
NO WONDER THE LADY wants to
re-invent the pushbroom. Few people
• noisy
have ever been-awakened by one, unless
somebody was beating on you with the
business end.
Also pushbrooms, when applied to
the regular task, tend to pile up the
debris at the end of the strokes so you
have to do something with the rubbish.
Like pick it up and haul it away.
And she's right about the new
blower gadgets. They just get the stuff
airborne so it becomes somebody
else's problem when it settles back down
again.
It's like the rollers in my
neighborhood with the stereo. It's
somebody else's proble m after the
crazed sounds blow out their windows.
ONCE, AROUND THE Newport
Beach, Costa Mesa and Irvine areas,
they had jet aircraft flying overhead
that lots of folks thought were vefy
noisy. So they re-invented a less noisy
"She waa quiet, Zeb, before they put that engine on
one and now a lot of people think it's
noisier than the noisy ones were.
It's very confusing, all this progress.
Years ago, we so improved
automobiles that they were getting 29
miles to the gallon. Then we wanted to
get rid of noxious fumes so we fixed
those cars so they got 14 miles per
gallon. Now we've fixed what we fixed ·
and autos are back up to 29 miles per
gallon again.
Sometimes it seems Hke progress is
one step forward and three to the rear.
Sagittarius to m.ake new start
By SYDNEY OMARR
TAURUS <April 20-May 20): Restrictions are re-
moved.
GEllJNI (May 21-June 201: Be wary when it comes
to affixing 1lanature to legal document.
AR.It ESt < ~atrckh 21·April 191 Opportunity exists to CANCE& (June 2l·July 22>. You could win popuJari· correc pas m1s a es. ty contest.
• LF.o <July 23-Au1. 22>: Family member confides Patterning help needed a s~::~o (Au1. 23-Sepl. 22 ): Aura of romance
· domlnata scenario.
VOLUNTEERS are needed to help a brain-
mjured youth through patterning exercises ao HOROSCOPE minutes twice a day. Hours can be arranged. Contact
Jack or May Beresford at631·3404 for more lnforma·
tion.
COMMUNICATION FOR COUPLES with Joyce
and Robert Simpson will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tues-
day in Santa Ana. For information, call 532-5646.
WINNER AND LOSERS: That's Us is the theme
Qf a free workshop sponsored by the. Mental Health
Association of Orange County at 9: 30 a .m . Friday in
Santa Ana. For information, call547-7559.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22>: Emphasis on promotion.
production, Umln1 and Intensified reJalionshlp.
SCORPIO tOct. 23-Nov. 21): Longstanding project
can be completed.
· S~Gl1TARIUS <Nov. 22·Dec. 21): You'll make new
start ln new direction ..
CAPR.JOORN (Dec. 22·J an. 19): Emphasize caution,
metlcuJou.s attention to details.
AQUAIUUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Perceive situation in
Its entirety.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Doors open and you
have opportunities ror creative endeavon. PLANNED PAREN'l'BOODof Orange County is
seeking volunteers to take part in a countywide
telephone survey in August. For information, call ·-"RUFFELL 'S
973-1727. UPHOLSTllY .
PROBLEM SOLVING is the topic of a discussion s.re ~ ........
Jed by stress specialist Murray Oxman at 10: 30 a.m. 1922 HAH OI It.YD.
DAILY PILDr
CLASSIFIED ADS
842·58?8
!Saturday in Newport Beach. For information, caU .cosr• ~ISA_-=-•~~, 11~
-'(213) 936-91~76~·------------~!!!!!~~~~~~~--------_J
SHUTIERSCUSTOM QUAUn SHUTIERS
Designed,
Finished
Installed
Receptions
by MA.RY .JANE SCARCELLO
Of •• o.tly ...... l&aft
T he Laguna Beach Museum of Art hosted
a private reception for Blue Ribbon
Sponsors who contributed to the Junior
Council's Art Education for Children
before the opening of •'Southern California
Artists: 1940-1980."
Contributors, who each gave $100 or more,
were presented with a specially designed blue
ribbon for display al the museum's entrance by
Janel Eggers, the museum's fund-raising
chairman.
Guests enjoyed classicial guitar music, a
hosted bar and hors d'oeuvres while viewing the
exihibil, curated by Maudette Ball of Newport
Beach.
The hon d'oeuvres, served on the patio, were
prepared by Kay Pastorius, director or the
School of International Cuisine. Her husband is
sculpt.or Hal Pastorius.
Mrs. Put.orius, assisted by Kathy Douelass
and their committee from the Junior Council
prepared such gourmet delicacies as poached
salmon with dill sauce, curried stuffed
muabrooms, Italian sausage quiche, campignon
pate and usorted fresh vegetables with a
spinach dip.
Among the members and guests at the party
and opening were Ken and Marla Bird, Norman
and Virginia Nixon, lrmeU Desenberg, Cindy
Prewitt, Mr. and Mrs. Nick B. Williams Arlene
Isaacs, Jim and Wendy Wood, Dr. a~d Mrs.
Richard Newquist, Tom Enman and Adrian
Kuyper.
N ewport Harbor Art Museum's opening,
held the same evening, attracted the
rest of Orange Cout's art world.
Mark Boyle's "Journey to the Surface
of the Earth" reproduced chunka of terra fuma
from all over the world, evoking cobblestones,
---·---~
At the Laguna Beach
Miaeum of Art were
rtop from leftJ Mrs.
John 8 . Parker, Mra.
Richard Newqui!t, and
Dr. and Mrs. Norman
Nixon. At the Newport
l Harbor Art Miaeum
were (photo at left from
left J David Steinmetz,
Margarita Shaw, B.J.
Richter and her husband
George.
are artsy
vacant lots and meadows in fiberglass.
Museum members set aside wine glasses to
travel through "Bram's Very Own Fault," an
architectural sculpture creating passageways
for exploration.
Artist Peter Berg took 12 days to install his
work, and a scale model on the wall gave vis-
itors an overview or the project.
Among the viewers were Betty Turnbull and
-HAPPENINGS
Victoria Kogan. who also had attended the
Laguna opening.
Rumors in the art world are that the two
women may open an art gallery together which
will feature only California artists.
Other guests were Bill and Bobbie Stabler,
Laurie Brown, Tom and Ginny Haley, David
Steinmetz with Margarita Shaw, George and
B.J . Richter, Andrew and Ursula Cyga, Steve
and Judy Strauss, Max and Carolyn Dunn, Cora
Baldikoski, Harry and Charlotte Selling and
Snoozie Ullman.
Bomb group slates reunion
A reunion committee for the 345th Bomb
Group, a bomber outfit that flew B·25s in the
Pacific during World War II. is looking for their
comrades for a September 1982 reunion in
Colorado.
Retired Col. C.V. True, reunion chair, said the
committee knows the whereabouts of only 1,000 of
the 8,000-member group.
Committee officials are requesting squad
members or anyone knowing the whereabouts of a
member to call 886-2169.
$1,000or11IOl'e-8, 12 week•
%
J\n11110/ Hair
Todayk mterest ratt·
guaranteed ror
the term b)
Amencan Sa\-in~
Anierican Savings pays high intemst with safety.
ftle~eflm•h1nl llHIWI ...... 1 ... 1,...1re.1alll
~by Seem kin of the U.S. cw U.S. GoYmunent ~ '111180BLIGATION IS No1 A SAVINGS
ACCOUNT OR DBflOllT AND IS NOT fNSURJm
BYTHS FIDIRALSAVING8AND LOAN
INSURANCE CORPORATION.
Princ:ipel plus interest paid by American Savtn,s at
maturity. NO FEE, NO SERVICE CHARGE. Available
to Calli>rnla resident• ~ lnte_reat rates are tel...dlihl
Brtnr any bank or 1aYlnp .....-k. We'll tranafer
~efunde. '
I
I
I r ~
I
THE
f..\MILl'
CIRCUS
by Bil Keane
"I stubbed my belbowl"
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
8
l -(
' J.
! ... , r • ~
"Gueaa who'• been aeedect thrte·mllllonth ln-
tem1tJonaUy?"
MARMADt:KE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum
7.J6
"Honestly, Phil...stop panting!"
.Jt'DGE PARKER
MOON Ml'LLINS
®
~,
"Mom ... if Mrs. Reagan is th~ first lady,
what number are YOU?"
' I
by Harold .Le Ooux
YOV 6AY YOU CAN COME IN TO 5EE ME MONDAY, MIOO WE()f>TE'R? ~T ... l'HAT'5 FINE! HOW~ ,__,.....,
NINE O'CLOCK ?
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
AND BRIN~ ME
TMAT SIGN-· :t!J.J.
Do THE
THINl<IN<5
AROUND
HERE.'
,,..... ---··~---
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, July 28, 1981
PMNUT8
11IF A FOUL BALL 15 MIT I THAT'S TMEMES5A6£ I
SEMIND THIRP BASE, IT'S FEEL lME AH6EL W ME
™ERE Al.SO MA'I 8E A FEW EMTMGOAl<E5
AND SOME FLOODS TME SM~TSTOP'S PLAY!" 1061VE10 M WORLD. ..
• • • 4 , • • • : • • ', •
TtMBLEWEEDH
CAN YOU
TELL ME
HOW TO
GETTO
THE
LIBRARY?
GORDO
7-ZI
1l-teRE:'S A Nf:W LQT"ION
1HAi 6'1~ AROIJNP-Tiif'·
CUXK ~ION FRCW1
MOSQUl10ES.
I
I
l ,___~~--__..1,,..;;;.i
. ••
by Charles M. Schulz !
by Tom K. Ryan
by Jeff MacNelly
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Batiuk
AND HE'( I WHAT A800f
"THE R.JJ Qf 5PLASHI~
A~DINA~ RJU...OF~.
by Kevin Fagan
I
d
Orange Cout 9AILY PILOT/Tuffday, July 28, 1981
W. esiern loses
$8.4 milliOri
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Western Airllnel bU
reported a second quarter lou ol •.4 mllUoll or • cents a share, compared to a lou of $5.4 mllllon or
46 cents a share In lbe second quarter of 191().
Western said Monday lt reduced ita aecood
quarter operat.inc lou to S15 mlWon from *30.2
million a year a10. However, pretax 1aina from
the sale ol equipment fell to •·2 million from 111.3
million a year aco, West.em Prealdent Domlnlc
Renda said, wlth lnveatmenta credits for the
second quarter $3.4 milllon lower lban last year.
(Western serves John Wayne Airport in Oran•e
County.)
"The second quarter result.a were extremely
disapj.int.inc,'' said Renda, who blamed slack ab
trave and increased price competition.
Revenues for the second quarter were '2'70.8
million, lbe company said, up 14 percent from
,$237.7 million a year ago. Net loeaes for the flrst
half were $10.1 million or 87 cent.a a ab~e. Western
said, compared to a net lau of $14.3 million or
$1.19 a share ln the same 1980 period.
Oxy Pete in
Italian venture ·
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Occidental Petroleum
Corp. and Ente Nazionale ldrocarburi, the Italian
national energy corporation, have announced the
formation of a joint chemical and coal company to
be called ENOXY.
Occidental and ENI will each supply half of
ENOXY's initial capital of $1.05 bllllon, the com-
panies said in an announcement released ln Rome.
An Occidental spokesman in Los Angeles said a
preliminary agreement on the venture was sigaed
in Rome by Occidental Chairman Dr. Armand
Hammer and Dr. Alberto Grandi of ENI, with
Italy's minister of public holdings also present.
ENOXY will initially control some 60 chemical
plants in Sicily. Sardinia and northeast Italy, the
· spokesman said, and will operate ln the basic
chemicals, plastics and rubber sector. ENOXY
will also control four coal mines in Kentucky and
West Virginia now operated by Oxy's Ialand Creek
Coal Co., he said. ENOXY's sales are initially ex-
pected to be approximately $1.5 billion annually.
he said.
The joint venture, originally announced March
5, "will be important for Occidental as it will
strengthen our international role in chemicals, ex-
pand our production and commercial base and
give us additional markets for our coal," Hammer
said in a statement released by bis office here.
"""'~,CTORS
CORNER I
A•r• Cotna & lltlmp1
· GOLD & SILVER 7-27-11 .... ce....... ....a. ..... 1erv9e,,.,. ..,a..
Metltel.Mfl ..,... 1•c--.... . -~ ...... .. ~su-~..,...,,.,-...
"-c ...
lllA& ......
(714) 551 t l lO
South Coest fltue Vlffage -.... ... ... __ .... C-_)
PRIME
COSTAMISA
btcall•• Wies forLHM , ........
Oa.V..W .... S...eo.t ,...
NE ACO-
,.OILIMs WITH UALllTA11 .. MAMCIM•1
W. heYe ttrong co-slgnera who can help you qualify to
the home ou want
Co-Signers. Inc __ 17;.,=.J.
.................. ,.. ... ........ •C _ ...... ...... 1drl
...........
A dragline operator at Texaa Utilities Generating Co.'s Big Brown stnp mine
in Pairfield scoops up a giant shovel of overburden. exposing a seam of
lignite coal. The gargantuan shovel can scoop up to 95 -cuOic yards of dirt at a
time. ·
MGM stock hike OK'd
CULVE R C ITY <AP ) -
Shareholders of Metro-Goldwyn.
Mayer Film Co. have approved a
plan to increase the company's out-
standing stock and sell about $100
million worth of the new shares to
MGM's principal stockholder , fman-
cier Kirk Kerkorian.
The restructuring was necessitated
by MGM's purchase of United
Artists, which is due to be completed
today. a company spokesman said.
MGM is buying UA for $250 million in
cash and $130 million in notes, with
the stock sale to Kerkorian and the
general public expected to generate a
total of about $200 million, be said.
The combination of MGM and UA
will result in a company with assets
exceeding S1 billion and annual
revenues exceeding $500 million,
MGM Chairman Frank Rosenfelt
told s hareholders at a s pecial meet·
ing here on Monday.
·'The acquisition of United Artists
will enable quality motion pictures to
be d eveloped b y two creative
management teams and the release
of such product domestically with the
efficiencies obtained from a single
. distribution organization," Rosenfelt
said .
-. Texas anticipates
major coal boom
• FAIRFIELD, Texas (AP) -In a
region better known for oll wells than
strip mines, some of the nation's bis·
gest oil and energy companies are
quietly acqulrln' leases on millions
of acres of farm and rancblands.
The heavy investment ln six Gulf
Coast states comes as companies
such as Phillips Coal Co.. a sub-
sidiary of Phillips Petroleum, Exxon
and 10 other energy concerns an-
ticipate a coal boom that could
forever change power u1e patterns in
this oil-rich region.
Lignite -soft brown coal
somewhat denser and richer ln
carbon than the peat burned in some
countries -underlies a vast section
of the region.
With the long-term availability of
n atural gas in question and prices for
domestic and imported gas rising,
the area's estimated 35 billion tons of
lignite figure prominently in several
proposals for developing synthetic
fuels, state and industry officials say.
In eastern Texas, where salt water
is seeping into the famous oil fields ,
some of the state's 23.4 million tons
of lignite are already being dug from
three strip mines operated by a con·
sortium or Texas electric utilities.
Eight generating plants located right
at the mouths of the consortium's
mines last year produced enough
electricity to meet the needs of a city
of 2 million.
Phillips Coal, founded in Dallas six
years ago, now holds leases on more
than a million acres, while a dozen
other major oil and coal companies
own lignite rights on an additional 3.4
million acres in Texas, Louisiana,
Arka nsas, Tennessee, Mississippi
a nd Alabama.
A r ecent study by the Texas
Bureau o f E conomic Geology
estimates the region's lignite r e·
serves have the energy content or
more than double it.s proven oil and
natural gas reserves combined.
As a result, lignite mining aiong
the burgeoning Gulf Coast is project-
ed to soar from 30 million tons last
year to as much as 138 million tons
by 1990. Barely a decade ago, onJy 2
million tons a year were being mined
in the six-state region , the bureau
said.
James Van Reenan, vice president
for marketing of PhHlips Coal, said
lignite is fast becoming the fuel of
choice for the region's utility com·
panies and heavy industries.
As a fuel, Gulf Coast lignite is only
slightly less efficient than Western
coal and transportation COit.i are
almost non-existent becauae the
plants are near the mines, Van
Reenan said. And it'1 easier to
reclaim atrip-mloed land alCllll the.
flat, verdant Gulf Coast than ln the
arid coal fields of Wyoming and
North Dakota, he added.
The soft, chunky llpite resembles
topsoil lo appearance and texture
and owes its exlatence to the same
geological process that produced the
Texas oilfields. The procea1 becan 70
mllllon years ago when slit covered a
thick layer of plant matter alone lbe
Gulf Coast.
The fossilized remains or the
vegetation are lignite, which lies 15
to 200 feet below the surface lo a
giant black blanket spread from the
Texas-Mexico border to Alabama
and Kentucky. Older deposit.a of or-
ganic materials became pocketa of
oil and natural su.
Exxon is designing a proposed S4
billlon synthetic fuels plant to
process Texas lignite into a syntbetlc
crude petroleum which, lo turn,
could be used to produce syntbetlc
gas.
If the company goes ahead wilb the
plant, lignite mining would begin
near Troup, Texas, in 1986.
N FL o w ner
joins Fox
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Arthur B.
Modell has joined the 20th Ceatury-
Fox Film Corp. board of directors,
studio chief Marvin Davis bu an-
nounced.
Modell , who was one of the
pioneers of daytime TV iD the early
1950s, currently is owner and presi-
dent of the Cleveland Browns football
team. Re was president of the NFL
from 1967-1970.
·•Arthur Modell brings to our board
years of business and marketing ex-
perience which will prove very useful
to Fox," Davis said Monday in a
statement. "We are extremely
pleased that he has joined us."
Film executive Alan J. Hirschfield,
former president Gerald R. Ford,
former seeretary of state Henry A.
Kissinger and attorney Edward Ben-
nett Williams all have recently been
named to the Fox board following
Davis' takeover of the studio earlier
this year.
W E Do~rr GNE SHA LLOW ANSW ERs To DEEP QJESTIONS.
~faced with unconventional
problems. a routfne "no" Is the easiest
answer. But at Herttage Bank. we don't give
easy answers to tough questtons. Instead,
we take the time and troubie to look
below the surface and come up with fresh,
Innovative solutions to your business
problems. Soludons that cdJld keep a
promising business from going under. Or
we may develop lnnovatlve ~
polldes that might raise some eye-
brows. Vie may be unconventional. but
you can bank on our sound. pro(esslonaJ
ftnandal polcJes. Vie'~ businessmen M wel
as bankeG. So where you may have found
unbending rules you'I ftnd us bending ~r
t.:kwards to say "Yes" more often than
"no." Heritage Bank Unconvendonal
because shalow l/nWiers are part of
the problem, not the solution.
ANAHEJM MAIN omct. 711 N. lucid St .. (794)851-4100. ANAHEIM STADIUM omct. 2099 So. State ColleJle Btvd.,
ANM1m,(714)1Sl·4l54 •AIRPOITOfflCE.2171 ClilnplSDr .. IMne,(714)151·'<>00 •COSTAMlSAomc£. '720Ad.m1Ave ..
Calta Mesa. (7M) 851-4165 • Ntwl'OttT llACH Oma. 1501 Supertor Ave., Newport h«h. ~:l·.tl61 •SANTA AHA oma.
1100 No • ._, Nie .• S.W. AM. (714) 851-4149 • WOODB«IDGE omct 4180 &ananc. .._. (71.t) 151~1.tl.
,
' \
I
PUBUC NOTICE
-----------------
..,...
PM:ftftOUt IUll ...
llMle ITA,.....MT
Tiie ............ --· ...... ...._._:
v .................... prine
(IHI MeYlflt 6 Stw .... •1' W.
IC.elelM, 0r-.. ~
....... L.. ....._, '"" .._ ....... ............... CA9'111. "•rten L. Wll1•11, Utl1
·-----.,.., S-U ,..,., CA ..,.. ..-... ,.... ........ ~.., .. ......... ar.,..c-1>e11y ............. , ....... Wife).
WY 14. JI.,~ 4, ltlt ....., ... L.. .._
PVBUC NOTICE I ~L....._ ,... .......... -.... """ ... c..tw a.-" ar.,.. ce.ly .. J...., """· .. ,.... ,........ Cll'llll9I CaMI Delly .....
Jllfr ,._ Jt, -. A49: 4, t'1 _ 11.w-.
PVBUC NOTICE
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, July 28, 1981
......
Parker Hannifin appoints VP
....... B. ••• bu been named roup vice president-operations o the
Hydraulics branch of Parker Bertea
Aerospece, a group of Parker Hannlfln
Corp. i.eadQuartered in Irvine. He pre· vtC>U.111 wu vice president, finance and
admtnlltratioo ol the Aerospace IJ'OUP·
Parter Hannifin Corp. also an-
DOUJlN that WWlam D. Wll.kenea bu
been ••med director or advanced
tecb.,.ey for the Cleveland-based
worldwide •upplier of fluid systems
compenenta for industrial, automotive,
av1at:lilln., space, marine and medical
appllcationl. Wilkerson lives in Tustin.
* JS ..._ was appointed vice
pre marlleting for M.icrodata ln·
terna Corp., Irvine. He will be
ON THE JOB
respobltble for marketing proerama in·
vo~vl international distribution of Mic 's products and services. Ad·
di • Bonne will direct the product
mar t lng, product support and
marketinJ communications for the new-
ly announced sovereign DDP system
within the North American marketplace.
marketpJace. ·
* Ile.la Strelllo bas joined the full
service marketing agency of Cochrane
Chase, Uvingston & Co. Inc., Irvine, as
an aceotmt executive. Streblo lives in
Irvine.
* · Mleta.I B. S&effora has become direc-
tor or service operations for Irvine-
based Airco Cryogenics, a division of
Airco Inc. Steffora will coordinate the
division's worldwide efforts in main-
taining a blghly responsive service or-
ganizaUoo. Included in bis responsibili-
ty is Alrco Cryogenic's newly completed
salea and service center in Houston,
th.at • designed primarily lo serve oil
well llllwvice companies. ~-:-*
Jack Doaald of Huntington Beach baa
been appointed re1ional sales mana1er
for th e Southwest regi on of
Waacomat/Wascoclean, International
manufactll(ers and marketers ol pro-
f easional laundry and drycleaning
equipment .
* George Mltcbell bas joined The
J . L . M. Co.. Irvine, as account ex-
ecutive. Mitchell, who lives in Irvine,
will provide consulting services for the
incentive travel needs of J .L.M. clients.
The firm specializes in the planning and
engineering of conventions, meetings,
commercial travel and incentive pro-
grams ror major corporations. • PbWp R. Garr or Huntington Beach
has been appointed district manager or
Pacific Telephone's San Gabriel res-
idence service district. He will be
responsible for residence service to
Pacific customers in East Los Angeles
and San Gabriel Valley communities. • Eugene R. Howard, manager of
Home Savings and Loan Association,
Newport Beach, 16
Corporate Plaza, bas
been appointed
Home vice president.
Howard is a 26-year
veteran of the U.S.
Marine Cor ps and
joined Home in 1978
a s a m a ·n a g e r
trainee
* A. B. Laffer and MOWuo
his firm, A. B. Laffer Associates, will
ser ve Marine National Bank as
economic consultants. Laffer, 41., is best
known for the "Laffer Curve" and
"supply side" economic theories that
many claim form the basis or the
Reagan administr ation's economic
policies.
Sue Laing has been named director of
tour and travel at the lnn at the J>ark in
Anaheim. Laing, who lives in Newport
Beach, will be responsible for the sales
effort in the tour and travel market rdt
the 500-room hotel owned by the
Wratber Corp.
* Robert F.1Wa1maa of Santa Ana hAI
been named aaslatant vice president·
auditor for Capistrano National Bank.
The bank has offices ln San Juan
Capistrano, Santa Ana and Irvine.
* PbU Greene of Newport Beach bu
been named director, public relatioos ol
Estey-Hoover Inc.,
Newport Beach. For
the past two years
Greene b ea ded
PG PR Public Rela-
tions, a Newport
Beach counseling
firm . PGPR h as
bee n acquired by
Estey-Hoover. • Jim Hacgard is .......
now vice president of Cannell & Chama
Commercial Interiors Inc., Newport
Beach.
* Lew Small baa been appointed
Western region marketing manager of
Fountain Valley-based Customweave
Carpets Inc. Small joined the firm in
1975 as sales representative.
* Garrett A. Caner of Irvine is now ex·
ecutive director of the Dental Market·
ing Institute. DMI and its affiliated Al·
sociation for Dental Health are head-
quartered in Tustin. Both organizations
are designed to apply modern market·
ing techniques toward public aware-
ness, understanding and appreciation of
regular quality dental health care.
* Cbarle9 F. Bottomley, former chief
executive om cer or Keystone Savings
and Loan Association in Orange County,
has been elected executive vice preai-
d en t of Huntington Beach-based
Mercury Savings and Loan A&aociation.
His general responsibility will be in the
area of loan administration and new
strategy development.
fmm Gibraltar~
~~Gibraltar's Roc.k Solid""
Cash Management Fund.
High amh1p. Earn a guaranteed 13%
on investments of S5000 or more. (Interest
compounded daily. Effective annual yield 14.086%.)
lnvatmenb under SSOOO earn 5~%.
~ Instant IJquidity. Easy transfer of funds
11111111 by telephone between your business checking
account and Gibraltar's Cash Management Fund.
24 hours a day. 7 days a week.
~ Guaranteed rate. New rate set on the 16th
~ of each month and effective for 30 days.
~ Fully secured. Funds backed by U.S. ~ Government Securities. The fund is not a
savings account or deposit and therefore is not
insured by the F,S.L.J.C.
For more information, contact your local
Gibraltar branch or call toll-free 800-252-0396
and ask for our Cash ~ent Pund counselor.
.,.....--..... 0 0 0
-Orange Coast OAILV PILOT(r1.1tfday. July 28, 1981
I
Dti'IKlDUCING 11IE LEVEL PAY Pl.All It puts your gas bills on a budget.
And that can help keep you on a budget.
Here's a simplified explanation of the plan:
Based on your past bills, the Level Pay Plan averages your higher winter gas
bills with your lower summer bills. So you make equal monthly payments. In the
lweum month of the plan, your bill is adjusted to make up for any underpayment
or overpayment during the year.
Check your August gas bill for complete details about the Level Pay Plan.
Then, if you want to join the plan, just pay the "Level Pay Amount:'
If you don't want to join, pay the "TotaJ Amount Due:·
Call the Southern California Gas Company if you have any questions.
Find out how the Level Pay Plan can help keep you on your budget.
And help keep you on your feet. Let• work together to saw .....,..,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE.
PICTITlWS au11 ... u
MAMelTATmMa•T
TIM fOll-fftt ltWllOtll ore dolllO
M IMMel: <.t.> 1.11e11rv HOMll e.-01<e1u ,
181 Ll&E.-TY HOMll LOANS &
PVBLJC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
INVESTMENTS, U IS2 ... <II PICTIT10111au1n•••
8.,lff•fl. 5'A1o IU "E .. , H..m1,,.... ....._ ITA~ft
8Mdl, CA ""'1 TM fel-lftt perllOtlt ore Cloi"I Tiie l.eOftord Group, Ill<. Co Wll-•:
CollfomlO <OtllOf'ollOll), 1'1Q hocfl THll OI~ COM .. ANY, IMSI a.uin ... Sullo l•J "E ... H1111U119to11 ....., ................ CA mu.
•°!!."·CA ftW1 P,_A,Ot Y. H. Yl:H, 1 .. jl .._,.
, -• .....,,... 11 <-led by o <•· ...... INIM, CA "115.
,.rolt.... IAU. Ya. ....... 1'451 a-,. ......
THE LEONA.-o o.-ou~. ,,,,,,.,CA"7U.
INC. l',_AHK YRH, Jlt., INSI IMrre
GffoMt L. ~rel. , ll'YlllO, CA tr71S.
CNlf £xo<llU¥e Offkor ADEl.alNll J . YllH. "451 ..... r.
Tlllt ........ -lltocl •ltll IN ll"llM.CAtll71S. c:-t'f Oor1I fJf Or.,..~.., Jul., 11la _._, 11 <...-CtM ay • J.1"1. , ................
IC a A Y a IMITM lally i. Yltll <-•• .... u. TMa ... .,.... -ni.i •ltll ._ _ __,..._............ Ci.A llf OrMtll C.....ty • ............. ca...... -11.1'91. ~ f'lllllltllM Or .... C.Otl Dolly .. 1104
JtAy U, Jl1 B. Awl.•. 1''1 JIM-41
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
~,..., .
.. llDll&llM Or91199 (MU Oe lly
"""'· Jlllr rt, a. ....,.. •· 11, 1t11 ....,.
PUBUC NOTICE
PVBUC NOTICE
a a o e a s a a s: a a: s •• &SJ 2 Z t St h 0 6 5 IS
National fAl.ucation profits rise
Nadmal Edlica&loa Corp •• Newport Beach, hat reported record llx·montb reeulta.
Net 1Dcome f« tbe ti.a a>Ootbt ended June ao
reached st.I mlWoe, up 19. 7 percent from th• fl.t
mllllon lut year. Revenues for the period rote to '50 mlllloa compared to Jut year'• "2 million.
Primary •arninal per •bare were 93 c.nta tn 1911
compared to 12 cent.a in 1J80. Fully dlluttd earn·
lnas per 1bare were 78 cent.a ln Ul81 compared to 82
centa ln ueo.
Net income fOI' the three moatbt ended June 30
lncreued to '803.000, 22.7 percent hi1ber than the
$'73e,OOO repotUd in the Ute period lut year.
Revenuea for the period rOle to $27 mllllon com·
pared to lut year'• *21 mUUoo. Primary eamin11
per share were '3 cent.a in 1981, compared to 37
cent.a in 1980. Fully dUuted earnin1• per share
were 37 cent.a in 1981. Compared to :n cent.a ln 1980.
BUSINESS BRiEFS
McDonnell Doualaa AttronauUc1 Co. la located
In Hunt.In~ Beach. •
MSJ Data Corp., Costa Mesa, for the quarter
ended June 27, reported a 38 percent aaln in net In·
come on an 18 percent lncreue in revenues over
the comparable year·earlier period. The com·
pany'a first 1981 flscal quarter showed net lncome
of $1 .l milUon, or •5 cent.a a share on 2,4'9,836 ,
average common abares and equivalent.a outatand·:
lng. This compared with earnings of S815,907, or 36 f
cents a share on 2,258, 771 average common shares •
and equivalent.a outatandln1, for the quarter ended I
June 28, 1980. .
Revenues -including sates and service -!
totaled $1'.2 million, compared with $12 million in j
the year·ago quarter.
• l
Rome Federal 8avta11 and Lou .Usoclatloll
bas slped an agreement to merae with Minion
Federal Savings and Loan Aaaociation of Santa
Barbara. The mer1er ia aubject to reautatory ap-
proval.
lMI Limited, United Kingdom. baa reached I
agreement in principle to acquire lrvlne·baaed ,
Control Components International <CCI>, a j
division of Babcock & Wilcox, in turn a subsidiary
of McDermott Inc. CCI is engaged in the design, ,
manufacture and sale of process control valves for
the energy hydrocarbon processin1 industries. The
current turnover of CCI e:ceeds S20 million. · 1
Marine NaUoaal Bank, which claims it as the
largest newly capitalized independent bank in I
Orange County banking history, ls open for busi·
ness , The bank i11 located at the intenection of
Harbor and MacArthur boulevards in Santa Ana.
Mlaslon Federal will retain it.a name and
operate as a separate entity, aithouah it.a financial
resources, services and personnel will be Joined
with Home Federal. The association baa asset.a of
$343 million, a net worth of 924.8 mUllon and 18
branches throughout Ventura, San Luis Obispo and
Santa Barbara counties.
Al June 30, Home Federal reported a net
worth of $252.5 million and aasets of $4.8 billion.
The S&L has offices in Huntington Beach, Irvine,
Laguna, San Juan Capistrano, Santa Ana, Seal
Beach and Tustin. • McDonnell Doactas Corp.'• earnings Cor the
first six months of 1981 were $89.6 million, or $2.24
a share fully diluted on saJea of $3.5 million, com·
pared with net earnings of S87.l million, or S2.20 a
share for the like period a year ago.
This included an after·tax gain of $15.5 mlUion,
or 39 cents a share from a real estate transaction
in 1980's first quarter. Sales in the first baJf of 1980
were $3 million.
For the second quarter this year, earnings
advanced to $48.3 million, or $1.21 a ahare on sales
of $1.8 million, compared wllh earnings of $43.7
million, or $1.10 a share on sales of $1.6 million in
the comparable period last year.
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
• Smith ln&.ernaUonal Inc., Newport Beach, re·
ported record revenues and net income for the
second quarter and first haJf ended June 30.
Revenues for the second quarter increased 63
percent over the second quarter of 1980 to S289.6
million. Net income rose 86 percent to $34.2
million. Earnings per shue advanced 69 percent
to $1.49 .
Revenues for the first half of 1981 increased 65
percent over the like 1980 period to $551.6 million.
Net income rose 80 percent to $61.8 million. Earn·
ings per share increased 63 percent to S2.69.
* Great Western Savings has opened its new
branch office in the 15-story Great Western Sav·
ings Tower, 3200 Park Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
The savings fa cility formerly was in temporary
quarter s at 3315 S. Bristol St., Santa Ana.
* A F1uor Corp, unit has been awarded a SS
million contract lo design and construct two
de wpoint·control plants in Venezuela. Fluor is
headquartered in Irvine.
' NEW YO"K -IA"I ~· IN•Tr 109 110 Hfll,__ 12\lo 1i.t NlelMI a 40 40\tt StPoul ~ ....
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------~' ~I
Mwft Milli NL l'i.i ft NL
OY1 IK 11 NL
~ I
Orange Coast OAJL Y PILOT/T~. July 28, 1981
~--------------------------------..__ _________ __ NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
OUOTATIOMS IMCA.UO• UAOl•O• , ...... YO••. M10•1n. •ACt,I(. .... totTOfl DIUOIT AMO C•lf~l .. llATI noc• llCCMAMOltA•D •IPOttTID .... , ... •oo ANO INSTINll • • •
(Fir•o/o raoo-parl um•.)
A craduaJ lncreue over 1 lOftl span ol yean ln the
tradltional Soclal Security retirement ace for U.S.
workers LI increuinaly likely. Whether the advance la
from tod1y'1 age ~ to 88 or to 10me 1lmUarly h11her
level and whether the 1pan over which the lncreue
lakes pJace reaches into the next century or some year
before 2000-these are quesUona \Mt will be intenalve·
ly 1tudled and debated.
But aireement ia apreadlne that t.his ia one ln·
telll1ent direction in which our 1yatem 1hould bead.
And moet algnlficantJy. the lines or diaaareement
ft.!.!.:'.,:. :0:. ~ servatives on
this issue are • ,.
softenln&. ~
Older re· A :. tiremeot ages, ... , ... -1111.._Pl_IJ_l_I __
mandatory or I.
voluntary,
already are commonplace in our private pension plans.
If you loot closely, you will aee the fascinating
phenomenoo of millions of workers voluntarily opting
for earlier retirement while milllona of other workers
reluctantly take whatever retirement benefits they
have accumulated at older and older years.
Are other industrialized lands "graying'' as
rapidly u we are? If they are, what can we learn
from these other nations that might help lead us to
financially sound, yet emotionally sympathetic
solutions? While the populations of au industrialized countries
are growing older, none is aging urapidly as Japan's.
By 1985, more than a fourth or Japan's population, now
approximating US million, will reach that nation's
traditional compulsory retirement age of 55 -a
percentage that dwarfs the scheduled proportions with
which we are starting to grapple.
In Japan, life expectancy for men is now at>Out 74
years and nearly 79 years for women -as compared
with 69 years for American men and 77 years for
American women.
At the top of the nation's readjustment agenda is a
policy under which Japanese firms must postpone the
age at which most workers leave their companies rrom
the present 55 to 60.
The Japanese government provides subsidies to
companies that extend the retirement age of their
workers. It has established formal guidelines under
which firms are pressured -but not legally required -
to meet the extension io the retirement age by 1985.
Nevertheless, a recent survey disclosed that a
large percentage or all Japanese companies -perhaps
40 percent -stiil enforce the old retirement age or 55
among their employees. These age levels reflect
practices that made sense when life expectancy in
Japan was much, much shorter.
Retirement in Japan, though, does not mean the
same as retirement io our country. Employees do not
just st.op working eotireJy at age 55. Instead, most
merely leave the company for which they have been
working since graduation from high school or college.
Virtually every retiree then aets a second job. It
may even be a less important, lower-paying position
with the same company or a less important job with
another. rrequenUy smaller enterprise.
Wednuda11-IAuona we con leans /Tom Japan.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT Dg)! J!_~l$Pl ~!!~!.VIL
NEW 'f'Otlk (API -............. r lll'tc:9 'Voe~· Jul. 1:1 •
.. -c ..... ,,, .. '"'"" -· ec1hft a.. .... '--a.. Gill .._ Y-Stiecll 1r.c._.. ..._ 10 lllf "''·• MIAI m .12 toeS..17+ t.1, tr .... lllillilMll' .t lftlA 11111 JI. JI Trn •76 -.u ,.. ... -.111+ .... NwtM Mm '71... I~ •• ... IS Ull 101.a l".Jt lt7.4't la.JI+ Ill"
I( -1 --*'> +1'-U Siii ., •• 171M .S.41 -.n+ lM AIMf T& T 111,A11 9"' -14 lnWI . . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . . . • • . . U91 )W IMICelEd ..._,,. a.. + 'o'I Trefl ...................... -.S.•
ScNIU .... _.. '"' + 141 Utllt . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. .. 1,m.-~~ == = :'= '5 Siii ....................... 6,114.M
.~:.t...: 411~·,. i; .. ~; WHAT STOCKS DID -... _.... ,. NIW YORK CAP) Jiii. t1
Ctltl~ ...... II -Vt r .... 1111 • as1;1• •1• + v. .... ..,.... SS4' + ..
S......Tedl m.• ll'-+ flo
AMERICAN LEADERS MIATMIUa.J
NIW 'f'OAK IAPl Jiii. t7
Mvlfl<td r-rl.
0.CllllM ... u~ '" , .... 1_ m N_..._. II ""... ,.
METALS
'"'"· ~ .. ,..
771 J II
Due to late transmission
today's llstlng will not
appear In the Dally Piiot.
\
-
--=-MNltG-.. , .....
ICUNGPU
A ~ plot unfold• 10
lure Celne bed! 10 ChlN
and C*taln death.
I 110 TAC OOUQH
M•A•l•H
Hewtc~ 1nd Tr1pp1r
"~" ''"* not to .....,.t • dlltlonot•~
dlec:Nirgl for • wounded,
homoluUlll llOldlet.
• OOOOTIMU
J..J. --Uj) with • Yoc:ll
dllc:ov.ry 1141 caNe 11141
CHECKING OUT Watter Olkewicz and
Deborah Harmon are employees in a
small, haunted hotel on ·•comedy of Hor
ror" tonight at 8:30 on Channel ?.
Ir.~"
eot#AHY ("'>
Cl) C81NIWI 9 A8CNIWI 1:..-w. * * \4 "The MICl<lntOllh ........ (1973) PIUI .....,_
"""· Oomlniqul Sandi.
&Med on • ~ by 0.-
mond BIQl9v. A 8"tllh
lnllllglncl """' and 1111
Ntnlle eonort -~ to cope with doubll IOlfll•
and trlple-o-on thlW
mlulon 10 QIC>IUN a oom-
munllt fll)Y.
e:ao I JOKIJt't WILD AU .. ™-'AWll. y
Followlng a tot>Wy, ' CtOOk 11r..... Into ,,,.
llunllw lloflll to e¥Old c:ec>-
lutl by the poMc9
• MNNYHU
8anny imper'IOftlMI ---..nown entert.....,.
• KCET Nl.WUIAT G ITUDIOIR
"Coc>bl9r" T'llfO ooC>bllt'S
11\0W ltldl how to INk• "'* °""" "-: .. .,,,,.. toulllng rnetc:ll In South
Cerolna. (R)
Cl)QJNIWI 9 8AANf:Y Miu.EA
Barney puta 1111 11'9 on tile
Nne when tt c;on,. to a
chOicl of ousting I gtOUP
of ttnante from • llMl>a.g
notel or facing deplrtmen-
181 (tlwg-. (PW1 1)
(l}MOVll
"Don't ..... The Boet" 1::111 EDfTONAL 1:00 CUNIWI D NBCNEWS
• HAPPY DAYS AOAIH
,onzle ahOcio.e Richie and
hi• lrl1nd1 whe n he
announcee that he la oet·
ting mW"rled.
8 A8CNIWI ·~ A genw81 ,_.,de Ille
40nlh with an Oflloerw'
Club after Hawk• and
Trepper -hie aon'1 ltt..
• STI&T'S M IAH
FMNCl8CO
A young man from ttll
ghetto~ tom ~
joining the syndicate and
telling St-when hi wtt-
-the alaytng ol an
underwot1d Chief.
• OWAEA8Y
GuMte: "Roger Blklwln.
Teddi sOtton, Dr, lrwtn
Portner. ( R) 0 G MACNa. I LEHAEA
llllPORT
Cl) T1C TAC DOUGH 9 MERV Gllff'IH
GU1111: 8lelr Flrrlng1on
D~. Llbll'ICI. l11
Roy Reim•. Roger & Rog-.,,
(C)MOYIE *•>A "The Wred< OI The
Mwy l>Nrl" (19591 Gwy
Cooper. Chlttton Helton.
A ehip'e offtclr la aided by
the •lpplr of • Mlv8QI
bo9t In c:IMrlng Illa neme
of Mgllgel-chefOll. (Q)MOVIE
"My Brllllent CerHr"
( 1980) Judy D1vl1, Sam
Neill. In turn-ot-IM-clntu-
CHANNEL LISTINGS
ry Auatr811a, en lndepeud-
.,,, young -trlee to
mall• • ~ ... Mil•
~· IC>CW Pfll*KU l~~:~, ~Ma l
Newton-JC>M. 0-Kiiiy
A young artlel .• 111e_,iy I
~ and a untlmentll
mllllonllre Join lorcee 10
CIC*\ up • hooge ro!lat.
dlec:o ~ 'PG'
1~ 9 INGLANO: CAOWN
AND ntOfllNI
On ,,,. -of ttfle mat-
,,. of Prince Ch81tM and
lady Diane Spenoer, Jiit
MatlOw , ... a look •I the I
Btltlah Mc>Mtehy Ind how
... .. lt¥ld In OOflleme>O-
"'Y England.
I 8 '"*--Y FlUO ~CHAAL.f.9
A~ look 11
Grell 8rltaln'a Prine:•
CharlM 8 IY!OHLA.
Hoata; Inez Pedroza, Paul
Moyer A Ylalt to the old
Cutwr City S1udloe; a
c:n.IM up the Calltornil
c:ol91 on tile -anklMt
pc:ht to MA the Pecfflc:; a
loo6c at the women wno
ride the rodeo drc:ulle.
D FACE THE MUSIC
• ALL IH THE FAMIL y I
Arc:hte la outraged when
Edith ljl""9 aw.y a valu-
able lntlll'ltanoe left to ""
!>} '* c:ou.ln
• MACNEl I l.SiAER
"9'0fl'T Ii> NEWS
Cl) P.M. MAGAlJH£
CID RACE FOR ntE
PEHHAHT
Berry Tompllin1 and Tim
McC.,.,., recap dlvlalonal
bu.ball atlndlnga and
Interview aome ol the eame'• top peeywe. (tt t111
playwa' llnkl OOflllnuM,
an update on the tl1uatlon
""' Mo bl Included.)
l:OO 8 Cl) WAL TEA
CAONKITF8 UNfVEA8E D LC>eo
An UC>lflng roell linger
Oita Lobo and Plt1tlne
milted up with record
pirllu.(R)
• MOV1I
• • "Mako: Jewe Of
Death" (1975) Rlc:hlrd
Jaec:kll, Jennftw Blehop.
An eco!Ogy-mlnded n.tier-
mM trlet to protec:t gtM t
white ltlartta from would-
bl hunt.,.. e a ~AOYAL
WE>ON>
A report on the upc:ommg
wedding of Britain' a Prlnc:e
Ctllt'IM to Lady Ol-fr=' bl ~·Id
• • * "C""1cl" (1967)
Dorla Day, Rlchard Harrie.
A women tr...,... Incognito
ro trldl down the narc:ot-
lca ring reaponllbll tor hit
fathlf'• dMth.
• P.M. MAQAZJHE
SkydMng off the 3000-lool
El C8')1taln ~ t11e pr9'>-
er 1t Ion 1 lor Prine:•
Charla•' wedding; Biii
Harrla with 1 movie revi.w;
Steve C1nay mllc11 1
water tilde: Capt. Carrot
1J KNXT 0CBS1 Los Angelo•.,
D KNBC !NBC! Los Angelt•s
" Kl'LA 1IM I Los Angele'>
D KABC TV tABCI Los Anqele<.
(I) KFMB 1CBSI San Diego
D KHJ TV find I Los Anqelf"5
(!I KCST 1ABC1 San Diego
G> ;(TT\/ 1lnd I Los Angele<,
., KCOP TV llno I LOS Angelp<,
SI KCE T TV t PBSI Los Anqt'les
IE!> KOCE TV1 PBS1 Hun1 nq1on Beach
Scott livens up
staid Britishers
By F.RED .ROTHENBERG
•APT .............. '
NEW YORK -Watch out London. WUJard
Scott, the "Today" show weatherman , is comlng
to crash the royal wedding.
You can take Scott out oft.be country but don't
expect staid oJ' En1Jand to chanre him. 'ae·u stiU
be tile aame clown who bas turned mornln1
wealber forecastlnC lnlo stand-up comedy
"Today'' will be spendlna thla week U:. ~don
and bu plana for Scott to lake his unique brand of
co= to En&lilh pubs, cricket matches and an e1M thet 1trlk• bi.a fancy. "It will be out to aet up at 10 o•c&ock in t.be momln' like human beinp," Scott Hid.
••What I re&Uy want to do ls put on one of lboee
Beefeater oulflta and late a jq of Nt• York City
water around Pl.cedUJy J•t to '" if U.. PIODJ• wtU drink it. New' York waler 11 aodarn aood." &t aa.ld
"M•Jbt 111 put a bud oa •t. they'U 10 tor tt... •
Tbe lmale of the bu1k1 Scott bouncllq throup
.LoDdoa lbiuld tum a few beads. For one t.blnc be
bean a llllbl NMmblaee to BrtUM wtt Rob.rt
Mori.,, f1mWar to Amerlcau for Ida droll
alrplue edl. lloNj WUI be ~ for ABC'1 ''Good lldrnlftl,~Allierica•• Udl wetk.
··1 · baYe · t1Mlt IOoli, .~ a.ow. a.me nsnt
....... ........ .... bUd~llDd ~ .,.., ..... un-. tl'Gli ._.., fml1.·• llM..U.
Tllli WW llil lilllt'1 fk1it lrtp to ma·· t 1m ••••n. .. r. dlftUed to 11e
.. ..., ........ , Nl.u.. ..... °"".. ,.
on '*"'" 1o.1b balhe lor tlllutlon.
• MOVIE * * "Star H~" Dorothy
Buh,_, Stetting FrNllt
ThtH bH utllul young I
women turn • lelttng driv.
In Into • r111ty auoceulul
butlll'llA.
• HOYA
"Animal Olymplane" Thi
beauty. endure.nee end
pow. Of Mlmala In Ille
wild .,. Jwlllj)OM(I With
Olympic: athlll• perlorm-
lng IMt• whlc:l't have par11.
.... In the lnlmll kingdom
(R)c;J GD MYaTIRY
"The Racing Game· Oddi
Agllnat" Jodley Sid Haley
dec:td" to lnvNtlge te
myatetloue ~ at
the SMbuty ~
1tl1t hi Irreparably lnjur•
Ne hand In. It~
r1e1.(R)O a!TEHHll
"Walla Fargo Open"
®MOVIE
"Rocky II" (1978) SytvMter
St"'-. Tiiie Shire After
loelng Illa bout with the
WOttd Cllampion, an ambl-
llOua box• lralna lor •
MCOnd dlanoe 11 the'"" 'PG'
CS) BQAARE lOO
JOhn Byner allow• you
thlnga alranget then truth.
11rQ8f than Hie, and zanier
than anything you've --· OMOVIE
"Magee And T lie Lady"
( 11178) Salty Ke411tman.
Tony lo Bi.nee, An 1ttr1C·
live female trill to brlltt
lnlo the lllghty c:ompetltlve
truc:klng Industry, aroolllng
the wrath of one part!wler
wtaren In the bu"'-
'PG' e:ao. Cl> COMB>V cw
HOMOM
A young c:ouple go to a
IUPC>OlldlY l'launlld hOtll
for their honeymoon
• TOPSTOftY
Hoeta: Jim TllomM, Mary
·~· Cl)~THON
A comedian lloat end IOUt
COlnlc cont•tante wtlo
c:o'"p•t• agalnat one
lnOINr -tMtUNO In tNe
uncail90t'ld comedy 91"'8
llftow. t:ae(Z)~CHAWl.IH
TAUCI wmt AAOWL
WB.Ot
M1(Q)THArl MI:
9:00 8 Cl) MOVIE + ''Stunl S-" (1979)
Christopher Connelly,
CMatopner Lloyd A IMm
of 1tunt expert• atlempr •
daring land. ... and "' r11CU1 ot a kidnapped
movll atar. (R) D HIU. STAUT Bl.I.JU
A fOf'mlf cop offart 10 pro-
vide tnlormatlon on police
c:orruptlon In axdlengl for
freedom and • ,_ ldentl-
!L IR)
•O THNEE'S COIMPNl'f
White IMC:hlng at hla Old
achool, Jaell becomN
embrolled In • etlc:ky lltua·
tlon with the dean'• "'-·
(R)c;J
• MlllVONmN
0.-te: 8l8lr Ferrlnglon
Denclera, LlblrlCI, Lii
Roy Reema. Roger • Reg-
er, Domlnlek, Dew Ind
•~.hit Jol'iMon. MYITEAY
"Thi Rac:lng Gamet Ddda
A$811'111" Jock9Y Sid Hiiiey
dec:ld" lo lnv11tlg111
myttlrioue happenlftO* at
the Selbury raQICOUtM
•ft• ,,. lmlperably lnJuNI
Illa hand In • at~
r1e1.(R)c;J
CD NOVA
"Anlmal Olymplana" The
TOPPERS =ty·of -::::-"' = I TU BE wlld .,.. lwltflll>Olld with
~ •thllltla pwtorino ----------------------Ing M tl wNd't lwl¥e panY.
.... .,, Ille 1111ma1 klftOd<lm I ~~
"MeMn>e ""'-" ( t971) I
8lmone lionor"'. C'-11
Diluphln. A WOllWl'I Plr•
aonallty undergo.a an
eattlMI iranalormallon
when ilflt lnvolvee hlfeell
In • romentlc: aflllf wNCh
bridgll two Wldllly dllflt. ;=:._..,'A'
"Mid ~ ... ' ( tNO) Mt1
Oleleon. Joanne aamwi. 1n
an Aualrllla of the noi•too-
dletant lutuN, the friend•
and family Of a lop "'Ofl-
way puraull polic.tnan
blCloml Ille IMgeta ~
Mdlatlc mo1~ oano
'R'
(I),.,.. WACtlCY ~
Cl' JONATHAH WIHTPI
Hoet:Oraonw ......
e:ot (%) llN>M MOUlll.. WITH
LOVI •.ao • 9 rra A LMHQ
1.0I• tnlk• en ''"l>U-
aloned ~ In ~ I ot w81tr-In front of hit
iO-year-old d 1ughter'1
c:laM
MOVIE
"Up The Ac:adlmy" (1H0)
Ron Leibman, Barbare
BMlll Thi Wlt-ObMIMcl
oommandant ol Walnberg
MIMt•ry Ac:adlmy la no
m•tc:h for the troo~
btate enrolled •'-• 'R' I
10!00 D QI) THI ROYAL
WI.DOINO
A r~ on tile upcoming
.eddlng of Britain'• Prlncle
Ct\"111 to Lady Dian•
~willbl~tld aG•G NEWS 8 (II HART TO HART
Jonlthan •nd Jennllar are 1
t•k•n hoalt1ge by 1 .... 0
klllera whO .,.. •!tit .,,
tnc:rlmlnatlng pl«» ol .....
OetMll hidden In the HIM1
manelon (RI
-~ "BllQUlne De Loa Angelltoa
NegrOtl" Thie Beguine, a
HIM·b•lllf and lrlldftlonal
c1l1bretlon et which
lrlend1 and rllatlvea Of a
0-aMd blacil Puerto
Rican cntld danc:e late Into
the night to uaure the
ucendanoe of the c:llH<I'•
aout to ,_,,.,.,, IMturee
original MIN mua1c: by Wll·
Ile Coton CID COH8EHTINO
AOUl..TS
VarlOue typee ot ratatlon-
ahlpe lhal defy the tradi-
tional llandarde Mt by
modern IOCllty .,. -
mined
0 MOVIE
"RHurrec:llon" ( 1980)
Ellen Buratyn. Sam Shep-
ard Alter • ,_, ,,,., IUto
ICCldent, • women llnda
thll the hu the et>Hlty to
hMI ot,,.,.. but la per-
MCUted blc:auM of hit
reluNI to dalm • dMne
In"'-'PO'
(Z)M<ME.
"Myra Brec:tcenrldge"
(19701 MN W-. John
Hutton. w-.to• NaWI
CB.5 9 7:00 -"England: Crown
and Thoms." J ess Marlowe looks at the
British mooarchy a nd Ute ln modem England. .
KTµ e 7 :~ -"Prince Charles."
A biography of the bridegroom.
KCET 8 8 :00 a nd KOCE 9 9:00 -
"Nova : Ani m a l Oly mpian s ." Wild
animals and Olympic athletes are com ·
pared.
ABC D 8:00 -"The Royal Wed·
ding." A report on the Wednesday wed-
ding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana.
(Pett 2 ol 21 (RI ~MOVll "Thi Stunt Man" (1980)
Petet O'Too61, Sieve ~
bac:k. W1ntld by the
polloe, • dl9tur1)ed VIit-
""" veteran find• en
-• "*-on • MOYie II! Wfllfe I WOt'd W11 I
~la befno fllmed 'R' CID MCI! f<>fl nte
l'INNANT
Berry Tompkin• and Tlrn
MoCllfVlt recap dlvllk>MI
blMbaN atll'ldlnge and j
lntlt'V19w aome of the
0-'I top p«eywa (K the
player•' """' c:ontlnull. an update on the llluetlon
w+ll "'° bl Included ) (l)MOVIE
"Clddy9hack" 11980) BtH
MurHy, Rodney Denoet·
llald Th• dem ented I
grounda-lteaper of • _.,._
ky ()OUl'lff)' dutl WegM Wit ll08IMt ,,,. goc>het'I .,,,.._
biting_ Illa turf. 'R'
11:IO 8 Cl) THE AOYAL
WIDClMl
Den Rethll'. De"1<I Froal
Ind lady Antonie Fr-
report on the upcoming
wedding ol 8rltaln'• Prine.
Charlll to Uldy Diane
~· UQITOMOHT
Holl Johnny C1raon
Ouwta: Mac Devla. J-
St-W1. 8 9 AllCNEWS
HIGHTUNE e LErS MAQ A MAL
• 8TAHlEfM!Ga.
9@) CAPTIOHID ABC
NEWS
CIDM<ME
"Allen" (1979) Tom Sker-
rttt. Yaphet Kotto The
er-ol • epacegolng
M:r14> earn. IOllow a mya·
tarloua algnal to 1 auppoe-
edly dMd planet and. •!let '
!anding, dl800\le( that ,,,.
meeuge waa • warning 10 I
•tay-ay 'R'
1 1:115 (%) MOVIE I
"The l•l•nd" ( 1980)
MIC:ll11I C aine. Da vid
Wwner While ln-tlgat·
Ing • rMh ot atllp dlMp-
Pllfll'ICll In the Bwmud•
TrlangM, a joumlllet etum-
blae acroea an laoleted,
400-year-old C:Ololl) Of
piratu. 'R'
" C&llllrlQ ...... ot mp-
l«loue and deedly acc:l-
danla. (R)
• OUNIMOQ
Doc; A4-flgl!te to ~
¥«11 UV..~ beblae
trom ll"o-ino 114> In an ;":.:
-....Oll•ti
!:,~ ':tu:i' ~t:: I
.,,....... the ,,... wor1d.
(Part 1) '
• MNTTA
Tony la ttlned to wenge
,,.. lathlf'• dMttr altet '
'-'Ing the dMlhbld c:on-
11116ofl of a QMORat.
1HO D QJ TOMOMOW
Gueate· Unll Richard and ,
Wayne Coc:tlten 1•~ I
"Ptydlologlcal I~ Of
Pheoomene" Hoet: Dem·
Ian Slmpaon. GUiit: Stan-I
;~·Ph.D
* • * "Full Of Ufa" (1967)
Judy Hotllday. Rlc:hatd
Conte. A man dl8fupte the
Nvw of hie aon and preg-
nant daughtet-ln·I-.
• IN09IHOelr
HITWON< HEWS (I)~
"The Tin Drum" (1979)
David Bennett, Angel•
Wlnlt .... A ""all boy with
unuauei ~ of perc:ep-,
lion ,.led• polltlca, humarl
c:ompenlonahlp and -•
adulthood Ind wander• I
a bout Na c:ountry during
the tumultuoue )'Mira ol
the Nazi reoime. r11tleuly
banOlng a toy dl'\ll'TI. 'R' I
1: 10 8 THE SA.INT
Simon """" of • blutre death game being p41yed
by gtoupe of ~
atuelente. (R) e a HIW9
1: 115 ~ MOVll I
"Our Time" ( 11173) Pllmllll I
SUia MW1tn, Plt1lw St•
~. Thi .._ of two
~ coup6ee enrolled at
private ac:hoola are
dlangld wtlln -of the
gltte ~ .,,. .. PNl>-
nent. 'PO'
1:21eMOV11
• IHDENNDB(T
HITWON< NDl9
• 'AllT FOMWAAO
11:41.MOYIE
"Megee And The Lady"
(19715) S ally Kellermen,
Tony Lo Bllnoo. An e ttr.c-
tllle len\8le tn. to bf'..it
Into the hlgNy oompetltlve
INCklng lnduatry, llOUalng
the wrath ot one pwtlc:ular
..wren In Ille butlneaa .
"T eohwlOlogy Of Muailc"
~ la traced from tta
_,.... -11c: lormL
....... MeCHBEWI
WOAU>
"Sporle In Amwlca; en+!·
dren And Sporte" ~
Mlc:llener explore• th•
phyalc:at and emotional
affect• of the "win at all
c:oete" attitude on young
••""' .. end ,,,. 11'-•
placed on the gifted c:Nld
athlete (R)
10:46 (0) MOVIE
"Thi OpenlnQ Of Mitty
BlltllOYen" ( 11179) Con-
1tanc:1 Money, Jemie
OINla. A Nl'IOWned Mx
.authority tnelc • a wager
that hi cen tum • c:ommon
. Parlllen tart Into • hlgh-
f>'1Cld, )II Ml c.il ~· 11:00ea e C1>aa
HEWS
• 8T"" TAE<
Mr. Spool! b1owa Ilia cool
and almot1 geta Capt. l<lrll
lcllled when Ill Overwhelm-I
Ing mating urge tall11 poe-
"Le pke" ( 1876) Tony
Cuttla. An)lnltt• Comer
Louie .. L.'f)k•" 8uchelter.
• lleder ot Amerlu'.
UI Ide! wor10. f-.da Uj) the
notorloua organization
known u Murder, Inc. 'R'
-Ml>NIGffT-
12*> 8 Cl) CAHHOH
Cannon 1n'41tlpalel mut·
der c:harg•• lodged' r ~ndian (RI 1
+ * * ~ ""'°'Y Huntw"
( 1952) Anthony Steel,
Dinah Sheridan A game
warden Mii up • wtld ani-
mal eanc:tuwy In Mt. KIN·
mentaro Nallonal Pirie In
EU! Alrica.
8 9 CHMUE'I
AHGILI
The Angela go und«CO\'lt
In a drcua to llnc:I out ~
'PG'
1::to • MOVIE
• • • "The Stripper"
(1963) Joanne Woo<lward,
Rlc:hard 8eymer. After
ttaytng In • amall lown for
• btW period of tlml, .,,
ex~ atar dtddll to
-andatwtowr CIDSTANDMJ ~
ONLY: HAU..11.WAH
..OU.YWOOO
From tile MOM Grand
Hotal In Lal Vega, Gene
K•ty holte a glillet1ng Lu
VIQN ,_,. wtlldl Ulutw
th• 9 old1n era of
movletMklng In ~ and
dance.
(%)MOYIE
"Xened11" (1~) Ollvl•
JOHN DARLING
.. -. ~ . . . . . .. . . . .
"'-'on.John. Gene t<ellV.
A young llttiet, a~
-and a -;llllr•otM ,.._... "*' tcwoee to
GpWI up a '-IOI tolar•
dleoo peleoa 'PO' '*I :. ~ .t.NNOUNCa> ""*' OWf' ATION An ...mn111o11 of differ.
9ftt ~hod• of tnrnepot1• uon
1;IOI NIM 1:11 "°"9CA ... & Wtll
Eric Md Etnle drw9 up ..
cl\c)r\oa Oftt9 In ""-Y. BIO
Spendw''. Ernie deeAdea
that Eric: la loo old and
'-up with a -pert.
net.
2M 8. 9 QJ THE M>YAL
WIOONJ
Thi wedding ot Britain'• p,._ Chetiel to Lady
Diane 8panoer and fllaled
~ will bl tee.ca.1
!Ive from London. 1:21111 NIW8 MC>Mlt'· ... & Wiii
Ae Staray and Hutc:ti, Ello
and Emil Cllen up c:rlme;
later they vlllt the materni-
ty bOutlque and Mllct a
baby gift. 2:411 =
• *'.t "South Of St Lou-
ie" ,, ... , Joel ~ ...
ZacMly Sc:ott. RanCllet9
battle Horth and Sooth 10
pr-their aprN dl
from the ctevu latlon of the
ClvN Ww.
(C)MOVll
"Tergete" (196a) Borla
Karioff. Tim O'Kally An
aging llON~-movll ,,.,
trill to r-.on with 1 mur-
deroua IJtllper et • drl,,..ln
movie lhlltet.
2-.80 I ~C>NAL
• • • ''They Ware So
Young" (1955) Sc:ott Br•
dy, Raymond Burr. A
group of Innocent ll'IOdll9
.,. herded to South Amit· a under the ttv11t ol
dMth In order to become
the puppell ot powerfUI
and Influential men •••NEWS S:C>I (%) FROM AAOUf.l., WI™
LOVl a:.ao (I) MOW
"Dreamer" (1979) nm
Mathllon, S\lun Blalllly
A young bowW haa 10
overc:ome many ob8taclll
wllNI trying to rMCtt for Illa
lffelong drlMI. 'PG'
4• 8 THE ROYAL
WfOOINQ
The wedding ol Btltaln'e
Prtnoe CIW1ll to Uldy °'*-Spancer and rllllld
flltMtlll "'4ft bl t8'1c:Ut
llVI from London
D QIJTOOAY
Continued c:overage ol 1111
wedding ceremony end
l11tlvltlla aurroundlng the
merrl•g• ol Brlllln'a
Prince Chartea to Lady
Dien. Spenoer will bl , ....
c:ut llVI from London • 9 GOOD MOANIHO
AMENCA
Continued COVll'tlge ot ,,,.
wedding c:eremony and
l .. tMtlla ai<roundlng Ille
marrl1g1 of 8rl11ln'1
Prince Chettll to Lady I Diana Spencer wttl bl t..._
c:ut Ihle from London.
Cl) THE AOYAL
WE>OINQ
The wlddk>o ot Britain'•
Prtnoe Chat1ll lo Lady
Diana Spencet end , ... ,Id , .. ,Mt... wlll bl llileut
lrom London.
(Z)MOW:
"Myra Brec:kenrldge"
(1970) M11 Wiii. Jol1n
Hueton.
4:115 . VOYAGETOntE
BOTTOM CW TH£ SEA
"The Magnua BMm"
4:IO. MOVIE * ~ "Gr11n Buddha"
(1955) Wayne Morrla, May
Germaine. An lnVlltlpator
Ml• out to recover • preci-
oua Chlneee •tatue that
,,.. bletl •tolen. ~MOVIE * *'Ao "Of Human Bond·
age" (IMC) Kim Novalc,
Laur-Harvey 88lld
on the nowl by w. Somer-
... Maugheom. A young
medlclil atudenl with •
Mfloua defOt'"lt)' ,.,,_
,,~ In lo\ll with a
PIOll lfCJIOUI Wtlltr-.
M'ed ne•da11'•
· D a 11• 1,,.e Moe l e•
-MORf.-o-
11:00• .... ,.._ ~ ..
(1947) 8-y &oye, Ctvi="
tine Mcintyre. Thi ~ ""tall• action~
8oye try to "Uftfta" • •
·~-t.
11:IO lrl * * \4t "The Looet; •
MM" ( t957) JICk Plllenoe,
Anthony Perkin•.
rlfornwntnded gunflgtltar
la pc-llilld Into one
banll
CC) * * • ''The Young In
H .. rt" ( 1938) Dougt
Fairbank• Jr , Paulette
Oocld11d. A ne' et-do-well
lamlly ol c:a rd ettar;w
ohllme an old lady ..,.-·
reform• them • t
12:00 • * * + "Thi PhllacW-
pllla Story" ( 1940) Katha-
rine He pburn. Jema-
St_,, A young ~· phi•-·· mattlage wl -•~ over catefl;tly ~
,,,. city'. aoollllt• " • * * 'h "Sodom And
Gomorrah" ( 1963) St-.rt
Granger. Pier Anoafl. AllW'
Iha twin cltl11 a rtl
Olllro)'ld, Ill th1t remala l
.,. the ... -.. lot'11
daughter and tile~··
brother. 1• CC) "Kiii Or Be Kiiied"
( 19801 JOllph Ryan. Ch.-.
10111 Mlc:helll. Two MVllgl!
aqUeda ol 11111 karate
c:h•mplone c:laah for
revenge and ~al 'PG"
1:aG CS) * * * "tt'a Ai....1ya Fllf.
WNthlt" ( 19551 Gene KW
ty, Dan Delley A local rt/.
111r111 dlddea to bt
c:aat I reunion of tllr
World War II Army buctt;
dlea. .•
2:00 0 "Ulllm111 Thrlll" Bntt •
Ekland. Barry Brown.
paranoid bualneum.O•
becomll lnvolvecl In .......
ot murder end vi~•
'PG' a• 8 • *'Ao "Thi Land Thal•
Time F~got" ( 1976) ~·
Mc:CkKe, Suean Penhallo::
gon. Survtvor. lrom ~
Allied aubmarlne and t •
German captor• land ~
111 laland ruled by~ tone: anlmall. CC) ••• "Heidi" ( 1965) ..
Eva-Marla Slnghem~
Gertrand Mltterrnayr. A~~
111 Swlu gin le taken "°"' ,,.,. mountain home tn inc·
Alpa by ,_ aunt to U$
city.
3::SO D • • • "Th•I'• My Boy"
(1951) Dian Martin,
~ A wNlcllng la
by hla llhletlc: roommat•
lo become • lootb .. etar
In ordw to p1eaae 1119
lalhlf
CS) "Wturda" ( 1977) Artl--
matld. Dlrec:ted by Ra1pf1
Baltehl. In • world of the
future. aoroery playa a
major roll In the bettlll ot
two greet c:onfllc:tlng .,,,.,...
4:00.., "Somewhef• In Time"
( 1980) CMatopher Reeve.
Jene Seymour Ob-.cl
with the portrait of • 1 ttn-
century ec:tr-. a modlm-
day N-York playwright
u-hypnoala to traVll
back In time Ind meet hlf.
'PG'
4:30 CC) "Trocedero Bleu
Citron" ( 19781 Mlc:hHI
She>dl. A.ntty Oupfey. A 10-
)'Mt-old boy " .-nlttlf\(
with • llttll glt1 whO -•
blllde ttlm 81 T roc:adero. '
15• CID "Coel Miner'• Deugtt--'
,., .. ( 19801 Sl"y Spacek.
Tommy L11 Jonee. Bued'
on Loretta Lynn'• euto-~aphy A young glttf •
from • poor lamlly tn rurml
Kentuc.ky rnaniea a mud!
Older local boy WflO engl--
--hit t1ea to stardom
In the mu9lc lnduatrv. ·PG·
by Armstrong & Batiuk
UMIOtl ot """ "4E.V, GUYS! J..OOK WHOS
GOING 10 BE OUR OUARTER BACK! MIKE MA.JOR6, "THE ~CASiTER!
r------~-------NO.s-NOf THAI W/'6 8Rtet< CH~E6£! 'YOU 1-<NOW •••
LIKE IN A. ~ICK WALL.'
I =.cxvwm GAME
"A View Of NowMre"
WhNI flyltlg In a hlllc:opter,
Mannix ~ he'a _,
• woman murdered on •
Pfll'llhOuM lltrlCI, but le
belflld to find there le no
c:otllM and no report ot •
c:rlme.
• 8ENNY HU
The Thr99 ............ ride
again Into '"°''* -Pldl with Pfetty maldene.
• DICfC CAVITT
GUiit: HatOld MacMiiian.
SA.V, ISN'T HE "THE ONE
WHO 5.A.10 OUR O:FEN51VE UNE. R ES EM0LEO SWISO C HEESEf
Early birds see
NEW YORK CAP) -The colonies may have
rejected royalty 200 years ago, but U.S. television
networks are betting that a royal romance ls still
enough of a fascination to get Americana out or
bed early.
Tbe networks all have planned at least rive
hours of live, early mon.Ung covera,e of the
Wednesday wedd.i ni of P rince Charles and Lady
Diana Spencer.
Some of the biggest names in American TV
Journalis m -Chancellor, Rather, Waltera,
Brokaw and Pauley -wlU travel to London to cov·
er the historic ceremony.
Other parts of tbe spectacle include the pro-
cenlon from Bucklnabam Palace to St. Pau.1'1
Cathedral and the return trip to the palace.
NBC, which I.a movlna ita "Today" prosram to
London for weddlna •tekL~~~ 1cbeduled t.be lonceat live broadca1t, 7~ auun bectnnift1 at '
a .m. "Today\' holta Tom Brokaw and Jani Pauley
will anchor tbe eovera,. from a apol at Victoria
Oardent overlootlq BacklDcbam Palace .
ABC't "Good Momlll1 Am.-iea," alto wW be
broadcut from Londoa that ..-. wtt.b weddlDc
conrqe nnnlDI from 2 a.in. &o I a.m. "._.
da1. Davkt a.rtman WW~ UM bn>Mcut
from tbe top floor of tbl l.aDdan HUtaD, wbkb of.
fer1 a paooramJt ri•w of tM ellY .
ABC 1Newt ~·.idaM.i'i BarWa Walwra ud Ptt« .r-•ap~ • tM nnm~ from a. huJ"a C.tMidri.I.
o.l'I A.aw wW lfteMr al' CMS ... fliotlt ' a.m. ilnt.lJ t a.m .. WWI 1a updMe WINia tM -...
wedding
leaves Buckingham Palace on a honeymoon pre>'
cession to Waterloo Station. British TV pen onaliti
David Frost will assist Rather with the runnlnf
commentary from an anchor position atop lh
Abby Ufe Bullding and overloold ne the cathedral.
The Public Broadcastine Service will uae ~
Br itish Broadcast.in& Co.'s 80-camera covera1e i a three-hour wrapup on Wednesday. And aU-oe
Cable News Network will plug into lbe BBC's lfve
coverage for four hours. -
A combination or summer TV doldrwn1, the
fact t.bal Uttle recular pr~iramminc wlll n~ be pre-empted, and the pa1eantry and falrJ e
nature of this event baa sparked the l.otere1
U.S. television execuUvH -and, lhey beUeve.,
American viewers. _
If lt'I got wheels
you'll move It
f a1terln1
Dilly P iiot
c1111ifled
ad .Call
642·5671•nd
• friendly
1d·Ylsorwt11
ftelpyoutum
yourwMels
''"°~
Daily Pilat
TVESOAY,JULY 28, 1981
CLASSIFIED C4
If the baseball strike is
ever settled, what, s in
store for the fall? See C2.
~ay to play: It's fast becoming reality
· ash r egister s warming up for hi gh sc hool athletes as dwindling resources take a toll
ROGER CARLSON oli ....., ..........
';.. The ultimate goal for many athletes is to play
Qf pay, but it appears many will be_ (or already
) in a pay for play situation because or dwm-
ling Cunds within the bigh school arena.
Already saddled with fixed fees lo participate
'sports are athletes at Laguna Beach High, the
'pistrano Valley Unified schools (Capistrano
\talley, San Clemente and Dana Hills) and begin-
·ng in September, Irvine, University and Wood-
ridge high schools.
Proposals for similar tabs on Newport-Mesa
d Huntington Beach district athletes have been
bers, the fewer the bucks from the state) and in-
creased costs in transportation, equipment and
salaries.
The implementation or fixed fees to
participate has alread withstood a court challenge
in Santa Barbara, but several veteran observers
are betting it won't stand up lhrouih the State
Supre"'e Court in Sacramento, which has tradi-
tionally shown a liberal view. Fees to participate
are not considered liberal, maybe not legal, either.
Still, future legislation may settle the
legalities for good.
Abbott Hughea Nicoll
Hills, which are entering their fourth year under
this system, the fee is $25 per sport.
Frank "Jake" Abbott, a former coach with 10
years experience and the Superintendent of the
Huntington Beach Unified School District, says the
proposal was shot down lhls put sprine because
"we had made other cuts and there wu a concern
the Santa Barbara case is going to be appealed. To
go into something like that and then have the State
Supreme Court overturn It would create more-
problems than it is worth."
He adds, however, "If it is upheld, I would
think next year we would look very strongly at it.
wrned down by the respective boards or education,
t each was blanketed with a wait-and-see at-
ttude toward the near future.
,. Adrni,Ustrators are unanimous in describing
he reasons for such a situation -a critical lack or
Wlds cause or the ercects of Proposition 13, a
eclining enrollment factor (the fewer the num-
Coaches are against the fees, but most wilJ
agree it is a necessary evil. Administrators are
also philosophically against it, but cite the figures.
which make it mandatory that funds come from
somewhere.
Athletes are in agreement, too. No one is voic-
ing much concern over the situation (If there are
any, pride is kee in the mouths shut).
At Laguna Beach High each athlete must pay
$45 during the fall, $40 for the winter and $35 for
the spring, while Irvine schools are entering Sep·
tember with a flat $55 per athlete, regardless of
the number or sports or which sports.
"I'm personally opposed to it. Athletics is a
part or the education program and we should pay
for what we can. But the way the law reads, it's
the only area we can charge a fee for. You can't
even charge for driver's education because of the
concept of free public education.
··Districts are bein~ forced lo look at every <See PAY, Page l."l) At Capistrano Valley, San Clemente and Dana
Forget last season
unhappy ways R ams' Thomas . reversing
By JOHN SEV ANO
Of ... INllY ~ SUit
Shortly after last season,
Owner Georgia Frontiere and
General Manager Don
Klosterman vowed to "clean
house' within the Rams' or-
ganization.
They promised that the
turmoil and strife that plagued
the club in 1980 would be gone in
1981. Players that were unhappy
-for whatever reason -wouJd
be made happy ... or else.
Some players, tlnder manage-
ment's new hard-line stand,
were satisfied . Others, of
course, were not and that's why
Vince Ferragamo , Ja ck
Reynolds and Bob Brudzinski
find themselves today in new
locations.
ONE MALCONTENT who
signed under the team's new
policy was Pat Thomas. The All-
Pro cornerback was inked lo a
oew four-year agreement, bind-
ing him lo the Rams through
1984.
"No, I'm not surprised that
I'm here," said Thomas as he
sat in his dorm room at Cal
State Fullerton. "because out on
the football fi eld I gave them
everything I had." t •AGE NO BARRI ER Oswald K. Smathers ! acknowledges the crowd's admiration at the
: National Sports Festival after the 66-year-old
: archery specialist competed in the 00-meter
Af'W1o ;I I
event (above). He uses a motorcycle because
he has two artificial knees. Below 11-year -old
Billy Burke guides his men's eight-man row-
ing entry.
Thomas insisted he never
wanted to leave the Rams
<·'Despite the controversy, I like
it here") but be did admit to not
being happy last season. I
~rt..
"I WOULD JUST LIKE to leave last year alone,•· he stat·
ed. "It was a rough year for the
Rams.
·'But last year was more or a
mental strain than a physical
one. Actually, it was a mental
strain for many people which
tells a lot about a person's
character: I mean playing as
well as we did under the situa-
tion."
Thpmas' situation involved
promises made by Georgia
in 1979 that weren't kept in '80.
Frustrated and not knowing
where to turn, the 5-9, 186-
pounder walked out of training
camp last year <Aug. 6) and re-
turned five days later after
"thinking things out."
This year Thomas claims his
attitude is different.
"I REMEMBERED
something Freeman Johns ca
former · Rams wide receiver)
once told me," said Thomas.
"He said, 'Pat, God don't like
uely.' In other words, lf people
are going to do me wrong it's go-
ing to come back and haunt
them.
"I Just thank God I'm able to
play the game. I don't care if 1
fet $100,000 or $20,000 an)' more.
realhe there are mlWona or
other players willlng lo be in my
shoes."
~ams' No. }. pick (Owens) to sign today?~·
Owens' aaent reportedly wanted a con-
tract comparable to that of Johnnie
Johnson, the Rama' top plcll ln t•.
Jobuon received a tlx·year pact worth
almo.t SL2 mUllon. Cloelua felt Owena waa
worUa at least tbat, plus a '400,000 bonus.
The latter ftpre waa vebematly denied
by General llana1er DOQ JOOlterman.
"When P90Dle pt that (bleep) I'll never
know,'' beaal.d.
OweDI la currently btblad .Jlm
Youqlilood on tbe Rama' 4'Pda daart at
left outalde llnebaeker. Re ,...._ to W» rw UM vo1c1 left by u.. de....,.. o1 w ,
Brwfstmtl to ltiaml ud , ... ,.... to
Su l"ranclaeo,
Owta1, W, do Pouadl. ii UM fomtll
ll.DebMMI' P6e1iM • tM ftrlt rGliDd IW .tllit
Rama .me. .,.,.. Be rma a t.• ba die •
ucl WU a itstAit .. Mlclll•'• ...
'
Bowl team, reeordlna 100 tackles ror the
seaaon. He wu named ftnt team All· Bit Ten by
UPI and second team AP. He waa honora·
ble mention All-American from AP. Owena baa been Uvtn1 In a houa• In the
Ann Arbor area while nefOtlatlODI have
bffn t.ak1Jll place.
Seid ao.tua: "Ila will be ln better abape
lban •f rookie in camp.''
Rama eeoutinl reports call Owena OM of
lbe f astst and quitktlt Unebaclt ... ln the
draft.
Said Jobla -..u., the team'• Dtnetor ol
Player PtllOllDlll: "He'll ftt rlabt in wllb
our t.am.'' • . Owtal WU u~teel to tltn a contract
thl1 monlaa and tben 10 throu•b a :.Jll1lica1 ............ _.,,... ......
l
Thomas said his negotiauons
with the club went without a
hitch, which has him puzzled as
to why the others didn't sign
"IN A WAY I WAS surprised,
and in a way I wasn't," he said.
"I was s urprised that they
couldn't come to terms in some
way. and I was also surprised
that management look such a
firm stand.
••But what happened is not for
me to question. They (manage-
ment) know more about football
than I do."
And what Thomas knows is
how to play cornerback.
"I feel like I played last year
like I played every previous
year -to the best of my ability.
"l have a different attlLude
now," added Thomas. "I want lo
play football for a long time."
THOMAS' PRIOR objective
was lo play for five years and
then go into another Jine or
work. Obviously, he's changed
his thinking . . . and playing
with what many consider the
best secondary in the NFL
might have something to do with
that.
"We have a secondary with
s peed at every position and peo-
ple who can cover one-on-one,"
explained Thomas. "Plus, we 're
all competitors and it's hard lo
get a secondary like that in the
NFL.
"If used right, with the proper
defensive alignments, we could
be the best secondary the Rams
have ever had."
Thomas said it's hard to figure
how much the loss or Reynolds
and Ferragamo will hurt the
team that only at the end or
the season can an answer be
formulated.
"I CAN'T SEE where we 're
hurling any right now," he said.
"You tally up the difference
when the season is ov·er by the
won-loss record: not statistics or
anything else, just how many
games you've won or lost. Only
then can we see how bad we
needed Vince, Jack, Bob or
anyone else down the line.
Thomas said at least the
Rams are off on the right foot,
though.
"You don't hear people bad-
mouthing like they did last
year," he said. "People seem to
be a little bit more serious about
football , and there are a lot of
s miles on a lot of faces.
"I feel good about the Rams
and myself. The only thing
that's going to worry me now
.. is me."
Old/ ield's still up
to his winning ways
SYRACUSE, N.Y. IAP> -
Brian Oldfield would like to
have his status clarified once
and for all.
"I am not a professional -not
even a s emi -professional
amateur. I am an amateur," the
burly, colorful Oldfield said
Monday after winning the shot
put title at the National Sports
Festival.
The U.S. Olympic Committee
and the International Olympic
Committee do not agree. They
maintain he is tainted because
of his participation in the In-
ternational Track Association, a
professional circuit that operat-
ed between 1973-76.
So, even though Oldfield has
been ruled eligible for interna-
tional competition by the In-
ternational Amateur Athletic
Federation, whidl is the world
governing body for track and
field, the USOC and the IOC
have not given him their blesa-
ing to participate in the Olympic
Games.
Since the USOC runs the
Festival, an event for Olymplc-
elieible athletes, it was upwUJ-
ing to admit OldCield.
Actually, the 36-year-old
Oldfield. a former school
teacher, claimed he originally
was invited. Then, the invitation
was withdrawn.
"When I got here last week,
they told me 'no,' " he said after
uncorking his winning throw of
68 reel 5 inches. "What was I lo
do: Take that?"
What he and pole vaulter
Steve Smith, another former
IT A member, did was file suit in
New York State Supreme Court
in Syracuse. Justice William
Roy ruled In favor of t he
athletes, and much lo the cha-
grin or USOC officials, Oldfield
and Smith became part of the
field.
Oldfield's victory came on the
final day of the Festival's three-
. day track and field competition
at SuMycrest Park.
Gov. and Mrs. Hugh Carey at-
tended long enouth to make pre-
sentations lo the medaJists in the
men's and women's 400·meter
relay races, and to heptathlon
winner Cindy Greiner ol Oreeon
State University.
In the feature race, a
weakened Crait Virtin overtook
Alberto Saluar with 2~ laps left
and won the 5,000 by about 30
yards in 13 minutes 35.4 seeondt.
"With one lap to 10, I wu re-
ally hurtint -1 did not ree1
good," said Vtreln, who loet
valuable training time aft• luf-
ferln& a vll'ul recenUy In Italy.•
"I don't think I have all IQJ
1trenltb back.''
Whfle the $,000 turned Into a •
runaway, there were two H · . tremely clOH ftnlahet.
ID the women'• 1,IOO Clndy
Brem .. r alpl*S Jan Merrill,
4!H .• to 4:U .a . In the ......
400-met« rtilaJ, Dwayne a.am,
runnlnt anchor for tlM Welt
team, edled llarv•J Oluoe of t.lile 8outb I& &M ....... n. ... ,. .................. ...
ooa118alll 1of a. INwa:t Srlc .......... ,, ........ d; ..
............ ••cloellMlll . ....
Q Or~ Cout DAILY PILOT/TUffday, July 28, 1881 ... ---~--------"""""'----------..,,
NFL could survive
court loss -Rozelle
FTom AP •.-atcbea
LOS ANGELES -NaUonal Foot· Ell
ball League Commissioner Pett c9•
RozeUe predictably contldera the
league the favorite to wln tt.s court
battle with the Oakland Raiden, but be also
believes the NFL could survive a loet.
"I don't think the league would fold up and
go away (lf it !()lies); it would lower the level we
are at now." Rozelle said out of court Monday
= . . ~ ,, -··
' 4
after closing areuments
began in the trial of the an-
titrust suit brought by the
Raiders and Los Angeles
Coliseum against the NFL.
Rozelle also said that,
should the jury find for the
Raiders, the case would be
appealed and "We don't
think we're going to lose at
all levels."
RoulU NFL attorneys get their
final shot at the seven-woman, three-man jury
today when they present closing arguments.
hoping to preserve a provision of the league con-
stitution requiring three-fourths or the 28 team
owners to approve any franchise mov e.
Quote of the day
"I didn't want to go there. I'd always
questioo his motives. I have pride in my
own ability, and I didn't want anybody
sayinf I made the team because I was Don
Shula s son." -Davie Shula, a rookie wide
receiver, explaining why he chose to try
out as a free agent with Baltimore rather
than with his father's club. the Miami·
Dolphins.
From Page C1
Rams' hopef ute make exodus
Defensive end Bob Cobb, a thlrd· Ell
round draft pick by th• Rama out of c •
Arizona, has left camp foe persona!
reaaona. Nlne others have been cut and three
more have left camp. Waived were wide re·
clevera Stacy Colbert, l.obert T11lor, •erll
Tolbert and Mike Braat. Also cut were 1af et1es
Riek MJ.ay11ct and alek MaUl'O, cornerb1ck
8any Copelaad, punter Jef Kalul I nd center
Lor.aso Wly. Leaving camp were Devt Doll.lo
and Ray Polll ... Steve Myer, attempting a
comeback at quarterback ror Seattle, haa re-
tJred . . . Backup quarterback Larry Fortaer
was cut by Atlanta ... 1'oe1 Owea, a backup
quarterback for moet of his aeveo·year-old Na-
tional Football League career, rejoined New
England after signing for the 1981 seaaon . . .
Reserve quarterback Pete Woods was waJved
by Miami ... BW Kaamaler, wbo won the
"World's Strongest Ma.n" competition the laat
two years, is attempting to become a member
of Green Bay. Tbe 6-2. 300-pounder la workine at
nose tackle . . . RoaaJe Lott missed the first
tlve days of camp because of contract snarls, but he's getting a warm reception ftom the
San Francis co 49ers.
Players, owners on opposl~e coasts
CHICAGO -Striking major Ill league players and club owners wiU
be meeting on opposite coasts Wed·
nesday as the walkout that bas canceled more
than 25 percent of the 1981 basebaJI season con-
tinues through its seventh week.
Armed with a vote of confidence from the
player representatives, Marvin Miller. ex-
ecutive director of the union. will hold the first
In a series of regional meetings In Los Angeles.
Miller said no further meetings had been
scheduled.
At the same lime, the 26 club owners will
gather in New York for an update from the
Player Relations Committee and their chief
negotiator. Ray Grebey.
MUler spent more than five hours Monday
night briefing the executive board of the union
on the negotiations. which broke down last
Thursday in Washington. The two sides had
bargained for four days with a news blackout
and Miller said he thought the playe~ needed
an update on the status or their strike.
Some 25-30 players_who are not executive
board members showed up for Monday night's
meetine..
Baseball today
Oo tb1I date ln baHba.ll lD 11'71:
Blue Moon Odom (live lnnln11> a.od
Fraodsco 8arrloe (four ln.nln11> com·
blned oo a no-hitter as the Ch1ca10 White
Sox defeated the Oakland A's, 2·1.
Today's birthday:
San Francisco ace Vida Blue n 32.
Heritage sails to victory
MACKINAC ISLAND, Mich. -lD Herlta1e. skippered by Don Wildman
of Chicago, was the first boat acroes
the finish line Monday In the S7th Port Huron-to-
Mackinac sailing race.
Heritage, a 63-footer baaed at the Chicago
Yacht Club, was the first yacht to finish both
the 74th Chicago-to-Mackinac Island race and
the Chicago-to-Sarnia International Yacht
Race. sailed concurrently tut week.
' Two-time Rose Bowl captain dies
Retired Marine Brig. Gen. lob •
W. Beckett, a captain of two different
Rose Bowl winners <Oregon in 1918
and Mare Island Marines in 1918), died Sunday.
He was 88 ... Argentina's JOH-La.ls Clere beat
Guillermo VUas, 7-5. 6-2, to win the Washington
Star lntemalional lennls championahip . . . The
New York Rangers wlU conduct part or their
1981 National Hockey League training camp ln
Finland and Sweden . . . A boat which compel·
ed Sunday in the Columbia Cup unlimited
hydroplane races in Pasco. Wash.. baa been
stolen, authorities revealed Monday. The van
used to tow the U .5 -known as "The
Ma chine." and owned by retired Eastern
Airlines Captain Carroll Kem -was taken from
the Red Lion Hotel early Monday, detectives
said. Crew Members thought it was a Joke and
figured the van would be returned, so no report
was filed until the crew later dUcovered that
the hydroplane. docked lo the pit area of Colum-
bia Park where the race was held, also was mis-sing.
Television, radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Baseball -Tucson at Salt Lake Ci-
ty, 6:30 p.m .. KMPC (710).
-----
Kuhn has
a decision J
If strike settled, then what?
From A.P dlapatclle•
If -and it's becoming a big 11 -the 1981
baseball aeuon iB ever resumed, what format will
it take? :
WlU teama simply pick up where they left off~
or will some more complex formula be adopted tG
determine the champion of this strike-scarred.
season?
Commissioner Bowle Kuhn's staff bu been in ..
formally polling teams in an effort to get their in·
put and reactions to various proposah aa to what
shape a resumed season should take. A spokesman
for Kuhn said it's premature to discuss those plans
right now.
"rr'S PREMATURE to get Into something
that may occur Aug. l, Aug. 15, or whenever,"
said Chuck Adams of the commissioner's office.
BASEBALL
·'A key to anything is to get a settlement. Once
we've got a settlement, we'll be able to say where
we go from there."
One direction could be to make 1981 into a split
season -declare the leaders at the time of the
strike the winners of the first half, then start from
scratch when the strike is setUed and play a
second hall. The two winners would meet in a
mini-series to determine the four division cham-
pions, and lbe rest would proceed oormaUy.
The spht-seaaon concept was proposed by Al
Rosen, president of the Houston Astros, who!
believes there are too many inequities In the 1 schedule to pick up the season where It was Inter·
rupted. t
"SOME TEAMS WOULD end up playing more:
home games than others, and teams would play:
each other different numbers or times,.. ROAen .
said Monday. '
PAY TO PLAY BECOMING A REALITY IN HIGH SCHOOLS • • •
"One of the most important factors iB that if
we just picked up where we left off, many teams !
wouldn't have the opportunity to make up lost
ground. They're so far behind they'd be out of the :
running right away and there would be diminished
fan interest in those cities.
"U you start it fresh. it will give the fans in '
every city something to root for." avenue to pay, it's a matter or survival."
Newport-Mesa chief John Nicoll went even
further in urging his board to drop the fee plan.
asking for an additional $90,000 for the 1981-82
budget for extracurricular activity busing.
Nicoll cited the pending legal action and called
the proceeds of such fees "picayune.•·
The district's trustees went with Nicoll on a
unanimous basis. Todd Hess, however. one of the
trustees, said: "Reality is going to cause some
sort of ree in the future if it remains legal."
One potential ramification is the plight or a
substitute. who seldom plays, but also pays bis
money. On the other side, the coach, using bis
P' wnnel to his best advantage, is obviously going
tv .,1ay his hand to what he considers bis best ad·
vantage and the goal is very simple: Victory.
"To date that hasn't really happened," says
Laguna Beach football coach Walt Hamera.
"We've had kids say they couldn't afford the time
commitment. but the money fa ctor hasn't been
dangled over our heads. Athletes seem to un-
derstand.
"Initially I wanted no part of this, I felt it
wasn't proper. But when faced wit.h realities, you
have to do something. Your tune changes when
faced with realities."
BOB HUGH~S. THE PRINCIPAL at Laguna
Beach, says he has not received a single complaint
about a player not getting enough playing time
during the two years fees have been implemented.
"Communication was made and people seem
to understand," says Hughes. "We've sailed
through thus far, but yes. there are potential
problems. "It's permitted us to retain our programs and
we have an escape clause. a form which goes
home permiUng those who find it Impossible (to
pay) to have the fee reduced in half or reduced
completely. We get about 10 percent response (no
fee) per year."
The participation fee includes transportation
and "replacement'' or equipment.
Allie Schaff, football coach at San Clemente,
bas been strongly vocal against it, but be. too, says
the times are dictating it.
"EVERYONE LOSES players because of it,"
says the veteran Schaff. "You lose some
bol'derline kids. kids that wanted to come out, but
it just happened to be the straw that broke the
camel's back.
"Shoes are S35·$40. most buy their shirts and
insurance is close to $100 now. Some give up a job
on top of it, then have to pay to play, too. Any
school that bas this situation is going to lose kids.
"A lot of them wlll say the boosters or some-
one will pick it up, but a lot of kids won't ask
for it, it's a matter of pride. Others simply won't
sponsor a kid.
··our fees have been $25-$35 for the entire
year, now they're talking about $100.
"It hurts. I don't care what anyone says. Often
times I bear people stating they don't lose any
par ticipants because of it, but our staff sat down
and checked out all of our sports and we reel we
lose 40 percent.
"Our sophomores have suffered. We bad less
tha n 20 on in our sophomore football program. and
that's one step away from the varsity.
''It's going to get worse before it gets better.••
OTHERS CONTACTED -Corona del Mar
High athletic director Ron Davis, Fountain Valley
athletic director Ken Duddridge and Saddieback
CoJrege assistant football coach BiJI Cunerty. a
former head coach at Dana Hills and Capistrano
Valley, similar objections and effort for the acbool
should have to pay to do it." says Davis.
"It's a last resort thing," says Duddrldge. "If
if It is wb.at it takes to save athletics. than il is a
. necessary evil.
"But it will keep some out or a se~ond sport,
spor ts which may not be an athlete's No. 1 love,
but which ends up a very successful venture.
··Regardless of what auyone says about the
needy being taken care or. a lot of them aren't go-
U.S. poloists closing in on gold
Americans remain unbeaten at World University Games
Fr•• A.P clllpalcfllea BUCHAREST, Romania -
The U.S. water' polo te1m ex·
tended ill unbeaten streak to
five matches by beattn1
Hunfary 7-3 Mond1y, assuring
ltael ol a medal at the World
University Games.
For the third Ume In a row,
goalie John Gamel of Stanford
Unl•ertity, a former star at
Foothill H11h tn Tuft.in, was out-
at.andlal to lead the Americana
to an eaay victory.
Fonner Newport Harbor High
ataodout J1mea Bercuon and
Or•t loJ• allo excelled for lbe u.s.·IC(Ud.
•• IUl)lt now we're lD llle belt
p09!UCID for tbe ,oaci," said U.S. toadt n.m. o.&wnantJ. Uodlr tbe compUeatff ~.
111t.am UMd IMn, the United
Stmtee bM auured ltaell ol a
medal..-ti It a. atalmt tbe
Romlllllliliteamt0da1.
A YIC'l'Oal over Romuia
would _.. UM Americ .. ot
dle.f.:wla~lD IWl•mla,, ... ,. Yi •• ol ........
CaF·m11 la••• Hrprlaed a n••* ., . ..._., ..... alt•
wohi.UMI frorld UnlYenttr
GlilMt *9-metar l•dlrifaal ..... Netrd ..............
herself even more by doing it
twice In one day.
Yokohama shaved six seconds
oft the previous reeord of 5:06.65
when she waa timed in 5:00.49 in
qualifying Monday morning. She
lowered that mark by another
five seconds later in the day,
capturing the cold medal in
4; SS. 4S in the final.
'•I was pretty aurprtsed by the
whole day," Yokohama said.
"I'm 1.muaUy prttly nervous dur·
tna compeUUon and don't expect
this IOC't ol thine."
TRI: \1Nn"ED 8TAT£1 JOit a
silver-medal performlDff iD tbe
race. Stanford's AM• Tweecly
w11 lecond in the 400-mewr ln·
divtdual medley iD 4:57.• but
WU dilquaWltd for snakilil ID
UJe1aJ tum Ilona wltla CaDdu Ula Dbon ud Barbara SelMi'
of West German1. Am.tea COffbel ftled a pro-
tett but to DO AY&U.
"it•a a pntt7 ran th1g to ... three d11qaalllleatlou la a
•lncle ~· Mid u.a. .... .., coacb Coilfott.
Th lllwr mldll.•• awarded tolOIDllle'l.lrt8'1~
wlall• Pol•••'• ao11ck1 f~ll~ re'.":'.': :~· tlu
Unl•..,...tJ ol Tnu llft IM
Americans a second swimming
aold Monday, taking the 800-
lreestyle in a games record
~: 37 .~. Irina La.ritscheva ol the
Soviet Union waa a distant
aecond.
Sergei Fetsenko ol the Soviet
Union wan the other awimmlng
f lnal llooday ni&ht, wlnnina lbe
men's 400-meter individual
medley in a games record time
of 4:25.53.
THE AatEalCAN women's
baaltetball team advanced to
today's aotd medal fame
a1aJut the Soviet Unloo, deleat.
ln1 Romania 74-M beblnd • 21·
po1at c1me by Or.con State
center Carol Menken. Tbe Sov-
1.t• doned Cb.lna 11-A ln the .
other semlftnal.
StmlflnaJ action ln men's
baahtball , ... underway todat
wltb the United ltatee mtedaa
Rominla and UM Sori.tt Jlia1·
lnt Yuplavla.
Local Idol Vlr1lnla lluld
uptund a pair Of Cold meMll
la laad&a. 8be doWllM Luria Romanov .. 1. ..1 a. lite all·
Romlld•wom.'1..,.ftul .... '*teamed.,... ..... 1tcarceem co,_ a ..a, N ife.
lory OHr 8UHla'I lerael ~-LM•a.•abteft
laUMlllladdDubl.aftUI .•
,l
ing to come forward. You can't help but lose a
few." says Duddridge.
"I batUed it," says Cunerty. "It really stems
from the fact au of education is not funded correct-
Jy and athletics is the easiest area to cut. But in
the long run it may be more detrimental than peo.
pie know.
"Tbey did this in the Palos Verdes district
with about a $75 fee per sport on a sliding scale
and the effect was disastrous.
"Coaches would love to coach and oot walk
around with their bands out.
"It becomes a source ol embarrassment for
the kid and it's a tough double standard. I think 10
or 140 athletes at Capistrano Valiey, that's one in
every 14, may have been in this situation."
DICK ROCHE, Univenity High's athletic
director, says be ex~ts to lose a handful of
athletes because of the new fee.
"I bate to see it come, but maybe we're creat-
ing our own money and running our own show. I
don't really know what is going to happen.
"We've taUted about that (il you pay, you ex·
peel to play). especially in basketball. Con·
ceivably there can be some problems, there are
still a lot or things we have to try to figure out ...
All of this, or course. may be moot pending the
court case regarding the Santa Barbara situation.
But then again, maybe the Supreme Court's de-
cision will be moot, too, once the state legislature
gets involved.
That's where Mike Moropoulos, Santa Barbara
High Athletic Director and former lootball coach,
comes upoo the scene.
Moropoulos paintg a pim and frustrating pic-
ture, citing the chances are good the State
Supreme Court will rule the whole mess illegal,
but just as coovinced the state legillature will in
turn pass oew laws to make it legal.
He was against the recent suit primarily
because of the timing. since it would have
destroyed Sant.a Barbara's athletic program in
mid-sea.son.
But the $33 a sport per student imposed oo
Santa Barbara Hieb athletes bu had an adverse
effect on the program. according to Moropoulos.
"LET'S FACE FACl'S," says Moropoulos.
"Kids can come by $25 pretty easy these days. But
u a coach I told my players oo the fifth day of
practice that for those that have paid the fee, come
back tomorrow. Of 80 players, 1J returned.
"'fie have a •scholarship program• which
amounts to a form for the klda to return and we'll
make arrangements for the fee, but many won't do
it. It's a matter of pride and I tried to tell the
board ot education that in tile first place.
"Minorities, especla!Jy, won't do that.
"I had one famlly, a minority mother too
proud to accept welfare, with athletes in lbe fami·
ly. They bad to buy loaurance, aboes and .Ult had
to pay and juat flal out couldn't do it. I've paid 1
couple myself."
The bit question f9r MoropoulOI bas been
whether Santa. Bll'bara bu actually loet athletes
bec1u.ae ol tbe fee.
"Yes, we baveJ but I can't HY It's became ol
the pay for play of uaL colnctdence," be repUee.
"Parenta are saying we'd rather pay than
abandon a procram, aod I'm aaytna that. too.
"BUT •&OM THE 8TA&T W1 lhlnl la preJ·
qdlc~ ~ainat athletes. No one elat pays. Not atu·
dents laklnl a food clua, for fteld triPI . . .
"The way the trtod ll 1otng J tblU the
lt1il.lature la IOins to cbanp tbe law to malle lt
Jecal. But lf the trutb were told. Uda la Ule1aJ.
Fabrication and clrcumveat1D1. however, wlll
make It •ppear le1a1.
The Atlanta Braves have endorsed this pro-
posal. according to executive vice president Al
Thornwell, who described it as "the best way to re-
vive interest in the season in all major league
cities."
Nonsense! says Eddie Einhorn, president of
the Chicago White Sox.
"YOU'RE NOT GOING TO FOOL the people,"
Einhorn said. "They know a bad team when they
see one. some people favor the split season
because it keeps everybody in the race. but the
bad teams will still lose. To start all over again
and play another inequitable season would just
compound the situation and penalize the good
teams.''
Instead, Einhorn proposes expanding the
number of teams which qualify for post.season
play. Instead of just the division champions, he'd
let the top two, three or four teams in each division
advance into mini-series. '
"My basic feeling," said Einhorn, "is that an
extra tier of intra-divisional playoffs is necessary
to redo the imbalance in the sphedule. There are
inequities and they can't be corrected by having a
two-part schedule because that would only double
them .
"THE SCHEDULE IS A BIG THING in
baseball. Over 162 games everything equals out -
long road trips and short road trips, home games
and road games, playing every team the same
number or Umes. it's the most testing schedule in·
sports -but when you take that balance away,'
you just have to treat it in a special way." '
Einbom off en three opt.ions to his plan of put-
ting more teams into the playoffs. Under Plan A,
the top two teams in each divisioo would play a •
best-of-five series. Under Plan B. the division win··
ner would draw a bye and race the winner of a
best-of-three set between thl! second and third
finishers. Under Plan C, teams 1-4 and 2-3 would
play best-of-five.
Loufeks sweep
to Prindle title .
LONG BEACH -Richard and Gretchen,
Loufek or Newport Beach -to no one's surprise -·
dominated the Prindle Cat Slate Championship re..:
gatta here by winning the highly competitive 16-A
division. :
The Louleks have been winning local and na-'
Uonal titles in the class Jtlnce they switched ove~
from Hobie Cats several years ago. The huabaod1
wife team is considered the top small catamar~
sailors Jn the U.S.
Trophy winnen In each clus:
PRfNDLE-18 -1. Randy Smyth.Jay Glaser
Huntington Beach; 2. Jorn Curt111-Jennlfe11
Roscoe, Miami. Fla.; 3. Nigel and Mike Wood, S
Dle10.
16·A -1. Richard and Gretchen Loulek,
Newport Beach; 2. Gunnar and Otto Kruae, S_..
Diego; 3. Steve Quant-Leslie Llndermaon:
Phoenix. :
16-B -1. John Clark-Julie Retbwisb, San;
Diego; 2. Peter and Joey SanUey, Dana Point; 31
Glenn Rosa· Bill McGriw, La Cl'esceota. · -
18·Novlce -1. Tom Wi11on·Scott Pa1ne
1
1
Woodland Hilla; 2. Pettt Mahoney, Owen Hill
Long Beach; 3. Mike Kellerman·Sand.1 Babbitt
·Loni Beach. ,
PRINDLE·15 -1. MUce Staudt, Rlvenlde; 2J
Earl Kinnaman, Bellflower; 3. Dave Perry. U
Crescenta. "The bottom llDe 11 tllll: Wben they ltart
cbaratna for other cl .... I can acnpt It. Muea· ---------....----------+
Uon Ia auppoMd to be rr... Tbtl la cf>.cunieular
and deftnl~ part of tlM curriculum. Oar eoaclMI,
for lmtuce, &ada Ulne per1oda I daJ ud U.. other two ,.todl are tor -.cb!q, bat tbeJ'n
pal4 tw ftve per1oda.
''Wbat rullJ boUMn me II bow mtmben ol
IM IC!boOI '-td can be ID W"'moM ad 11Jiq
bOW ~ ataaa.Ud an, l8d nat a put job we'nclaile·bat .•. •· •
lo, lt 1"Cim1 like W.: lolM .,. .._ ti ~ ..
IODM IN ........ to ....... tM ............
Covldlddm.
............. at .................. .. • .-... ---.A1111_...-, .. ,..u.un
tu•, t.bef woe"t be tem1111W7.
UMS
SWtl 11Cl£TS
lF ··~ Q1ls11Mh
21*1111
IA*wlrn .. ,1
11~752•
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MalOf"• l1i·12·YHr-Old•)
D1h1uc:'r u T°'1•MAMaMT <••• .......... , ....... .,..le_
A.01,,..._ '-SMvlew J . ......,.., .. ._ n
'" SHVMW n. Aoblt>WOM. J•45 I•'-...
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AoblnWOOd). .. DllHICT N TOURNAMalfT ~I MlulM Viele v...-AtNMI< f'artl) ,.,...., -......,..1c-~I Mlulon Viejo So.Ml 12, lr vl,.. Soutll 11
(lrvlne Sooltll •llmlnaledl; Mluloft Vlelo
Soulh wins .,... <llemolonsNp.
'.) T__.t Dltllrtct ~-Mp
ft
I/
Irvine North vt.. Mlulon Viejo SouUI. s:•
111 lfvlne Nortll '-S, --..,ow wlN lie otayecl w.cllnndlly el S: •I.
S.nlon(14-15-year-olda)
HCTIOMAL TOURNAMaMTI (et cal 5'* I'....,_) .... , .• 1c_
Minion Vltlo Soulll '· Sovtll 5""'1M •
lt•m• c.llecl ~ OI ct¥kneu •"*' ti• 1nnl1>9s, to be conlliwed tOOty •I SI
(llt~j
T ...... 'tO-Fount.tln Vtlltty Nortll vs. Bell, S:•
S.nlora (13-year-olda)
HCTICINAl. TOURMAMaNTI let.._ ... ~, _.,.,le_
Fou.nialn V.tlley Nortll 17, Lonv .. ecll 1 ..... ....,..0-
,.._, •• ,, ve11.., Hcwtll vs. -"""'"
OCli)OMnt, s: JO
(et.. 3. ""'"· ~) T...,.tO-
HI v1110 ~ Dhlrkt JO <Mmolon •• p.m.
.,, District,. vs. Olsttl<I • tuPetmel, s:•
(IOMr'' brKktU
.,.
t.
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BlgLHgue(1&-111-yHr-olda)
HCTIONAL TOURMAMaMT
l•t ,......_.Valley Rc....._t CN•I ~··1c-Dlllrkl 2' t, Olstrkt J1 I
Dlsltlct • 10, Olstrkt » 0
T ......... 10.-S
District 2' vs. Olstrl<l J1. 5,io
Dl•trlct 3' vs. Dlslrlcl 12. e
w-...,·1~
Ohtrl<I J1 vs. Dlslrkl ». S JO
Tuesday'• town.•
NASl.
WIESTIERN DIVlllCMI W LG,GA SP ....
1..0I A119Slft IS !I 40 '1 a 124
S.ft Dietl» IS 10 47 • J9 113
S-1 " " ,, ,. " ..
Sen JOit ' 17 JS " ii 17 MORTHWIEIT DIVlllOft
VtftCOU-17 e M J2 • t• •, • C.tl .. ry U IJ 45 40 4' ID
,.,, Suttle I> 1J SJ 41 43 lie
Porlltftd 12 14 • 41 JS MD
Edmonton 10 1S "' Ml 41 101
flt C .... M
IEASTlllN OIVISIOft
1> Monlrltl
We1lllnvton
Toronto
lO j ...
IJ U M Q
IJ I> 4S " s 21 llJ ,..
SOUTillEllM DIVlllO.
Allent. U 10 SJ '1
Fort La-..... U 10 t2 12
Ttm pe a.-, 12 U SO S7
Jeck-mite u 1l JI •
.. 1SJ
J2 114
Q '" 11 ,..
CUfTRAL DIVlltOM !1• Cl>kaec> 11 7 Ml SI 4' IS1
Ml--.a 14 11 41 43 Q 1•
T111.. u u • • a '" ('ji Delles ' 22 • S7 1t C2
SI• polllb ere -•did for • ............ w
overtime •k:IOrf. -polms for •.......,.
vlCIOl'y. One bon<n Polfll tor .... ,., fMI
KOl'ICI wltll a mex4mum tll tllr• per ..... .
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Clllef """" <•--· ... ... .... Mr. Ort•<,....> 1M ~ H.-Jefwl(~l -Atw r.-: .. K*1 .... ..._. , ....... .......... ..,_,.._.,
HCOMD aAC.-. 6 ....... ..,_....
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lta,\•6atrr Oe11111a IMI ,_.. ..... ..
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ltlwe\t Faclllr tVeldMeMI ...
AIM rec.d: Mll<lle t.ea, ,.,...,. Ollk.e, --·~ O.tme. Prlv-·-·,..., _.,, £pl .....
""" 11ACa. 1t116 ""'" °" twt . .._ I-MU. Fllllea 9lld ,,_.. ,..,_ ..........
wp. l'UIW'1 ....
GrHIOM ITOr9) 4.. a.• lAO Gem ky (KewWf) ••• 4M
JNft't l.Mfy (~) a.AD
AIM rac.cl: L.adr ~ Tna ~
fHt Tre<Je, Hall to Sol-1, Pr-1-
Cornlsll, O..ull119ly, Call Mt~
ltlvarT-. U uada IMI lleN fM.SO.
llXTM llACa. 111' 11/11 mllH. Maldlll
(0111 •nd geldlnoa. ).yMr41di •lld .......... au.ooo. Go*11 Onie (Two) ..._.. ... IMI
AM"* hli9 IWl-1 SM 4A
Calt'*"9 IV8"nNl!al IS.-
AIM rated: O'lt\lltY, Pocket Man,•l( ..... S Alm, Wllml .. lllft, . D.J . Jaltll, -..ul.
Cettlc Werrtor, Mlltntk ..,_, C...-..
ltoed.
1av1MTM llAQI. • "'....._. ~....._ c1a1m1111...-su.•.
Gart ... c1c;.....,
(0.1.......,.I UO I.• 1A
lmpor'talll ""'""°(Wini-I UI 1.9
MaJor Dari (Pln<tyl UO
Alto,_.., Ml. Rt«tar, Traek Sell, Wf//T
"-· • ......, Jlt n .... •-, .. -· uuac: .. 1w1 pa1c1SJ1f.•.
U Pldl Sb (4-+2·M 1Hl ... Id azi.-.a
•1111 2 ......... tkMll (llJt Mn .. 1; SJ""* SI• cONOlatlon pe1c1 .., .. wllll 111 wlftllllll
llOetl (flW --.).
..ONTM RACW. 11114 ""'" on turf. AJ. towence . .,__.,,.,. ....._PSML
1t1111y c-y.on '"'"'•'' uo u• UI Miile F~ <T-1 4 •• IA
Zor (PIW<t), 1A
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MltMY lt""'1\.
MIMTN RACa. 1116 11116 mti.s. 1-\'M'·
OlclS. Clelmllll--Slt,•.
foxy Qullto 10--1 s . .o ue uo
$11191• R .... l~I JM tM
Htlld Over HMrt t l'tll(.ay) LID
AIM raced:_...... e..wlt9, 0-Nrd
Uflcllr, Fl'l'lnt~·
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A UlftdMC» -1.4, t11.
WHhlngton St• ehamplonatttpe
, ........... 1)
SI .... ......
Jow·Lwls o.rc .... c;..i1ier... vi.-, 7·S. .. 2 (Clerc WIM Ql.000; Vllat wlM tH,•I.
Men'• tou.mament let .... c-er. M.M.I ................
Jlmmr 0.---Clef. I.Ao Pallll, lot, .. ,,
Eddie DltoDa def. CNrlle $trcM9e, .. 1, W ; Jey Uplcles .... Erk v11t1 Oii-, 74, M , 4-4.
Men's tournament , ...... 0r .......... 1
~·--u..-$111orno GlkJtAllfl def. s-Meister. M ,
._., .. ,;Jim ~def. Orll ~ • ..._
H ... 1; J..an N-.... Sell T...W-.
2·6, .. 2, 74 ; AOll9rt VIHlt'Hol Clef. Scott -..
C•I", •·'· 4-S; Gr11tOlre lt•t•lllft del. Ferfteftdo May,..tlo, .. ,, 2·•· H ; Dlcll
Stockton .... ~" s.w...,.. loJ. M ; ~ my Gl~v• def. Walt..-It---. ._l,
>4. 1.s.
Women's tournament , ... _ ... ...._.., ..................
Julie Hanlfttlon clef. u.-.., ....,_, ...,.
H, 6-4; Kim J-def. 0.... Glllltt't. 7-.S, 74, 7-S; Stacy Mw9D1t11 clef. Kelli-C-
mlft91, 4-4, 4-2; sue SalllM ••· .,._ OllVall, M , 4-1; C*"'Y llt'Y ...... clef. T....,
Ltwll , ..... 2, .. 1 ....... Sfwl,,., Clef. J-
Preyer ... , ... 2.
Misc.
P..Uaa MVtTI ... ................. c 0 •• '· • .....,_ s-.n. ................ 2.t lt ctet ... plKH; I . Jec:lll FMntll,
J-vllle, Wh., 4.t; I.*"-ni.-. Mauepeci11a, M.Y., 6.e ; 4. SIM .. t
Ort1erasc11, Denver, t .I ; S. Jat1111fer
NewfM11, SM Oletlt. tA; ........ -.. ,...,, Uttlet11t1, Cole., 11.t; 1. 11.-y •••u, ...nMW-. 111., 1s.2; 1. Kallr w..,._, QMr ... Spr"'9I. c.te., IU; t.
OeN C#rlflan\, utuet ... Gate.. 14.41 "· Jiii .. ,_ .. w ........ Meet., 11.6. UMUU
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Eesl211.W...11.
watlltf'fUf'TllM , .. ,.....
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Mldwftt. U......._, f'a., "4YI; '-WI~ ,,._, Eat. w-..
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......... ...,,., ........... CollefMt ~
n1Y1; 4. Kwt ~ ... , • ......,..,
()No, 71°"-
MM ....
1. Gll'I' c.llOrl, Well ~ ... ~
n1; ?. ltllllert So«"""•· East, Detroit, 766; I. Marvin HOllMI. s..tfl, ,_..,,, n1Y1; 4. Jeff
Ml< .. b, ...._CHuell, 122.
• O.WMM ....
1. Marlo INirtlMZ, West. s.ttnae, n1Y1; 2.
Jerome H•-· t!•st, L.evltt-n, N.Y ••
760YI ; J. Tim Swerds, Mldwnt, "•w
llUrtlnsvlllt, W, Va.,...-_
Or8nge Coast DAILY PILOTITUMday, July 28. 1981 Cl
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
MUINClf'AL CIOUSn' Of' nte
I TA ft OI' CMJPICHUtlA
c:ou.:TYOfl ........ walTOlaAllMMI CIOUllfTY
NDICIM. CMITatCT .............
WI I I ,~tllill
f'la""1fl: IMSURANCt! COMl'AHY 01' NOltnt
AMt!RICA
De ....... :
ALAM A. SMITH Md
DOES I ...._ 10, INCl.USlVIE c........,nm
IUU'loetl 1tOT1ca1 Yw...,. ..... ..._ n. '-' .................. ...... _ ................... ....... ...... ..,.. ...... ..., r ..... ti .,.., ............. ..,Ice ., .. ..... "' .. ,,_...., .,.., ._.. .
M pre....-1, M IMit .,..,, wrltt.ft ,..._,If...,,.....,.,. ...... ._.
AYllOI U-.. ..... _, ' S
........... ~.~tH. ........... _ ... -,....... .................. ....,_, u.. .. .....
SI Ua ... ._. ... kit.er II -Jo• "" ............. -......... \,aOrlo l11-dl•tme11tt, d• HI•
-• • ., .......... aterlta, II IY't .. ........... -............. ....... I. TO THE ot!,.IENOANT: A clvll
cemplMM ,_ t1e11t1 Ill•.,. tM .,._.~
tiff ....... -If .,.., wllfl .. ... 11111 ........ .,... ,,,..., ....... ..,.
af1er 11111 -II t«WOd iltl .,_, ,. .. •1111 .. c.w1 • wr1llllll ,......
It tM _,..,...... UllltM -••• .,..,r.,...,twlltllt.....,...811•
p1kac1e11 e1 .. plallltlff, .-lfll• ~ -... -.~..-...,...ttieretW ....... lflllle~
wMcll Cll'IM ,..... "' ..,.... ........... ., ........... ., _, .. .,..,,., ..
atMr raflaf ,.......-Ill tM <-llllOMt. o.-..JM.lt,J.,.
ltle.lwnl J, Wac:ll, Clet'lt ,,,,_ '--19, ~ coeotteeo. WR .... a MOOOY
A .. 1U I Cup;i.._ ... o, .. ..
, ..... c.llDr~ .... ,.. c:.-. ...... ClllMlrW ...
(ft4) ......
......... Or .... c.... Oelly f'llet,
July 11, ......... "· ,.., D»41
PVBUC NOTICE
P\18UC NOTIC& ruauc NOTICE PtJBUC NOTICS ] •
ASS&TS
C•sh ~ dUt from deOOllllOrY lnllltullons. · • · • · • • 1,21' I ~~i~~ =::'''" ................... 3 •••••• 093
u .S. GoWrnn*'lt agencies 1
•nd corpor•Uons ••••••••••••••••••• • . , . • · · · • · · · • .o 1
Obllgetlons of S~etes .
and polltlc•I subdivisions J In the United States .......... , ............ , ...• .0
All othtrsecurltJes .••••••••.••••••• •• • • ••• · • · • • · · • t50 I Feder•I funds sold and securities purchased
under ~reements to resell •.•.•......•••.. , , 7 ,300
Loans, Tot•I <excludlng
un .. rned Income> •.••....•..• 21,030 I
LAU: Allowance for oosslbfe I<*\ losses ...... ., • • .. 108 t Loans, Net , . . • • • • • • • . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • . 20, 922 L .. se flMncfng receivables •••• , .•.. , ..•...•••••••• ..0
Bank premises, furniture end
fixtures, and other assets representing bank premises .•..•......••...•.•. 704
Reel estate owned other then ban6c premises .......••.•.. , .•.•...• , . . • . • ..0 I
All other assets •.. , ......•.•.....•......•... , ••.. 6M '
TOTAL ASSETS .......... ·.• .................... 31.07S
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of
Individuals, partnerships, )
end corporations ..•............ , .••.•.•.•. , . 5,009
Time and savings deposits l :!,!,~~=:~~;::~~~~~~~~ .... '.'' ......... 19,eut l
Deposits Of United States Government ........... , ........•.••...... 9
Deposits Of States and
rn~~c~·n~=~~~::15
.......••........••..•••. s • • ..0
All other deposits ............................. , . , .. ..0
Certified and officers' checks ...•...............• 1,217 1
'Total Deposits .•...................... , ....•.... 26,lM \ Total demand depoSI~ ..•...•. 6,235
Total time & savlngs'det>oslts 19,'M9
Federal funds purchased and
securities sold under agreements to repurchase ...••........•........ ..0
lnterest,bearlng demand notes 1
<note balances) Issued to the u .S. Treasury and other llabllltles for borrowed money .................. -0
Mortgage Indebtedness and
llabillty for capltall~ed leases .................... ..0
All other llabilltles ................................ 183
TOTAL LIABILITIES
(excluding subordinated notes
and debentures) •...•.......•....•.... , ..... 26,367
Subordinated notes and debentures .. , ..•..... , . . . . ..0
EQUITY CAPITAL
Preferred Stock ,,..., No. shares outstanding ... -0-........ {par value) ..0
PUBLIC NOTICE Common stock
No. shares authorized ... 500,000 No. shares outstanding ... 675,000 (par value) 2,500
Surplus ......••.........•.•.................... 2,500
Undivided protlts and
reserve fM contingencies and other capital reserves ..................•. (292)
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .................... 4,708
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL ...................... ,, 31,07S
MEMORANDA
Amounts outstanding as of report date: Standby letters of credit, total .....•...........• 861
Time certificates of deposit
In denOmlnatlons of $100 000 or more ..................... , ... , .. 12,617
Other time deposits In amounts of $100,000 or more ......... ,. ......... .0
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month) ending
with report date: Total deposits .........•............•...•. 22,250
we the undersigned directors attest the correctness
of this statement of resources and llabllltfes. We
declare that It has been examined by us, and to the
best Of our knowledge and belief Is true and correct.
ts/Brian Chlslck
/s/Wllllam A. Schmidt
l s/Richard S. Flagg
1, Gerald R. Martin, Vice Presldent/CaShler of the
above,named bank do hereby declare that this Report
of Condition Is true and ce>«ect to the best of my
«nowlec:tge and bellef.
• l s/Gerald R. Martin
7,1s-a1 ,._..,..,e>r.,..c..t Delly ...... JI/fly .. ,.,
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
I I
Orange CO•l DAILY PtLOT/TuUday. July 28, 1881
• earn es
away 5
TUCSON (AP) -A
wall of water swept
throuah a canyon
recrutloo area at the
Tanque Verde Falls,
carrytna away at leut
five people, oftlclala
aa!d.
Rescuers recovered
the bodies of an uniden-
tUied man Sunday night
and a second unlden·
tilled victim Monday,
Pima County aherUl's
deputies said as the
search continued.
Helicopters plucked 26
people from waters of
Tanque Verde Wub
after the flash flood
surged through the.area
about 4 p.m . Sunday, de-
puUes said.
Hispanics rap
phone • service
By TllOJUS D. IUAI
From Buena Park to San Francbco, from San·
ta Moalca to ftoMvWe, Callfornta. ctuet are react·
inc offtcially a1a1n1t u.. rat.e lncre&M requeata by
t.be state•• two lar1e telephone compan111.
The complaint everywhere ii t.bat Hrvice lan't
lood eoouah to merit a bil price biit. No 1roup
feels thla more 1t.ron1ly than a coalition of 18 Kil·
panic or1anbaUon.t that actually want lo wrest
away part of Pacific Telephone's francb.1Je.
The Btllnl\lal Rlshta Coalition plana lo sell
stock in Hispanic areas lo raise the hundred.I of
mUllom of dollars needed lo buy Paclflc llne1 and
equipment.
"We realize this is a major undertU.ln1," says
John Echeveete, communications direclor of the
East Los Angeles Community Union (TELACU>.
"But tb.e altemaUve is juat keep quiet about totally
inadequate Spani1b-langua1e service."
TELACU and Its alUes will oniy be able lo
rorm a phone company if the state Public Utilities
Commission agrees after lenatby hearln11 that
Pacific Telephone service is beyond redemption.
And the phone com-
Ex-commander
fined $2,000
SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP> -The fonntr com·
mander of the 24th Infantry division at Fort
Stewart, Maj. Gen. James Cochran Ill, bu been
reprimanded and fined $2,000 for mlauae of 1overn-
ment resources, an Army spokesman aald.
The spokesman said an lnvestitation by the
Army Office of Inapeclor Geeral revealed that
government personnel, faclUtiea and property
were used in March to repair a stove from
Cochran's boat.
Ritter said Cochran also used an Armr
aircraft to fiy lo Newburgh, N.Y., in May for bli
benefit.
Oakland hikes taxes
OAKLAND CAP> -ln a move that is likely to
draw court challenges, the Oa.kJand City CouncU
has voted to raise/roperty taxes to meet the city's
rising pension fun obligat.ion.
PUBUC NOTICE
,ICTIT10UI eu11M•ll
MAM& ITAT•MaMT
PUBLIC NOTICE
"ICTIT10UI eUllMall
MAM& ITATaMaMT "Within 15 seconch, it
was Just bank to bank,"
said one witness, John
Cook.
CALIFORNIA pany says Its service to
Hispanics ia as good as FOCUS :en!.where else, if not bet·
NAMID -William
J. Dyess, 51, who
earlier tbis year
spoke for the Reagan
administration at the
State Department,
has been nominated
to be U .S . am -
bassador to the
Netherlands. TIM follow I,.. .,.,_, ere dol111 -----------1 tl<ltl-.. ;
TIM totio..t119 perlOI\ It clol119 bltll·
M UHl .......... About 50 people were
hiking, swimming and
picnicking in and around
the area when the wall
of water, estimated at
up to 10 feet high ,
rushed through ,
rescuers said.
"We now provide a
statewide Spanish-language assistance bureau to
which ail calls are referred if operalora can't com·
munlcate with callers," said Doug Cambero,
Pacific's assistant vice president for external af·
fairs. "It is available 24 hours a day and coats us
$5 million a year. We also promote phone service
heavily in Chicano areas."
Fund cut
reducing
day care
12' -I WUIOI\ "-1,.,,.,.U, 12'
Weal w11 .... Or.,.., Celllomle
Mery l.r#lt Mtrter, * E. h l-llvd., ....... CllllOr11le 9*1
N.,.,._ E. Moyer, t1W E. 9el-
11Yf., a.lllDa, Celllomle '*'
Tlllt NIMu It candud9cl lty ell In· dlvlduel.
MMviAwlt~r
Tlllt 1\ltltmeflt •• llleo •1111 11141
County Clertl ol 0r..,.. County°" July ,., 1'11.
MAURY STAUP:P:ER SEA LION
REAL TY, .01 E. C-11 Hwy., C._
del Mer, CA tK:ts .
L. MAURICE STAUFFER, 721
MerlflOld A-. CM-del Mltr, CA mu.
Thia NI-It condlic"4 by e11 l11
.cllvlduel.
L. Mllurlu Stauffer
Thia IW-•et llleCI wllll ...
County Clef1I ol 0r.,. County on JMIY
u. ""· ,,...u ,, .....
OUT OF MOTHBALLS -The battleship USS
New Jersey is returning to sea for the first
time in 12 years. The ship left the Naval
Shipyard in Bremerton, Wash., on Monday
and is being towed to Long Beach for. re-
activation as a missile-launching warship
after a $326 million refurbishing scheduled
during the next 21 months.
Bell relates
major goals
Ken Burgess, another
witness, said he was
able lo save one child,
but another be tried to
grasp was swept away
in the flood.
But Robert Gnaizda, the Hispanic coalition
lawyer and a former aide to Gov. Brown, says
that's not nearly enough.
"One of Pacific Telephone's own surveys
shows •bat 1.2 million calls were initiated ln
Spanish last year," be said. "That only means the
first word was in Spanish. Of those, 360,000 ended
when the operators bung up because they couldn't
speak Spanish.•·
SACRAMENTO (AP)
-The state has dropped
most of its surveillance 1
of family day care cen·
ters for children, says
Sociai Services Direclor
Pvbllllled OrMte Cout O.lly Piiot, P11bllr.Ncl Orange Co.11 Oally Piiot,
J11ly 21. Al.IQ.•. I I, 11, 1 .. t U1M1 July 21, Al.IQ.•. 11, II. 1 .. 1 Jf1H1
P\JBUC NOTICE
"ICTIT10UI aUllNall
MAM8 ITATaMaMT
Tiit IOll-lfll perll0fl1 ••• doing butlMUn:
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUI IUllN•ll
NAM• ITATIMIMT TIM lollOWlllQ ,_,_. It dlOlfll 111111· ....... ,
WASHINGTON CAP> -Education Secretary
T.H. Bell, issuing marching orders lo his 7,000
employees, wants them lo ta.ke shorter coffee
breaks, turn out lights and batten down tbe
bureaucratic batches.
The flood occurred as
rescue workers tried to
save a man injured in a
diving accident at the
recreation area's falls.
Pima County Deputy.
Chuck McHugh, head of
the sheriff's rescue unit,
said John Evans, 22,
broke his neck after div-
ing 50 feet into the
water.
Gnaizda also says lhe phone company should
offer discounts on calls to Mexico and other Latin
American countries.
"Every time they offer a discount rate," be
said, "they find that revenues rise."
Marion Woods.
Woods issued a state-
ment that parents
should therefore careful·
ly check such centers,
which are defined as
caring for 12 or fewer
children.
He said a law, effec-
tive July 1, reduces
from $8.8 million to $4.1
million the funds lo the
Sociai Services Depart·
A E MIEOl·COMPUTER. 2111
Mtylerti Circle. C:O. .. -· Calllor11I• 92'2'
Allell J , T. Yin, M.O., 2117 S.ylertl
Clrcle, Cate Mew. Ce lllornle t3'2'
Elellle K. Vin, 2111 S.yl•r11 Clrcte,
Coat• ,....,., Callfwllle ...
Tiii• bl.mlneu 11 condllc'9d by •n In·
dMdu•I.
All .. J. T. Yin, M.O.
ElelM K, Y In
Tllll ,..,_, we1 Iliad wllll 11141
County Clerll of 0r..,.. County o" J uty
2A.1tll.
PERSIMMON OESIGNS, 1'JJ
lrvlM •-. Coste ~. CllllOl'ftle m11
A11ne S. Okimoto, IU) lrwlne
A wnw. eo.t.e "'"9, Celllornl• t2'V
Tlll1 llu&lneu II conclUClit<I by Mt 111· Olvldual.
IV!tM s. Okl-Thll 1t.ei-1 WH lllecl wllll the
County C.ler1l ol 0r-. c-ty Oii Jiiiy t2, IM1.
.. ,WJt
PvblllNO Or-C-1 Delly "llot.
July U , A .... •, 11, II. 1"1 n.Mt ,,.,., t---------
Publlllled 0r..,.. C:O.ll Oelly Piiot. PUBLIC NOTICE ~MIY U, AllO. •. 11, II, 1 .. 1 »4'M1 r------------Bell also wants his start to use moral
persuasion rather than legal threats to secure civil
rights enforcement, encourage lougher standarch
in schools and colJeges, and jettison unnecessary
rules and paperwork.
A rescue helicopter
had landed on a ledge
above Evans and
rescuers were preparing
to carry him lo it when
the wall of water ap-
peared.
Gnaizda and Echeveste claim a Hispanic
phone company would have no trouble raising
operating revenues. They cite PUC documents
showing that Hispanic cuslomers' phone bills
average $2 a month higher than others.
"If that is true now, when there is very little
promotion, imagine what it would be like if
someone really tried to attract the business from
them," Gnaizda said.
ment's Community Care PUBUC NOTICE ,ICTIT10UI IMIMHU
Li in Divl · UMa ITAT&MaNT
1
cens g ston. TIM 1o1i..1,,. per-• e•• c1o1111 Previous regulations F1CTmou1eu11 ... 11 Ml-•:
BelJ laid down a dozen major goals ror the
year-old department in an eight-page memo to bis
top managers last month. The department re-
leased a copy of it on request.
· ed · ti MAMalTATaMaltT JOHN'S TOOL SHEO, to S. requtr an tnspec on TM 1o1io..t,,. ..,_, 11 c1o1111 1111s1-•uclld serwt. AMIMlm, ee111or111e
Neither side questions one key statistic: 42
percent of all calls from Cailfomia to foreign
points go lo Mexico.
vi.sit at the time of ap-Mta n : ,_,
Plication, another v1·s1•t YOUNG INOUSTRIES, JOOO N.... He11ry It. Persley, 1UlS
"He was still alive,
and we were bringing
him up when we beard
someone yell, 'Flash
flood -get the hell
out!'" said Dennis
:Welsh, an Arizona
Department of Public
lune Avenue, Hewport leec II, Loclln...,11, Nerwelll, Cellf9mle '°"° after any complaint, and Celllorllle lnerly J , Persley, 1HU
I. ns ections t · a O•ry o-ve Youne, sooo Neptune, Loc11Mv11. Norw••ll. c.ilforl\4e '°"° President Reagan in his campaign promised
to strip the agency of Cabinet rank. Bell said in an
interview last week be expects t-0 send the White
House by Labor Day a list of proposed alternative
structures.
But Gnaizda argued that those calls could be
much more profitable.
p . Wlce a ye r. .._,.rt ee.c11, ea111om1e.,.., ,1111 ._ .. 11 condYCt• °' ,,..
But now, Woods said, T11111M1M1111,0l'duct.c1 by en ,,.. dlviw.11 t~ -WH•l.
"We know that lowering rates always In·
creases revenues," he said. "We also know that
Mexico is the only country lo which Pacific offers
no discount for <Urect dialing."
the visits are beina re-dlvldll••· 14enry R. Peniey
d • GM-, YOUlll .....,..yJ. P....a.y uced to one at the start, Thi• mi-t ... 111.0 •lt11 .,,. Thi• ...._ •• tneci •• .,, u. investigations of com. c ounty°""'°' 0r.,... Cowlty on July c-ty C1ett1., 0r.,.. c-.ty on Jiiiy
In the memo, Bell complained, ·'Some
supervisors have obviously been lax in having a
disciplined work force. Employees should be re-
quired lo report to work on time each day, to take
only the permitted lime for coffee breaks and
lunch lime, and perform with greater intensity and
commitment. ... "
1•. , .. 1. •.1111. plaints, and annual vis-.,,...., MOH•UAllOCIATH, uec.
l·ts to a 10 percent sam f'lllllllllld 0r..,.. co.11 oeuy Piiot. t111 c-.. ........... '·
Safety officer and
paramedic. "By the
time I turned around,
the water had risen
from my ankle to up
around my waist. It hap-
pened in a matter of
seconds."
But Cambero and others contend that the real
aim of the Hispanic coalition is sjmply lo increa.se
both Spanish-language service and hiring of His·
panics by Pacific.
' • July2t,A14•.11,11,1"1 131M1 ....,....._,~, ... pie. ,,.,...
Applicants for licenses P\JBUC NOTICE "'*'.,.. ar.,,.. c.o.st o.11y P11et.
must still be fingerprint· ir.----------1-J·u_•_,_1._1•_.2_1._a._1., ___ mM1
''The idea of a new company is really pre-
posterous, especially if it's Juat in Hispanic
areas," says one veteran utilities lawyer.
ed, submit lo criminal '=::~:::r PUBUCJNOTICE
record clearances and T11e '°''°"""' .. .._. 11 c1o1111 ""••· 1---------
Promotions and pay increases "should
absolutely be withheld from persons not meriting
them," he said.
"It would coat billions, and where are you go-
ing to find that in the barrio? So they're just trying
to create some kind of pressure."
si gn financial state--~~WAll 'S FUTURE. No. • MOTIUO, men ts. SUrb1.ortl Ct.. Newport leech, DIUOl.UTIOM 0'
Th d art t k d Cellf0rllle'*3 "AllTNl .... 1 .. e ep men as e R ...... • G s Pvt111c 11otk • ts ,.,...,., 11,,1111 tlMt the Leg isl at u re t 0 .. _.;.;"i.kh. ~t0r!1e'="1 Cl.. LAN RON ENTERPRISES, INC., •nd
eli minate 11' cens1·ng T1111 N1M11 11 c_..., by en 1n. FP:EC·TWO. •Nc .• wttofor• dol111
Bell asked that lights be turned off,
thermostats lowered and travel lo conventions
curtailed to "reduce costs and give the taxpayers
a better bargain during this time of belt tighten-
ing ... .''
As water gushed down
the canyon , the
helicopter ilfted off, and
the rescue workers scur-
ried up a bill to safety
with Evans, McHugh
said. He said Evans died
on the way to the
hospital.
"That may be the reason," said Ed Perez, the
deputy city atlomey representing Los Angeles in
the case. "But in my opinion service could def-
initely be improved. The phone company surveys
showing cualomers generally happy with service
may not be lotally accurate, because they survey
only phone cuslomers, not those who don't have
service. But full bilingual service would cost $122
million a year statewide and the question is do you
need it everywhere in the state?"
di d bu1lnen under the flcllt1ou1 firm altogether as ineffective "' ueiiw.rt • GNber n•mt enc1 11y1e o1 vo11 u LINOA and too costly. Tllll ,..,._t ... llleCI •Ith .... KNOLLS ESTATES, et •120 llrcll
County Clerll o1 Orengt County on Jiiiy StrMI, City of ~ 9-:11, C-y
Bell, who has settled college desegregation
disputes with several states and scuttled bilingual
education rules, said his agency "should do more
to get a commitment from state and local officials
to take voluntary action lo enforce civil rights
laws."
Policy eyed
Bell said the department should help lead a
campaign to improve the quality of schools and
colleges. He promised to set up "a national com·
mission on excellence in education."
Paul Roberson of
Amado said bis
daughter , Darla
Roberson, 18, was miss-
ing.
A new phone company would cost much more,
of course. But at least its costs would be borne by
its own investors and customers, not subsidized by
every other phone customer in California.
FRESNO (AP)
Parlier School District
trustees should establish
a policy on confiict of in·
tereats and nepotism to
avoid future allegations
of imprope.r consultant
tradeoffs, the Fresno
County grand jury says. (Elial ii a columnist baa~ in Santa Monica).
DEATH NOTICES .Pair join
AllANT McClary oe Newport Beach, Jose, Ca .. Diane Carol UCl'S MARG ARE T ANN Ca. and Susan Schuman ol Managuh or San Diego, Ca.
ARANT, resident of Hunt· Huntington Beach, Ca., 1<» and Ruth Eva June Olson (de· PBK
lngton Beach. Ca. Passed grandchildren, 2 greal· cea1ed), 16 grandchildren, 2
away on July 24, 1981. grandchildren. Services will 1reat-1randchlldren, 2 Survived by husband 0 ., be held oo Teaday July 28, brothera Elil Syvert Quist of
Perry Arant, 3 daughters 1981 at 10:00 AM at Paclflc' Pompano Beach, Florida andl John Schneiderman Of
Nelsle Sbaiinahan of ViewMemorlaJPark.Inlieu NormannQuiatofStockholm, Newport Beach and
Caldwell, Idaho, Genevieve of flOlt'en, the family suf· Sewden, 3 slaters Anna Hope Diane Marie Wixted of
----------·geats memoriaJcontribut.ioru of Park Forest, Illlnota, Eva Costa Mesa have been
IALT?IHGHOH
SMITH & TUTHILL
WISTCUff CHANL .
427 E. 17th St Costa Mesa
6'6-9371
PMCl llOTHHS
SMITHS' MOITUAIT
827 Main St
HunllnQton Btlach
536-6539
, .. C9'1C .. .. ....., ..... , .. .
Cemttert Mortuary Chapet-Crematocv.
3500 Pacific View Onve
NewPort BHCh 644-2700
oLittleSi.lteraofthePooror Fredricksen of Mondal, elected to UC Irvine's
The Maryknoll Slstera, Norway and May Barnes of M h f Phl B t Pacific V\ew Newport Beach Oslo, Norway. Graveside u c apter o e a directors. servlceswillbeheldonTbur1· Kappa, a national honor
GOLDM'EIN day, Jul,y30,191laU:OOPM at society, after tb~y
HERBERT REUBEN PaclflcVlewMemortalParlc. iraduated cum laude
GOLDSTEIN, r:e1ident of Paclflc View Mortuary, from the uniyersity.
Costa Mesa, ca. Paaaed away Newport Beach directors. 1 Additionally, 11 area
on July 23, 1981. He l1 1ur-WAllDL& students have been
vlved by 1\11 wife M1urine, LUCILLE M. WARDLE, honored by the Wl1verai-
1on. a Geolfrey and. Richard. re1ldent of Newport Beach. ty for sraduaUni cum
dau1hter8etbAnnGol<llteln, Ca. Paued away on July 2', laude The:v are· slater Marjorie Berboft and 1•1 ln t.o.Mlelel, Ca. Born · · ·
brother Marvin Rosen, ln Lofan. Utah on December '"'--""* M. ,...._ lftvl•
1randchlldren, MlcbeUe, 5, 1917. SIM was a member ot "e::.:=..~~o-"
Dou1Ju, MtUua aod Paul lbe Cburda of Jt1ua Cbriat of =:· ~ ~-MkllMI J: Goldateln. Gravuldt Latter-day lalnta, Newport ... ~ ....... ~ ~theri11e 1ervtc11 were held OJl Sutr Beach 2nd Ward. She w11 Mein• .._ -. ,...., • ~
day, July 38, 1911 at Harbor ownar and Ol)trator ot Bu111 "· """"· Lawn llowllOllve Memorial International ot Newport• 111 ...... v.....,-o._ .....
Park. Services under the Beach for 17 yean. Survived direeUOG of Harbor Lawn· by hOnl Gerald A. Wardle, of
Mount OUve Mortuary of VanN~,ca.,A.DavldWar· Copa gel C0tta M•a. 540-1164. dle of Caretr .. , Arlaona and u
lllLL&I A. Kent Wardle ot San DltJo,
CELIA MILLJtR, r•ldtot Ca., a brotMn B. Seott MWtr d of Oranie, C.. Puttd away ofLompoc,Ca .. Papp1Mlller recor er8
on July za, 1111. 1be ta ,•ur· of Van Kura.Ca. and Oavld HOUSTON <AP) vlnd by ber lwlbMd Albert, MWer of Jloll)"WGOd, Ca., l -
dau1bter Joan Catwrow, IOD 1l1ter Veda Ball ol Ut.ab, • M o r • • D d m ore Lawrence Miller, 1t1ttr• paDdcldldnn and 1 1ttat. policemen are armlDt
Rebecca Amlterdam', larab srandeMld .. ~ WW be t.bemlelftl wttb ta,. N·
Garnakel and Ida •areua, btldoa~1Jul7•,1111 eordera 11 ln1uranee
allo 1vrvhtd by • •t11:00Allatu.Clnarftof 111la1t ebar1H of
1randchlldrea. Oravt1l4• Jt1u1 a.rill o1 Lau.-d11 ab111e t•• Routon Hrvl• wwt Mid oa lull· lalDta, Nftport IMcll lad p 11 ' p t 1 da1, 1&&&1 •.1911 it Har• fhrd, IOI Dour Or., 0 ~· 1 ro man Lawn Mollllt OU" llemodal N f w po r l at IC la, Ca . Ualoe I dlreetOr ..,.. Park. .....,.. u4er Ult In ume•t al Otclta ct\J 0 l 11 11 a a r 1 e I o
cllnctlon fll a.rw ta~-Ce=~ U&U. VII-..U ..... tbat U J:{. g::\.~vz.,.tuar1 ol ~=...:~== ::;.:or.~=1.,~
.ilNT .-cm!'...._. fll •1-::·J""";.•r.':: pouee are 1art11a1 a..J-.&~aWQ• ~: -..:=:..,;, te ~11s~·~ narb den1t.!
lu!J .. -· "*'1nd '1 I &Mt da M ....... •• 1 • ... , 81 w •
IODIAralO.··...-: ....... --··c....m UNdi'_,. ftmMQ I• AM .Qldll *'ls111110.W 11...teD..,. 111 of. ,.,.._ ................... ~. _., ... ,..-.t:-· fiV'=• ::r-.... '.!!!. r..:: t:c:'., i. '::,ea~ " ~ oi c::£=,=•n la .... a... .... W;;.. --· ~
Inventor gets
biggest break
CHICAGO (AP) -Bob Kirk, a chronic
invenlor, says he bad to fracture bis leg lo get the
biggest break ot bla 25-year career.
Kirk slipped on ice in March 1980 and broke
bis leg in three places.
"When the cut was removed, the nurse struck
some sensitive apota with a cut cutter aaw," the
54-year-old former amateur boxer and coach said
Wednesday. "So I invented a cut cutter cuard.
It'a the best of all my inventiom io far.''
Kirk says be baa patented 50 items, moaUy
toys, and has about as many pendinc. But be ju.at
hasn't been able to come up with a better
mousetrap -somethin1 that really 1oe1 over bit.
One ot hit bombl wu the "Bubble Bat."
"It wu a plutic baseball bat with a little hole
ln the end. You dipped It ln bubble soap and trttd
to bat the bubbles when you swuni it.'1 aald Kirk.
"Some executives looked tt over and tried lo uae lt.
They were turned off when t.be liquid 1ot on their
'400 suit.a."
Now be'• workln1 on the "diapoaable 'Spoon
Straw,' that lets you 1et down to the very bottom
of a IOda;" a "Ski Horn," wbicb uaes ruahlna air
tA> produce a wblsU• that warns other 1ktera of
approach: and a Jump rope wblcb features
ln1trument1 ln the handl• that wind and play
mutlc Wbile aomeone ll jumplna.
Thi cut cutw ruard bu beert sold to Stryker
Corp. of Kalamuoo, Mlcb., he aa!d. The contraM
pro•ldel him with royaJtl• and a 91.000 retainer.
''11iey have turned out 370,000 cut cu.tten ln
the put IDd mr nt• pa.rd HD be fttted limply to
IO pereeat ot al cut euu.n told," h• aald.
Kirk 1ald t.be ruard wW lbow doctors bow
dHplJ theJ art eutt1111. ID lddltioD, tt bu a
platter du1t 1tora1e container tbat can be
empUed, aad aueUoD of UM ncuum cleaner
1wlrllq ~ tbe blade at ldCb •P194 k"PI the bJadefrom overbeatial.
"Stryker bu recopllfd tbat ~· 1uard
1ttaclunmt hlPI plMter=from Htt1lDa all
over till ..._, Md tea dlml•l•HI the mam&a-ti ..able ia.-1111a N1llUat h'olll cutttna paUtat'1lldnor11 ullU" ............. tima, ua
II tu• IDd W. IDt tbl 119tilat 11 wt&l u tM ,..... ..... 1t.••1 ... Klrll
"J ............. °' ....... s..p *ltl•lrl?.S ud ........... .__ ... tidMl'l..U UM time,' 1ald
K1rt1:11.•1it ......... tio linM ........ ..
24 , .. , of Oren.-, SI ... of Calltorftle, did on
• . .., ..... the 2111 dey ol July, 1 .. 1. by ""'Ml
p111111-Or ..... Cout O.lly Piiot. tOftaent. cllUOlw the a.Id ...,.......tllp
July 21, Al.IQ.•. 11, 11, '"1 JaH1 :;:m!~::':. their relellon1 et
P\JBUC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUI IUllM .. I
Further l\Otlce 11 ,,.._, .,_ that lhe U ......... Wiii not lie ,._...,.
iw., from INI cley °"' tor any obo ...
Itel\ IMwnd llof Ille -r In 1111 own
neme or Ill IN -Of the firm. MAMSITAT8M8MT OATIEO AT Newport 1 .. cll,
Tiie followlfll ...,_ II deilll 111111-Celllorlll• ~I 2111 4ey Of J ly '"1 ........ , " . .
CL.°C SIEllVICES, SI• Upper ~~ 9rownJr,
N-pott Pl9U 0r1w, N..,.n eHdl, Pvbllltled 0r.,,.. CNst o.11y Piiot C.ll~::..::o L.oul .. Cottrell, U16 Cir· July 2t, l•t usui
cl• Wey, L...-e..11, Cellfornle mst Thll 111.91-11 concllle"4 by e11 111·
dlvldllel.
c.tlNrlM Cot1rell
Tlll1 1wi-t •e1 llled •1111 Ille Coullly Clertt ol Or ..... Co11nt? on Jiiiy l•, ltll. ,,....,
hlll ...... Or_,.. C-1 Oelly Piiot,
J11ly n. •1111-•. 11, 11. 1111 un.-i
MOTICE how Daily Pilot Class·
lfied ads display their
me11agea with legibility and impact? Our ads, we are proud to say, re-ally get results. Phone
6'2·5678.
STAR GAZER'~~ .....-.-..-...-....,.... __ llr Cl.A Y II POLLAN---..-----1
M Yow Oollr AcfMI, ""1do M V Acct rJl•f to I~• Jtort V
To develop meuogt lo< Wednesday, reod words corresponding ro numbe" of your Zodioc blrtk 11gn
,..,A,,N
lltt uo.-:!~ ·-·-11UM ·-•a..c-101'~• ,,..,
n Mow ,,,.,,. ,.,_..,. ,.._ ,._
"°" """ "-·-.. """" ·-110.. .. _ ._,.. := ·-·-.. ,._
"" C)Ne11in.I
LmLE
' ..
'
C 11 A T 11 ll E E M S P ll 0 U T P U A L
S ll K A U £ J L Q £ M 0 ll ll M E A N Y
TEMll I KOZQYAOiAL H llDO
ll Y E A S A D I U Y P V ll T C 0 E U
ll l I S Y M [ ll N T I T N M I I N C N
NNDCHEMAEVIUOEATEOL
A 0 l A ll N P J Y V A ll ll M ll T IC ll Y
S 0 P L X I W E E F A ll ll T P L 0 P £ •r
M ll H S E W ll Z I H I E I N S N 0 ll
0 l C I J D W I C H M T I U L A ll U
P t A 0 U L It I 0 T A M W A A A M A U UNH~YOltlLTNUAFOllOLD
l N I L ll I I 0 l ll l A H D £ l U I A TA ll I 0 L l,t L ll AH SD CL M f R
IOYL PDTWI I l"ATVl EOa
":" -':t:' ~= =i .....
I .
___ ,__ ___ ----. . . -.. .. ----..--. -...-----..... ~ __.....--.-
INDEX
Tt Place Y• M. Cal
642-5678
110US£S roa uu
1m mm
~ .. ., .... i..k """'' ... "'' ,., ..... :::-Pt~tll f'n) ,.,...1,\ f"'°"''" lAb fh.,,-, timrNr<'l•I Proptr\\ t -Gelllom•.,wm~ '-1~ ~..-l••""'"' llo...-.10.,. ""'rd .......... Pt ......
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Ullt l0<'4I< \1-11.,. Tri! l'th
)I ... l>ntf'\ ""'""'' Ut-le p,._.
!Mall-• Pt"11 ··~"!':.;-!~::~~>fU\f\ ...,,,.J t .\talt t.Uh.•"'"' KuJ t.;t.ttt' .. IMfd
IENULS
Hou"f" t "'f'U\hfid ·t~lf'fWtAI\.~
uw~ t\"""'' "' \~ll'UW.m' twt" ~ nnOcMn1nu,,1n\i. ' •f • u .. NlcM\f"'\ tVtft
'' """ a.hw-\f'\ l "' lNP't•h t'wrn
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• ""'-' t'ur" Uf'' n1 Roottl> Ho6m . 8U1Hd
Holt'l\ ... Olfl\
G~llrlf»l'~ <itiwmmtr H .. nta..i~
\ .t»IMlft Kt-nu.h
feff'(ah lu\oh.,.rf t •t4Jh fnr RtM Kl1tt Mtnl•I
i:kblnt'\\ fh·•hl
' ~Ml'"'"•I Mt-nhl .... °'"'' RHlhl.,'AaMtod • )1.,,.. ftPM•l'
BUSINESS, INVEST-
MENT. FINANCE
~·-·l-1
• ~lftift' • antld
' ll"'\~lnwMt~I'
"''""'"""' •• n1..d •.,MOM\ tu lo.ft
41.00.\ .. •"'""
I Wor1.1u..-i lH -.
ANHOUNCCMENTS.
~ISONALS &
LOST & roUND
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l.0.1 ~ ti)Uf\d
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SERVICES
~HU Utr~IOf\
£Mrt.OYMENT &
mmArtON
"Moil~ '""lrwcho~ ,..ioow.~,.,,
1,Hrl5-1 .. 11nlrd \t • •
MERCHANDISE ,,.Kl......,
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EOUlrMENT "*fffff ••
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fto.tb \hnnf' t 't'ftl•
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TWANSPOITATION
.\in-raft t.'amPf'n~~ Mtnl
lltttri< l •r" "•• c·, °" '«"1'11114" \CatOf' Um' '-.Ir Htnt
Tre1k-n 1 r•••I
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111111.r •vtc• DmCTOIY
F•Relult
SenlceCall
IGN71 ....
...... w. ........ ,.,Wt Orange Coast DAIL y PILOTfTuesd • Jut 28, 1981 Cl
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••
••NI IOOZ.....,.. 1002 Ge•rtl 1002 . 1002 tt.Mt'°"Wt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ............. , ..........•••..............•.••...•.•••...............
I 002 GeMrll I 002 C-. W.. I H4
,....,,,....a:
All r eal eetate ad·
vertlud In th la
DeWSj)apet is subje(t to
the Federal Fair Hout· Ina Act " • wbith mun lt Wecal to ad· vertlN "any preference,
limitation. or dla
trlmlnatJon b11ed on
race, color, rell&ion,
sex. or national ori&ln,
or an intention to make
any soch preference,
limitation, or das-
crimlnallon."
This newspaper will not
knowlnfly accept any
advert sine ror real
estate which Is In viola· Uonofthelaw.
aao1S: ..,_..........,
.......dledl ..... .., ... !"PO'f ~
l"Of'I' l~.n.
DAILYPl.0Tw1 •n ~ ....... fint
l•cornct l111ertlo• ...,.
••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• POOL
$6500DOWN
A quiet family. tree-
Uned area, 3 Bdrm. 2
bath, light and air y
family room, kitchen
overlooks sparkling
pool. Great financing.
Owner wants out!
Slll5,000. CaU 5'6-2313
THE REAL ESTATERS
DWI.IX
Dalebout
Bay &Beach
Real Estate
REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949 .. • • ~ ti
COME WITH US ••• TO DOYIR
SHOIH WATHFIOMT. MAJESTIC
TH REE BEDROOM HOME .. FORMAL DINING ROOM AND DEN . .SIT-DOWN WET
BAR .. LAVISH USE OF SPANISH AND
MEXICAN TILE .. UNOBSTRUCTED VIEW
OF BAY AND MOUNTAINS .• PIER AND
SLIP .. SEE DORIS BROWN WED AND THURS4·6.
I OU rou11s DllVE • • • • • • s I, 125,000
1617 WISTCLIFf DI. M.1. '11·7300
~~~
\"L~l .I Y \
~YLOR CO
IU:ALT<>I\!--.... 11111 !~HI'
llG CAMYON C.C. $2,150,000
GEORGIAN COLONIAL MAMSIOH
Unequaled elegance in this architec· lural beauty o 'looking the 8th green of
Big Cyn golf course. The finest
craftsmanship & materials! Imported
marble, air·cond. crystal chandeliers
crown moldings, rich paneling, 3 wet
bars + many other impressive
features. 5 Large bedrooms, each with
private baths, banquet-size dining rm, ram rm with marble fi replace, billiard
rm with coffered ceiling & oak floors,
refrigerated wine rm. A truly elegant
home for someone who appreciates
the finest ! Ca ll for appointment.
WESLEY N. TA YLOl CO .. IEALTORS
2111 S..J~ ..... ood
MEWPOlT CfNTEI, M.I 644-4910 0.. Wock to Mac~ l
Ir 2 le ..,.,, I Ir I
10 lower. II-la & W ALIC TO ICH = 4·~=1.~ $92,950 45'10ATSUP
For s ale SS95 .000! lncludes sandy beach
deck & patio +large
quality 3 bdrm + den. 2 bath home Fireplace.
brick BBQ+ extra park·
ing. Owner/Agt 673-9187
or 675-7080.
OWHr w flll•ce. N e w p o rt B .e a c h
AiAnS325 000 bachelors bargain As·
JAC BS Drll .JY I sumable ~.600 loan I &J~i ~~~.Actnow,
KNOCK 0 ICMOCK
This LS DO joke. It's op-
portunity knocking Be
sure to see this mint con-
dition 2 br beauty. As·
sume existing loans at
less than 133 err rate
Owner very motivated!
963.5671
_REALESI'ATE
DUPLEXES
E'side C.M, close to
beach. 3 & 2 BR. Lge as·
sum able loan. Sl65,000
Open Sunday 1-5
223/225 Knox St.
Peninsula "I block to
beach. 2 BR each unit
Furn for sum -
mer/winter rentals.
S230.000
Large A·Ftame. 4 BR & bachelor w/loft. Btwn
bay &c ocean beaches on
Peninsula $310,000 lease
hold .
Cal tor.._.
BURR WHITE
REALTOR. IMC.
67>4630
THE REAL ESTATERS
REDUCED
Ch arm ing wood
shingled t.ownhome. Sun
filled kitchen overlooks
cozy palio. 3 large
bdrms plw sewing room .... <ml@"'"
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
71'·631·6990
I l°lo
WOW!!
Spectacular home wilb
covered entry. Huae liv·
inc room, fireplace,
country kitchen. family
area. Magnificent bonus
room. Comer lol. RV •<'·
ceu. Owner may carry AITD at 13"'c. Price.
$134 ,900. Act DO W,
546-2313
THE REAL ESTATERS
MESADB.MAI
W...,.,_.Glmt
ledtlced to Sl65,000
Right on the canal in Newport Shores. A huge
3 Bdrm 3 Ba fam ily
home in immaculate condition. A super loca·
lion only steps lo the
beach. Attractive owner
flnancmg available. A
super buy!
• ..,. hlmd llty
673-8700
*** Tl9tntal..d
2560 Newport Blvd
.Costa Mesa
You are the winner of
TWO FREE PASS~
($17 value)
RINGUNG BRai
BARNUM & BAILEY c•cus Anaheim Convent.Ion
Center Aue. 6-17 Long Beach Arena
Aue. ~23
To daim passes. call
642-5678, ext. Z72. Passes
must be exchanged for
reserved seals at box
office pr io r to
performance . •••
IXICUTlVE 3 Br 2 Ba $126,500 l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I 4 Br 2 Ba $132,500 $227.000
Almost new 2 story
beauty. Sun filled
kitchen. fonnaJ dining
room . wark and cozy family room too! 2nd
story hosts secluded
master suite with c ra ckling brick
fireplace. 3 more queen
sized bdnns too! Don't
miss out call
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
114.631·6990
5 Br 3 Ba pool $164.000
5 Br 3 Ba 1mmac Sl76,000
All have attractive
fanancing.
THNIMG
TOWHHOME?
Call the specialists at
the condominium In-
formation center.
Touchstone Realty
963.(867
. ..,.,. ...
Slff,fOO
Chanoine 2 BR cottage
with fireplace, walk to Pavilion. rerry, bay or
beach Owner will
finance-be creative
759-1616
OCEANFRONT
By owner Lge price re·
duct.ion for <'ash. 4 & 2 br
dplx. ~79llO
RfSIDENTIAt RfAl £STAH SfRVICFS
llAUTIFUL IA YSHOll:S
We are delighted to present these select listings in the
gated & charming Bayshore community with private
beaches and marina. Of'IM WIDMISOAY
J-5
2471 Marino Dr. 3 BR. +' Den $450,000 Fee
2715 Bayshore Dr. 3 BR. + Den $3(9,500 •
2515 Crestview 3 BR. + Fam. Rm. Spa $3.W,000
2661 Crestview 3 BR. 2 BA. $335,000 ~CircleDr. 3BR. +Fam.Rm. $598,000 •Fee
2632 Crestview 4 BR. + Fam. Rm. ~.ooo
You are invited to this special mid·Week 1bowin1.
Plan to visit all six open houses and see why Coldwell
Banker bas been cbosen to represent these pre·
1tl1ious pro,perties. •itEDUCED FOR A FAST SALE
644~060
EAST ILUFf AT In HST
Remodeled ~nd wonderful. Three
bedroom, three bath and fireplace.
Wait until you see this incredible
Master bedroom. BeautifuJly done
throughout. $215,000. Possible lease
option.
U~l()l)f tl(Mfi
REALTORS,675~
1443 !Mt C-. H.__,, Corou "1 Mar
WI HAYI 41 Of THI llST Aeetn IM TOWM
o/ newporl
REALTORS
67S.551 I
ASSUM.AILE LOAM: LAnJt CdM .... .
wftll good &anchMJ. Each ... 3 ... 2
la., -..., "" + uffllty rooa Clow to t•~ AlkhMJ $429,,00. -COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS
2515 L Coast Hwy .• CoroM .. M•
675-5511
ENGLISH I MOVEIM NOW TUDOR! This la.rge s. Bdrm 3 Ba
Personalit)' plus! Enter home. LS Ul 1m!'1aculale
a large livme room with I tond1t1on with new
hi&h ceilings, charming I carpets. drapes & paint.
kitchen with breakfast Walk to shopping &
nook. Formal dining schools. Assume. large
room with builtin hutch. loan a.nd owner will help utility room, super back finance Only Sl76,000
yard. fruit trees, double
detached garage. SlS.000 down. Owner will help
with financing. 119,900.
Call for more details,
546-2313
TR, \DI T 10\, \I.
~L\Ln
631·7370
.... , .. . .. ,... .......................
Exciting op~~nfl~f ~de channel
view from spectacular architectural
designed 4 bdrm, 5 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 qu.!~1dy at $475,00Q. Must see. .
IALIOA Thi.I 10pbiltlcated con
temporary 3 Bdrm home
II all wood and ~.
wilb bi1b Ct'ilinp and,
oo a lar&e lot. Ealy rare
yard, double 1ara1e
plu1 boat 1tora1e
leaves you free for
Pninsula Point bead~•
IDd bay. Ml!t000· 64~:.200
A PETE BARRE TI
. REALTY
.......................
5,,o DOWMt ~oomy J bdrm 2 ba
home on ID R2 kit wtt.b plant for aMI .it Great
e11t1ldt location and
'
rut flundn1 Only w.soo. I
M l!:SA VERDE I ·
STORY : With apartlln&
POOL! Huee ue.cuUve
home, about 2llOO sq.ft.,
with 4 bedrooms ~
fireplaces, formal din·
Ing, and c~IA>m design.
All extru . Owner will
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus
tge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam
ceilings. Great for entertaining.
$420,000. Best price for the money. help finance. $350,000
•••••••••••••••••••••• C all TARBELL , SAU IY OWMa R Ei\L TORS. 97~2390
PENINSULA POINT IEACHFIOMT
Panoramic bay & ocean view at
wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm. 3
bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft. featur-
ing marine room. $1,385,000.
NEWPORT CREST CONDO
2 bdrm, den, spacious Plan 8, im·
maculate. Low priced at $215,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
1~1 t\r:1,,d, (J,,,. NI! ty,') 6161
ASSUME LARGE
fO/o LOAM
on this excellent value. 4
Bdrms, large pool, gar
flrepit, new carpets. On·
ly ses,soo. Call 979-5370
today.
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
• REH TORS
K~~ 1.
3 2 7 C or a I & 3 1 1 AFflOIDAIU
Amethrst. 673-0188 IUCCOLA HOME
NOCASH VA & FHA terms, owner
TO OK for down Cute 3 wall carry. Great loca,
BR 2 Ba cottage, trade t100. Upgraded and
OK. Desperate ~.000 clean . Moti vated I
Ownr a -0693 (~A)
CoroM .. M9> 102 SUHUALTY
•••••••••••••••••••••• 964-2611
434 IEGOHIA 1------
Elegant new 4 Br Vic 4 H roo&.HOME
tori an partial v u, Excellent College Park
ownr /contractor Just area Has ll0,000 1st. as·
com letin . SS75 000 sume at 14"'c Sl~.900.
IY OWtiB David, 646-325.5 3H+~+spa Custom 4 yr old home. 3 Harbor & Balcer area, Bdrm, 2~ ba Xlnt ·11 financing. S4IO,OOO 15~ $146.900 Owner w1
dn. Courtesy to Brks. carry at l:rl with $40,000 846-0096 down. David, 646-3255
CDM OCEAN VIEW
Lovely Harbor View Hlls
Hills home w/3Bdrm,
ram rm . pool·& features
oak nrs, french doors,
jac, 3frplcs, + more.
Owner wants offer Will
consider low down or
lease option S48S,OOO
Ask f o r Car ole
McMahan 644 9060 or
644.8067
s...,.R..cllNI!
Highl y upgraded" 4br
home on lge lot. Clse to
everything. must see to
appreciate. Name your
terms! Aitd/low down
high assumable, call for appt lo see. 957-2819
Owner/Agt
... complimen thls love·
ly New Bedford home. It
features 4 Bdrms, 4 Ba. family room. and formaJ
dinmg room Extensive
upgrades make this
DESPERATE! Near
foreclosure, 3Br. 2Ba,
$20.000 dwn. SI 18.500 Agt. LaDoris 645-9161 home a t ru I y um q u e !'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'I
find Offered at s.sss.oooi--------·I·-------· JEWELEDSPLENDOR with excellent owner 502 Acacia. $324,000
Nestled on a quiet cor financingavailable. OPENSATISUN
ner of a greenbelt over· D.M. M.1 ... IUtr 616 Begonia. SZS9.500
look mg the valley of San 644-9990 760.0135 Drive by, then tall
Juan Capistrano, th1S 2 •G-WIU SARA MARVIN
bedroom condo features "" ""' 67S.5688or67S-6000 beamed ceilings. a IESHOTIY
fireplace. and 2 decks. IU Tl SBJ.ER Costa MftG I 024
available Sl6S.OOO edialely. Assume IS LOC"'T10H
COLLEGf P AU
2 Br 2 Ba Condo
$109,fOO
67S.1771
THE REAL ESTATERS
Assumable financing l is home is not sold •••••••••••••••••••••••
493·8812 ting loan at 91'•'1. "'
MAHAGIMEMT L. er moving out o! This nearly new So. I PROfan e at fam~ly home. IMPORTAHT7
. Inga area -des perate . Coast Plau home has it SPlCIALJST 963-5671. all. Eng Tudor style on HARIOIRIDGE Call Terry or Ch ris lh.lt..... corne r l ot Near
Aw a rd winn i ng 851 ·5117 or 851·5157 freeways centr AIC 4
D..aPoW 1026 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SprawlJng 4 Bdrm. large
pvt yard. Minutes to
Marina Owner will
finance at good rate
$165,000
"Jodelle" estate home. Residential & Comm'l. Br 2'.'a Ba $214,950 C~ll
1st resale offering on Management secured & 0.,~,__ ... __...___ now . Ownr /Agl . Rick
this exquillteb' appoint· rentals. .....___,~ Keeler 546 6706 or ed townhome wilb OPTION Spectacular View from 631 0213 massive VteW or bay, rvacH~, B 3 this 3 Br 1• Ba with ltn· .
ocean, coastline & night New Fndoan..-.~ r. nl~. spa. 1be finest m
r1 tsp ........ £.
_ __::497·17'1 Ba. Co • _,.,.,moves condo living. Only Ii & h ls . 0 ff ere d al you in. SJOOO per mont.h. S2:50.000. EZ terms.
SB85,000. <Why pay rent). Next to
all sboppin&, theaters &r
park, just minutes lo · 1!1.: ,!;.;,( .\ ~ ...
' ... : ·:.
~ n 1 •, l ·1t .".r • • ,.,,
beaches.
Ward Manaaement Co
714tal·*5
RCTaylorCo
.!1 \ )\)
~ I t f .'' ~ • 1 1 ! t --------Ir\ WantMHtlp? 642-5678
OWMl'De1111•• ,_
Spyalus Hills Nao· ......
tucket model, S Bdrm 3 WALNUT $9UAH 1 Ba, IK down. Owner 2 Bdrm condo lO Irvine BID II IL11•s ca. wlll carry, Owner will carry al n
13.5% $102,500.
IOV•O/o flNANCING AV.AIL
Assume existing 1st T.D. on this 4
bd r m ho me in NEWPORT
Riviera payable at $668 per month!! Featuring French doors,
fireplace. 214 baths. raised wooden deck, & new carpets &
paint. OnJy $141 ,900.
$114 PER MONTH •.....
when you take over existing low
interest FHA loan ! ! This is a
superb starter home for a young
familr. Lots of potential & priced
to sel at $89,500.
NEWPORT IEACH OMCI
2670 S.. MNptl Orm
1714) 759-1501 1714) 752.7373
Walker Blee
Raal latata
'=~=-, ~i-.~1J-"£~s·::
~., CU.f .. ~ -----
·=~-:.~ lowiet«Mlo.<,.._.
GITSY P I
I I 1
1
I I . ~ ... ~~•
K L U F E
Tht •It In my llOmelown 11
t.,tlble. Now I know Wily blrde
OVER 57 YEAR S OF SERVICE
SAN CLEMENTE DUPW
Super Buy. Upstairs Unit With
Three Bedrooms. Wet Bar, Living
Room With Fireplace. Cathedral
Ceilings, Wrap Around Patio.
Spacious Downstairs Urut With Two
Bedrooms & Living Room With Fireplace. Laundry Facilities. Good
Income. Owners Will Help Finance .
Priced At $195,000.
75l9100
•2Ccwpcuh,_. ..... wpo;.c~
CAPE COD ON WAltR
New on Marbt!
1'Wt h • ...... He Cape Cod resldetlu
by ....... t.ct.lllMJ •taiMd .. ttcMcl
9lau, brick. Hd bta•s. Totolly coor•1lhd wltll In.._. _...._,
......... tlllh 4 bed. t.Lra 2 ,......
vu ....... Little ..... lac4llloa. n..
fw 2 ...... $115,000 .... '73-6900.
WTBLUFF VIEW tlltE
LI. .wt Wa•d1rflll fmlr .._ wltll
MW dtcer twa .... o.t. Wood flMn.
aoW11 ialllclulg ' tWa I c .. ta 4 ..... ...., ,... .. ftnllll ... ,_.._. snt,ooo. Ht-1400.
BALBOA IS. BAYFlllfT
..... 4 ............ . ...... '"...., ......... .... ....,.,..., wl.. hlcNJ m ... .
1;mwt ......_ s.111 • • u • .., ......, .. , ... ~····· .... ... ~· ..... 1 OwWtr .... .
. fti•1 .... 11,JOO,toO. Wll umllllr ...... ,, ..
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
MAL CSTATf.
~· Pn!,tttY Mot.+ 114111
2G \II Co.t ""'1 m MM,,. /wt
""""" INdl 6llboe Wind Hl·I• '7M ..
EAST SIDE
$9,000 dwn. Jbdnn, 2ba,
pool owe at 121l
$185.000. 55'1 2783 01
851·5117
Fo..toit Vc*y 1034 •••••••••••••••••••••••
COUITYARDHOME
Wl'THPOOl
Supnsingly affordable
MESA Val>E luxur> and privacy As-
.ASSUMUU sumable--0wner will
Nice 3 Bdrm 2 bath carry Grut area !
bome. New roof. near <640CA >
schools and shops Ask· SUN UAL TY
ing $129,900 For 1n 964-261 I
formation, call 540-1151 H•llttgtoft leocll I 040
... ' .. HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
M•sa Vl'U'dt llecJ-c• Charming 4 Bdrm hid den 2-story and 3 Ba and
3 car garage. Superbly
decorated with the most ex pensive draperies.
wallcoverings and carpeting Pnced to selJ
quickly and it has 2 as
sum able loans. Full
price 5228,900. 151·3191
c:. ~fl f ( 1
-1"" PHC 1P! ;n I! '>
• •••••••••••••••••••••• ON EXCLUSIVE HUN
TINGTON SEACLIFf'S
GOLF COURSE '
3bdrm. pool. xtra lrg lot Many xtras. $395.000
Broker · 633·6633,
637·~·-----
OLDTOWN Con AGE
3 BR with oversized sun·
ken family room &
fireplace Near beach
<626CA I
SUNUALTY
964-2611
New dlx 3 Br townhouse .
walk lo beach. fully de-
corated S2:11.000 + min
1!9wn. 536-0332
S3EA5"1DJTSIDDEN ~r::i:;;:j::;iilii·~1t~ ~ Portola Model. must see
Ow W ........ fi mny upcrades, prin only
1044
ner w 1""'·., lna.nce. Sl69.SOO. For appt Assume loan at lo<'k 3 Bdr m, 2 bath. Only _,,5S""l'-'·Q90="-· -----
ll27,900.CaU~9161 ASSUMAILEVA
. OPEN HOUSE
REALTY
/
~ down. St 180 mo.
buys 3 BR 2 Ba tixer In
Costa Mesa. Ownr/agt.
642-1523; 64S-7365
1044
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Take over high balance on VA loan on this
almoat new 3 Bdrm 2 Ba
on large lot. Nice up.
grades, central air. Ira
covered patio. Call for
details. l
TUln.I IOCIC YIST A WITH '1IW
Three levels of luxury w/soaring ceilings & private patios . .Dramatic living room w/walls of
glass, for mal dining, fam.
rm/nook, 3 BRa. Inc. secluded
bedroom wing. $269.500. Natalie
Benjamln 752·1414 CT·61)
LOY&Y llAOFOID-WOoo.Dll
Nicety '-'Psraded 2 BR + den (or
3 BR) Condo with 2-car garage,
central air and terraced patio
area. All this plus an assumable
loan make this a good buy at only
Sl39,900. Glnl lfcGbee/Darlene
PelnUncer 551·8'700 ('f-G)
............ 118llmllillll!lllili
i' I
I· I 1,
' '
........ Wt c::t::······· ... ··i~ ~ .. -....... . "••• TOWMlo.-7
CaU tlM sped&llN at 0•• fHMmlalum In· ,_au..mmr.
~Reaky
·•-El! I Bdnn ado kl adult oriented Orancetru.
5-lper location, air con.
• diLioola1 • more. '1tlll· bltfiD~.
Now flQ,400
l \\Mdbrldte
Reat•u m . .,.
r me• l'llwy,lrvlM
PllRCT!
I Bdrm 2 Ba, corner
locatlon_l Irvine'• Colw1e Pan. Showa bet ter Oian model. 1t.e111 to acbool and pool, Owner's
motivated, taU now.
·••MMN
Uke oe• 2 Br condo in
praU1iow Woodbrid1e.
Close to puti Ir pool,
areal starter home with
111vmable fianandn1.
SlOS,000. Call for details.
\\bod bridge
Reahu
551·3000
4ti0Bernno l'\wy,lrwh•f
JMPehnCO.
W11An•~ Last a vailabe plan S
1:2115,000
4 Bdrms + bonus, 3 ba
3 car 1ar for info call
S.Sl
WOOOllMI
DllAM Lovely 3 Bdrm bome1 clote to pa.rt, pool ana
tennis. In prime Wood·
brid1e location. Take I
over fantut.lc low in· terest loan. Sle3,SOO
don osen
•• 1.1 r ..
17111 ATPRaiPECT
TUSTJN, 73H1U
TOWNHOME
DELIGHTS
Easy living can only
barely describe this
beautiful 3 bdnn, 2 ba.
townbome. Taite over
loans. Fireplace, central
air conditioning, climate
control. Euy car e
land1caiiing, plus a
magnificent view .
1299,000.
Let-ltedl 1041 ......••.•... ~ ....... .
o.t of SllJilit
O.ofMl.d
Prime Dana Point
duplex on conaer lot
near Dana Marina . 2
bdrm. I ba up, 1 bdrm
down beamed clng,
frplc, dining area, end.
patio. $152,500
Minion Realty
~.,,.31...._ __ ,
New Modular Type
Homes, leased land,
Oceanfront Pk, 3 pvt
bchs, 24 security. fishing
pier f rom 129,900
-3116
New woodl&lau, spa, solar, & db, 2 frplc1.
3+ 13+ clole/unobstruc-
tablelpanor/vlll& vws.
M@JI. Ptp.$7631.
IMllAl.DIAY
Only available (root row
lot in I.his &ated area.
Plans and permits for
elelant villa. $1,&SOJOOO.
CAllOL TAnIM Hi.TR. ......
Divorce Forces Sale
Lower 3 Arch Bay.
Great ocean view, pvt area. Odrm beach
boUH.@.3144.
North Lacim Beach, 180 de&. view of water, Wt
property will be 1oln1 to court Aui. e, a petition tor order lmtructfnl ex· eeutor to aell real pro.
perty 1111 been flied, case No. A·lcmlS. A~ prailed 1/r7/Sl. s:M0,000.
522 Allview, Laauna
Bea ch. Required
amount ol lit overbid S2tt,T50. Conlatt ea.-.ews.
Llfllll... I OIO •••••••••••••••••••••••
YllWCOMK>
HiO balaDca. •um•· bit loa1. Owner will ~an,-..,. down ... ,.
ble. (M7CA).
IUMIMLn , .... ,,
a...-..... .......................
R&'M~
I• f \I '·•I•
lOS..,.To.IHcll
Water view, includu
land. 103 anumable
loan, 4 bdrm, 2 ba,
w t possible guest
quarters. Call now for
detaU.. TSZ.&499
Plan IV Real~
S 15,000 DOWN
Nice J 8d 2 Ba end unit.
near So. Coast Plau1 Pill approx IM9. Cal
now . Jeanne Salter
631-1266
OCEAN FRONT Duplex
& Tri·Plex. Xlnt loc.
P.P. 673-76'n, 613-78T3.
PAllYIN
HAIBVIEW
Smubillf family room
wilb wet bar. Un -I believably beautiful en·
tertainer's patio. s Bdrm
SommerM!t oo ftt land.
Absolutely 11nmaculate
move .in cond11ion .
Creative financing
available.
RED CARPET
7 4-1202..
IAYcasT-
FHUND A.slumable loan, secon-
dary financln4 avail•·
ble. Large family home.
Low maintenance .
(624CA)
SUMIEALTY
tMa 611
Rt ·1..ll1. I I 0-~ f\t ·.1ltv
I,~ : ; . ;1 111
ILUf'fS CONDO
Immaculate 3 bdrm con·
do, close t.o pool. End un·
it. $198,000.
C/21 Mtw,.tC.tr.
640.5357 760-6767
lHllWfflS PRIME view condo. 3
Bdrms · front row. Fee
land . Low down .
creative financing.
C/21 Mt ..... c.tr.
640.5357 760-6747
IAYSHOllS IAYFIOMT
B.IGAMCE Tall impressive doors
enter throug~ used brick to pool,
garden & the bay beyond. 4 BR
suites Cam . rm . $1 ,400,000
leasehold estate. Barbara Aune
642-8235 (T·63) .
KAllOI VllW HOMH Well local·
ed 4 BR with private spa. C.Orner
location w /city light view. Seller
will assist with financing, so br·
ing all offers. $279,000 Holly
Markas 644·6200 CT·64)
!OUJ.alla!OUJ.umaoDa
llllnCm auGll
llOI ~ °""' 8""'°' vi.. a... JlllrpGI\ ll!Mb.CA _, • ~.,._,CA._,
<"•)W.811111 {'!14)~
¥ •• • • • .. -¥4; 04#004 I
-• i.~ HERITAGE
REALTORS
, I'
e e o o c a o a
PARK llWPORT
COUNTRY CLUI
UYIHG
Bachelors, 1&2 bedroom
apts & townhouses.
Jo rOJ;l'l_~..lQ_ _64~:.J!lOO
LIDO VIEW 2 br, 2 ba. 2
terr .. rrplc, prime. adlts i1.._0QQ_mo. 675-6359 __
OCN & BAY VIEW
Bright 2Br. 2Ba penthse
unit, lux amenities S7SO
1110 JITCO~~t __
STUDIO · across from
beach S34S mo yrly
Pool. enc gar, laundry
210 Cedar, Npt Shores M .. ultsi>nlr. 64().~--
associated
8110~ fllS llf AL T()llS
l ; ""' lo t-..,,.., ' ' -,. 1
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuesdly. Ju!f 28, 1981
-•••••••W1 ,,.,. c.r•I• C...../C11 ... ._ .. ~. H•'> • H•tdl•! U••• r Pqa ... ....................... .... ...............•.. ·········~····· .. ······ ·········'············· ....................... .......•..... ......... ..•....•...........•••• ...................... ~ VOUSWAtlM Cutom ·bullt hU DRIVEWAYCLEANINO CLEAN·UPSILA~ Carpentry, liluonry, WANTED! Houleclean· Frplc1, P.UO., Plaaten. OuaUtyPU.Lowettrat.et BA.Llt()AA~~~· SPICIAUST wooden 1helvt1 for Improve your bome! Maln~Lodlc~ Roofln1. Cer .. .J'~!!.t ln1.u~, reliable, For 1 ~clone r1-"t. la OC . fifeat prompt 3:'c:!f ·=fa«*: for ~::;:~0~~_::u WE:.e·~~·:~1~! ~ =::;r~'I.'~ f.:eru•umoto ~~ gz••ll. sncw ..... r~~7fd'M1r1'o ~~~ev... t'Nt;::!t'r".:!. s;;~A.--;-&rr
Stf.tzal ~~.--ntOlfPSON'S llAJNT. 'Cltu·U~. ............ CLEANING BY STAR ..... ;;:................ OualllyWolt·-· .... ;;r .............. .. ... Cabl.neta •~Ur~· CONCRETEOONSTR. Tret ~· small ................. , ..... 15 y ra up. Reh. Movlns? The Starvio1 Frnut. HIMDIN& C•tm Dreu MdJ.111 .
, ...................... ~~7~h Uc.MIMI fG.HIZ lald•U*'·lltH HARDWOODPLOORS R.eUOQabk.fG:IUf C:OU.1eStudmt.IMovln1 QUALJTYPAIH'I'ING altera1tlon1•11'1epal~a.
wwa. r,_e1 CYdC Mowln.a$~1Z5 Cleaoed6Wued •ifol'Mt' ..... IDI• Co.bUpwn.Iuured. 6't&t Uc. D80. JI yn Con•u tat on 11 Jour •DlAlrA·BAND• (betTMg.HtlODm> ........ ~............ Haulln~~ AAxtim,&a4M11.A. Proleadmal·'l)otoulb Uc. tT~. fMl-1417 QrwtCo.--Mt7IHIZO
1114>7W=lHZ CUS'!OMCAJlPENTRY S3190•IWI lit·*'~"' ReftalllllQ1 AIL floon, XJnU.ocalRer1 Watcbuuml THIC.l.MOUP W..
l11 .. 11r,lll1 :;:,::aoa~c:,ver•, de~, Rot haacb. ~.M. -Chril· T1M5 c p h 6 window•. Cbarlcl.1HlllH ABC MOVING .• l!sper RESID ./COMM . ,. .................... . ~j'b;k.'8:' .. "';t• ----~km·•-llanPrescbool.MW423 Topped/remowd,clean Pera.oaal service. All Reliable. Great work! prof, low ratee, quick EXTER. Rotwater+poolbeaUol
up. Fhianci~f· s~a::: FINW!f,~~RY c;.;f;~ u111.1twnmoy.75l·3t7§ Hf.ffu1UUIDtetd. =t'tlilffa.~ Call c&rtfulteo1et.AROU0 PRfl'liilJC'D :r:r::~·c=-c.'l:
menu l tuet. ~. !2fbr1111wtrln.cacrv.> ....................... CLEAN·UPSll w---. •A·I MOVM• --U ...,n...,t ... Hf;__.l.,,.W..._ ___ _
t=DOQQ. e...ts..tce Cu•tom Btick Block TREETJUJUUNG ,._,, 141•...... Top quality. Special ,....,./lam* s.rwden
R ...._.,s.-.,1ce .-..-.~;; ................ Tile. P1t101.' Wa11u: 541-l>l<Mlbl •ii:id'~i:::;·::;~· ... 00 ••• N•ij-8-;.Ef~··p.ry•u care In bandlln&. 25 yn ........ ;;;r.e. ......... ;[.-.-;-;.;~; ........ ~ ••••
'
e~. taUve ....................... Shampoo l steam clean. Drives, Covers'"' Deco, YARD CLEAN·UPSi tree removal DuM~t.ruck. RSTY .,.M ~: exp. Competitive ratet. Neatpatct.ltuh1tt1 SPRINKLERSlSOD 42·N71,td322 Boob, all t.am ' r• Color ~n wbl Ca~!orls, 6 rencea. work, lrriiaUoo • re-Quictm.~1HI 1111 ORLONu.Y Nooyertime.'131}1»3 Pntttf. nJ-14U Tree Removal. DIG M' ~rt.I. Set up, write up. cr(llt 10 min. bleach. lJ.c~Do111ftH1§1 , pair , Ma1ntenance. DUMPJOM "Se ··-'t Pl .. wiU lt i-.....,.,,..,... PLAST!RPATCHING Ltndteape.HtWO. ~Cl tM ~/St....,.. IAM·12. Hau, liv . ..cf.ln. nm SU; ._.. S. d .. t Greenbelt Landscape, Small .. ~. Jobi C1111 Y '--s ....................... lnt/ext. J> yru~ . .......... r ............ ....,. av& rm '7.50; couch $10; J .s. coN8liucnoN H2.01Q2, CaU ·iii-1•1 ::t!r .:i~= plant• • I'be Paper Han.ser. Prof. Ntat )!Ork Paul ~Ml ~ ................... .
BOOKKEEPING ,...................... chi SS. Guar. elim. pet Nobody Does It Better! GNwtr11 S.. rial · lnttaU. Decorator qual. ...... , TILE INSTALL.ED
For a mall buaineu . GRWICKASOM odor. Crptre119ir. L5 yn Llt'dlbogded M}3188 ....................... Hautlna 6DumpJobs. '•d1e1r'r! rrnnt.Steye547-i2fl ....................... AUKlndt.Guaraataed.
Beu. rtliabk. 131.§$13 Build Sin 1947 exp. Do work myself. . DON HOFELDT Ali:: for Randy. "'""' ............. Fine palotln• by Richard M C 0 R M A C K Beta. John. IRJMZ ,....,.....ta..ln en ce Refa.$31=9101 l>r.,.r1t1 ISharpeoAllYlhln.I ' Kl.fUl BrothenComt.ructon Sino LI_,. 13.,.. ot c , ---· --..,... -.-;[.-;;;. Addltlona,remodelln&. W C CrptCl ....................... 8Slatl8cl!l0-ui5. HAUUNG-8tudefttbu lMOSantaAnaAvCM t. c,m . ,.. PLUMBG rrHs.r.lct t.i:;:;:i~:·;;~i.'~i::~~ ~wi~est. ~ii1o ~ea'in~iean1r~J:f:. •/a OPFIMJULY lt.t ;g;~ 11r1etn1c1t. Low•t ~~c~~ln~e :~~ ~~:k ::a:ers. ::::.~'!.~:::~~i!. ................... , .. .
decb, cement, crpta, CONSTRUCTION W Trui cimount~37 • A~raperlf blyb~~v3nni.._ .. :J ................. rate.Lp!!~pt. JJ:°li'71 sery, •Prlnklen. Lie. Est/Int l>liotina, cab. re· Lie. f2H371. f1}91H JAYITUlc;All carpenlty, weld, plumb. Add/ model ~t _or &uar. yw= lv 10 m n • n • • REASONABLE :!htDA XW. , #C27·852Hl.64f-QW fin/stain. Prof. Renbl. i-ool ~ •--'-TopplnJ, pnu11n1. re·
Brad,642-348'2 Free~suu.=!n.: RESIDUE FREE . 1eve&oun.5'2=221S. PROMPT FREEEST. WEHAULANYTJIING - --freee1t.8teveS4H28l ............ :::?':':".: .. moval,•pr•)'il'l1.1oyn Afpl•c•..,.... ROOM ADDITlONS l Carpet and. upholstery l)rywd ALMcST EVERY Yard clean·ups, demoll· Lew DB'a PAINTING Complete service re· exfi,iLo~ re~~ ....................... REMODELING Quallt steam cleanin&. 15 yrs ........... , .... , .... ,.. REP AIR NEEDED Uon. Have dump truck. ....................... Int/ext. Neat, reliable, pail'1, "solar lnJtall. So. et .c..
GUAR.USEDREFR's construction from d/. quality service at Drywall iallst CH£THHTSZ Reu.1SH15 MORTOAGEMONEY re~.Dave@6-0389evt Cal. Pool Service. W ... wCll ... I
SALES•SERVlCE sign to completion. &u.arantted reaaonable Qual. 4i • New& te· Carpentry.lfuonry ClttmU,.Y ... Ad AVA.ll.ABLE RE.MTA~ourapeciality. &42·Hf3 ..................... .. Good cood, ff2.77S4 Family contnctora for ROC:U. Hff7!3 Roefinl ·Plum bin& G1ra1es. haullnf, etc. '20,000to SZI0,000 Lot/ext. Seuide Paint· bflitilMalJ Ori&inal Window Wublr H...,ArH 30 yra . Reas. ralel. Fr NoSteam~Sha~poo ALLTEX'l\JJU~e" DrywaU ·Stuc:ro -Tile ltontruct,IZS.Al·lN .._...._,.,.... ln&.PromDl53HIQ6 ...................... Av&3~':·135· · ..__.BetStniu Hta.AllenEJobnJoo 1 StainSpedalist. ut Dr~waU.Clean& pen· 4morc. J.B,HH1!9Q TREE/SHRUBTRDI Uptol.5/yratorepay lNT/EXTPAINTING J.D.HomRefin.ishlna · G""'9wi.llon 301007. Call ~or drY. Freust 83f-1W daJe. Rw.§31·2345 Discounts to senior ~ara e & ard clean· PRIME FINANCIAL GENERAL REPAIRS, Antiquea.Kit.cabineta. "Let the&mhil'leln"
For:n'!rly 11'0;;'iw. 840-i724 c.11.g.ACOllHc DIYWALL .. A.11 cltl1ens. Alltypeaolre-S57·1Z'Zl SERVICES LARGJORSMAU fioepaintin,c. 6*0664 CaU Sunshine Wlndow
Davia Brown. State reg. J84COCOHST. • ....................... lbeC.F.Grouo 7*1539 pairs. Free eat. Call 527·3477 REAS.·PROM. PT &•~ Cleanln&,Ltd.54f.IW
19ru• ~...,,... Addi••-·. n._...,._lin ArouaucCeilinga + 11...-A....1 II An a w,e t ad I 4 S 3, u••••••••u••••••••. ••• JERRY~7S'1 .....-Window Cleaning ' All -~· ~!!!!!.!. •" c """to .. H,_,_.,,Li 1 custom hand texturing ~me 642·4300, or 631· 1137. Want a REAU. Y CLEAN ••••••••••u• .. ••••••• Screena. Reliable, fair .. ~ .,. us m omea .. c. Lie. 389944 $32:M49 ........................ Altus HOUSE? Call Gln1ham 10% DISCOUNT eneral Services, no Job Ca ll Chris or John, "~'"••••••••••••••••• 1299374. 117~8044 1,.----i-. ELECTRICIAN-priced J CK OF ALL TR DES Girl. Free at. W-5123 Dl D Custom Palnting too small. Free est. 546-00SJ, 5S7·1!W Dnve~aya, parklnf. lot AVALOMCOMSta. C....t -rl&ht, free ~ate on Aumbl.o elec .:atin ROBIN'SCLEANING Jnttext.Guar.98}32163 Reas. Call AnswerAd ---·-rep11ra , sealcoa 1ng. Building Ir Remodel~ p~j'i);;k;•:;;tP;u;~ ~r1eoramaU,JObs. Oddjoba 1• • g g\ Servlce-etboro111hly RALPH'SPAJNTING #453,642·0Xl,or63Hl3'1 SEAVIEW t~~d.Aaphalt. 631·4199 Uxrs·Uc·!na. HP~ Muo~SportlTennls U~=~COM:t~ ROBERTS CARPET cleanbcye.5*QW Ext/Int. reu, prompt.• aft. S. Window wub ff2.WASH
ASP.HALTREP. AIRING e.,..t.. Courts. ·c. 374081. Bob, Highly ~u".Jified. No job REPAIR. R.eatretcb, re· ExpeDe~~ble ~_!>in& Llc.AFGreAePest,E""'J64..0RC5*E ,,,!':':! ....... , ... ,,,, ~=~i~ne,:.er, !!_.~~:
Se.lco.''-&i8"Stri..l-o u••••u•••••ooo•••••• toolml m.~L lay.All-~·-,re.a. .-b'" . . ,~ Co ..... 'td. ....... All Types Remodeling Ir GUARANTEED ----·~ ~ ~ Supplie1(wn. ffl=4tl0 PAINTING COMPANY or 1 be, composiuon the minority! Try ltooce
mm/res ·Free eat. Repairs, top qualil)', 17 Block walls. brickwork, SELL Idle Items witb a Qualit Houaeclean.in 3Generationlor or bot, Call Les. Free and aee bow quickly you Yc.urzxz ffHlBl yrsinarea.Liceosed. 1Labs. driveways. Refs. Dally Pilot Claulfied SelltblnpfutwithDaily witbienon.a!Touch~ Paintin~Excellence. tst.968=9»5 get ruulu. Pbooe WantMHelp~ §42.S678 Mr.Palombo.PG-8314 Reauatel.9Q82SS Ad. PllotWantAda. fmut. Bctb55§.913 ~Wl WantAdl CaJjHZ-5678 MZ·Sl'TI .
..._ 4100 ...... to S.... 4300 Offlct ...... 4400 StofGCJf 4550 ._...., ,...._, ~'"" Trwt LMt & F...t 5300 Lott & Fomd 5300 ,.,.._. UH ....................... ...................... ....................... ....................... Oppo: W, 5005 Oppo: hlllty 5005 hidi 5031 •••••••••• ..................................... , ..................... .
Private entrance in priv. Roommate · 2 bedroom HIWPOITIUCH StofOIJIGarCICJIS ..................................................................... Loll: Gold Snake Cham sc11u IEJS COEDS-;-would love to home. No smoking or condo in HWlt. Beach. Full service exec or. .M. a 548-l 8 BIKE RENTAL BUSI. Stained glau abop. By Want lnvestor for Npt Bracelet w/$2~ gold pc. """' partk with you. CaJI Sue drlnkinv Pref. male Female non·smoller, fices from $397 • .. 0n a..taft W..e.d 4600 In Laguna Beach. For owner. Newport Bcb. bayfront home. Give A I r porter Inn . AMNrlK' or a tby anytl me over40.~5Mo.SS6-0637 S263 per month + Call" exec offices rrom moreinfo glltiPH. Lona utabllsbed . well 1ccuted lit or 2nd REWARD. 759·&812 rwnUl.J ~953:~·~09'7~1 _____ _
Xlnt La Pvt ba nr Ho~ utilities. Need 9/1. CaU St05 Inc:lcb secretarial ~~··1•••c··:::~··,·::.~:t•>•d•e" N ~· 6U·S180CallmM. T.D.A&t.87Hlf1. wkdn. Pl11ty-Fluke -11 .... 'S-'"OITS '"" _...., d 9114-7167 · · • .xn or i. . ....,n ...... · ew grow womena ex· , _ 2 M ta 1 Unarm-Buuer-"' ~ no an nos ....... stea Y . pbo~ ana., wor~ pro-sires home pref. with erclae " ealth spa. C..._..Sen.. ......t: oeut. c~ • BEAKS 9AM·3AM asp $22$.fff.1035 Park Nwpt, t.ennis, pool. cessmg, Telex,qwip. stud io. Year lease. Great potential SZI0,000. Swi-...A....Pool He.cf AMT.D.7 black an~ 1 whJte & The air ID m hometown E x p e r I en c e d 2 working adulll wanted. spa. mature employed TIIE HEADQUARTERS Be inn' Oct 1 67 Terms . So Or•~ Area COMPETITIVE RATES brown, vac. Spyglass. la •· 'ble NY I ._.__ Acupreuure M11111e H g pool born F. wanted to sbr 2Br, COMPANIES · --~ . · Dell p dtl M rt CdM. Reward for both. ...,m · aw r.uuw ~ e e, :;,ross 2Ba. non-smoker. 1265 714 1-0681 Apt wan~ yrly, Se~. PRINT SHOP No exp nee. Will tram. a a c o 1a1e 758·01611 why birds slttp oo ooe Therapeutic: &eluatloa S nta Ana C.C. 5 f mo 64+91.ZUhrJha Respon11ble fem. with Tbri In bulinell CM SJ.S,000 caab down. Pl111 (714)1151·2040 foot. They're using the Techniques Suany 6~~ mo. 545·6891 a t M/C.hrisUll'I under 30 to Cf: Deluu ~es. AC, xlnt references. S3SO low ~v:rhead. can' to; approx l'l'OOO for~~ UcenaedR.E.Broker ~!'Jii~es~~ ~'!.":~i•:o other to hold their 631-§377Nnport.
Beautiful Npt Bcll home share hoi.me with same. E ipl pkg, Vtil67~ ~ 2.8So5 mnth. 7S0.11~ details. -.S,000. Crai&. needed. Call ~olln· . WI p•y-...,OST years. E. CM. Reward! BE KS. Preventative & Streu
wanta workin& female $225 mo. CM. $4!-3199 : CslHwY. ~._,., .. IHH/ .. Yftlt/ 631-1216 ""' "" '"""' 642-oll08 Free to understanding RDoe~~c. i~&ntroM~s;cra'e by·' adultl27Smo6*53SS CHRISTIAN Roommate Pnmeofficespacelnnew Fil~ . 11\tH...., For yourT.D.'s l Notea , n,,,T Gold :ha v· home. 12 wk old kittens. ,.. Ii I!
------2br 34 St NB Penn bldg, f:)ana Pl.ail<?cean1 & ....................... O.o:tmltr 5015 at Denison Assoc. Oc ~ Mancuta~tur~~a 1Jt aeries of shots. Days 548-2817. lOAMiP Responsible young • ·• · · mtn views. Av . 9 81 . ._1..._. , .. ,., ................. f7}7311 · · .. 494.9421 female wll'lted AUrac· S160 673-7856 Dan eves Pre-completion leasing .w.I ~JOOOVENI'URE Bank Bldg. or Irvine. --------·--.... ~111111--• Uve, brlgt&, large room 6-9 bonys.661·~1 Opportwiltr 5005 OPPORTUNITY s ....... ~Co. Sentimental Value FoCundMd:HJM!e'Scswhooatc1~· THE with frplc, pvt entrance Owner, bu 3Bdnn, 28• ............. •••••••••• Ca r wuh developer· All typea ol real eat.ate REWARDSS2-3039. ~76 •
and wet bar. Avail im· hme. !. Side C.M. Will V .._ C .._ .,. T & * * * ov•R..,,,.'GHT? operator will provide iaveatmea&uince ttti. Lott: white Persian M. Girlfl tends
med. $300, lit • last. sbr w /1 or 2 resp & con· "' "' " LK8t I. O..h UNDERWEzGHT? Shed land & bulJdinl. Needa Spech4 ... • "Sam", Spyglus, CdM, P~ 5350 * ESCOITS * C!llB*-337Seves. gen ial youn& ladles. READY SUFullertoo .lointvcnturepartnerfor Zld11k reward . 7S9·011 S, ....................... Hw/OMc./H.e
Room near OCC. Pool. 642·8SS8 S195 IJJcludes all utJls + NewportBeacb ~!fe,;~n~~j~~I~~ lront end expensea. 642-2171 HH+I I 975.7909 FIRST LADY * 972-97721r
non·smir, male. S180 MaJe /Fem to abr 2br bse a/c. Lou of wood Ir You aretbe winner of 1 ua r . 494.3929 eve 1157·lm
4
I SI 00 REW AID Escort. Models Male /Ftmale Eleort
mo.$4HS10.AIUPM. CdM . Avail. Au& 1st. chann.CallCatty. TWO(~~~~ES N0-73216 MwytoL.9 5025-•t•n1,h Yellow/orange tabby, MC VISA
Room Jn larce hou.se, Yearly.~ 631·ll42 RINGUNGBROS. ....................... r!!!\"~ ~~e eyes , N.B. f'.riyo.c.n. l!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!I••••
Colla Mesa. Ve'lu cloae Fem to ahr N.B. rondo. BARNUIUr BAILEY WIDOW bu money for _.... • ,,_ v•~ * 972-1345 * For total atteu redudiaD
to S.C.Plua. All cben fully furn. $230 + Y. util. CltCUS Alnllate 2Dd T.D.'• Sl0,000 •up! ....................... Good looldn&. romantic MC l VISA Accepted ' relautioa mUU1e
priv.l;lOmo.851·@!.5. Jan-Don.1!3l=QllS AnabeimConvention MIWPOITllACH E-ZCREDIT! Nopnlty ...... ,...... noo 1ucce1•ful~wporteiec COYER GIRL by Steve lO·lp•. S .,...,. 4200 Rmmte for Jae hse In CenterA111.6-17 Become a wo rkln1 CtllA&t E!Jepf7H311 ....................... 49 ieeu dlscreet. fun· ~$48:-...21 ......... 11..__ ___ _
•••••••0 n .. •••••••••• C.M. straleht only-muat Locl&BeachArena partner In the luxurio\11 10% lll!llv~ lovln1 lady for daytime * OUfCALL * Serioua Roc:k Drummer
LJDO lSLE charming 3 be clean 1215/mo + utJI. ....... ..... 4410 All.I. a.13 sbeepakln bu•lneu. l l0,000 {o b million. •weekend d.at.ef. Poul· Pa-0718 MC/VlSA aeeka mualdana to form bdrm, 2bat.h, Rlayroom . Brian646-3228."6=0192 ....................... To claim pusea-t call S 3 0 , 0 00 for SO 'Jo Land devel/111ht mf&. fO. AD$ ble travel to Awtralla.1•-------; bflld. NU.Hf.J23lC.ll.
Juat remodefed. Mon· Fem 2S to 35 yn to sbr For it.ore . ottlce apace MZ·.Sf'fl, al 272. t"Ultl partnerablp. fully No electronlcs, com-AIE mrr TonxNf..OW • FOXY LADY . Would like to meet an
t.bly rental. Bill Grundy. 2br, townbowe S52S/mo. at reuonal* ralel. muat be exchanged for ~cured. Call: put era. Prine. only. rMt FOUND: tee Grey Male OUTCAU. ONL y educated lady between
1175-8161. +util. Call 9-S 752-SS99 500to4000S.Pt. mervedaeauatbox 714-44MJ49 Crouroada Develop· l'..a. Do1. Vic. Newport VlSA MC 45 Ir ss. Am a well
NEWPORT OCEAN · Pat MESAVERDEbR off Ice pr! or to ment Co. P.O. Box G , .,_ Hel&bta 15th/Irvine * 972-1131 * educated widower Is
FRONT Lux.~ Br. Wk· ,Female Non· smoker. PLAZA performance. [Cla .. illed Ada •. YOW' one-TUllln.9* 642-1671 ff2·5111 fuiand ally aecure. bave
!y. 673-SURF. 673-76TI. Ref's. l2:IO mo. + utill. l.525 Mesa Verde E. C.M. * * * 1.JtoP thoppiu cegt.cr. Lolt Collie female wear· nice home l all that1oea
Bayfront pvt awte. Adlt Kitchen/lndry priv. 545-4123 ••••••••••••• •·•••• ••••••••••• in& red coUar. Pleue SHE , wtlh It. PO BOX 10071 non·amolter July U to 54.5-7975 at\4. c•ll 831-S4'78. Vic. Mia· E S C 0 R T S & CM 9ZR7
Oct 15 . Sl200/mo. M/F to sbr. oceanfront R.ETALSPACE • • 1lonYlejo. MODELING DI"-• "'•11 673-0560 f S37 M be 770 aq. ft. on Harbor "'.,.,,_,..
BeaCbrental . Sunset ~!°:P<>ns1:1e~~1.C:~or Blvd.ln C.M.liOO.Great . S•DAY WEEK SPECIAL • L~~:A~~··~~~Ym2~: IU.tltt "WELIEFORYOU!"
Beach. 2 Br. 2ba, rum. 1 will hold UI 911. Call: Ad R~'::~cs 675-6700 Uc 1$ff82. 615-lJOC G C f~:i;~!J~.~Cie:J:1: bli to bch. S3.'IO per wk. Sitter, 1210, 642-4~. 24 • • Found: Fgray&whitept 1'Ht D ... , ly or juat foJ' funl
Ca11213/-..1M hrs· RETALSPACE 8 Daya • 3 Linea • I Dolllrl • Siamese kitten, Shiffer Escor+i 7eo.7166.
Newport. avail. now, or.Jlt• 5000sq.ft.ooNwptBlvd. • Pariarea.M7-5574 24Hn. 641·0180 --Y-:-O-UN_G __ LAD--IES_A_v_aJJa_.
steps to beach. 3 br.. for"l...t 050 Hi traffic. Great U·. It's easy to plac e your 8-Day Week Classified by mail . and it • Found: small white. tan C~Qacb blefor Cuualfun.Dawn 3;:sf.~i:(.~~Jfo1 (:;;;t,·~;·;:;:;;~~it fr:~~.e~!~~~o mo . • costs just $8 -that's only a dollar a dayl To Qualify for this • ~r·~~jzJ· AM /MC/VIM 7fl·9031
Summer Rentals · alley, Costa Mesa. $40. Rea!onomics flS-6790 special offer. you must be a non-commercial user offering .. d F """'· £Xff'llTN( UOOwk . Ocnfrnts· 645-7836. NewportlllodemStore • • rOUD : ...,.~r.it:py, * * * UIUllf
S300wk . Jones Rily Offlct ...... 4400 or ofc nr post olc. S4SO. • merchandise for sale up to $800 per ad. and the price must • ~lk tb~; ~ross~ blket' re.,~ * SITE *
613-6210 ....................... scs si t . 2u1411.1oo1 be in your ad. The cost sta ys the s ame whether your ad tan· M Dobiecrou, red: 1~ uHourESCORTS
3 Br. 1 ho~ from ocean, 1617 WestcUff. N.B. Want Jerry • needs eight days selling time Or just one. • F Sbep., beige ; M Collie Youarethewlnner of '5J.llJZ Me/YIM parkln&. Avail. Auiust. financial lnat. 7000IJ. COroMdlfMar • • cro11, sable ' blk; F TWOFREEPASSES - --
1175-6TI5. 1.St. noor. A&ent $4l·W . 4.200 sq ft. Ground floor. Collie cru.s, blk & wht. m7 value) TN'ftl 54IO
Vec.tlott._.. 4250 PLUSH oFrrc Es. coast n 1abway . e Use one word in each box. About 4 words make one e ..... fff-......... M..._....______ RINGUNGBRos. w>.';/ri:'o"t;:~~;;;~~
Oceanfront Newport Newport Blvd, C.M. Ph 67$-6700 • ClaSSI 10 line 0 type. lnlmUm 8 IS 1nes. ease pnn • acrlptlon tint«! glum, C•CUS ....................... soo.aooo sq ft. 1101 Realonomlc• Corp. "f' d . f M. . d . 31· Pl . t Found: woman's pr~· BARNUMlBAILEY RoundtriefromNPTto
Beach, 2 l 3Bdrms ~9495 QRau-ISPACI • plainly. • Brookburat & PCH. AnahelmCooventlon Univ. Hi \lrv. Sdaysa II '"I C li rm.. ,..., ""u wk, be& ID Sept., 1'Jll ava · wee. y. a CM, 3 beaut. olficea & Motomo.nodeposlta _..,,,.~,,..,,,"""'"..______ CenterAu&.6-17 compcnaate.K-i(lf
5ff·OSW838=3232 bath, HO.q.ft. Xlnt loc. • ,-------------------------------, • FOUND: Male Cocker Lon1BeacbArena GrandCaQ)UIRaftTrip! So. Lake Tahoe luxury Air, cpll, chill. 1 N c L R E c E P T . 1 _ • Spaniel Tan coloring. Aug.19-23 Julr 31. AU& 9. Trwpo Mt.n. Home Sbr, .,. In &.S-'7861 CONFER. COFFEE. • Vic. Newport Heights. To claim paues, call inc . SIOO. Thnf3l·ltZa Montgomery Eatates. urw--y COPY RM. ETC. • • _.ffHtMi.u...u=<------fM2·511'78, ext. 272. PUSH
very aechlded yet 5 min. ".::' ''"""' FOUND : Doberman vie. muat be exchan&ed for -~llll'!!ll!l ..... --tocylno/bdl.117}3809 P....SUU IDEAL IF REAL . • SanJua~pistrano reaervedaeataatbox SAtLTOHAWAll OCEAN FR 0 NT . Spacious executive of· ESTATE RELATED ~~ of f I ce pr Io r to I'm lnvltad. Join a cou·
N A II kl fices •crou from City BUSINESS • • -..i performance. pie leavlal 8/1/11 for 3 ewport. va w Y' Hall. Alherviceuvalla· · r wd wbat ~ant ln * * * wb. Needed: attrac· ::~Sept. 545-2147 " blen'optional'. From 225 PR Iv ATE DESK • • ~D::•=ll~v;:;;P:;Uot~~=:::fkdl:::· =...!..•------.:-.::-.::-.::-.:-.:-::-::-::~-live, tntelll1ent female.
EllclualveSo.C.abopplng sq .. up at reuooable AREASORSUITENOW . • All ex~ pd. Lettn area, 20 min to beach. 2 rental•. No leate re· AVAIL. tosaU. Jlm,117S.Mll.
Br.2Ba.iiool.Aug1thru uited GIL7HJ9M.lm5 • •
Labor bay. Ref'•· THlllGHT RF.S.§7H535
544-m!callearlxAM. SPACE Wnt11111t1r IJO~ • •
KONA Houae on ocan. THE IUGHT 14308 Beac:b Blvd. Btwa • • Furn'd. Sips 4. Week or 2 Frwy1. Cvic: Cater
mogth. f'lHff4 au~1 ~~~mome • Add S2.eo for each addltlonal lln• for I time• • ...... t. Slilr't 4JOO aoo to eooo Sq. n. Prime RETAIL "/~.,.C.. 100 e •
Waterfront olllc" in 1q ft., Wmcllff area. • •
.Newport Harbor wltb _,15..,,_1·,.,8300:.=...-----•
boat 111,. avauabie. 1..,...,0Hlcn e Publish my ad for 8 days starting e ~~u;:it~.f.:~J1:~ Prime location, Cdll.. •
ln1term111ow1vallable. -or -E. Cout Classification C1l1Tod1y! Hwy. Call Paul Martin, • ------------------•
C7 I 4J 67M662 N!;:· Beach 15 • Sd. • Name e
IUl.1805 WtMdllf Dr. • Add MIWPOIT e&lfll• 15wauoxt1mt ress e rrn1=. = c;:::w 4411 e City Zip Phone e
rcpt. lr.~ ~.!: ·;·:;:;i:-·,:,;·;·,~~ •• Check or M.O. enclosed 0 ••
• • -· rm lltall ..,.... 6 utl· ~~--~'..Dll~.____..._-1 ... .1Jlldle11.•11t1 e Charge my ad to: ·e ESTCLIFF .af twWll41ii le ILDG ....... ,_ .......... n ~ # Exp 'te MIWPCIY.Mctt ':~:3t:W.~!J.• u L_.J .
eor..w .... or. e • # E le •1nt1tkft. • .. fl.afndoffktl,a EJ xp. I e -~,."r 11r1• drive t1 , .. , •
..... .._. -....... .. .... JO..-... Lo.------------------------------'• ....,, - -• ft. 1"' Ndlr 11.; ==' ,., . .,. .. Mll•Qr "ll4.W.alrk1 , ..... ~ .... ~ .... ~--~Im
"""' -omc. ....... w .....
Use ,,,,.,,, M serv ice
when plac ing your ad ... a
Dally Piiot ad number will
appear In your classified ad ... we take your messages
2~ hours a day . • . you call
In at your convenience
during office hours and get the responses to your ad ...
this service Is only $7.50
week. For more In.forma-tion and to pl1ct your Id
cell M2·5678 .
~::=: ........................
~!!~ ..... ?!!!
•ACCOUMTM lO ·ker by touch. Dlveralfled apertuce '*·· lndudlnJ Bte W
accurate typ1111. °* opportunity wltb fast
arowtn1 food com,..y.
Coata Meu area. ...
I
l
I
' J
DAY WEEK
&Days
3 Lines
8 Dollars
HetpW..t.d 1IOOH.fpW..W 1100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
AeciMAUq
·l ....... CLIU
Irvine 1d 11eacy needs
ad. bilJi.n& clerk. Must have bkpt. blck&round,
be ftrll~, ICCW'llt,
flnible Is deta il·
minded. 10.k:li::i' touch li&d. tytiina req'd
Will tnan on NCR ~
Bxcell. btotfits. Call:
Mrs. Breeb, 752-$111
ACCOUNTS
IECllVAIU am
Nar111co M1teri1ls lnc . luding st r uctural adhesive manufacturer. has an Immediate open·
ing for an Arrounts
Receivable Clerk The aucceuful candidate
will have had 1 year fX·
perience in a manu!ac· turing environment, ac
curate typing, 10.key by
touch, " knowledge or
invokln&.
Numco olfens a com·
petilive surting salary
• comprehens iv e benefits pacb&e For immediate con sideration please call . Jackie Bickel. S48-1144,
ext 224
MAIMCO
M.-W.,IK.
A Subsidiary ol
Cel~Corp.
600 W. Victoria St
Costa Mesa. Ca 921627
EOE. ... M/f _
ADMNS1UT1VE DIUCTOI Jewl•h Community
Relations Aceocy seek· ioe director for new
Orange Co. office. Salar
Salary to bl,000. Send res u m e to H .B.
Schechter, Suite 814.
6505 Wilshire Blvd, Los
Angeles, Calif. 90048.
Repln confidential.
ASSOILEI ELECTRO.MECH Electronics co. In
LagWla Beach needs an E/M assembler with
soldering & E/M as·
sembly exper. Requires
&d. manual dexterity.
Ability to use basic test
equipmt. such aa power
meters would be a big plus.
We offer excell. pay &
benefits pha a
4 DAY WOllC WEB
Co. is 2 mi. from Coast
Hwy. & 8 mi. from 41l> le s Frwys
PleuecaU for appt
Penonnel Dept Tl'!LONIC BERKELEY
n4-4tt-t401 E.O E
Aaaistuce needed F1cu Of Irvioe Haircutting,
7l4-SS8.g3..Leonard
AUTOMOI'IVE
MICHAMC Ellperienced. Xlnt fr·
Inge benefl\S Including
medical le dental plan.
Co n ta c t Service
Mana.er.
JOHMSOM I SOM
~~
Colt&Mes.t
0. 0
Earle Ike
TOYOTA-YOLYO
, .............. &
c ......... .
Pll U •·tJU ., S40·'4U
BANKING
TELLER
You will find we offer a
competitive salary, ex·
cellent benefits and a
romfort.able working at-mosphere.
Please call for an ap-
pointment to:
714-75'"4963
GW
(illATWESTBH
S4VMS
lmmed: full & ~rt time Oj>enangs 1n our
Westminster & Santa
Ana Superstores. Exp'd.
req'd. Call: Personnel
pocket!
Special flat rate for non-commercial users offering merchan-
dise priced in the ad for $800 or less. Cost is the same for '8 days
or one. Minimum three lines. Extra lines just $2 .60 for 8 days.
For Qn EXTRA daJr call today 642·5678
n. new Dally Piiot 8·Day Week It~ a Classified PLUS
RECEPTIONIST
East Hwitmgton Beach
office has immediate
opening for a rerep·
t1on1s1 at enln le\el Must be able to handle busy phones and enJOY
people contact Lifht
typing. Xlnl Co bene 1t.s and congerual environ·
ment 37 12 hr week, Mon -Fri C.i II Ann
Marshall. 54l·i!J;41
COLDWe&.L
BANl(C!RC
-t~--
--'
UIWIHO ALL 01 OllAHC)( COVNfY tH COSTA MUA
'nn1's D1y Sc/Joo/
&Nursety
.__., ...... Ml
CI pul•'ftftW ..... -
• fNt "-• 0.., ea,. """ , ...
Ctallt • 11.-• 0..0-. • ,.,. • " 0.., • ,_11111•81•~ •CIMINe
l'ler•"'--
HCMSI 6:>0 ~ ..
Learn How to use
Wang. IBM 056. Oisplaywriter
c ..
014)556-iaM
Cnl1u tfllilf, ...._ As1it.a
Days • IY11lll91 • 5......,.
EAIM MOlE MOt4IT
Beco me a Word Processing Specialist
Excellent Career Opportunities
WORD PROCESSING AND INFORMATION
SYSTEMS 2232 S.E. Bristol-SU1tt 106, S.Ola Ana, Ca 9'l707 ........ .,~ .... .......,-E_•·-
•BALLET• TN'
• JAU. • TRIM TO RHYTHM • AEROBICS
• CHILDREN • TEENS • ADULTS ................. c1os ...
Rtcpt/S.C Npt Center/Des1an
Plaza. Good typist.
Cheerful phone voice.
Pleasant surroundings
Single girl office. Up to
SlOOO mo. 7~9006. Ask
for Norman Jarobeon or
Jack Annstron&·
RESPONSlBLE Person
to clean & m1i9taln
home. Must haw ttr's.
8:30am·12:30pm Mon·
Fri. Start 15/hr. ftflO
Restauram-Need outco-in& petsonallty (Gr food prep, sandwich malleg, meat slicing. cub re·
giater. 8·4 Mon.-Frl.
14/hr. Also need exp. At· ~~ 7-3, It .St.SO/hr.
ReslautHt Good opportunity for
B•runder ' lfo1te1a. Plhse call for appt. Ask
for Herb or ·111011.
963-6711.
USTAUIANJ Immediate QllilniDp for
te"rvinl ~ • eook. ~Dent beoel'a. A~ ly in penon : Jelly
Roser. 2100 Harbor
Blvd.C.M.
Part & full time, wlU
train. Pref. exp. In retail clothing sales. C.M.
55tm3 5'6-1&21
•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, July 28, 1981
Schools and
Instruction
PILOT
TRAINEES
Earn your wings down
under in friendly Australia.
Exceptional trai n ing,.
re asonable cost, enjoyable
visit. Call Bill Hawkins.
957-8317 after 5 p.m.
TN1 ,_...,of fine schools
c..WWaocmct
YOI to a ftlW tomorrow
, ...........
D.urclM,A...-.C.l*u-.
l:amll'V' w..-.. ...... & ...
,., ..... , lefW9ett• reter4Jet c:: , ..... ,,,a: .. .., ...
_.tat ul11 tj.,. r
Call 642-5678
&.q.lse Griffith
ht. 311
ANNOUNCING
CL/BERTY CHRISTIAN
ACADEMY
OPENING THIS FALL
KINDERGARTEN and
GRADES 1-6
• COllClllllBI. -.-m
TIMMM
• OlolMCTlll ftlllllllO . ...___,,,.._
WOllll(O PAIWlm ,.,. '"' MAillAl'ltO-
lMI ClaPl'DI
• IT'llOllO ~ Oii lMI
MllC ~Al.I Oil IDUCAnc. \\ \ .... ~,,... • '"'°"° "tOMCI l'ROOllAM
o -ACA111* ITAHCWIOI
• -HID fOll •VllWll AHO #IJl¥olf. AYIMOl llUOlJITI
• llllCllUllf -,AQ.ITID
• PATlllOTIC -
Another ministry of
LIBERTY BAPTIST CHURCH
5108 lonlt. Canyon Rud
Ir.Int, CA 92715
JfRRY IUNCH, PHtor-Foun«Mr
CALL 851-9144
'9••·························· ::::::::::;:;;:;;::::;:::::::::::::::::: i PRIVATE HOME !
,
NIGUEL CHIUIEN'S CENTER
= ......... .. ,. .,.... ,.
Cal &251Z
eWWc ... A......_
Also accepting registration
for Prnc~~ oPtn in Sept.
! TUTORING ! • • : (Serving You Since '62) :
• • ! BASIC UJECTS !
• IEADIHG * MATH • STUDY SllUS • • • : ALL MES :
• .6.UA e . _., .
• ALL GI.ADES • • • • • • Mr. L Robinson, M.A. •
• Director/Teachef • • • : 551-5646 : , ........................... .
_.GLOBAC DRIVING St~HOOL
DRIVERS EDUCATION & DRIVERS TRAINING
IN ONE WEEK ONLY
COURSE INCLUDES:
rft[( P'ICK· UP' ro• 30 HOURS or CLASSROOM AND
6 .. OURS OF 8[HIND Hf[ WHEEL DRIVING .
For More Information Call :
558-8673 OR 978-0909
SfATI CUl lFll D IN SUUCfOU
• • • •
·~PAGE SCHOOL
~.,OF COSTA MESA
Growftl Wlftl Honor-nnd Year -....
. : AGE 2 THRU GRADE 8
:-ENROLLM€NT NOW IN PROGRESS
REASONABLE RA TES
NON SECTARIAN
:c-'~"9mOI ~·r . :
•.• CllU -..cllO ; ' ' I ' ___ ,._ """
·-·-·---OPa oftl'WAft .... POOi. ....,. -· •llO'f u.-_,., ' ......
-M.1.T AOC19nD SAT.
l:JOUI. TO The Vougllon Famly l :JO ,,11.
MPWICTOll& .. t. m-:.,..
QC»TA..U tt.AIO-_.,_.. .........
MH411 t7N07
Hey, lids,
9·11! ~
TRY
SUMMER
~~.!~ ..... ?!~ ~.~!~ ...... ~!~~
WINDOW Wubttnp'd., FREI KJTl'ENS to IOOd
mlllt own de~odable bomt. I ..wee. 2 w1d:te car SU5 bt to •tart. w/oran1e apota. l wbiW Hf.9780 w I b I ac k , I w bi U
w I bel u . Art•, s.
SICllJAIY -Mf=.-...5ff'I .......... ~~~~
to ND Htlbllsbtd realty rR!! Male Dac:Jiaund • firm lo Conm del Jlar 11'1, Malt Jrllb Setter
T11il Is a ooe aecreury lli xr1. lfHW oHlce and tbert 11 Pru to you: Whitt
alwayt 10mttMn1 ID do. female rat. I)e(Jawed.
M Ult bave ucelleot typ-Houff brgkm. $SHA.
Inf 1kllJs and pleuant Free Sja!DfM FemaJe to
penooallty. St1rt1n1 good home, 1111yed 18 ut~ry SW per mo. Call .m0t. 631·@1
Mary Kay weekday• Free to lovin& home
8: 30 to 5. 673-..00 . ador1 ble 6 wk old pup-
.Ries. Call894=@4 Mtrc...... . Free C-Ockapoo, mostly
••••••••••••••••••••••• Cocker,lyrold. ......... 1001 ~ •••••••••n••tt•• .. 0 •• CHDruAHUA FOR SAL E-1930 'I 2 yr oldrem .. thats, nke
kitchenware. Rare HaU eel. 97}122rwkdxs
a!'d Fiesta. Over 300 fwwffw9 IOSO paeret. Buy one or all. ~4088. • ...................... .
Dan1Sb modem teakwood Beaut. Engl antique dou· dinin& table with 8 new ble bed, mi.t sell, $250. m a t c h i n I c a n e d
646-4327 chaiu·S27S 00. Bent
Antiques. rec. clocks. 1lus oak rhina cabinet
$250. Wash bastn set. (antique reprodur-
S7S Trunk, US. Med t.JonJ·~.00. King-siJ.ed
desk. $M. 63l·W maple hudboard with
CASH Ruisi.er 1927 drawers turned spoola,
tis Beautymt m11.tress ' 548-sprln&s·S250.00. Call
971-7352 after 5 p.m. *** Atlly GttosCMI
62.'J Avacado
Costa Mesa You are the winner of
TWO FREE PASSES
($17vaJue)
RINGLING BROS. BARNUM & BAILEY
**I BUY** Good used Furniture &
Appliances-OR I will
sell or SEU.for You
MASTEIS AUC110tf
646al616. 13}9625
CllCUS I IUY FUltHITUU
Anaheim Convenllon Les ~7-8133
Center Aug. 6-17 Large C-Omlortable ann
Lone Beach Arena chair and matrhin& ot-
Aug. 1~23 toman rust colored cor· To t'laim passes, call duroy ' Xlnl cond. S140
642·5678, exl 272 Passes 67J. 7108 must be exchanged for So~f ~~h---d--b-1 -reserved seats at bo a , c air. en ta e,
f . x dresser. area rug, o f 1 c e pr 1 o r lo lamps, bookcase etc. performance. S!·SlW. 644-l096 *** . Beauty Rest K.in4 rn.t,
ApplHCH IO I 0 t1sprg1 SUO; oak ire box
••••••••••••••••••••••• S200. oak desk rti.ir
I IUY Am.JANCES SIOO. stereo cab S75. Les 7. l ~6'4~·2=11~9 ____ _
Freezer. upnght, clean. Beaut traditional love
works good SlSO seats wltbls & lamps. MS-8513,~ __ from attorney's oft'. Cost
Dryer, gas, clean. works S 2 2 0 0 • Sa " r i f I ce
good f75 Wshr, clean, llSOO/obo. 97S-0363 · works good Us . 10 pr cream-colored
S48-SS11,MS 4485 matching Uv. rm & dm.
STOVE ·clean. works rmfurn.$450.64HUS
good. Sl50. S48-8513 or 9UffH.Srz.E IEO
S48-448S. flSO. 67J.Z777
Refrig, frost free, tx· Sofabed Sl25, elertnc cellent, works good . dryer $40, dining room
$2.'!0. S48-8$!J, S48=4485. set. Sl2S, stereo. f75.
Rerrig, frost·free, lrg top _.C..,t,,..11.:..54""5""'·3'784=.:. ___ _
freer.er. xlnt cond. SlSO. Dining room cham; 4
559-0957 eves. Kindel SIOO. Packard
20 c u ft Upright Bell 4' Hi-Fi S50.
Montgomer y Ward _.6:f1.........,.§S=7;..:::9.._. -----
Freuer. Xlnl cond. 8·drawer dresser $285/cash.54&-§?34. SlllO
Brand new Hotpoint Electric HJ.Low double
Oven Range. $400 325 Grand Canal, Balboa
11.
644-72S2.
••• ·, , .........
2M01 Via Portola
LapnaN&iuel
" Yod~t.bewiftnerof 'l'WO FREE P~~
t( 117 value> RING UNG BRa;.
IARMTM 6 BAILEY
. CllCUS Aullelm Coovenlloo c.nter A\11. 1-17
: Loeg Beach Arena
• A\11. 1)..23 • To claim passes, call • MUl'JI, Ht. m. Puses : must be exchan&ed for
; reserved aeata at box
ofP,.i:e prior t o
: perfeftrluce.
***
1~!1-~f'I w/hdwe, (2) ~. S15 ea: (2) 80x30, S20 ea. Closet doors, (2)
9~30; (2) 93x36; C2)
93i~:10 ea. Gd cond .
Bally pinball, <Playboy).
perfect cond. t995
C1J Karen ~1·5n
Ceilinl Fan · Casabella · forward, reverse, vana·
bit spee<b, tight 111d d.
Was $239. Take SlOO
Jydy 130·"'5.
Oki Vanity with mirror
SlSO. Metal frame for
twin bed •· 67Ml!80
GE Gu Dryer rm. Chest of dnwers $20, Guitar
L..-a. .... , ...
U.clborg TeMis Club,
loll r.14U487
06ee dettCmetal) 30x60"
for S'JS. XJnt cond. Chair. l'l!S, tfH543 aft s.
Bu. 4 stools, rm. Pool
ta b I~ , I i & ht , a c -
ceaortes., tllOO. All Of· hrs considered
5310.
lttin& Machine, new Toyota S2SO.
6*-4519
3 chailil w/auoman, $30
ttdl. Magnavox stereo,
RH. f1S«ZO: Hts.wt .• vw body SZ10. Refril 2
dr m. '72 • dirt bike
laOt. lfHZOl.hff
Blk DI.II&. couch, SIU. Ster.. caaa. deck Is
mlbt SW. Bite. l50
., ------
CONMEU
CHEVROLET
,. ""ti • r'
" , \ ''' . S4i>-I 200
• • • • •
IUJJll l:UIT 011 HlllllWI UllY PIPll
TUl SOAY JULY 28 1981 ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA 2•, CENTS
Prince Charles 'expects to cry'
Lady Diana chuckles during interview before their 'wedding of century'
..........
Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer snuggle in this informal
photo taken by Lord Snowdon. former husband of the groom's
aunt. Princess Margaret
LONDON (AP) -Prince
Charles says he expects to cry at
bls wedding, while his bride,
Lady Diana Spencer, says they
would not meet on their wedding
eve because "we might quar-rel."
· The couple spoke last Thurs-
day In an interview recorded by
the British Broadcasting Corp.
and British Independent
Television, the nation 's two
networks. The interview was for
broadcast Tuesday evening in
Britain, hours before they were
due to marry at St. Paul's
Cathedral in a ceremony British
newspapers were calling the
·'wedding of the century.'·
Diana, showing no sign of last
weekend's pre-wedding nerves
-s he burst into tears before
cameramen -chuckled often
and interrupted her fiance with
aCfectionate humor.
Charles said he chose most of
the wedding music -ranging
from Edward Elgar's, "Pomp
and Circumstances March No.
4, .. a great symbol of Britain 's
imperial past, to t he hymn
"Christ Has the Sure Founda-
t Io n," by the 17th century
master Henrv Purcell.
Of Purcell's hymn. Charles
said: "I find it very moving. I
shall, I think, spend half the
time in tears."
T he 32-year-old heir to the
throde said he always longed for
a musical wedding.
"So I can't wait for the whole
thing," he said. "I want every-
one to come out, you know,
having bad a marvelous musical
an d emotional experience."
<See related story Page A4. >
Lady Diana, 20, laughed as he
s aid ·'stirring. dramatic and
noisy music" was necessary for
the 31~·minute waJk up the aisle
of the cathedral.
··Bec ause if you have
s omething rather quiet. you
start hearing your ankles crick-
ing, you know what f mean?,"
he said.
Diana said s he chose only one
,of the hymns, "I Vow to Thee
(See WEDDING, Page A2>
The Royal Wedding at a glance
LaCy Diana Spencer 100
Lady Diana 1 motti.r SO
LaCy Otana s lathe• so
Pnnoe Chlu'fes 300
Queen Etiiabeln 2 000
The r.ceptlon: Breakfast wedding calle. and c.nampagne tor at>Oul 100 guests at
8uck1ngnam Patace tollow1ng the ceremony
Prealdlng: Or Roben Runcoe Archbishop ot Can1er0ury
The honeymoon: tn the Caribbean aboaro ahe rova1 vacna Bnaann.a
O.C..,T~G<-
Traffic snarls London wedding route
The path of the roycl couple toward their big event Wednesday 1s chronicled in this
overview of the cernnonial parade
Missing Mesans' plane sought
Fuselage spotted by pilot in Sierra Nevada
By STEVE MARBLE
Of I lie Dally l'itet S\efl
A volunteer team of moun·
taineers is searching the rough
terrain of the Sierra Nevada south
of Mammoth Lakes for a light
plane carrying two Costa Mesa
men that was last seen four
months ago.
The crumpled fuselage or a
white airplane was spotted last
week by a private pi o near a re·
mote lake at a high altitude in the
mountain range ..
Authorities from the Fresno
County SheriH's department
be li eve it could be the Cessna 210
tha t was carrying the Costa Mesa
men.
A spokesman from the sheriffs
department said his office neither
has the money nor the equipment
to undertake the search and has
nothing to do with the volunteer
team .
The men -26-year-old Michael
Thompson and pilot Robert Reed,
25 were last seen March 19
when they took off from the Mam-
moth Lakes airport bound for
nearby Bishop. It was snowing at
the time .
The Costa Mesa men were re-
.ORANGI COAST llATHIR
Low clouds in late night
to mid-morning hours .
Otherwise sunny through
Wednesday. Little change
In temperatures. Highs
rrom mid·70s at the
beaches to mid-80s Inland.
Lows tonight 60 lo 66.
IJJllDI TODAY
Citi.mv /eel fO/er wlwre
polfcem.:n walk beal1, c
Police Fotuulation 111.cd~
/frwh. S. lt°'11 Page .u
11011
" -
turning from a three-day slu tnp
and were to pick up friends in
Bishop before heading to John
Wa y ne Airport in Orange
County.
'I 've really tried
to pull out all
the stops'
Thompson. a carpenter, was
the son of Newport Beach Police
Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson.
Reed was a management trainee
at a Laguna Hills supermarket.
The original search was halted
after 10 days and both men were
presumed dead.
Fresno authorities said they
confirmed the sighting of the
wreckage last Wednesday. They
said three pieces of a plane, white
in color with a dark stripe, were
clearly visible from the a ir.
The description matches the
plane carrying the Costa Mesa
men.
Authorities in Fresno said the
wreckage is located near Red
Slate Mountain on a steep incline
that "is very. very hard to gelto."
The Fresno authorities said
moves to get county, slate or
federal assistance in sending in a
helicopter capable of flying at
high altitudes bas been unsuc-
cessful .
Sgt. Ken Abell, a member of the
Fresno Sheriff's sear ch and
rescue team, said that federal
authorities responded that they
didn't have the money to bankroll
the mission. He said state and
military oCficials have told him
thesamething.
.. f 've really tried to pull out au
the stops," Abell said, "espeeial-
ly since this was the son of a fellow
officer. Butl 'vehad no luck."
Sgt. Thompson said he is irritat-
ed by these reports. He said he's
spent some "rough days" waiting
for word on whether his son's
body has been found.
San Onofre model
'not indicator'
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A struc-
tural englneerlng professor says
an earthquake mlght shake the
San Onofre nuclear plant a lot
more than is predicted by asin1
a computer model.
Prof. J. Enrique Luco of San
Diego State University aatd the
model fails to predict accurately
the motions from a conUuuoualy
ru,pturing quake.
The model bu been used by
Southern California Edtson Co.
to ariue for Ucentet for two new
1enerat.lnc unit.a at the plant, u -
aertlng they would wlth1tand the
aeverest tremor.
Luco. a consultant to tbe
Po~ holds meeting
ROME (AP> -Pope Jou
Paul II met tocla1 wltb tbe
l11dertbip al Poland'• Roman
Catbolle Cburcb in an a\1411eee
la bl1 holplta.l room, UM V•tka
•naouneed.
Nuclear Regulatory Com-
mission's Committee on Reactor
Safeguards, testified Monday
befor:e the Atomic Safety and
Licensing Board.
Although both Units 2 and 3
were designed to wlths,and
horizontal ground movements of
.87g or two-thirds the force of
1rnlly, Luco estimated lbat ac-
tual iround movement durtna a
maanltude 7 earthquake could
have the force of .sc.
The utility and the com-
ml11ion'1 ataff have concluded,
parUy on the basl1 of the com·
puter 's findines, that .671 11 the
1tron1est 1round movement
which could occur durln1 a
7 mapttude quake -the bil·
Jett the utlUty'1 expert.a say Lt
POl•lbl• -on an offshore plant live miles from tbe nuclear
plmnt.
Luco lldmltted be hH done ao
almilar P'O'.tnd motion modelln1
or Miamok>licaJ ltudiet ol the
1lte.
Visitors WWD
stake out •• • view area
LONDON (AP ! Traffic
s narled in central London today
with campers. sightseers. ven-
dors and bowler-hatted busi-
nessmen thronging the two-mile
royal wedding route.
Colorful crowds, clasping
Union Jacks and pictures of
Prince Charles and Lady Diana
Spencer, grew through the day
at the two prime positions at
each end of the route -Buck-
jngham PaJace and St. Paul's
Cathedral.
"This is history in the mak-
ing," declared 19-year-old
Man ches te r st udent Brian
Balmer, who staked out a good
spot near lbe steps of St. Paul's.
His face was painted with the
red, white and blue Britis h flag .
.. Jus t look at the people
around us -the British s pirit
unb e atable . and a few
Americans too,'' he said amid
several hundred enthusiasts out-
side the imposing cathedral.
Lady Diana, 20, who celebrat-
ed with Charles until the early
hours al a glittering Buck-
ingham Palace reception hosted
by Queen Elizabeth fl, retired to
Clarence House, London res-
idence of the 80-year-old queen
mother.
Diana· did not plan to join
Charles and the rest of the royal
family at a· pre-wedding dinner
for 80 guests at the palace
tonight, followed by a giant
fireworks display in Hyde Park.
·'She said she wanted an early
night," said the queen's press
secretary, Michael Shea.
Tonight Charles lights the first
of a nationwide chain of 101
royal wedding beacons during a
$125,000 fireworks display in
Hyde Park, hatr a mile Crom
Clarence House.
The 18·minute finale wiJI use
2"2 tons of explosives in a 170·
foot wheel as the bands of the
Hous e Gua rds an d th e
Household Cavalry accompany
massed choirs and guns boom in
celebration.
In a final rehearsaJ Monday at
Sir Christopher Wren's 300-year-
old cathedraJ atop Ludgate Hill ,
the bride and groom met before
Archbishop of Canterbury
Robert Runcie to practice the
ceremony that wiU be televised
to an expected 750 million
viewers in 55 nations.
Sclwol sport
fees examined
AthJetes in many Orange Cout
area high 1cbool1 are, or will be
requlred to pa.y to participate ln
or1an1sedsporta.
Admlnlstraton are unanimous In describing the reaao~ for the
situation-the elfect.I of Proposl·
tlon 13, decllnlna enrollment and
increuedcoat.I.
For the full story, lncludlna
pros and cons and loc11 acf.
mlnlatratora' thou1hta on the
matter, ... Sporll, Pat• Cl.
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..............
This 1s a sketch of Lady Diana's wedding dress based on the
descnptwn in a document said to be draft ed by the office of the
Queen 's Lord Chamberlain The sketch was obtained from
Women's Wear Daily
County to appeal
Emerald Bay ruling
By FREDERICK SCHO EMEHL
Of UM Oellf ...... Stltff
Over th e objections o f
Chairman Ralph Clark. the
Ora nge County Board of
Supervisors decided today to ap-
peal a state Coastal Commission
edict that the beach at the
Emerald Bay private enclave
north of Laguna Beach be
opened to the public.
''The right to use the beach
should not be a factor of the
thickness of your wallet," Clark
said In ur1ing that the county
support cons truction of a
pedestrian and bicycle path for
daylight-hours use onlv.
Clark cut the lone· dissenting
vote on the motion to pursue the
appeal with the atate com-
mission, based in San Francisco.
In one ol Its final acts before
disbanding, the South Coastal
Restonal Coastal Commission,
whlch 1overned coastal develop·
ment ln Orange and Loa An1eles
counUea, added to a plannlq
document Cot Emerald Bay re-
q u lrlng tho public access to
Emerald 81y'1 beaches be pro-
vlded.
Supervl1or Thomu Rll•Y ·
whose district inch.idea lhe
affluent, sated community,
arsued qalnat Clark's 1t.u\H ln
support or the commission's ac-
tion.
"There are excellent (public)
beaches on both sides of this
private sector." Riley pointed
out. And he claimed the county
could face costs of providing
lifeguard a nd maintenance
services ir public access were
provided. Those costs now are
paid by the Emerald Bay Com-
munity Association.
Supervisor Bruce Nestande
said Clark's opinion that beach
access should not be Judged by
the thickness or one's wallet was
"somewhat unfair."
Comm enting on an early
morning vi1Jt to Emerald Bay
on Monday. N"estande said,
''That beach WJlS jammed (with
Emerald Bay residents)."
He sald he wou ld support
public access to the beach of the
private community if it were the
only beach around.
''The beach was there lon1
before the peopJc of Emerald
Bay:• Clark countered.
lt la th second Ume th1I year
Clark bu d111ented on the lllue
keeplna lhc beach prl•ate.
He cut the lone ne11Uve vote
last sprint when H"rriaora l~l the IC>-Cllled I.Me.I QnaltaJ
Proaram plan t.o lllll rll6onal
commlaalon lot conaldetadan.
...
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/TuHday, July 21, 1981
SuJ>l'rmarket strike deadline nearing
..........
LOS ANGELES <Al>) -Al 1
mlclnlCht deadllDe for • strike by
,clerk.i at eome 1,300 Southern
Callfornla aupermarketa ap~
proacbed, effort.I to reach a COO·
tract agreement conllnued amid
. a total news blackout.
"All I can say ls our meet.inp
are still going on,'' &aid Dale
Brown, spokesman few the United
Food and Commercial Worken
Union. Ill! said barealnin1 with
tbe Food Employers Union,
representtn1 21 supermarket
chains, was scheduled to resume
today.
A strike by the more than 73,000
unionized clerks employed at
1,277 stores would affect an
estimated 14 million shoppers
from as far north as San Luis
Obi.I po and Mono counUea down to
the Mexican border.
The supermarket.a bave been
recru1Uni thouuod1 of tem·
porary workerf to man the cuh
registers in case or aslrlke.
By mutual consent of both
sides, a newt.blackout has been ln
eff eel since t.alu resumed over
l tbe weekend. Ne1ottatlona bad
broken off last Wednesday with
union officials who bad souibt a
H percent pay and frln1e
benefits increase over three
years uratng members to reject
management's offer of a 22 per-
cent wage and benefit.I hike over
the same period.
. Results of the ball0Un1. which
ended Monday. were due today.
but indJcaUons were that subee·
TO WED -Susan Atkins ,
convicted murderess serv-.
ing a life sentence for the
1969 Sharon Tate murders
by the Manson Family, will
m a rry wea lthy Texan
Donald Lee Laisure. 50, on
Aug. ~ in a prison chapel
ceremony.
Israel claims PLO
breaks truce again
From Page A1
WEDDING • •
My Country," by the nationalist
20th-century English composer
Gustav Holst.
But Diana, an earl's daughter
once little known outside her im·
mediate privileged circle.
became more se r ious whe1
asked if, after six months of be·
ing engaged to Charles, she was
adjusting to life constantly in the
public eye.
"Just," she said after a pause.
Looking at her fiance. she said
h e has been ••a tower of
strength," but then quipped: "l
had to say that, because you're
sitting there."
Charles was r aised from
babyhood amid what he
described as the problems of
''cameras poking at you from
every quarter and recording
every twitch you make.
"You can get used to it to a
certain extent . . . I think if you
don't try to work out in your own
mind some kind of method for
existing and surviving this kind
of thing, you would go mad."
The young woman who Wed-
nesday becomes the third lady
in the land behind Queen
E lizabeth lI and the queen
mother described herself as an
"average cook."
''But you haven't tasted
anything because I won't let
you," she told Charles.
Both appeared deUghted by
the 100,000 letters, 3,000 gilts and
messages of affection received
since their Feb. 24 engagement.
Blast kills 9
in Tehran
BEIRUT (APl -Sixteen
more anti-government leftists
a nd a bomb explosion "prob·
ably" planted by opponents of
the Islamic regime bas killed at
least nine people in downtown
Tehran, Iran's official news
agency Pars reported.
The bomb went off Monday
Slight in a square in front of the
Shahre Tamasha theater , which
JNas closed at the time . Pars
hid the blast hurled pieces or
the victims half a mile.
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP> -
Israel accused the Palestinians
of two more violations . of the
cease-fire along tbe Israeli-
Lebanese border today despite a
r eport that a radical PLO leader
had agreed to observe the truce
after rejecting it earlier .
There wu no immediate com-
ment from the Palestinian com-
mand in Beirut on the Israeli re-
po rts of ne w firi ng . But
Lebanon 's state radio said
Israeli jets new reconnaissance
missions over Beirut and other
Lebanese cities today, drawing
No benefit
cuts vowed
by president
W ASIUNGTON (AP) -Leav-
ing the details for later, Presi·
dent Reagan has promised to
make the Social Security system
so lve nt without reducing
benefits to Americans who are
n ow "dependent" on their
mo!Jlhly retirement checks.
· · 1n any plan to restore fiscal
integrity of Social Security, I
personally will see that no part
or the plan will be at the expense
of you who are dependent on
your monthly Social Security
checks,'' the president said Mon·
day night in bis nationally
broadcast address.
Reagan touched only briefly
on Social Security as he ap-
pealed to Amertcana to lobby
their congressmen ln favor of
his tax cut plan, which faces a
showdown vote on the House
floor Wednesday. (Related story
Page A4.)
He told the nation he was
"deeply disturbed" because
many Social Sei:urity recipents
"h ave been n eedless l y
frightened by some of the inac·
cur acies which have been given
wide circulation."
The president has proposed an
eventual 10 percent benefit cut
for a ll future retirees and
further cuts for those who will
retire before age 65. Neither
change, however. would affect
Americans who turn 62 before
1982 and there would be no ma-
jor impact on present recipients.
anti-aircraft fire from guerrilla
positions.
The Israeli military command
said Palestinian guerrillas fired
two rounds of rockets, the first
about dawn and the second two
hours later, toward Kleiya, a
south Lebanese village occupied
by the forces of Is rae l 's
Lebanese Christian ally. Maj.
Saad Haddad.
1t was the sixth such violation
reported by Israel of the cease-
fire agreed to by It and the
Palestine Liberation Organiza-
tion last Friday after two weeks
of cross-border warfare in which
more t.han 4SO Arabs and six
Israelis were reported killed.
The Israeli command said its
gunners did not return the fire,
and sources in northern Israel
·said Haddad's men also did not
retaliate. However . Israel Radio
reported a group of fi ve guer-
rillas infiltrated a zone con-
trolled by Nigerian troops of the
U .N . peacekeeping force in
south Lebanon and opened fire
from there on some of Haddad's
m i 1 i tia m en . The radio 's
northern correspondent said the
militiamen returned the fire "in
self defense,'' not in defiance of
the cease-fire.
In Beirut. meanwhile, Palesti-
nian sources reported that PLO
chief Yasser Arafat met with
Ahmed Jebril, the head of the
Popular Front for the Liberation
of Palestine-~neral Command,
and Jebril agreed that his guer-
rillas would observe the truce.
The PFLP-GC rejected the
cease-fire last weekend, coo-
tendlng that Arafat agreed to it
without consulting leaders ol the
other guerrilla groups lo the
PLO. It admitted res ponsibility
for three of the rocket attacks on
northern Israeli t owns and
Lebanese Christian villages in
south Lebanon since the cease·
fire.
Arafat and J ebril after their
meeting Monday night issued a
joint statement saying they "re-
affirmed complete unity of the
position of all Palestinian grot.Jps
in the military and political
spheres," the Palestinian news
agency WAFA r eported.
Palestinian sources, who did
not want to be identified, said
tt)is meant Arafat and Jebril bad
reconciled, and the PFLP-GC
would honor the cease-fire.
Male model show nixed
Santa Ana cancels 'hot' photo session at museum
By JACKIE RYMAN =--... ,.,.. .......
"Model Shoot : Come photo·
graph our hot male models in
lhe courtyard or historic Bowers
Museum in Santa Ana. Ladies
only." .
That advertisement, which ~eatured a picture or a bare-
tchested man and ran above an
ad for Chippendale's male strlp-
t>er establishment, came as a
.JJhock to Reilly Rhodes, dlr~tot
"'f the city-owned Bowers
"Museum.
"I couldn't believe that this
actually happened," Rhodes
f'ald Monday in describing the
ad, which ran the day before in
.the Register newspaper'• enter· ~ai nment magazlne . His
museum, located in a plcturet·
'!'llUe Spanish-style buildln1. CW'·
'rentJy features an exhibit ol an-
ORA QE COAST
cient Peruvian textiles, one on
Orange County's Japanese
heritage, and another of Pueblo
pottery.
·'The Chippendale ad looks
somewhat tasteful compared to
the one that's just above it.,"
Rhodes said.
The model shoot, which had
been scheduled for Aug. 15, was
canceled Monday by the Santa
Ana city manager.
Rhodes said the museum bad
approved an application from
Romanoff Productions, which
bas a studio in Garden Grove
but a malling addreaa ln Or~.
"Whal the application aaid
was 'Amateur pbotosrapben to
photograph . live models in the
rustle courtyard settine,.. said
Rhodes, addin1 that c0Ue1es
and art acbooll often schedule
photo sesalona at the muteum.
D1ilyPilat CIHMfted ~efnt 7t4/t42•N1't
AH o.-depart.Mftta M~
ThOmee P. Haley "*""""" c:-t -lillff Ott-
Aobert N. Weed ,.,_
Michael P. Hervey ......... ~
L Kay Schultz oi.->t1~
~nttfl N. Goddard Jr. ~""-
Thomee A. Murph In. w...
Bernard Schulman
~
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C.ol A. Moore ........
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•1MClet Mf'!Nti*lef '"Y•ltf\t ...,,..,
In addition, he said, it bas
been used for ads for General
Motors. Datsun, and tbe I.
Magnin and Bullock's depart·
ment stores. Rhodes said the project as
described in the advertisement
violated city policy both by dis·
cr lminaUng -agalnst men -
and by charging a fee. The ad
stipulated a $25 advance re·
servation charge.
A spokesman tor Romanoff,
who uked that bis name not be
used, said the event wlll be held
the day scheduled al an un·
publiciJed private location.
He defended the planned
event, aafinl that it would not
have been dJacriminatory, U..t
be waa not informed it was
a1ainat clty rules to char&• a
fee, and that the event would not
have been u rlaque u the ad ln·
dlcated.
Tbe spokesman described the
ad as "a takeoff on Cbippen·
dale's," and said that altboulh
the event wat aimed at women.
"we wouldn't baYe excladed
anyone."
He aald thole not payint tbt
fee could bne taken pJetune, •
l>u( ''•peopte wltb an a4"uce
re1l1tration would have been 1reeted by one of our male'
modell In tux.a, with • tile c.s
tile cheek 1n4ybe ud a earu·
Uon. lt would uve been• el1111 I n_t11t. Tit• 1POkt1maa Hid male
modell ln Y&ftoat cottum .. ,
PIUlblJ mehidlna blklnl 1wt1n traiak• but alto h'chadlDI
WNt.. wear, wve to ban
poffl._ !,ltll COIWIH ~
eYef'J nau hour. •
quent revisions in proposals by
both sides would make the vote lr·
relevant.
The Food Employers Council
said It made the union a new offer
early Monday that includes lm·
proved wa1e and benefit pro-
posals. But council president
Robert Fox said the councll la •1·
gravated that union members
continued to vote on the lnltJaJ
prbposal.
"We deplore the fact that we
have made an Important offer to
the clerks and the union won't teU
its members themselves," Fox
said. He said the new offer ln·
eludes aniocreaseofmorethan30
percent ln wa1es and beneflta
over the next three years, worth
abouU3.30per hour more.
Joe Lench, a union spokesman.
said he would not comment on the
new offer because union officials
had notreviewedlt.
Senior clerks currently earn
$9.10 and ho ur plus frin1e
benefits worth an additional
$4 .12 an hour. However their
earnings lag $1. 74 an hour
behind those of their Northern
Callfomia collearues.
0.., ..... ,,_.., O... MowY
. Chad Marlin Sanborn. 17. of San Clemente. holds his head m his hand.3 m a gesture of sorrow after an
accidem in which a fellow passenger in a Jeep was fatally injured when the veh1cte rolled over in Irvine
on Monday afternoon. Newport Beach police officer Albert Enetmas stands nearby
'Cost cutting' aids
huge GM earnings
DETROIT<AP> -Gener al
Motors Corp. says close atten-
tion to cost-c utting sparked
$514.6 million in earnings for the
April-June quarter . but the
automaker is expected to have
difficulty squeezing out a profit
in the traditionally weak third
quarter.
Second-quarter earnings,
which GM announced Monday,
were $1.72 per share of common
stock and represented a sharp
turnaround from GM's loss of
$411.9 million, $1.43 per share, in
the second quarter of 1980.
For the first six months of the
year, GM has earned $704.9
million, $2.35 per s hare, com-
pared to a loss or $257.2 million.
Winds blamed
in air crash
CIUDAD CHJHUAHUA, Mex-
ico CAP) -A sudden wind shift
was believed to have contributed
to the cras h of an Aer omexico
j etliner that killed 31 people,, in-
cluding two Alabama men, of
ficials said today.
Thirty-four people were in·
jured and one was missing.
Ttie DC-9. believed to be car-
rying 00 passengers and a crew
of six, crashed Monday night,
bursting into flames after slrik·
ing the ground and rolling on its
wheels for some distance. of-
ficials said.
A passenger list was not im·
mediately available.
91 cents per s hare, through June
3-0, 1980.
··This continued improvement
is encouraging and reflects the
intense efforts of our worldwide
organization to control costs and
improve profitability. despite
the continuing pressure of infla·
tion on labor and mate rial
cost s," Chai rman Roger B.
Smith and President F. James
McDonald said in a statement.
General Motors' profit came
on net sales of $18 billion for the
quarter, up from $13.8 billion in
the same quarter a year ago.
For the half-year. GM's sales
are $33.7 billion, against $29.5
billion in the fi rst six months of
1980.
GM 's profit was "a little
stronger than I would have ex-
pected," said David Healy. an
auto industry analyst for the
New York investment banking
firm Drexel Burnham La mbert.
Jn an effort to boost third·
quarter sales, GM 's financing
subsidiary, General Motors Ac·
ceptance Cor p .• announced Mon-
day alhat it was lowering the in·
terest rate on its new car loans
to 13.8 percent. The rollback.
from a range of 16 per cent to 18
percent, s hould save the
aver age customer $550 over the
life of a car loan, GM said. The
cut will be effective from today
through Aug. 31.
GM was the last of the U.S.
automakers to report Its second-
quarter earnings. Last week,
Ford Motor Co. reported a $60
million profit and Chrysler Corp.
a nnounced an $11 .6 million gain
for the quarter .
If one isn't enough, come see
us. We have diamonds by the
handful set in bea(.!tiful 14 karat
yellow gold rings. A •t .'i7CI"
8. •1 .2.q> c. '67fPJ
-S LA. VIC K'S
FIN je-Wn Slntt 1917
Irvine Jeep
crash fatal
to youth, 18
A Corona del Mar teen-ager
was fatally injured Monday af.
ternoon in Irvine when the Jeep
in which he was riding rolled
over in a field near MacArthur
Boulevard and Ford Road.
Glenn Richard Van Dyke, 18,
of 310 Iris Avenue, was thrown
into the path of the vehicle when
it rolled.
Louis Francis Glatcb Ill. 18, of
No. 5 Point Loma, Corona del
Mar. the driver or the vehicle,
was arrested on suspicion of
felony drunk driving after being
treated and released from Hoag
Me morial Hospital, Newport
Beach.
The other two occupants of the
J eep -Richard Paul Van Dyke,
15, the brother or the fatally in·
jured youth, and Chad Martin
Sanborn, 17, of 334 Paseo de
Cris tobal. San Clemente -
weren't injured.
Irvine police Sgt. Robert
Kredel said that the three youths
who escaped serious injury were
wearing seat belts. Glenn R.
Van Dyke. wasn't wearing a
seat belt, he said.
After the Jeep rolled over at
a bout 3:40 p.m., the three youths
ran to MacArthur Boulevard in
an attempt to get help for Glenn
Van Dyke. They eventually ob-
tained assista nce from the
driver of a delivery truck.
Officers from the Newport
Beach and Irvine police depart-
ments converged on the accident
scene, which was pinpointed by
the Newport Beach police
helicopter.
Glenn Van Dyke was pro-
nounced dead at the scene.
Faahion IWncl, Ntw.c:' C~. Ntwr:: 9IMtht 714/ .... ·1*> ~~~ '-:1:... I ~ VWjo Nonh~ I Tht°'J
Allo c ..... t Lot An ..... I S.... 0.., I I.It Vtp1
u.-o1·~·----.-.. ....... ~ ...... """· ........ ~ MtW#r Fiw ~ C•IM '
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Betty Ann Luca of Cheahire, Conn., is shown during the lZth annual MutUal Unidentified Flying
Ob;ect SympoBium held at the Mcusachuaetts In.stitute of Technology in Cambridge, MCJ8s .. with
representation.s of two extraterrestrial creatures she claimed she encountered. Luca reports she
was abducted aboard a U ro in 1967.
New York mayor
chokes on food
New York City Mayor
Edward I. Koch has said he
.. almost choked to death"
when a piece or food became
lodged in his throat at a
Chinese restaurant.
He was saved when a
fellow diner, David MargoU1,
president of Colt Industries,
performed the ''Heimlich
maneuver," Koch said Mon-
day.
'.'It does slacken your ap-
petite," Koch told reporters
in his City Hall office.
The mayor said he was so
moved by Sunday's ex·
perience that he will suggest
to Schools_ Chancellor Frank
Macchlarola that students in
city schools be taught the
life-saving technique.
Koch said he was eating
sauteed watercress when "I
suddenly realized I was chok·
Ing. I coughed and I ~ouldn't
breathe."
Koch turned to Margolis,
"tapped him on the shoulder
and mouthed the words, 'I
am cbolcing.' " the mayor
said. Margolis then gl'abbed
Koch around the lower chest
and squeezed. The mayor
said b e does not know
whether be ejected the piece
of food or swallowed it, but
suddenly he round he could
breathe again.
The Rev. Bllly Graham
will be a featured speaker at
the four -day American
Festival of Evangelism in
Kansas City, Mo.
Also expected at the con-
ference is Charles W. Colson,
a one-time aide to former
President Nixon. Colson
served seven months in
prison for obstructing justice
after the Watergate scandal.
The festival, which is ex-
pected to draw about 8,000
people, opened Monday. It is
sponsored by 150 denomina·
tlonal and interdenomina-
tional churches nationwide.
Graham plans lo address
the conference Thursday
night and hold a news con-
rerence Wednesday morning.
During hls official visit to
the United States next week,
Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat will stop in Plains,
Ga., for a private dinner with
former President Carter, the
Egyptian Embassy has said.
Sadat is to arrive in
Washington Aug. 4. He will
co nfer with Presiden t
Reagan, Secretary of State
Alexander M. Haig Jr. and
other administration officials
and members of Congress
during the next two days.
He will go to New York
City on Aug. 7 where he will
meet with former Secretary
of Stale Cyrus Vance and
with Jewish leaders.
Oklahoma City flooded
Water collaps~s caf e roof; no i n juries reported
Coaatal forecast
Low clouds late IOftlQl\t '"'°""' mltl-momlno ~,. 01,.,..i.
1111,ny tllr-11 w.-dat' Llttle
l""P4tratwe a.ang.,
c-tat -60, 1n1-.. eo.si.1
111111 7S. lnl-IS. Walltr 71. EIMw,,.re, 119'11 varlel>le winds
lle<emtno -to saulllwest 10 to u kM41 ~, .,.__ wllfl •
twt wind wa-. SOU.,._.1 , .. , ..
two ta,,,,_ twt. Low cloudlneu wlUI
partial clNrlno w--., •lier· -·
U.S. summ ary
HNvy--Moflldr_...._,_
parh of Hew Mealco, Texas,
Okle"°"'9, ~. Mla»url, 1111no11
and Inell-_,, lOday, wlllle rain
darnpenedtNujiperMlululottl Rlftr
vallrt, tlle<entral Afpelaclllan ,,,..,,._
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tlle9day, July 28, 1981 H/F
Projects 'threatened'
County fears withholding of federal highway funds
By GLENN SCOTT °' .. ..., ..........
Although predlction1 are
sketoby, Orange County officials
say $43.5 million in major
highway projects could be
pc>itpooed la the next five years
unless federal clean air aanc-
Uons are Ulled.
The federal Environmental
Protection Agency lmpoaed
restrictiona lut December in
which federal hilhway funda are
withheld to areas that don•t
comply with the Clean Air Act of
1977 .
One of its requirements la an
annual vehicle inspection pro-
gram• in areas such as Oraqe
County where air pollution sur-
passes acceptable feder al stan-
dards.
Freeway lo MacArthur, $11.6
million.
Concerned with the loss of
badly needed road construction,
the Orange County Transport.a·
tioD Commission sent a letter
late laat week informing county
legislators in Sacramento of the
situation. The letter was signed
by new Chairman Thomas
Riley.
Nancy Coss·Fitzwater, gov-
ernmental affairs coordinator
for the commission, said Mon·
day the cost predictions are ten·
tatlve because EPA offlclala
might approve some projed.s iJ
they could be interpreted to re-
lieve congestion. hence vehicle
emissions.
She also noted that the delays
are difficult to predict consider·
ing that funds for financln1 the
projects sWJ are uncommitted.
In total, the commission Iden·
Ufied e.ight state projecta and
eight other federally funded pro-
posals that currently are subject
to EPA review.
Licensing hearing
for San On of re due
meeting was adjourned.
However, a bill to impose a
statewide inspection system car-
ried by Robert Presley, D·
Riverside, was defeated this
summer on the floor ot the state
Senate. Proponents say it is un·
likely that the legislation could
be revived this year.
A special evening hearing con·
ducted by the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission's
Atomic Safety and Licensing
Board will be held Wednesday at
7: 30 p.m . at San Clemente High
School.
Those individuals will be •
given priority Wednesday .
Others will be heard if time
permits.
Without the inspection pro·
gram -or without
Congressional action to modify
the Clean Air Act -Orange
County is subject to a project-
by· project review of highway
improvements.
The review includes not only
federally funded projects, but
any that would add capacity to
streets and highways.
Among those likely to be . de·
layed because of the sanctions,
according to the commission,
would be two important coastal
projects: widening of the Pacific
Coast Highway in Newport
Beach from Bayside Drive to
MacArthur Boulevard, $6.4
;nillion; and extending and
landscaping the Corona del Mar
Youths place
• • • m patr1ot1c
• • compet1t1on
Orange Coast youngsters
placed among the top 30 contes·
tan ts in the annual patriotic slogan
contest of the Americanism
Educational League in Buena
Park.
Robert Schuppe of El Toro High
School won the contest with the
sfogan, "Defense is Expensive
.. But Freedom is Priceless."
Lori Nadeau finished second
wif,h "Freedom ... America's
Greatest Natural Resource" and
''Freedom -Bought and Paid
For." Jesaica Kaas finished 17th
with "Americans are Free-Ex-
ampies: You and Me." They both
attendHunt.ington Beach High.
Finishing third in the contest
was Robert S. Samuell an with the
slogan, "Promote Free En·
terprlse -Get a Job." Frank
Cornella finished 14th with the
s logan, "Free Enterprise +
Defense = Freedom." They both
attend Edison High School in
Huntington Beach.
Jeff ~cKnight of Fountain
valley High School finished 28th
with the slogan, "Reduce Govern-
ment lo Governing."
Public statements concerning
the proposed licensing of San
Onofre Nuclear Generating Sta·
lion Units 2 and 3 will be re-
ceived at the hearing.
The session was scheduled by
the licensing board because
many people who attended a Ju-
ly 11 hearing in San Clemente
were unable to speak before the
San Clemente High School is
located at 700 Ave. Pico in
San Clemente. The hearing will
be held in the school auditorium.
Evidentiary hearings dealing
with seismic issues around San
Onofre resumed Monday in San
Diego. Those hearings are ex-
pected to continue for about two
more weeks at the Stardust
Hotel and Country Club. 950
Hotel Circle.
New heart beating
strongly in patient
HOUSTON (AP) -A retired
bus driver who has lived on
three different hearts -includ·
ing a man·made one -in five
days may not have suffered
brain damage durin g the
transplants, hospital officials
have said.
However, doctors said 36-year-
old W. A. Meuffels, of The
Netherlands, who is responding
to some commands, was still in
critical condition Monday, one
day after the artificial heart was
replaced by a heart from a
human donor.
His new heart was beating
strongly, officials said.
"It is a very crucial time for
c him and will be for al least 48
more hours," said Hazel Haby of
the Texas Heart Institute .
After the artificial heart was
implanted Thursday, doctors
worried about the possibility of
brain damage, since the heart
failure whic h forced the
transplant of the plastic organ
had interrupted the normal
blood now to his brain.
"There have been intermittent
periods of semi-alertness and
doctors are r ather hopeful about
this now," she said. "The doctor
will say, 'squeeze my hand,
move your left root.· and he has
followed instructions."
A problem with blood·clotting
also improved. Ms . Haby said.
··Doctors are delighted with
the coagulation factor change
and the fact that he has been
responsive ~ verbal stimuli,"
she said.
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642•6086
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•
H/F Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, July 28. 1981
Reagan • wms support Britain's
• • r1ot1ng Public opinion running 4-1 f or president after TV speech
WASWNGTON (AP> -Presi·
dent Reagan's nationally broad-
cast tax-cut appeal brought calls
and teleerams fioodin& lnto con·
greaaional omces today. but
Democratic leaders stood by
their prediction of narrowly
beating him in Wednesday's
House showdown.
At the White House, however,
presidential chief of staff James
Baker said reaction to the
speech made him "cautiously
optimistic" that Reagan would
win the tax cut fight.
And the president himself said
one congressman told him calls
to his office were running 4·1 in
support of the president's plan.
Democratic leaders, accusing
the president of waging a
"political trench fight," con-
ceded Reagan's talk may sway
some crucial votes ror his tax
bill.
Members of Congress report·
ed phones ringing off the hook
today from constituents who saw
Reagan's speech, with moat of
the sentiment running in favor
of the president's plan.
Baker predicted tbe Opod of
caUs "will give us a sense or
momentum ....
"I think the response to the
president's speech has been sub-
stantial so we're cautiously op-
timistic."
But Reagan said Wednesday's
vote would still be "a tough and
close ooe. ''
Telegram traffic into
Washington was "about four
times the normal volume," said
Senate unit calls
Casey to testify
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Senate Intelligence Committee
will call embattled CIA Director
William J . Casey to testify Wed·
nesday in a closed session about
his past business practices an~
management or the agency.
Sen. Barry Goldwater, R·
Ariz., the committee chairman,
said the panel will submit ques·
lions to Casey later today in ad-
vance of his Wednesday mom·
ing appearance.
Sen. Daniel P. Moynihan of
New York, the panel's ranking
Democrat, said of the commit·
tee's probe: "this will be a fair
and complete inquiry conducted
in such a way that the in·
telligence community will not be
disrupted."
The two senators spoke after a
three-hour closed meeting dur-
. ing which the senators were told
what the committee staff had·
learned so far in its Casey in·
quiry.
Goldwater said he hoped the
Investigation could be completed
in 10 days to two weeks, but
added that, if necessary, the
committee would resume the
probe after Congress recesses in
August.
Sources close to the investiga-
tion said Monday the review of
Casey's fitness is expected to
stretch into September and that
the panel might seek his res-
ignation even if no criminal
wrongdoing is found .
As Casey continued visiting
senators Monday to rally sup-
port and the White House issued
a fresh vote or confidence from
President Reagan. the In·
telligence Committee put
veteran Watergate investigator
Fred Thompson in charge of the
probe.
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"Sold it on
t he first call!"
~~~I @642-5678
a spokeswoman for Western
Union.
''The volume 11 extremely
heavy. It started tut oigbL. It's
a nationwide thtn1," said the
company's Margaret Jasko.
The omce of Rep. Beferly
Byron, D-Md., one of the un·
decided members the ad-
mlni11tratlon has been wooing,
reported 125 pbone caUs by 8
.a .m. PDT -most supporting
the president.
"We've got five or six peQple
answering phones here. w•·re
inundated with calls," said Jack
-Holliday, a Byron aide. .
Reagan, saying "this is Qot the
time for poll tlc a 1 fun and
games," sought ~onday night to
mobilize an army or Americans
to lobby for his tax plan with
·"letters, telegrams and personal
visits."
"We've gotten more caJls than
we 've gotten in our office s~ce
Watergate," said Dick Leggitt,
an aide to Rep. Stan Parris, R·
Va ., a firm Reagan supporter
who represents a Washington
suburb.
Leggitt said that 70 calls came
In the first hour the office was
open today' 67 or them backing
the president.
·'The phones have been wild
today," said a receptionist in the
office of House Majority Leader
Jim Wright, D-Texas.
.............
A battered police officer takes a break during rioting in Toxteth
area of Liverpool today.
Nancy unvei/,s dress for event
LONDON (AP) -Not wanting
to "compete with the bride,"
first lady Nancy Reagan has re-
vealed the outfit she will wear to
the wedding of Prince Charles
and Lady Diana Spencer,
·'She wiU be wearing a three-
piece ensemble made of peach
silk, crepe and faille." said Mrs.
Reagan's press secretary ,
Sheila Tate. "'lt's a pleated.
blouson blouse over a tu ck·
pleated skirt and long.matching
silk shirt·coat ··
She said Mrs. Reagan "will
top off her outfit with a pale
natural straw hat trimmed in
peach chiffon at the brim."
Mrs. Tale refused to disclose
the price of the dress but said it
was designed by James Galanos
of Beverly Hills, who is '"one of
her fa vorites and a personal
friend.··
The press aide made ('!ear
that a great deal of thought had
been given to the timing.
curbed ~
LIVERPOOL, EntJand (AP)
Police say everythln1 "la well
under control" In Liverpool'•
Toxteth district alter a second
outburst of rioting hours after
Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher unveiled a billion-
dollar plan to employ Britain's
youth and curb urban violence.
Police said the violence Mon·
day nJght was minor but 18 of·
ricers were injured in the large-
ly black district to Liverpool, 180
miles northeast of London and
the royal wedding festivities. No
arrests were reported.
Four people were injured Sun-
day night when 70 youths at·
tacked police in the troubled dis·
trict, lobbing gasoline bombs,
bricks and stones and tore.bing
some cars. authorities said.
The r eturn or street violence
to England aft.er 10 nights of
calm was blamed on "continual
police harassment" by the
Liverpool Defense Committee, a
group of black com munlty
leaders. Authorities denied the
charge.
Oxford said the violence was
slight compared with rioting by
young blacks and whites that
devastated parts of Toxteth dur-
!ng two weeks of street fighting
in English cities earlier this
month.
The program Mrs. Thatcher
announced in the House or Com·
mons Monday will provide $28 a
week to firms for every under-18
employee earning $74 a week or
less and establish 20 centers in
big ('ities to train unemployed
young people for computer and
electroni c work.
It also reaffirms the govern-
ment's pledge lo find jobs by
Christmas for all the 60,000 teen·
age rs expected to leave school
this year.
The su.n's rising , and as it rises so does the
demand for electricity. As the day grows hotter,
air conditioqers and other appliances click on in
homes, stores and factories. The electric load soars ...
far beyond normal demand. You can help lighten charge it ~-by phone
From South Laguna & North County
call 540· 1220 toll-free. this load -and delay building expensive new generating facilities -by
clicking off appliances during afternoons, when demand peaks.
Famous Bedroom Ensembles
at 2 0°/o Savings
Headboards -Bedlpreeda
Oraperiea -Boudoir Chalra
Complete Interior Oecoratlng Sefvlcet
nettle CREEi< IHOPI
Please.
Give your appliances
the afternoon off~·click'.'
Southern California Edison I
J
" [
l
I!
I
11 I
Ii
I
I I
I I
I
I
I
Gav in pushes
TV cameraman
SAN DIEGO <AP) -U.S. Ambassador John
Gavin, continuing his stormy feud with the news
media, bas pushed a televialon cameraman intp a
wall ln a hotel lobby. The former film star later
apologbed, explaining that be was ill from food
poisoning and ''was in a hW'ry to get to the
bathroom."
In San Diego Monday to meet with angry
. American tuna fishermen, Gavin, 50, shoved Dave
Smith ol Channel 39 into a planter after entering
the Kooa Kai Hotel at Shelter Island.
Buono b ack in court
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Hillside Strangler de·
feodant Angelo Buono r.eturna to C<>Urt today tor a
hearing which could decide the future of bis in·
creasingly bizarre pros·
ecution-a case saved BRIEFS from dis missal by a
judge's surprise de·
cision.
Superior Court Judge
Ronald George, rejecting prosecutors' recommen·
dation that the case be dropped for lack ol credible
evidence, insists Buono's guilt or lnnocence should
be determined by a jury.
Prosecutors had told the judge their case was
destroyed by the repeated changes in testimony of
the s tate's star witness , confessed Hillsidr
Strangler Kenneth Bianchi.
Kille r sp a red death
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -David Murtisbaw,
convicted or killing three students in the Mojave
Desert, has been spared the death penalty by a
California Supreme Court ruling.
The 6-1 decision on Monday said that a predic-
tion by a psychology expert that Murtishaw would
probably be violent ii imprisoned should not have
been admitted as testimony.
The ruling, written by Justice Mathew
Tobriner , upheld the murder convictions involving
the 1978" slayings of three University of Southern
California students who were part of a mm class
on assignment.
SU verdict uphel,d
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Joseph Remiro, a
former member of the Symbionese Liberation
Army, has been thwarted in bis attempt to over·
turn hls murder conviction in the 1973 shooting of
an Oakland schools superintendent.
U.S. District Court Judge William T. Sweigert
on Monday refused to issue a writ of habeas corpus
setting aside the state court jury verdict and or-
dering he be granted a new trial. He said the
evidence supports the convictions.
Remiro's attorney, Kent Russell, said he will
appeal.
lruwcent plea entered
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Garfield Bank of-
ficers, including the president and chairman of the
board, have entered pleas of innocent to charges
that they were Involved in a money laundering
scheme operated by attorney Nathan Markowitz.
John Gabriel,. who beads the bank and is ma-
jor stockholder, is scheduled to appear before U.S.
District Judge David V. Kenyon on Sept. 29,
following the innocent plea entered on· his behalf
Monday in federal court.
Match in g funlb a11ked
SACRAMENTO (AP> -The Reagan ad·
ministration won't approve water project funds
without substantial state and local contributions,
the Sacramento Union said today.
The newspaper quoted William Gianelli, chief
of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, as saying
matching funds will be required for such projects
as deepening the Port of Sacramento channel, re-
building Sacramento·San Joaquin Delta levees,
and possibly even finishing the proposed Auburn
Dam .
••••••••••••••••••• e PUT $1000 TO WORK A ND EARN e e $2000 IN 6 MONTHS e e We are establishinC a pool ol small money leo-• e ders to assist us in the final stage of completion of e
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• So get on the bandwagon with a young and am· •
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• @' c;yiew§ On
qjental HealtJi
l y GERALD WINKLER, D.D.I .
Ever y peraon
1wallows some 2,000
tlmea a day. Durtn1
tbat awallow, the
too1ue can exert one to
six pounds ol pressure.
Durln1 the correct
awaUow, the tJp ol the
ton1ue preaaes wllh lhe force sll1bt1y behind
lbe top teeth. The main
pressure ol the ton1ue Ia a1alnst the 1tron1
palate. Thi.I I• 1ooc1.
Durtn1 an lncorr~t
swallow. the tonrue force 11 exerted fully
qalnlt the troot t.ettb. Tbt ttetb au not
fCl.Ulpped to wtthitud
tbh {ype ol pr"sure
ad may be pueMd out
ot au,......t. AllO, tt ... ,..,... ........
fNm .... Jll'OPlrfJ.
I.II order {O correct
tllll a • It u tt to n •
Myofunctiooal Therapy
< aomeUmes called
ton1ue·tbrult therapy>
is used for both children
and adulta. This
therapy is designed to
retrain the musclea of
the ton1ue, llpa and
cbeekl to property
petform as to strensth
and placement: to
teach correct 1wallowln1 pattern•:
and to tnallll a
permanent. correct
1wallowto1 pattun. Tontoe thrut can be overcome, but H
requires full
cooperation by tbe
petlent.
GenN ....... o.o . .-.. ..... _ ... .
t•IAwec .... .._... ...
~ ..... ......,~ ..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Tuesday, July 28, 1981 H /F
l ...........
R COMPANY BLAZE -Los Angeles County firemen ~pray
es or burning paper at the Federal PaJ>t'.r Board Co .• Inc., I~ t~e
of Commerce Monday evening. The fire. of unknown origin,
ed an estimated $250,000 loss.
Chopper shot
Bullet hole found in sprayer
LOS GATOS (AP) -A bullet hole
round in a helicopter after it returned
from spraying pesticide over the
Mediterranean fruit fly.infested San·
ta Clara Valley bas prompted of·
ficials to tighten security around the
project.
The bullet hole was discovered
Sunday. more than 24 hours after the
Bell UHl owne d by E vergreen
Helicopters, Inc., returned to its
base. Additional California Highway
Patrol helicopters now are escorting
the aerial pesticide sprayers on all
runs, a nd other author ities are
guarding ground bases where the
choppers are ser viced and loaded.
"We t.ake this situation seriously.
out of concern for both the pilots and
the people on the l'round." J erry
Scribner, Medfly project director ,
said Monday. "But people should
realize that one bullet is not going to
bring down a helicopter.
The shooting is under investiga · lion. ·
"The lives or these men are on the
line out there," Evergreen opera·
lions chief Darrel Ward said. "But
there is a job to do, and they have
agreed to keep doing it."
Meanwhile, officials scheduled
daytime flights for the helicopters tO·
day to avoid problems with pre·dawn
fog .
The campalen to. wipe out lbe pro-
lific Medlly wu concentrated on Ule
ground Monday, as state workers
began making door·to-door rounds in
the Santa Clara Valley.
The crews warned resident.a of the
mostly affluent communities that
they had to strip grult oft trees by
Wednesday or face a possible $500
Cine or six months behind bars.
Meanwhile, a Mexican agricultural
offi cial said hls nation bas banned
Produce from three California coun-
ties as a "preventative measure"
agamst the medrty. But, he stressed,
the ban was not new and said an an·
nouncement made early Monday to
that ecrect was wrong.
And Texas, one or the major com·
pelitors to California's $14 billion
agricultural industry. tried again to
prevent suspect produce from cross-
ing its borders.
On Monday. Texas Gov. Bill Clem-
ents used his emergency powers to
order roadblocks in El Paso and
Amarillo within 72 hours.
A stringent embargo on California
produce by Texas was lifted by a
federal judge in Dallas a week ago.
Texas o rricia ls descr ibed the
roadblocks as inspection stations.
a nd said Clement's order did not in·
dicate an embargo.
att to appeal He r e's Good New1I NO MORE FLEASll On Your Pet or In Your Homel
vt•cum "° ..... ,.fl., ONI SINeLI PU•CMASI
lease block •'14.sv •• ,.,, co•11 .. ,.. y .. r peat proltl .. • • •
-NOYIN ........ c ..... lc•lal l"I CTIYI
AGAINST: ANGELES <AP> -Secretary of th! lo·
teri ames Watt vowed to take his case ~ the
U .S reme Court after a federal judge bl+cked
his artment from selling 29 oil leases qr the
Cah a coast.
• n.&>.I • M),\Ol(J • L<>n • lllCI • ruu ·~ ·-Ot • CA""""1A AJOTI • KO. .., Ail\
• unit works on sole s1len1. uhroson1c wove s
• sole to humons & pets
• uses only 4 wotts power
• no specool onstollotoon
• pests elomonoted on 2 to 6 weeks
· tt. is clear now that the question will Je de·
cided the Supreme Court and ... the U.$. gov·
• (al(aft) ·-·••"-~
Ots~on
(714) 661 -9191 (714) 966-2999 Pest Roi Sales
will appeal," Watt said in Was!,!ngt_on
Monday decision here by U.S. if Strict
Judge ariana Pfaelzer.
Th judge issued an injunction to priet the
sale of e leas~s. on which bids have alre~ been
receiv and 10 her 35-minute oral ruli , she
criticiz ' Watt. She said he "clearly viol the
spirit "the Outer Continental Shell La Act"
becau he gave only "minimal" consid ations
to obj tions raised by Governor Ed nd G.
Brown r. and the State of California. ut the
judge id Watt's action dJd satisfy the CLA's
legal uirements, while the plaintiffs d con·
tended did not.
judge stayed the injunction for days,
sides time to appeal. The stay lso lets
·or Department bold the $220.6 illlon it
in May from 47 bids on 19 of the trac~
Luis Obispo County coast. No ds were
recei on the other 10 tracts.
T issue now is whether "the oation'1 interest
or the tale's interest control the issuanreof leases
on th ederal continental shell," Watt sa .
J
l
c
out a
Q~~~~
col• 'lt cuff o...w-s_, ,~ ~. Coate Mea• 64J.a7U
Fora..-'MdAd
ACTION
Call
A DALY N.OT
U.YISOI '414'71
al
--r.Style
·Dinner.
AugUst15.
into a tender, juicy steak,
ribs. Every Bar-B-Q style
baked beans, plus
sw eet, buttery com o he cob. Tonight, have a
Real Rancher Style B B·Q.
A Summer Tradition
The Palm Springs area's newest luxury resort at only $32.00 per day.•
Much lower than our normal summer rates.
Spend a day in the sun. Relax, unwind and enjoy the resort's sparkling
poofs, 25 championship tennis courts, 27 holes of golf, bicycles, game
room, gift shop and much more.
Uncompflcated? You bet! Rancho Las
Palmas Resort is the place for
Your Day In the Sun.
Advance Reservations Required
Space Available Basis
Call 714/568·2727 or
Toll Free 800/228·9290
•P1u1 tax and gratultloe, not applicable to groups.
·~~~ho LASPALMAS
RESORT"'
• 11000 &ol> -er ... Re"""".,.._ CA e2210
\ ..
l
,
". * Or1nge Coat DAILY PILOTt:rueaday, July 28, 1911
Cheery brulget news
may be short-lived
When hearings on Orange
County government's fiscal
budget opened two weeks ago. of·
ticlals warned of doom and
gloom for the ensuing financial
year.
The $7a0 million budget -on
paper at least -showect a deficit
approaching $14 million.
When the budget hearings
drew to a close last week, the
once-dark faces were bright with
smiles. The deficit ha d been
erased; in fact, the budget
showed a slight surplus.
One might be left with the
impression the county Board of
Supervisors ran roughshod over
budgets submitted by county eov-
ernment's various agencies and
departments. Hardly . With the
exception of the vast Human
Services Agency, major county
budget units ended up with sub-
stantially bigger budgets than
they had during fiscal 1980.
How did it happen? Si9'l>IY •.
the board dipped heavily into
present and past entitlements of
federal revenue sharing funds to
bring the budget into baJance.
The revenue sharing dollars,
combined with budget cuts, most
of them relatively minor, added
up s ufficiently to erase the
deficit.
Well and good. Unfortunate-
l y , county government, like
many other local jurisdictions,
has come to rely on revenue
sharing more than is probably
prudent . The word from
Washington D.C., is that revenue
sharing likely end in two years.
As Super v i sor Bruce
Nestande pointed out during the
budget hearings, the board, at
some future date, is going to
have to face the fact that revenue
sharing is a temporary solution,
at best. to budget crises.
The gloom may have lifted
for this year. Rest assured it one
day will be back.
Boards seek trainees
Since registration for Selec-
tive Service was resumed, of-
ficials have been trying to put
togethe r local draft boards
qualified to rule on requests for
deferments, should a military
draft be r esumed.
They'r e not having much
luc k in Southern California ,
though there have been more ap•
plicants for board service than
needed in most of the rest of the
country.
Changes in the draft law
made in the early 1970s eliminat-
ed deferments for students and
those based on agricultural and
other occupational obligations. So
the principal duties of new board
members would be to establish
criteria for deferments of con-
scientious objectors a nd hard4
ship cases.
Selective Service officials are
anxious to receive applications
from women , minorities and
young people and would like to
have at least one woman on each
Jive-member local board.
They need to establish 187
boards in California, but applica-
tions are running behind need in
the Southland, especially in Los
Angeles and Orange Counties.
Applicants, who must be U.S.
citizens between 18 and 60, will
be interviewed by military re-
servists, after which names will
be submitted to Gov. Brown and
then to President Reagan, who
makes the final choices for each
board.
Orange County residents who
wouJd be willing to be trained as
board members may call either
( 213) 653-6208 in Los Angeles
County or (714 ) 233-3500 in San
Diego County.
While we must hope a new
military call-up will not be
necessary, if the draft should be
reinstated it is of utmost im-
portance to have qualified local
residents ready to handle prob-
lems that may face the young
draftees. This is a way to be of
service to the nation and its
youth
Free ri·des for seniors
Senior citizens along the
Orange Coast should be pleased
that free public bus fares have
been reinstated by the Orange
County Transit District.
Bus rides are free again to
all riders aged 65 or more who
board a· bus any time except ruah
hours, which are, according to
the district, from 6 a .m. to 9 a .m .
and 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. At those
times, the fare is 35 cents.
The lowered fares (they had
been 50 cents during rush hours
and 10 cents during off-peak
travel times) were created after
the county Board of Supervisors
voted this week to spend $45.5,000
in f ederaJ revenue sharing funds
to subsidize seniors' bus travel.
The decision to raise the
•
county s ubsidy was made
because studies showed that
significantly fewer seniors were
riding buses during off -peak
hours after fares were increased
in June. Although a dime doesn't
seem much, officials speculated
that many seniors were confused
about the new fare rates.
Nothing is easier to r e-
member than a free ride, though,
so officials are hoping that they'll
see older riders boarding buses
once again in larger numbers.
Now it's up to the seniors who
are getting the added govern-
ment subsidy to start using the
buses more often to substantiate
the arrangement made on their
behalf. We trust they will.
Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex-
pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Invit-
ed . Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone 1714)
642-4321.
L.M. Boyd/ Hitler stamps
Am asked if Germany ever put out
any postage stamps with Adolf Hitler's
likeness imprinted on them. Certainly.
As might be expected. What's curious
about it, though, is Hitler demanded
and received a royalty payment on all
such postage stamps. It was personal
income for him.
Our Language man says that word
"shebang" -used here from time lo
lime -wu a common name in the Old
West for a roadhouse. The Irish immi-
grants mu.st have started that one.
Their word for an Illegal drinking
establiahment was "she been."
Certain basic questions debated
vtolentJy many generations ago were
never raifed ln the public 1cboolJ that I
remember. For loalance, nobody ever
11ked out loud: h it concel•able that
Abraham Lincoln was a fool who
should not have set out to dictate
money snoraUty to the South. Or: 11 lt
poaalble that the Federal Govenunent
ORANGE COAST
lllilJPlat
had no right lo force Utah lo give up
polygamy for statehood? Come on, you
know this is no vote for slavery or
p0lyaamy. It's Just a note of curiosity
that the legitimate quntiona ol one
century become unacceptable even u
queslionalntime.
First Lady Nancy Reagan ~ently
said her husband Ronald Reapn wu
just getting out of the 1bower when be
first learned he'd been elected J>reaJ.
dent. lnterestina. but not VftY. Job.n
Tyler first learned of h11 electloa while
on bis. hands and knees playlnt
marbles.
No diet.er should foraet that bow
much food you actually nMd dlpenda,
. too. ooyourclotbin&. A lom~Datln
bl the tlOl>lct requirel food dally. An
ArctleudvebafulllddeUidtwcuco
without food f« almott a ...... You
miabt. keep W. ln mind lf JOU Wllll lo
loH ni1bt by bumlna caloriel: Take ott af ewclothel.
ThonYI P. Haley
'PubUIMr
~-.. ·-_-... _"_-_· ________ _
Carteir crew w.__.... __ t first class
I WASHINGTON -ThrollJboul bis ill-
starred presidency, Jimm~ Carter as-
siduously cultivated a~ image of
Puritanic parsimony -Eying bis
own luggage, selling the residential
yacht , installing bis cousin uah Carter
to nurse nickels and dim on White
House expenses. A •
But once the Carter crdtd was re-
tired by the voten Jut No~mber, tbe
barefoot boys from Geo ·a began
traveling first-class at the axpayers'
expense. The General Accowting Office
bas totted up the post-electiqi bill, and
it turns out that the Carter ilnJstra-Uon went out, not only with whimper
but with a roar -the roar o et planes
taking off on junkets that se little if
any useful purpose to the blic that
paid for them.
ACCORDING TO internal d,.o files,
more than 300 Carter a ointees
traveled about the world bet n Elec·
lion Day and Inauguration y, for a
gTand tot.al of 798 trips. The bill for
these junkets came to $454,000.
To be sure, many of these ps were
justifiable. But many were not e dis-
turbing feature of the lame-du travel
itch that afflicted Carter's cre11was the
number of outgoing officials trho ap-
parenUy felt it necessary lo gdo style
before they were snatched lftlmely
from the public trough. Here ae some
of the more glaring examples:
-Then-Energy Secretary tharles
Duncan's trip lo Pans r an intema·
Uonal ener(D' conferenc ast December
has already been well ublicized. He
chose to take the p mium-priced
s upersonic Concorde. ot publicized
I G. -JAC_l_Al-11-Rl-I~..,__~·~
was the fact that h~ deputy, Lynn
Coleman, who also fliw the luxurious
Concorde to the conf~nce, had flown
to Paris a couple of ~eks earlier and
s pent about 10 days thfe.
Leslie Goldman, thn an official of
DOE's international drision, also made
the Paris scene twicewithin a month.
He insisted that the prf'minary trips he and Coleman made re essential to
lay the groundwork r the December
meeting. Duncan's etinue on the
December trip include! a secretary and
a public affairs advisr. They did not
take the Concorde, hovever.
-THEN-LABOR SERETARY Ray
Marshall betrayed a fefulness for first-
class travel -at lest during his
peripatetic last three nonths in office.
The GAO mes show tht he made first-
cl ass official trips lo New York,
Chicago, San Antonio, San Francisco
and Atlanta, as well as a tour to China
and Japan by way of Paris.
Aides who accompanied Marshal on
the Asian junket also went first-class.
They included Nike Edes, his deputy
under secr etary for legis lation,
although the chances of the Carter ad·
ministration getting any legislation
through the new Congress in less than
three weeks before Inauguration Day
were remote.
-Dale Hathaway, former under
secretary for international affairs and
commodity programs at the Agriculture
Department , fle w first.c lass to
Adelaide. Australia, for a meeting of
grain-exporting countries. "I didn't
want to go," Hathaway told my as-
sociate Lucette Lagnado, "but the
Australian government wanted a senior
policy official."
IN FACT, FIRST·CLASS accom-
modations were practically a condition
for Hathaway's making the trip. He
said he had "an agr eement" with
Agriculture Secretar y Bob Bergland:
"Jf I was going, I would go firsl·class."
He pointed out that the 15-and-a-half-
hour flight was "miserable" -though
presumably less so in a rirst·class seat.
-Dr. J esse McCorry, an official of
the Health and Human Services Depart·
ment, spent four days in scenic Mon-
treux, Switzerland, in December. Tbe
purpose of his visit was to take part in a
conference on "use and abuse of social
services and benefits."
Newspap readers creatures of habit
When I'm on vacation I can o for
days without watching televbi t I
hate lo miss my newspaper. I'm nd·
ing this part of my vacation 30 ilea
from the nearest big city and it's ma-
jor trip lo get the paper. I don' ant
just any paper, either. I'm a om·
nivorous newspaper reader. I U my
own bed, my own chair in the g
room, my own place al the dinne ble
and my own newspaper.
Reading a stranee newspaper 'like
being in the hotel room you're -11Y
In when you do it. It may be g but
you're not at home with it. In the tel
room you can't find the bathroom
middle of the night. and i
newspaper you don't know whe
hide the sports pages.
ONE WAY or another, I mana lo
get the paper on vacation. Durln the
eight days we recently spent ln Fr ce,
I didn't see an American newspa al
all -with the exception ot one lJS of
the Paris Herald Tribune. N. a t,
there's going lo be a bole in m tn-
formalioo storage system for the of
my life. J know because I have
others just like It from times past
I've missed the newspaper.
"What do you mean, he's dead,' 'll
say. "When did be die?"
"Must have been a year ago.
summer. Sometime in July."
What can$
In the time it will take you to
this column, the people of the worl
have spent another million doll
the purpose of alaulbt.eriftc eacb
It is a depretaJn1 truth that
human 1peclea 11 the only ere
lilllll 1111
dtdkated to lta own m ... ft1i11!1'11._
tJon. n ii a depreaalnJ t.rutb em
by • NPOrt Crom the Stockholm Uoaal·P.~ Jteaeardl lutltutAt.
Tbe report Clet.ua aa IU·time
POO bWlon spent Jut 1•ar on ..
ol war. Tiiie mQw mercbaala of
la UM 1'0lid bltal the UDltA9d a...aa llDd Prance. Y•, ,..,1 1
•• • naive, 1ood1 two-IMea,
IPftaltM With 11Mt for I ~
Then it all dawns on me. The movie
s tar, the sports figure or the poet
passed away on one or those days I
never got to read the new,paper.
There are going to be ~I sorta of little
stories and events about which l 'U be
i1norant because or Having missed
I~''
-AID-Y-ROD-lf-Y -~
those eight days of history. It's OK to
say you can go to the library and look at
the files of the old papers but you don't
get at doing that any more than you get
at reading those parts of the Sunday
paper you set aside to read later.
ONCE YOU GET familiar with your
own newspaper, you know bow you
want lo read It. The trouble with a
strange newspaper is, you have to read
it the way the editor intended you lo and
that's no way lo read a paper, as we all
know. Fortunately, newspaper editors
are loo worldwise lo have their hearts
broken by readers, but it must hurt
them lo see what people do with their
day's work. Readers ignore stories
they've spent a lot of time and monev
billion buy?
$Soo bUlioo dollars could do lo help peo-
ple llve~r.
How many 1cboola, b01P1tals, and tr·
rtaaUoa projeet.t could be built wttti S500
billion? What could lt me19 lo the Uvea
of the poorT SSOO billion a year works
out to $114 for every person on the
&lobe. That ls more spent Oil murder
weapons than many people Uve on for a
whole year!
Consider what an utra $114 a year
would mean to the p eople of
Aft1'an11tad where the averqe annual
Income per person la $U5: or,
Banatadelb, where It la •: or, Chad, '13 ; or, lndla, $150; or, China, wtth one-lourth of tbe workt'I people and ID
aYft ... per up&ia IDcocne of•.
see.. .. tbe peopl• cl the earth spend
to mUCb • lrlll9, maa1 people ln poor
COUDtriei w11J die of atanatioa and W·
neea llld. Kiii i iiia,, IDU1,..... ln rlch couatriH wlll die In a auclear bol~ I 1"0Dller' wbo wUI SO t.bt ...... -
on, and readers have their own ideas
about which are the most important
stories.
Editors try to assemble a newspaper
in some logical, orderly way for an il-
logical, disorderly public. We ignore the
editor's order. We don't read the stories
they think are important first and then
proceed to the dessert. We go right for
the cake and ice cream first and come
back to the meat and potatoes if we
have time. A lot of times ¥1e don't have
lime. Each reader re-edits the paper his
own way.
I OFJ'EN TAKE A train to work when
I'm working, and there are import.ant-
looking executives going to town to deal
with the world who get on, sit down,
open the paper to the crossword puzzle
or the ball scores and never once look at
page one. The world could have come lo
an end during the night but they aren't
going to know .about it until lbey get to
the office and their secretaries tell
them.
Editors know this, of course, but
there's nothing they can do about lt.
Tbey can't lead the paper wllb the
crossword puzzle because even the man
who is most interested in that wants the
news on the front page whether he ever
reads it or not. Buying the paper gives
him the feeling he's read it.
In some ways I'm careful with
money, but when It comes to buying
newspapers, I'm profligate. Saturday
mornin15 I buy two copies of the same newspaper. It costs me 5o cents instead
of a quarter but may save our mar-
riage. I used to hate lt when I bad to sit
there walling for my wife lo finish one
section of the paper so I could read the
jump of the story I'd started in the other
secUoo. And when I aetUe down with the
paper, it spoils the pleasure of it for me
when someone says, "Can I see • tee·
Uon of the paper?" I want the whole
tbinf or none of it.
Now I have lo make thal damn 11>-
mlle drtve.
111111•
The time it tatH to brh11 1om1
crimlnall lo trial lUl&•tl JUlilce la DOt / OoJj blind but aulferi.nl from par.a,..ii
uw.U. P.K. ......,_c--. ............ ...,.. .... .
~ ................. ,, ........ ... ........ _, ... .....,,... .
..
'DlllyPlllt
TU ESOAY, JULY 28, 1981
COMICS 83
BUSINESS 84
TELEVISION BB HllTlllTDI 1111:1 If IUITlll VllllY
Airport
Panelist
chosen
Ore1ory Hirsch of Newport
Beach has been appointed by
Supervisor Thomas Riley to
replace Walter Koch aa a
member of the Orange County
Airport Commission.
Hirsch, 24, the son of promi·
nenl Newport Beach busi-
nessman Clement Hirsch and an
active Republican Party
member, "was more than happy
to accept the appointment," Ken
Hall, a Riley aide, said today.
Koch, by mutual greement
with Riley, resigned effective
July 31. Koch said he disagreed
with recent decisions by county
supervisors to embark on a $75
to $100 million to improve and
enlarge airport facilities.
Asked for his position on the
controversial issue of airport
enlargement, Hirsch said, "I ha-
ven't really come up with a
stance. It's difficult for any two
people to see eye lo eye on
airport issues."
Hirsch said he believes the
com mission. which is an ad-
visory body to the board of
supervisors, "can play an inte-
gral role" in deciding critical
airport-related issues.
Hirsch graduated from Stan-
ford University in 1978 with a
degree in economics. The Big
Canyon resident is president of
Hirsch Enterprises, an invest-
ment company that manages
real estate and securities. Hirsch
serves as business manager ror
his father's financial empire.
Young Hirsch is a member of
board of directors of United Way
o f Or ange County, Hoag
Hospital 552 Club, Big Brothers
of Orange County, Republican
State Central Committee and
Hoover Gentlemen, a county
Republican businessman's club.
Police seize
two boys in
Valley holdup
Two pint-sized robbers got a
taste of the law Monday after
Fountain Valley police took two
boys, 10 and 12, into custody for
their alleged participation in a
$125 book store robbery.
Detective Den.nis Min.na said
the two youths strolled into
Songs of Songs at 18849
Brookhurst Ave. at 10:30 a.m.
and acted like customers while a
17-year-old accomplice jumped
over the counter and grabbed
the money from the cash reg-
ister.
The two younger boys were
apprehended nearby by police
before being released to their
parents. The 17-year-old fled on
a reportedly stolen bicycle,
whkh was later recovered.
Minna said investigation is
~ontinuing into the possible ar-
l'est of the 17-year-old. Police re-
covered $28.25 from the two
young boys.
FV firemen
warning of
phone fraud
DISNEY SPELLS -Sheri Rude, 18. of Foun-
tain Valley, had a bad break but finds some
good cheer with the visit of Donald Duck.
Goofy and Mickey Mouse. accompanied by
Dis n eyland Ambassador Willi e Van-
Dell, ........... ,....
derZwaag. The Disney character s were vis it·
ing Hoag Memorial Hospita l in Newport
Beach as part of the Magic Kingdom's na
tionwide tour of non-profit hospitals.
R11ling irks HB parents
Students must remq~n at assigned schools to play sports
Eleven parents involved in a
suit against the Huntington
Beach Union High School Dis-
trict reacted angrily today to a
Superior Court judge's decision
requiring students to remain at
their assigned schools in order
to play sports next year.
Judge Robert Fitzgerald's de-
cision Monday upheld the dJs -
trict 's disputed policy that re-
quires freshmen to attend their
Three face
Huntington
rape counts
Three Downey men have been
arraigned on charges they kid-
napped and raped four young
women in three incidents this
year that originated in Hunt-
ington Beach and Long Beach.
Robert Irwin Tiffin, 20, and his
ha If -brother Ronald Gene
Russell, 26. have been charged
with 35 felony counts each in
connection with the three inci-
dents.
A third man, John Andrew
Krom, 19, was charged with 24
felony counts for his alleged
participation in the third abduc-
tion , acc<>rdlng to Deputy
Orange County District Attorney
Richard Toohey.
At their arraignment, which
concluded Wednesday. the three
were ordered to appear at a pre-
liminary hearing Aug.· 24 in
West Orange County Municipal
Court.
The three men were arTest.ed
last week in Downey as a result
of a joint investigation by Hunt·
ington Beach and Long Beach
police.
assigned school in order to play
sports. Those transferring must
wait one year in order to
participate.
Pa t Emma, the mother of a
transferred ninth grader at
Edison and one of those involved
in the suit, said she was unsure
whether the parents would con-
tinue their right.
"We're very disappointed,"
said Mrs. Emma. whose son
Lance will now have to wait one
year before playing basketball.
•·All the chi ldr en were
penalized," she said. "He chose
to go to the school his brother
goes to and now he's going to
lose his chance to play sports."
Much of the sports transfer
controversy has centered around
Ocean Vi e w High School
because of a unique "variable
cr edit" program in existence
since 1976. Parents have com·
plained that the sports transfer
policy should not apply to stu·
dents wanting to leave Ocean
View.
Trustee Zita Wessa, who has
supported the district's policy.
said she was relieved by the
judge's decision
"We've spent more time on
sports decisions than we have on
curriculum," she said. "I hope
n o w we ca n get down to
academic matters."
Trustee Doris Allen. who has
been an outspoken critic of the
district's sports transfer policy,
was unavailable for comment
this morning.
• Sizable souvenir
35-f oot tequila bottle stolen
While more than 400 volleyball
enthusiasts celebrated below,
someone stole the 35-foot plastic
Cuervo Gold tequila bottle from
the roof o( the Tortilla Flats
restaurant in Laguna Beach ear-
ly Monday.
The theft of the mescal monu-
ment came just hours after the
conclus ion of the two day
Laguna Beach Open Pro Beach
Volleyb•ll Tournament.
sponsored in part by the Cuervo
people.
The contest annually features
the huge air-filled tequiJa boWe,
visible from Coast Highway dur-
ing the competition at Main
Beach Park.
Police said owners of the
$8,000 advertising balloon deflata
ed it following the competition,
then re-inflated it on the roof of
the Mex1can restaurant prior to
a late night party at that loca-
tion at the south end of town.
Steve Levinson, who owns the
restaurant, said thieves ap·
parenUy deflated the costly bot·
lie while celebrants were still in
the building.
"Everyone was partying and
having a good lime." Levinson
said. "Who would know someone
was stealing the bottle.,··
Police said one witness -a
restaurant employee -saw two
men on the roof earlier in the
evening.
The pair, one described as
blond with curly hair. the other
with dark wavy hair, took only
the plastic inflatable bottle,
leaving behind a small motor
used to pump air into the huge
balloon.
Oil firms prepare
for Gulf Coast
coal boom . . . B4
a
0
Valley adopts
$10.6 million
city budget
By PIUL SNEIDERMAN OftMo.My ...... ,_
A month late and with few
dollars to spare, the Fountain
Valley City Council has adopted
a balanced 1981-82 city budget of
$10.6 million.
The budget, covering the fis-
cal year that began July 1, was
approved unanimously by the
council Monday night after city
orficials managed to eliminate
Drinking,
drugs led
to slaying?
A d ay of drinking and drug
ta k 1 ng preced e d the night
Stephen Ciaconne . a Garden
Grove drug dealer. was re·
peatedly s hot with arrows in a
Huntington Beach oil field, a
participant in the s laying has
testified.
Laurie Aguirre, 20. who
pleaded guilty to voluntary
manslaughter , s aid h er
estranged husband. Joe Aguirre,
36, was among those at their
Gothard Street residence who
was drinking heavily on July 18,
1980, when the plot to kill
Ciaconne is alleged to have been
made.
Aguirre and James Robert
Marvin, 24, are racing murder
and conspiracy charges in
Orange County Superior Court in
connection with the death of
Ciaconne, who was living tern·
porarily at the Aguirre home
while attempting to hide from
narcotics inves tigators and
former customers.
Ciaconne was among those
drinking whiskey on the day of
bis death, Mrs. Aguirre testified.
He also took several tablets of
the drug Quaalude.
During the day, she told the
jury in Judge Kenneth Lae's
cou rtroo m . Ciaconn e a nd
Marvin became involved in an
argument that ended when
Marvin was pushed into the
bathtub. As for the cause of lhe
argument, Mrs. Aguirre said.
"Steve was telling Bob. 'You're
always doing this to me. taking
the girls away'."
Under cross examination from
Deputy Public Defender Michael
Beecher, he r husband's at·
torney, Mrs. Aguirre recalled
only portions of her previous
tes timony for the prosecution
about events that took place in
the oil fi eld where Ciaconne was
slain.
She quoted Ciaconne. who was
stumbling along a dirt trail. as
saying he knew it was to be "the
last night or my life.··
Mrs. Aguirre said she told
Ciaconne .. not to think that
way."
Under further questioning,
Mrs. Aguirre conceded that she
was attempting to gain a favora-
ble outcome in her own criminal
case by tesWying against her
husband and Marvin.
lhe $763,000 dchc1t they were
faC'tng last month
.. I feel this is the culmination
of months of hard work by a lot
of people." said Councilman Al
Hollinden. "I'm going to vote for
this. then I think we're going lo
ha vc to start work tomorrow on
next year's budget. We 're still
going to be facing some serious
problems next year ...
"We would hke at least one day off," quipped city comp-
troller Howard Stephens .
T o halance the budget. the
counC'tl wa s required to
eliminate ei~ht city Jobs, in·
crease recreation program fees,
re.duce street sweeping and tree
trimming services, eliminate
the city's quarterly newsletter
and merge ·the parks main-
tenanct' and public works de-
partments.
The city wasn't forced to dip
into its reserve funds, which
cannot be replaced once spent.
Comptroller Stephens said the
interest generated by these re·
serves is the city's fourth largest
source of annual income.
Because they were able to
balan<.·e the budget without addi-
tional revenue, the council mem-
bers voted unanimously to
rescind their early decision lo
place an adv1sorv measure on
the November election ballot t.o
ask residents 1f they would ap-
prove creation of an assessment
district to pay street lighting,
tree tri mm1ng a nd median
maintenance col.ls
Fountain Valley residents wiU
see evide nce of the aust ere
budget in the following areas:
Street sweeping will be
done once each month. Current-
ly , it is done twice a month.
Most tree trimming has
been eliminated City crews will
only cut lo\\ hanging branches
that may inte rfere in street
s weeping
Curb and gutter repair
work will b<' limited only to
emergencies Sidewalk main-
tenance. however. will be con-
tinued on a rc~ular basis
Street li ghts will be re-
equipped with energy-saving
high pressurc sodium bulbs. On
r esident ial s tre~t s. the
streetlight:. "'Ill be dimmer than
the present illumination level.
Recreation fees for use or
tennis courts a nd softball
diamonds will rise an average of
50 percent Some class charges
will be increased . Rental fees
for the Mile Square Park recrea-
tion center and the city's com·
m unity centl'r will increase by
50 percent.
The basketball courts at the
Mile Square recreation center.
now open for free usage, will be
subject to a user fe e later this
year
Detailed tr imming and
cleanup work at city parks. now
done weekly. will be done once
every two weeks.
Turf on some street me-
d 1 a ns will be replaced with
s hrubbery and trees, which are
less costly to maintain. Also,
some parkway lawns along
arterial streets will be paved
over with concrete because of
the high cost or maintenance.
Fountain VaJley firefighters
have issued a warning for resi-
dents to beware of fraudulent
telephone requests for dona·
lions.
Fire Captain Larry Drake said
the Fountain Valley Fireman's
Association isn't soliciting
funds.
In the first incident. Feb. 11, a
19-year-old woman was abduct-
ed In Long Beach and taken to a
secluded Brea Hills area where
she was raped, Toohey &aid.
The second incident, Feb. 22,
Involved a 25-year,old woman
kidnapped in HunlinJton Beach
and taken to the same secluded
area.
Huntington civic center razing near
He said several residents bav~
called to complain about the
solicitations. When the retideata
have asked questions in an at-
tempt tQ authentic•~ the fund.
raising campaign, tbe solicitors
have hung up, Drake aaid.
The fire captain said ~
who wishes to verify any f\and.
raising request.a can caU the
Fountain Valley Fireman's 14.
sociatlon. 982·1000.
Valley Co/C
d.Uplay ael
The J"ountaln Valley Chamber
of Commerce will 1pouor ltl
second annual 8a1lne11
SboweaM trom 11 a.m. to I p.m.
l'rlday, July -1 ln tbe Pouataln
Valle7 Communlt1 Ctater bebiDd Ctt.y HaU.
J Tbt tt8't will allow tb•mblr
memben to~' UMll' Jll'Od-IUcte ad dilCUll t.tM:1r Mnic:IM:
More lbn 20 tdalbll• art
In both instances the women
bad stopped along Pacific Coast
Highway because of car trouble
and had been abducted alter tbe
suspects offered to help, accord·
ing to police.
1.n the third incident, the three
auapecta alle1edJ1 picked up two
H ·year-old Sirls hitcbhWni on
the highway in Runtln1ton
Beach oo June 2, and usaulted
them at tbe same Brea Hilla
location.
Fi~ed Venham
rites slated
A private memorial 1ervtee
will be held Wed.naday fot FHd
L. Venbam ol HunUD.aton Beach,
wbo died Friday at •I• 12.
Kt WU :,m,toyed lot JI 7tart u a CalU a l'llb and Game .......
Ht la 1unrtved bJ bll wtfe •••d•, IODI, Joe Vtabam, lllclaael Vealaam aad Ron
Barnltr. d1uabter Praaclae
WllU11n1, u.r.. ll'uidelail*tn
... foursr-t·~
l
ln the next week three vintage
buildings, the last remnants of
tbe old civtc center in downtown
Huntington Beach, will be no
more.
Demolition crews will be
working to rase the old ad-
ministration buildln1, fire sta·
tlon aod memorial .hall to make
room foe the construction of a
$6.4 million senior bousin1 pro-
ject ln October.
The Community Clinic bulld-
ina, also on the l&te, will be
pioved to another city location,·
whUe the clinic will open a new
omce at Oran1e A venue and
Main Street.
In April the city council ap-
proved the 155-apartme.nt pro-
ject and appointed William Lyon
Co.. of Newport Beach, to COD·
struct. the lhree·1tory bulldlnt.
Kamnipier Cott.on · Vreeland of
Los Angeles ls the architect.
Fuodinl for the multi·mil110D
dollar project will come frocn ·
the Ca.llfornta Houalog Finance
Agency and the federal Houaln&
and Urban Development omce.
The cltY .W lease the land foe
Sl a year over the next 55 years.
Additionally. the. city pald lot
the t87 ,000 demoUtlon coata.
When completed in early 1983,
the senior complex will become
the second such project in the ci·
ty. Last October the Wycliffe
gardens was constructed at
Florida and Main streets. The
u~atory complex is now the
home for 185 elderly residents,
aJtbouah 3,000 \nltially applied
for an apartment, said Steve
Kobler with the city's Housing
and Community Development
omee.
••A lot of people are 1etUn1
rent lncreasea," said Kohler.
"The~'re llvtn1 on fixed incomes
and tney have no way to cope."
Kohler added, that he expects
hundreds of elderly lo apply for
the 155 apartments.
Res idents Jiving in the new
senior housing project will only
have to pay 25 percent of thelr
income in rent. Although res-
idency in the city is oot a re·
qutrement, the applicant or
spouse must be 62 or over.
Some ·or the amenities in-
cluded in the comptex will be a
J acuul, an indoor meeting
room, ba_lconles and kitchens. 1
Applications wlll be accepted
by the construcdon tlrm afttr
October.
\
l
I
1 I
'
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, July 28, 1981
MARCHING SLOWLY BACKWARD
-Got a call just yesterday from a very
nice anonymous lady from Huntington
Beach who would like to see civilization
slip back to the old-fashioned
pushbroom. Her story gives you an idea
why.
"l just want to complain about an in-
fernal machine that's supposed to
replace the pushbroom for sweeping out
~·
----------------~ TIM IURPHllE ,w it
places like carports and parking lots.••
she explained.
"It's a very noisy, motor-driven
blower type thing which does nothing
more than blow the dust around.
l "l work at a night job and you just
lry getting some sleep during the day
'when one of these machines goes into ac-
tion ... " -WELL I CAN TELL you I really
sympathize with that one. Noise and
racket seem to be a major bedevilment
of our supposedly advanced civilization
these days.
Consider the phonograph, for exam-
ple.
When Thomas A. Edison first invent-
ed the phonograph, you could barely
hear it over the scratchings of the needle
across the cylinder. Then somebody im-
proved it so it didn't scratch so much
and you could hear it all across a big
parlor for dancing.
So do we leave well enough alone?
We do not. We continued to "im·
prove" old Tom E 's machine by adding
more power, multiple speakers and then
more power again.
· Today, you couldn't hear a Tom
Edison's needle scratch if it did scratch.
Stereophonic, multi-quad speakers and
all blast out the sound with enough dee·
ibils lo deafen dogs three blocks away.
And in my neighborhood, 3 a.m. is
the prime time for this kind of thing.
Alas, unlike the frazzled nice lady
from Huntingt9n Beach, I am not sup·
posed to be a night worker. But I'm not
much of a ni ght s leeper these days
either, thanks to the improvement on the
original invention.
NO WONDER THE LADY wants to
re·invent the pushbroom. Few people
have ever bee1\ awakened by one. unless
somebody was beating on you with the
business end.
Also pu.sbbrooms, when applied to
the regular task, tend to pile up the
debris at the end of the strokes so you
have to do something with the rubbish.
Like pick it up and haul lt away.
And she's right about the new
blower gadgets. They just get the stuff
airborne so it becomes somebody
else's problem when it settles back down
again.
It's like the rollers in my
neighborhood with the stereo. It's
somebody else's problem after the
crazed sounds blow out their windows.
ONCE, AROUND THE Newport
Beach, Costa Mesa and Irvine areas,
they had jet aircraft flying overhead
that lots of folks thought were very
noisy. So they rc·invented a less noisy
"SM I.DO$ ~t. Ztb. btfort they put that engiM on
one and now a lot of people think it's
noisier than the nois y ones were.
It's very confusing, all this progress.
Years ago , we s o improved
automobiles that they were getting 29
miles to the gallon. Then we wanted to
get rid of noxious fumes so we fixed
those cars so they got 14 miles per
gallon. Now we've fixed what we fixed
and autos are back up to 29 miles per
gallon again.
Sometimes it seems like progress is
one step forward and three to the rear.
Sagittarius to make new start
Wednesday, July zt
By SYDNEY OMAllll
TAURUS I.April 20-May 20>: Restrictions are re·
moved.
GEMINI <May 21-June 20): Be wary when it comes
to amxing signature to legal document.
... ARit ES (~arckh 21-April 191. Opportunity exists to CANCER (June 21.July 22): You could win populari·
"'orrec past nusta es. ty contest
• LEO <July 2J.Aug. 22>: Family member confides Patterning help needed a s~::~o (Aug. 23·Sept. 22 ): Aura or romance
. · dominates scenario.
VOLUNTEERS are needed to help a brain-
injured youth through patterning exercises 30 HOROSCOPE
minutes twice a day. Hours can be arranged. Contact
Jack or May Beresford at 631·3404 for more inform a:
fion.
COMMUNICATION FOR COUPLES with Joyce
and Robert Simpson will be held at 7 :30 p.m. Tues·
day in Santa Ana. For information, 'cal1532-5646.
WINNER AND LOSERS: That's Us is the theme
of a free workshop sponsored by the Mental Health
Association of Orange County at 9:30 a.m. Friday in
Santa Ana. For information, c.all 547 • 7559.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22 >: Emphasis on promotion
production, liming and lnlenslrled relationship. '
SCORPIO I Oct. 23·Nov. 21>: Longstanding project can be completed.
SAGITrARJUS (Nov. 22-0ec. 21 ): You'll make new
start in new direction.
CAPRICORN 1bec. 22·Jan. 19): Emphasize caution,
meticulous attention to details.
AQUAIUUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Perceive situation in
its entirety.
PISCES (Feb. 19·March 20): Doors ope.n and you
have opportunllies for creative endeavors.
PLANNED PAREN1'R00Dof Orange County is
seeking volunteers to take part in a countywide
telephone survey In August. For information, call ·-'RUFFELL 'S
973-1727. UPHOLSTERY .
PSOBLEM SOLVING is the topic of a discU&Sion s..e tr-1. -.....
led by stress specialist Murray Oxman at 10:30 a.m. 1922 HAllOI A•D.
DA Y PILOT
CLASSIRED ADS
142-5878
Saturday in Newport Beach. For information, call .cosyA .,_,SA_-::J~_l.:1 1~,
(213) 936-91~76~. ___________ J!!!!!'!~~~~~~~---=-----J
SHUmRS CUSTOM QUAUn SHUTIERS
Designed,
Finished
Installed
• • 0 0. 4
At the Laguna Beach
Muteum of Art were
rtop from left) Mrs.
John B. Parker, Mrs.
Richard Newquist, and
Dr. and Mrs. Norman
Nixon. At the Newport
·Harbor Art Museum
were fphoto at left from
left ) David Steinmetz,
Margarita Shaw. B.J.
Richter and her husband
George.
Receptions are artsy
by MARY JANE SCARCEUA> °' .. .,..., Nile .....
T he Laguna Beach Museum of Art hosted
a private reception for Blue Ribbon
Spoll50rs who contributed to the Junior
Council's Art Education for Children
before the opening of "Southern California
Artists: 1940-1980."
Contributors, w~o each gave $100 or more,
were presented wtth a specially designed blue
ribbon for display at the museum's entrance by
Janet Eggers, the museum's fund·raising
chairman.
Guests enjoyed classlcial guitar music, a
hosted bar and hors d'oeuvres while viewing the
exibibit, curated by Maudette Ball of Newport
Beach.
The hors d'oeuvres, served on the patio, were
prepared by Kay Pastorius, director of the
School of International Cuisine. Her husband is
scuJptor Hal Pastorius.
Mrs. Pastorius, assisted by Kathy Douglass
and their committee from the Junior Council
prepared such gourmet delicacies as poached
salmon with dill sauce. curried stuffed
mushrooms, Italian sausage quiche, campignon
pate and assorted fresh vegetables with a
spinach dip.
Among the members and guests at the party
and opening were Ken and Marla Bird, Norman
and ytrginia Nixon, Irmell Desenberg, Cindy
Prewitt, Mr. and Mrs. Nick B. Williams, Arlene
Isaacs, Jim and Wendy Wood, Dr. and Mrs.
Richard Newquist, Tom Enman and Adrian
Kuyper.
N ewport Harbor Art Museum's opening,
held the same evening, attracted the
rest of Orange Coast's art world.
Mark Boyle's "Journey to the Surface
of the Earth" reproduced chunks of te.rra firma
from all over the world, evoking cobblestones,
vacant lots and meadows in fiberglass.
Museum members set aside wine glasses to
travel through "Bram's Very Own Fault," an
architectural sculpture creating passageways
for exploration.
Artist Peter Berg took 12 days to install his 1
work, and a scale model on the wall gave vis· .
itors an overview of the project.
Among the viewers were Betty Turnbull and
HAPPENINGS
Victoria Kogan, who also had attended the
Laguna opening.
Rumors in the art world are that the two 1
women may open an art gallery together which
will feature only California artists.
Other guests were Bill and Bobbie Stabler, 1
Laurie. Brown, Tom and Ginny Haley, David
Steinmetz with Margarita Shaw, George and
B.J . Richter. Andrew and Ursula Cyga, Steve 1 and Judy Strauss. Max and Carolyn Dunn, Cora
Baldikoslti, Harry and Charlotte Selling and
Snoozie Ullman.
I
Bomb group slates reunion ~:
A reunfon committee for the 345th Bom
Group, a bomber outfit that flew B·2Ss in th
Pacific during World War II, is looking for thei1
comrades for a September 1982 reunion i
Colorado.
Retired Col. C.V. True, reunion chair, said thj'
committee knows the whereabouts of only 1,000 o
the 8,000·member group.
Committee officials are requesting squa
members or anyone knowing the whereabouts or,
member to call 886·2169.
$1,000or111ore-1,12 weeks ·
Blc1ced by Securtiea o( the U.S. or U.S. ~rnment
Afetic•. 11118 OBLIGATION IS NOT A SAVINGS
ACOOUNT OR DEPOSIT AND 18 N<YI' INSURED
81' THI FEDERAL SAVINGS A.HD LOAN
INSURANCE CORPORATION.
Principal plua interest paid by American Savlnp at
maturity. NO FEE, NO SERVICE CHARGE. Available
to CaWomil relide,nt1 Of\J)t lntA!reat ntea are eetJlibl
Brtnr aft)' benk or aavlnp puebook. We'll tnNfff
the tu ...
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTunday, Jut)' 28, 1981 HJF 117
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS ,
OUOTAT!Otd IN(LUD• TaAOU ON'"' ..... YO•tt.M1owen ..... Cl,.(, ..... .oifON OIT•OIT AMO C:IM(INNlofl Sfi><ll ••cwa ... u ANO RU'ORflO ., '"' ...... ANO'"'""''"
( Plrn of a two-port,.,...,, J
A eradua1 Increase over a 1001 apan of years ln lhe
traditional Social Security retirement a1e for U.S.
workers ia increasingly likely. Whether the advance la
from today's age 65 to 68 or to aome similarly higher
level and whether the span over which lhe increase
takes place reaches into the next century or some year
before 2000 -these are questions that will be Intensive·
ly studied and debated.
But agreement is spreading that this is one in·
telligent direction in which our system should bead.
And most signllicantly, the lines of disagreement
~b!r!.swandc~n~ ~ servatives on this issue are a. ,c
softening. -"' .;
Older re-#'-It tirement ages, -.,-[._ll_A_P_D_IJ_l_R __
mandatory or
voluntary,
already are commonplace In our private pension plans.
If you look closely. you will see the fascinating
phenomenon of millions of workers voluntarily opting
for earlier retirement while millions of other workers
reluctantly take whatever retirement benefits they
have accumulated at older and older years. Are other industrialized lands "graying" as
rapidly as we are? If they are, what can we learn
from these other nations that might help lead us to
financially sound, yet emotionally sympathetic
solutions? While the populations or all industrialized countrie~
are growing older, none is aging as rapidly as Japan'Y.
By 1985, more than a fourth or Jafan's population, now
approximating 115 million, wil reach that nation's
traditional compulsory retirement age of 55 -a
percentage that dwarfs the scheduled proportions with
which we are starting to grapple.
ln Japan, life expectancy for men is now abOul 74
years and nearly 79 years for women -as compared
with 69 years for American men and 77 years for
American women.
At the top or the nation's readjustment agenda is a
policy under which Japanese firms must postpone the
age at wh.ich most workers leave their companies from
the presentSSto60.
Tbe Japanese government provides subsidies to
companies that extend the retirement age of their
workers. It has established formal guidelines under
which firms are pressured -but not legally required -
to meet the extension in the retirement age by 1985.
Nevertheless, a recent survey disclosed that a
large percentage of all Japanese companies -perhaps
40 percent -stlU enforce the old retirement age of SS
among their employees. These age levels r erlecl
practices that made sense when life expectancy in
Japan was much, much shorter.
Retirement in Japan, though, does not mean the
same as retirement In our country. Employees do not
just stop working entirely at age SS. Instead, most
merely leave the company for which they have been
working since graduation from high school or college.
Virtually every retiree then gets a second job. It
may even be a less important, lower-paying position
with the same company or a less important job with
another, frequently smaller enterprise.
Wedne.OOy -uaion.s ~ CQtl learn from Japan.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW Y01tl((AP) ~llWI Oow..J-• ...,._ lw __ .,, JUI. 11
S1'0CIU
10 '"" °t:" .. ~a .M'::2 ~. ~ 20 Tri• «12.76 a.IS J9U14 40J.o:>+ lM u ~.~ :~:: m:: ~:~ :tro: t:r
11\dvt .. . .. . • . . .. .. .. . • . ,_,.,,,.. Tref\ 165,«IO " Ulllt . .. . . . . • .. . .. .. .. 1,751,IOll H Stk .. . .. .. • • • • • 6,01(,1Qlt
AMERICAN LEADERS
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YORK IAP) J..i. 27
Advenced Oet llrwd Uf\Cllenoitd Tot•••-N•• lllp New IOWI
WHAT AMUCllO
Tode~
"° 412
"" 11 10
NEW YOltK (AP) Jiii. 11
METALS
T-,.4
1IM ,.,
111 12 ,.
"'-· .,..r, ,,.
"' . .,.
10
JS
-· ~ -110 n1 s It
NEW YORK IAl"I -5"1 ,....,.,,._
UPS AND DOWNS "1:-'::~ ·_..us ..... 1 ....
NEW VOltl( IAPI -Tiii 191-1"9 lllt 11..,t ...... U. .... Y-Stodl eK...... I .... 42~ e ....-.
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--• •
. ..
-EVB1NG-e:oo1•• HIWI KUNGAI
A _.,,. plot unlold9 to
lure Celne bactl to China
and OIW1Aln death.
I TIC TAC DOUGH w•A•a•H
Hlwkeye end Tr•PP*
"~·· Frlnll not to
r~t I dlehon«lble
dlecharge IOI' I wounded.
homoMJlual M>ldler.
• GOOOTIMU
J.J. ~ up with a Yocel
dlecowry ha call1 Iha
~t whit• hope ••
•• f1.ECTNC
~Nltf(ft)
CJ) C88NIW8 di MCHlwe
·~ ...... **'it "'TM Maclllnloah
Man" ( 1973) Peul N-
l'Mn, Oomln!Que Sanda.
88Md on • ,_... by Oea-
mond 8-cile)' A Bntlah
lntelllgenca agent and Illa
tetnele COhOl'1 ere forced
to oope with double egent1
and tript9-ctOMM on their
mlsalon to ceptura • com-
munlat epy.
8:30 II JOKER'S WILD
• AU. IH THI FAMILY
Followlng a robbery, a I
crOOk br .. kl lnlo the
B<Jnker ._ lo evold cap-
ture by the polloe
• 8l!HH\' HILL
Benny lmpereonal• eome
well-ltnown antertllnen.
• KCETNEWS&EAT ID STUOIOIU
"Cobbler" T-cobblert .now kkl• how to malte
their own the>ea; en annual
joulllng mateh In South
CarOllna. jR)
(J)QIJNIW8 9 8AANEY MILL.EA
BMMy pull hit Nia on tl'le
llne whef'I 11 cornea to •
choloe of ouallng • group
ot tenant• !Tom a fleabag
hot.IOI' lacing departmen-
tal chargea. (PAt'I 1 I
())MOVIE
··0on·1 Mlal The eoar·
ue I EDm>NAl. 7:00 C88 HEWS D NeCHEWS 8 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Fonzie ahocl\I Richie anO
hit friend• when he
announoea that he 11 gai-
ting married
8 MCHEWS ·~ A gener91 ,__,dt the
40nth wtth .,, Ofllcers'
CIUb afler Hawkeye and
TrllPPef NW hie eon'1 llfe
• 8TNET8 OF 8AH
FRANCl8CO
A young m.,-, from the
ghetto It torn be'-
jolnlng the irynctat• and
telling Stone whef'I ha wit-
-Iha lieytng ot an
undenwor1d Chief
• OVUllEASY
0.-ta: flooer Baldwfn,
Teddi Sutton, Or lfwfn
POl'tner. (R) 0 ID MACHEL I L.EHFIEA
MPOfl'T
CJ) TIC TAC DOUGH di ME.AV OIW'FlN
Gu.It Blair FarrlOQlon
Dancert, llbet-. l4MI
Roy Reamt. Roger & Rog-..
~MOVIE
**'h "TM Wreck Ot The
Mary Dure·· ( 1959) Gary
Cooper, Cllarllon Heaton.
A ahlp'a olfil:« la lid9d by
the lttlpc>er of • Mlvagt
boat In deeflng hit -ot neg~ chargea
(Q)WOVIE
""My Brllllant Car-r"
(1980) JuOy Oav11. Sam
,.,..II. In turn-ol-the-centu-
CHECKING OUT Walter Olkewicz and
Deborah Harmon a re employees in a
s mall, haunted hotel on "Comedy of Hor-
ror" tonight at 8: 30 on Channel 2.
ry Aultrllla. an lndepand-I
ant young woman triea to
male• 1 car-u • writer
deaplt• aoa.t pr-.r•
lor her to many. CZl WOVll!
""Xanadu·· (1980) Ottvla I
New1on.JOhn. G-Kelly
A young artl9t, • heavenly
mu1e and a _,llmentll
mHllonalre join loroae to
open up a huge rOller-
d!Ko ~·PO·
7:30 • ENOlANO: ClltOWN
AHO~
On the -ol trn. mar-
rl8ge ol Prince Chartea and
Ledy Diena SpanQer. Jeaa
Marlow talt• a IOok 11 the
Brltllh Monarchy and how
Illa It llved In contempo-
rary England.
I QI! FAWtl Y F'EUO
PNNCE CHAAl.£8
A blogr~ IOok ••
Great Brllaln'1 Prince
ChMtea.
8 ~ONLA. ' Hoat1: Inez Pedf'ou. Peul
Moyer. A visit to the Old
Culver City Studlol; •
crulM up the California
COQI on the IWatlklMt
yacnt to NII the PIClllc, •
IOok at the women wN>
Ode the rodeo c:Wculta II FAC£ THE MUSK:
• iU.L ... THE FAMILY I Archie Is outraged when
Edith gives aw1y a valu·
al>le Inheritance left to her
ti}' her coualn.
• MACHEIL /LEHRER
REPORT tD NEWS
(I) P.M. MAGAZJNE
(8) AACE FOA THI PENNANT
Barry Tomptiln1 eno Tim
McCatver recap dMalonal
bueball 1tandlng1 and
Interview tome ol rhe
geme'1 top playw1 Ill the
playert' •trike contlnuea.
an update on the lltuallon
wlM Ilsa be Included I
L'OO 9 CJ) WiU.Tt:R
CAONKITE'S UNIWME D L090
Afl upirlng rock lllflQAt
get1 Lobo 111d Pertclna
mixed up with record
plrat• (R) 8 MOVll!
•• "'Moo: Ja-Of
O.ath'" ( 1975) Rlellard
JMCkel, Jennifer 8lahop
An ecology-minded fllher.
men lrlea to proteci gr .. 1
wfllt• 1118'11• !Tom would·
be huntera. 8 di THE AOYAL
WS>OINO
A repor1 on the UPQOmlng
wedding ol Bntaln'1 Prince
Clulrlea to lady Diana
Spenoar Wiii be ptM«lted D MOVIE * * * ""Caprice" ( tlle7)
Oorlt Dey. Rlcherd Harrll
A woman trewte Incognito
to track down the nercot-
lca ring rM90nslbM lor her
lllher'• death. .P.M.~
&aiydtvtog on the 3000-1001 a Capttain alffa; the prep-
are 110n1 tor PrlflCI
CharlH' weddlflg, Biii
Harrla with a movie ...,,._.
Steve Caney makea a
weter allde: Cept. Ca<rot
on neuttll tub bath• lor
,., ... ,jon .MOW!
* * "Star Hope" Dorothy
BuMNin, Stwllng Fruler
Thr-baaullful young
women tum a 1amng drive-
'" Into a rMlly IUCOealful
bUllMM.
• NOVA
··Animal Otymplan1" The
beauty. endurance and
power ol 111lmal1 In the
wUd are JwctlP<>Md wflh
Olympic AlhleCM perlonn-
lng leatl wfltch hAYe parll·
!els In the animal kingdom
(R)O ID MYSTUIY
"'The Racing Oeme: Odds
Agaln11·· Jockey Sid Halley
decldn to lnv .. ugate
myatarlout hapc>enlngt at
the S..buty racecourM
•fl• he Irreparably lnfur•
his hand In a lteepleeh-
r-. (R) O
Ql!Tl!HHIS ··wa111 Fergo Open"
®wow
"'Rocky 11•• ( 19711) SyhlMler
Stallone. T ella Shire. Alter
losing hie boul with the
wor1d Chemplon, an ambf.
llou1 bo11ar tralna IOI' a
~ ctience at the tttle
"PG"
CS) 8aAME lOO
JOhn Byner lhowa you
thlngt ltranger than truth.
larger 111111 Illa, and zanier
than anything you·va ....,. -· 0 MOVIE
'"Megee And The l ady"'
( 19711) Sally Ketietma.n,
Tony Lo BUinco An attrec-
llYe lemeie trtea to brffll
Into the highly competlttw
trucking lndultry, aroullng
the wreth ol one partlculer
veteran in the bullMSa.
'PO" a:ao 8 CJ) COMfDY OF
HOAAOA8
A young OOUple 00 to a
MIP90Mdly haunted hotel '°' their lloneymoon • TOPSTOAV
Hoatl: Jim Thomu. Mary
~™<>N
A comedlen host and lour
comle eont•tant1 wflo
compete agalnat one
another are leatur9d In thla
uncenaored OOtnedy gaine
8'IOW.
9:36 CZlOiAALU CHAMPLIN
TAUC.I wrTH MOUEl.
WEl.04
9;41 (Q)THAT8 Ml
t;OO • (I) M0\111
• "Stunt SeYen" ( 19791
Chrl1topher Connelly.
Chrlltopt>er Uoyd A taam
of atunt •llPetlt lltternpt a
daring land ... and elr
rMCUe OI I kidnapped
tnOYle lier. (R) D HILL 8TMET BLUE.8
A former cop oner1 to pro-
vide lnlorm1t1on on police
corruption In umanoa lor
freedom and • ,_ ldentl-
~ (R)
•@THREE'S
COUPNl'f
-..Uty, tftduretlOI and
power Of animltt Jn 11\e wtld .,, ju!C1apoeed with
Olymplo •ttllet• perfor-lnt !eat• wNctl hew pwal-
lell lft the 111""81 lllflOdam
~~
"Mlldeme Aoea'" ( ttfl)
SllnoM &lgncwet, Oteude
~.A-an'1pw•
1onallty 11ndatga.1 an
•• .,.,,,. trenelorm1t1on
when Ille lnllOMt hetMlf
In • romentlc efflir wtllCtl
br1clgee two WIClaty differ>
~==._.._ ....
"Med Mu" (1HO) Mel
Oltllon, Ja.Me 8Mwll. In
.,, Allt" .... Of the not-too-
~tenl lutwe. t.lle IT~
end lamtly ol • top high-
way purault polloeman
become the tAfO'MI OI
Mdlttlo motorcyda OMO·
"R'
Cl)THI W~ WON..D
CW JONATHAN WINTIM
Hoat: Or1IOll Wlllla.
t:OI (%) nlOM 9'AQUE... WITH
LOW t:ao e di rra A LMHO
Lola mall• 111 lmpae-
lk>ned IPMOfl In MfartM
of wait,_ In lront of hat
10-1aar-old daugnter'e
claM
MOVIE
··up The Academy" (IMO)
Ron Leibman, Bwbara
Bach The ·W8r-oblMNd
commandant of Weinberg
Miiitary Academy I• no
match lor the troubleaome
br•I• enrolled there. 'R' ~a a TH1 RtOYiu.
W!DOIHO
A repor1 on the upcoming
woacldlng ol Bntlln'a Prince
Cllerlea to Lady Diana
~wHI be pr-led UGel!> NEWS 8 a:J HART TO HART
Jonllhan 1nd Jenni!., 111
taken ho1tega by two
klllert who 11e afler an
Incriminating ~ of evl-
denoe hidden In 1M Hart
manllon (R) ., PAUEHT'E
'"Baqutne 0. Loe Angelltoe
Negroa·· Thlt 8agulna, •
NIN-belle( Ind lradhlonal
celabratlon at which
friends and relatlv• of 1
d-...ct black Puerto
Rlcen c:hlld dance late Into
Iha night IO uture Iha
8-\dance of the child'•
_,1 10 ,_...,,. laatur•
original NIN mutlC by WM·
lleColon
CID OOH8EHTIHO AOULT8
Verlou1 typea ol ralatlon·
ahlpa lhll defy the trldl·
tlonll 1tandardt NI by
modetn 90Clety era Alli·
mined
O MOVIE
"RHurrectlon•· ( 1980)
Ellen 8ur1tyr>. Sam S1>ep-
1td Alter • ,_ fatal euto
acx:ident, • woman !Inda
that Iha hu the ablllty 10 I
heal otllert but 11 per.
Mc:Uled beceuM ol her
reluNI to claim • divine
lrifluanoe "PG'
CZlWOVll!
··Myre BreC'tlenrldge•·
( 1970) M.. W•t. JoM
Huaton 10:30. NlW8
• INOINNOl!HT
NETWOfll< NEWS
• FA#T FOAWAAO
'"T ec11no1ogy Of Mu.ao"
Mutllc It trtleed "°"' It• _.,.... acou1tlc fc>rfN.
fD JAMl!8 MICHENl!R'8
WORU>
··sp0t11 1n America: CNl-
dran And 5'1ort1'" J-
Mlchener Hplorff the
phy11Cal and emotlon1t
elfacte of Ille ··w1n 11 all
coeu·· •ttltude on young
•thlet• and the praeaN•
ptec:.c:I on Iha gifted ChlkJ
athl9te (R) to:..a cm MOV1iE
"The Opening 0t Mitty
BMthoven'" (1979) Con-
1t1nca Money. Jamie
Gllllt. A renowned M•
authority mu .. • wager
that lie can tum • common
Parlalan tart Into a high-
priced. jet ... cell Qlf1
11:00 BD8(J)OQI
NEWS e 8TAA TMK
-
TUBE TOPPERS
CBS B 7:~ "England: Crown
and Thoms." Jess Marlowe look5 at the
British monarchy and We ln modem
England.
KTJA e 7: ~ -"Prince Char lea:'
A biography of the bridegroom.
KCET D 8:00 and KOCE 8 9:00 -
"Nova: Animal Olympians." Wild
animals and Olympic athletes are com-
pared.
ABC D 8:00 -"The Royal Wed-
ding." A report on the Wednesday wed-
ding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana.
~~)(A)
"The Stvnt Men" (IMO)
Peter O'Toole, 8t-Ralla-
baok. Wanted by tile
polloe, a dl9twbed Vlll-
nam wt.,an Nnd1 en
unauf• h-on a mo\lle
MC where a World War I
~ II being lllrned. "A' (8) Mee FOA .,.._
PfMNAHT
8lwry Tompldne and Tim
Mee-recap dM9'onll
b-blll ltandlngt and
lntervl-some of the
game·a top pleyw1. (II the
playeni' 11r1k• continu..
an i;pdet• on the lltuellon
.... alao be Included.)
())MOVIE
"Caddylhactt" ( 1980) 8111
Murray, Rodney Oenger-
lleld. The demented
O"oundt-lleeper of a twan-
ky country club w-oea ww
egelnet Ille ~ lnl\a.
biting hill turf. 'R'
11=*> 8 CJ) THE AOV iU.
WlDOIHQ
Oen RllU-, David Frost
and lady Antonia Fr-
reporl on the upcoming
w.ddlng of Britain"• Prtnce I
etian.. to lady Diana
~· U Q!l TONIGHT
Holt: Johnny Caraon.
Gueett: Mac Devil. J-
Stewart.
8 9 A8CNEWS ..OWT\JNE
II LET'8 MAQ A Dl!Al
• STAHi.EV 8IEOn
• C!) CAl'TlOHED MC
NEWS
®MOVIE
··A11en·· (19791 Tom Sker-I
rltt. Yaphet Kotto. The
er-of a ~ng
ICraP carr1er IOllow a myw..
lerlous 8'gn.i IO I tuppc»-
edfy dMd planet and .• ,,er I
landing, dlticOYer that the
n-.ge wu a wemlng to I
1tayawey."R'
11:11 CZl MOVIE
"The laland'" ( 1g1101 1
M lchHI C1lna. !)avid I
Warner While lnveallgat-
lng • raah of alllp dlNp-
peerancea In the Bermuda
T rlangle, a journeliet ttum-
btea acroea an lao4ated.
400-Y9'f·Old COIOn) of
plrlt-'R'
11:48 • MOYllE
"L•Pk•"' ( 1975) Tony ewu., Anjanette C-.
Loula "l..eplle'" Buchalter,
I leeder of 14.metlce'I
uoldel WOl'ld, ~ up the
notorlou• organliratlon
ltnOwn aa MUfder. Inc 'R"
~MDIGH!-
1~ 9 CJ) CANNON
Cennon 1n .... 11ga1aa mur-
der charo•• lodged• r~ndlan (R) I
• • * ~ ••tvoty Hunter··
(1952) Anthony St-I,
Dinah Sheridan A game
warden Mii up a wlld enl-
mel IAl\Cluaty In Mt. Klll-
manjero Netlonal Perk In
Eat Africa.
• di CHAM..11"8
AHOl1.I
The Angell 00 unOen:oYer
In • drcut to find out who
.. -*"" a --of myw.. i.toua end dMdly aod-
dlnQ. (R)
Gou.MOQ
Ooo Ademt llgflte to pre-
_,, tine MWbOl'n bablaa
from OfOWlno up tn an
;":.:·
..OH•LI
The IMF llghta e mlnd-
oeatroylng drug lhal ooukJ
eneNlw the ".. wonc:t. ~81'11)
• MMTTA
Tony le ltJrred to •V9t1Qe
1 Na fatfler"• deetfl after
'-1ng the deathbed con-
~ ot • gatlgllter.
12:30 8 QI! TOMOMOW
au.ta: Uttte Rlctwlro and
Wayne Cootwen.
1:00 G NYCHIC
PHIENO ... IA
"PtyCllologlcal Impact Of
Phenomena" Hoa1: Dam-
ien Slmpeon. Guaat: Stan-
.. ~. Ph.D.
*** "F .. Of Ute" (1957)
Judy HolNdey. Rlcherd
Conte A men dlaNptl the
.._ ol his llOn and preg-·~
nant daughter-In~.
• tHOIJllNDENT HETWOMNEWS
(J)MOYllE
"The Tin 0rum·· (1979)
Davtd a.nneu. Angel•
Wlnlcler. A amell boy with
unuauel ~ of pwcep-
tion rejecta polltlct, llUmen
cornpanlonehlp and .....,,
adulthood and wander• I about hl8 country during
the tumultvout yurt of
the Na.ti regime. r•tleaaly
1
banging a toy drum. "R'
1:10 8 THE IAINT
Simon 1Mma of a bizarre
deeth 0-being played
by groupa of P9ychology
atudlnta. (RI
•@NEWS 1:tl ~M<Ma
"'Our Time" ( 1973) Pwnel1
Sue Martin, Parlter St•
veneon. The 11vee of two
young couplea arvOlled at
private achool• ere
Ch8nged ""'*' one ol the
gift& ~ Ille le pr-o-
nant. 'PO"
1:119MOYll
"Magee And The Ledy"
(1978) Sally K.,lerman,
Tony Lo Blanco. An attrac-
INll ftmale trtea to brMk
Into Ille highly competltlwi
trucklng lnduatry, eroua1ng
the wrlttl of one partlculer ,,.._ In the .,.,,..,_.
'PG' 1:ao e MOYIE • * • '"The Stripper··
(1M3) JowVle Woodward,
Richard Beymer. Alter
It eying In • amalt town lor
• brief period ol time. an
••~ 1tar decldea to
move and tlM1 owr.
CID STNDNO~
ONLY: HA.I IE '"AH HOU.YWOOO
From the MGM Grand
Hotel In lM Vega. Gane
Kelly hOltl ~ glittering Lu
Vega rewe wflleh Nlutea
the golden era ol
rncwlerrlMlng In tOng and
d-.
(%)WOW
")(afllldu" (1~) °""''
JOHN DARLING
N9w\on..JoM, 0.. Kelly.
A YGUf10 artiet, I ~
~ Md • Mnllmentlll
~ jOlfl toroee to °'*' up • huge roler-dllco ~'PO' t:AO,TO•·~ AMC#
TMl•ORTA~
An ~lion of dlff•·
ant INCflOda of trlnlll>Ol'I••
lion, ':IOI NIW9 t:tl MMOIWCAll..ll"l-.VUI ... _ I wtll
Eric and Ernie dr-up u
ClhOl'ua glr1e In .. Hey, Big
Spender". Emla dlddea
Ulet Eric II too old and
·-up """" • -part-ns.
ltGO 9. di 18 THE AOYiU.
Wmo.NQ
The wedding of lrltlln'e
Prince ~ to Ledy
Olll\a Spenwr and raleted
featMllaa wlll be telecut
ll\le trom London l:a). NeWI
• MOMCAMee' WlllE
At SteAlly and Hutcll, Eric
and Ernie clewl UC> ortme;
later they lttllt 1he materni-
ty boutique and Mllct •
baby gift.
~1=
* ** "South Ot St Lov-
ie" (tlMI) Joel Mce<N.
Zachary Scott RancheB
battle Norlll and Soutll to
pr-v• their •Pr .. dl
from the del!Ulatlon of the
CMIWer.
{t)MOVIE
"Targeta•• (IHI) Borl1
Kanoff, Tim O"Kelly An
aging llOl'ror-movla 11ar
trlea to reaaon with• rnur -
der<>ut anlper al a d,,,,.ln
~,,....,.,
a:eo I ~Ofl&AI.
• * * "'They Were So
Young" ( 1965) Scott Bra-
dy, Raymond Burr A
group of innc>C*'lt modela
are herded to South Amer-
ica under Iha thf'NI OI
deaUI In e><der IO beco<ne
the puppet• of power'ful
and lnlluantlal man
3.'00. NEWS a:oe CZI FAOM AAOUEL. WfTH
l.OVl!
$:30 CJ) MOVIE
··oream1r·· (1979) Tim
Mal'-1, SulAll Blekely
A young bowler hu to
overcome m111y o«>ltecla
white trying 10 reach lor hit
llfelong dream ·PO·
4:00 8 THE AOYiU.
WEDDING
The wedding ot Brll1Jn'1
Prince Chartea to Lady
Diane Spanc:er and raleted
l•tlvltlel wtH be lalecett
llw !Tom London
D QIJTOOAY
Continued coveragt of the
w.ddlng ceremony end
l•tMtlea 9Urroundlng the
m1rrl1ga ol Brlt11n·1
Prince Charla to Lady
Diana Spencer will be tele-
cut live lrom London.
8 9 GOOO MOAHINO
AMl!AICA
Continued covetagt OI the
wedding ceremony and
l•tlvltlea tu<roundlng the
marriage of Britain"•
Prince Chertea to Lady
Diena SpenQat wiH be ,..._
catt 11119 from London.
(I) THE AOY iU.
WlDOIHQ
The wedding of Bfltaln'a
Prince Cl\wlea to Ledy
°'8n41 Spencer and related
taatMtlea """' be telecatt
!Tom London
(%)MOVIE
··Myre Breckenridge··
( 1970) M.. Watt, JOlln
Hu.ton.
4 :158 VOYAOETOTHI
IOTTOM CW THE 8EA
""The Megnut e..m··
4:to• MOVIE
* ·~ ··GrHn Buddh•"
(1955) Wsyne Morrie. May
Oermelne. An 1n ... 11gator
Mt1 out to reciover a pracl.
OUt Clll-atetue thal
hu been ttolen.
{t)MOW
**'h ··0t Humat1 Bond·
9 •· (1es.) Kim Novak.
Laurence Harwy Baaed
on lhe novel by W S--
Mt Maugham A young
"*9lcal etlldent with a
MflOu• HIOl'mlty .....
ltaglc;elly In tow With
pr~welt,..
1t'ecl11e•d••'• o.,, .. ,,. .. ,,, • ., ....
~MORt~•!!!!tG~~--1~
11*1. *. ··~ Hounda"' (19471 ~ loys, Ct!t1e-
tlne ~·-The
Cit• tllk• ectlon whef'I t
~ try to "unfix" • IDC"""-11"9 .....,,t
11:ao D **"'··The 1.onaty
Man" ( 1957) Jiiek Plllanol.
Anthony Perkifll.
relorm.mlncled gunflgllt
It prMMd Into one !Mt
batda .. ~ *. * "'They In, ll , 0Yng 0 I Heart" (1838) Doug!
Felrbankl Jr.. Paulet~
Goddard A ne'er-do-well I'
family ol cerd lha1~e
cllarma 111 old lady wl>OI I
1elorm1 them. /
1~. * * * '"The PhNedel-
pl\la Story•· ( 11MO) l<eth~
rlne Hepburn, JamiJ 1
St-. A young ~I t
pf\18 woman'• marriage It
watehed owr carefully o, I 1 the City's aoclallt•, •I
• **'it ··Sodom And
Gomorrah" ( 1"3) St-ah I
Granger. Pier Angeli. Afllfll 11
111e twin cltlH are I
O..lroyed, all that rlllNlnJ 1
are the Hebt-. LOI~
~:.-and the ci-i11 "
1:00 ~ '"Kiii Or lie Kllled"" ..t t
119801 JoNpti Ry111, Cha1J I
lolte Mlchelle Two Mvagt
aqueda ol ama karate
champlon1 c1a111 toi
revenge Ind turvtval. '
1:30 CS) * * * '"lt'I A1w1y9 F w .. thar" ( 1955) Gane
ly, D11n Dalley A local
1tarte1 decidea to bf
caet I reunion of
World War II Army
dlea
2:00 Ct "Ultimate Thrill" Btltt
Ekland, Betry Brown.
paranoid bualnaatm
becomaa lnvOlvec:t In •
of murder and """'....,,~
"PG'
s:00 a • • ·~ ··The I.and That
Time Forgor· ( 11751
McClure. Suaan P
gon Survtvort from
Allied IYbmarlne and t
German c:aplOl't land
en llland ruled by pr
torlc 1111ma11. ~ * * * "Heidi" ( 1985)
Eve-Marie Singh
Gwtrano Mtttermayr A
lie sw1 .. girt la taken Ir
her mountlln ._ In t
A.'91 by her aunl to "-
city
3:30 II • * * '"Tha1'1 My Boy"
( 195 t) O..n Martin, .Jwry
~t A weakling 11
by hie athletic roomma
to l>eOOrne a football 1t
In order lo pteue ~
l•ther
CS) "Wlurd1" ( t9n) Anl-
maled Oltactec:I by Relpft
Baltlhl In • wor1d of the
future. IOl'eety pley9 a
major role In the battlea of
two or••• conlllcllng
8'1"1\lM
4:00 0 ••aorn.wt>ere In TlrN"
{ 1980) CMttopner ~
J-Seyfnour ~
with the portrait~-.-,~
century ICtr-. a rnodwrl-
day New York playwright u-hypnoals to ,, • .,,.,
bllCk In time end mMt her. ·pa·
4:80 Ct) "Tr~o Bleu
Cllron" (19711) Mlehael
Sl'IOdl. Anny Duprey. A 1~ I I
yew-old boy It lmlnei;i
with • 11111e g1r1 W110 racer
bealda him It T roc:eclerO. I ,
S:OO CID ··eoar Miner"• Deugll-, : • ·,
far" (1980) Slay Sf)acell,
Tommy L .. JOM&. 8aec2
on Lorette Lynn'a auto-
blogr llOhY. A young gllf
from • poor lamlly In rural
Kenrucky marrlea a muc:fl
Olde< local boy wflo ar9-
-· her riM to stardom In the muaAc lnduttrv. "PG"
by Armstrong & Batiuk
CHANNEL LISTINGS . I
While tNCNng at hit old
school. Jack become•
embrOlled In a ltlcky lltu•
tlon with the ~·· ni-. l~O QI MERV OAfflN
Gueett: 811lr Farrington
Denoe<1, Llber-. L ..
Roy Reama, Roger .\ Rog-
w. Dornlnldr, a.... and
Sugar. Jey Johneon
Mr Spoctt blows Ilia cool
and almost getl Caot. Kirk
killed when an overwhelm-
Ing mallng urge taltM poa-
-'00 of him . ..---------------------------
IJ KNXT CBS1 Los Anq,.lt•'-
0 KNBC 1NBC1 Los A n JPll''>
" KTLA ilnO I Los Ang.• p~
G ><ABC· TV !ABC) Lo~ Anqt>IP<.
(JJ -<FMB !CBS\ S.rn 01PQO D KHJ· TV (lnO l Los Anqt>IPc;
®) KCST (ABC1 San D1PQO ID KTIV (Ind I L OS AnqPIP~
., KCOP TV (Ind I Los A nQPh•o;,
fD KCET TV 1 PBSI Los An9,•1r•s
'1D KOCE TV 1PBS1 Hun11n 11on Beach
Scott livens up
staid Britishers
By FRED ROTHENBERG ... ~ .............
NEW YORK -Wat.ch out, London. Willard
Scott, the "Today" show weatherman. is coming to crash the royal wedding.
You can take Scott out of the country but don't
expect staid ol' En1Jand to change hJm. 'He'll still
be tbe same clown who has turned mornin1
weather forecasting into stand-up comedy.
"Today" will be spending lb.is week ln London
and bas plans for Scott to take his unJque brand of
cornpone to Enallsh pubs, cricket matches and
anything eJse t.hat strikes his fancy. "It wlU be
great to 1et up al 10 o'clock In the morning Uke
human beinp," Scott said.
"What I really want lo do ii put on one ol those
Ike/eater ouUita and take a Jua ot New York City
water a.round Plcadllly Ju.st to eee lf the people will
drink it. New York water iJ so dam •ood." he said~
"Maybe if I pu& a bead on it, they'll 10 for lt."
The lmate of the bulky Scott boundJn1 lhrou1h
London thould turn a few head.I. For oae thlni. he
beart a 1U1bt rettmblance lo British wtt Robert
Morle.J, famlllar to American. ror ba droll
alrplane adl. MorleJ will be wortiq for ABC'•
"Good 11orn1n1. Amertca" Ulla ...et.
"I 11.ne that loot, JOU mow. Same weird
abape, l&r .... lllld head IDd b6c eyn. Wt eOWd
bave oome ft'Clim IM .... famQJ," 1.W leotl.
'l'ldl wtU be &eott'a ftnt trtp to l:nllaild, Im
ol Ma ..-.... ''I'm UarWed lo be 1oto;. nteM are m.J root.I. 111 retatJv• tune ov• ln l7a0 Ud
• MYSTDIY
"TM Racing Game: Oddi
Agaln9t" Joclcey Sid Halley
decldff to lnvHtlgat•
my1tanoua heppanlngs at
the S..bury raoecourM
alter he lrrepar1bly lnjur•
hie hend In • lteeplecl\-
,._. (R) O
fD NOYA
•• Anlmel Otymplena'' The
I ::a YWf.Q GAME
"'A View 0t Nowti.e"
While ftylng In a helicopter.
Mannix bellevw he'a _,
• woman murdered on • pertlhowe ,.,,_, but ..
baffled to find there It no
CC>r'pM and no report ot a
etlme.
• MNNY~IU
The Th<M Mualtet..-. ride
egeln Into another -
plde with pretty maldenl
• OICKCAWTT
Gu.t· Harold MacMiiian .
Jan~ ~ med WUlard Scoff of IM .. Toclo~"
ihOw.
MtUed In North CarOOU. Tbe1 ~ a lud 1rul hill the k1aa net , .... , talse 15 attpe from tbe
bll tne_. turn toward the river.''
.,_.. be WU hind to tM 'To.IQ•• abow by
NBC H"9 President 8W Small, 6eott dJd weal.her
and acbllck foe the NBC anwate bl Wublnaton.
5,6..'( I ISN'T HE IHE ONE
WHO S>.tO 01.JR ~EN5NE
LINE-RES£M0LEO SW I~
NO. NO! THAI Wl-6 &RICK
CHEESE! YOU ~NOW •.•
L..IKE IN A ~ICK WAL.L/ CHEESE?
Early birds see
NEW YORK CAP> -The colooles may have
rejected royalty 200 years ago, but U.S. television
networlta are betting that a royal romance la still
enough ol a faacinaUon to get Americans out of
bed early.
The networks all have planned at least five
hours of Jive, early mornint coverage of the
Wednesday wedding of Prince Char lea and Lady
Diana Spencer.
Some or the bluest names in American TV
Journalism -Chancellor , Rather, Walters,
Brokaw and Pauley -will travel to London to cov-
er the Mstorlc ceremony.
Other parta of the spectacle include the pro-
cession from Buckin1ham Palace to St. Paul's
Cathedr'al and the return trip to the palace.
NBC, which ls movin1 its "Today" pro1ram to
London for weddlnr week. bu acbtd\a.ltd the
lonceat Uve broadcut, 7"°' houn bell1Ulln1 at 4
a . m . "Today" holtt Tom B~aw and Jane Pauley
wlll ¥Chor the coveHte from a 1pot at Victoria
Garilena overlookin1 Buekl.Qlham Palace.
ABC's "Good Morntn1 America," a110 will be
broadcul ~ London that week, wtt.b wecldlac
cowereie runn.lq from 2 a.m. lot a.m. Wedael·
daJ. 0.Yld Hartman wW &DOor &.be broaclcut
from the top floor of. UM Loodoa HUtcm, wbidl of.
fen a puoraanlc •lew ot &.be city,
A8C Hewa c°""'poadeeU larWa Walt.rt
ud Pet.er JM•lnp WW nport. • u.e eeremoar from 8Ll Pora caa.1•a1.
0.. Rat.her WW ~CBI' .._. ... from • a .m, llliW t a.a., WIUll • ....... ..._ tlM ea.pie
wedding
leaves Buckingham Palace on a honeymoon pro·
cession to Waterloo Station. British TV personality
David Frost will assist Rather with the runninl
commentary from an anchor position atop the
Abby Life Bu.llding and overlooking the cathedral.
The Public Broadcasting Service will use the
British Broadcasting Co. 's 60-camera covera1e fdr
a three-hour wrapup on ~ednesday. And all·ne#
Cable News Network wUJ Rlug into the BBC'• t.m-
coverage for four hours.
A combination of summer TV doldrums. II
fact that Utt.le regular programmin1 will need
be pre-empted, and the pa1eantry and fairyt
nature ol this event has sparked the interest of
U.S. television executives -and, they believel' American viewers. _ ,,., •
If It's got wheels
you'll move It
faster in a
Daily Pilot
Cllssffled
ad. can '
'42-5671 and
• friendly ect-visor wtll
ltelpyouturn
your wheels
Into cash •
• I
1
• 4 • 4 0 #SU a Q o • • •
Daily Pilat
TUESDAY, JULY 28, 1981 H/F
CLASSI Fl ED C4
• s u a s a 0 .. ....................... , ......... --.......... ..
If the baseball strike is
ever settled, what's in
store for the fall? See C2 .
. ay to play: It's fast becoming reality
, ash registers warming up for high school athletes as dwindling resources take a toll
I
ROGER CARLSON
... Deity ....... a.ff
,: .. The ultimate goal for many athletes is to play
or pay, but it appears many will be. (or aJready
11e> in a pay for play situation because of dwm·
Jing funds within the bigh school arena.
Already saddled with fixed fees to participate
!\"sports are athletes al Laguna Beach High, the
apistrano Valley Unified schools (Capistrano
alley, San Clemente and Dana Hills) and begin·
mg in September, Irvine. University and Wood-
ridge high schools.
h. Proposals for similar labs on Newport·Mesa
bers, the fewer the bucks from the state) and In -
creased costs in transportation, equipment and
salaries.
The implementation of fixed fees to
participate has already withstood a court challenge
in Santa.Barbara, but several veteran observers
are betting it won 'l stand up through the State
Suprerrie Court in Sacramento, which has tradi·
tionaUy shown a liberal view. Fees to participate
are not considered liberal, maybe not legal, either.
Still, future l~gi slation may settle the
legalities for good.
Abbott Hughe3 Nicoll
Hills. which are entering their fourth year under
this system, the fee is $25 per sport.
Frank "Jake" Abbott, a former coach with 10
years experience and the Superintendent of the
Huntington Beach Unified School District, says the
proposal was shot down this past spring because
"we had made other cut.a and there was a concern
the Santa Barbara case is going to be appealed. To
go into something like that and then have the State
Supreme Court overturn it would create more-
problems than it is worth."
He adds, however, "If it is upheld, I would
think next year we would look very strongly at it. ha.d Huntington Beach district athletes have been
urned down by the respective boards of education,
at each was blanketed with a wait-and-see at-
itude toward the near future. ~ Administrators are unanimous in describing
he reasons for such a situation -a critical lack of
unds cause of the effects of Proposition 13, a
ecHning enrollment factor (the fewer the num-
Coaches are against the fees, but most will
agree it is a necessary evil. Administrators are
also philosophically against it, but cite the figures,
which make it mandatory that funds come from
somewhere.
Athletes are in agreement, too. No one is voic-
ing much concern over the situation (if there are
any, pride is keepin the mouths s hut).
At Laguna Beach High each athlete must pay
$45 during the fall, $40 for the winter and $35 for
the spring, while Irvine schools are entering Sep-
tember with a flat $55 per athlete, regardless of
the number of sports or which sports.
"I'm personally opposed to it. Athletics is a
part of the education program and we should pay
for what we can. But the way the law reads, it's
the only area we can charge a fee for. You can't
even charge for driver's education because of the
concept of free public education.
··Districts are bein~ forced to look at every <See PAY, Page t:21 Al Capistrano Valley, San Clemente and Dana
Forget last season
R ams' Thomas reversing unhappy ways
By JOHN SEVANO
Of Ille Deity ...... Slatt
Shortly a fter last season.
Ow ner Georgia Frontiere and
Ge n e r a l M anager Don
Klosterman vowed to "clean
house' within the Rams' or-
ganization.
They pro m ised that the
turmoil and strife that plagued
the club in 1980 would be gone in
1981. Players that were unhappy
-for whatever reason -wouJd
be m ade happy ... or else.
Some players, under manage-
ment's new hard-line stand,
were satisfied. Others, of
course, were not and that's why
Vince Ferragamo, Jack
Reynolds and Bob Brudzinski
find themselves today in new
locations.
ONE MALCONTENT who
signed under the team's new
policy was Pat Thomas . The All·
Pro cornerback was inked to a
new four-year agreement, bind·
ing him to the Rams through
1984.
"No, I'm not surprised that
I'm here," said Thom as as he
sat in his dorm room at Cal
State Fullerton, "because out on
the football field I gave them
everything I had."
GE NO BARRIER Oswald K. Smathers
APW .. ;I I
90-meter event. He uses a m otorcycle
because he has two artificial knees. Below
11 -year-old Billy Burke guides his men's
ei~ht-man rowing entry.
Thomas insisted he n ever
wanted to leave the Rams
( .. Despite the controversy, I like
it here") but he did admit to not
being happy last season.
acknowledges the crowd's admiration at the
National Sports Festival after the 66-year-old
archery speciahst (above> competed in the I
•1t1 I
"I WOULD JUST LIKE lo
leave last year alone," he slat-
ed. "It was a rough year for the
Rams.
··But last year was more or a
mental s train than a physical
one. ActuaJly, it was a mental
strain for many people which
tells a lot about a pe rson's
ch aracter ; I mean playing as
well as we did under the situa-
tion."
Thomas· situation involved
a lleged promises made by
Georgia in 1979 that weren't kept
in '80. Frustr ated and not know-
ing where to turn, the 5-9, 186·
pounder walked out of training
camp last year (Aug. 6) and re-
turned five days later after
"thinking thlngs out." ·
This year Thomas claims his
attitude is different.
"I REMEMBERED
something Freeman J ohns (a
former Rams wide r eceiver)
once told me," said Thomas.
"He said, 'Pat, God don't like
ugly.• In other words, if people
are going to do me wrong it's go-
ing to come back a nd haunt
them.
"I just thank God I'm able to
play the game. I don't care if I
fet $100,000 or $20,000 any more.
realize there are millions of
other players willing to be in my
s hoes."
Rams' No. 1 pick (Owens) to sign today? ·
,'1Y • ~
Owens' agent reportedly wanted a con· trac~ comparable to that of Johnnie
Johnaon, the Rama' top pick ln 1980.
Jobnlon received a six-year pact worth
almost 11.2 mlllloo. Cloelua felt Owens "u
worth at leut that, plus a '400,000 bonua.
The latter flaur~ was vehemently dented
by General Man.a1er Don Kloeterman.
"Where people 1et that (bleep) I'll never
k:now ... be aaicl. .
Owens ls currently beblnd Jlm
Youqblood on the Ram•' clep&.b chart at
ltft oUllide linebacker. Ht fttun1 to ~Jp
flU tbe vokt left by the d~ ol Bob,
8ncllialkt to Mlami and Jack Beyno&da to
San Fraodlclo.
O•tn1, t-21 2IO pound1, l1 UM fourth ·
llnebadcer '6cked • tb• ftnt .,... bJ die
Rams llDee Wft. lie runs a•·• la tM •
and wu a IWter oa llldUpa'1 ~
Bowl team, recordln1 100 tackles ror the
aeason.
He wu named firlt team All·Bll Ten by
UPI and second team AP. He WU bonorl·
ble mention All-American from AP.
O•ens bu been llvlnl ln a home ln the
Ann Arbor area whlle negodatlom have
been talrlnC place.
Said Cloelua: "He wlU be ln better shape
than aoy rookie ID camp."
Rall\I tcoutinl reporta call Owena one of
t.bt f uteiat and qulcke1t linebacker• in the
draft.
Saki Jolua -.u.. the t..am'a Dlnctor of
Player P.-.oaaet: "He'll ftt fllbt lll wltb
our team." , O•-wu espeeted to alp a contract
tllla mornlAt and tben 10 tbrou1b a
.PbJllci.I euimleettoa. _.,,... .....
,
Thomas said his negotiations
with the club went without a
hitch, which has him puzzled as
to why the others didn't sign.
"IN A WAV I WAS surprised.
and in a way l wasn't," he said
• · 1 was s urprised that they
couldn't come lo terms in some
way, and I was also s urprised
that management took such a
firm stand.
"But what happened is not for
me to question. They !manage·
mentl know more about football
than I do."
And what Thomas knows 1s
how to play cornerback.
"I feel like I played last year
like I played every pr evious
year -to the best or my ability.
"I have a different attitude
now.'' added Thomas. ··1 want to
play football for a long time."
THOMAS' PRIOR objective
was to play for five years and
then go into another line of
work. Obviously, he's changed
his thinking . . . and playing
with what many consider the
best secondary in the NFL
might have something to do with
that.
"We have a secondar y with
speed at every position and peo-
ple who can cover one-on-one."
explained Thomas. "Plus, we're
all competitors and it's hard to
get a secondary like that in the
NFL.
"If used right, with the proper
defensive alignments, we could
be the best secondary the Rams
have ever had."
Thomas said it's hard to figure
how much the loss of Reynolds
and Ferragamo will hurt the
team that only at the end of
the season can an answer be
formulated.
"I CAN'T SEE where we're
hurling any right now," he said.
"You tally up the difference
when the season is over by the
won-loss record; not statistics or
anything else, just how many
games you've won or lost. Only
then can we see how bad we
needed Vince, Jack, Bob or
anyone else down the line.
Thomas said at least the
Rams are off on the right foot.
though.
"You don't hear people bad·
mouthing like t hey did las t
year." he said. "People seem to
be a liUle bit more serious about
football, and there are a lot of
smiles on a lot or faces.
"I feel good about the Rams
and m yself. The only thing
that's going to worry me now
is me."
Oldfield's still up
to his winning ways
SYRACUSE, NY. (AP>
Brian Oldfield would like to
have his status clarified once
and for all .
"I am not a proressional -not
even a semi -professional
amateur. I am an amateur," the
bur ly, colorful Oldfield said
Monday after winning the shot
put title at the National Sports
FestivaJ.
The U.S. Olympic Committee
and the International Olympic
Committee do not agree. They
maintain he is tainted because
of bis participation in the In·
ternationaJ Track Association, a
professional circuit that opernt-
Pd between 1973-76.
So, even though Oldfield has
been ruled eligible for interna-
tional competition by the In·
ternational Amateur Athletic
Federation, which is the world
governing body for track and
field, the USOC and the JOC
have not given him their bless-
ing to participate in the Olympic
Games.
Since the USOC runs the
Festival, an event for Olympic-'
eligible athletes, It was upwill·
ing to admit Oldfield.
Actually, t he 36 -year -old
Oldfield, a former school
teacher, claimed he originally
was invited. Then, the invitation
was withdrawn.
"When I got here last week,
they told me 'no.· " he said after
uncorking his winning throw of
68·5. "What was I to do: Take
that?"
What he and pole vaulter
Steve Smith, another former
IT A member. did was file suit in
New York Slate Supreme Court
in Syracuse. J ustice William
Roy ruled in favor of the
athletes, and much to the cha·
grin of USOC officials, Oldfield
and Smith became part of the
field.
Oldfield's victory came on the
final day of the Festival's three-
day track and field competition
at Sunnycrest Park.
Gov. and Mrs. Hugh Carey at·
tended long enough to make pre-
sentations to the medalists in the
men's and women's 400•meter
relay races, and to heptathlon
winner Cindy Greiner or Oregon
State University.
In the feature race, a
weakened Cra1g Virgin overtook
Alberto Salazar wlth 2~ l•Pt left
and won the 5,000 by about 20
yards In 13 minutes 35.4 ~.
"With one lap to go, J wu re-
ally hurting -I dld not fee.I
good," said Vir1in, who loet
valuable trainin1 time after •uf·
rertna a virus recenUy ln Italy.•
"I don't think I bave all m7
strength back." ·
Whtie the 5,000 turned Into ·a
runaway, Ulwe were two H · tremely clGle ,....._,
ln the WODMD.. 1.• Clndj
Bremaer nipped J an lhrrut,
•~15.a to 4:15.81. m•'•
400-m41t.r' relay, DW ...... ru.nnl.n1 anchor for. Weet
team,-....~ of
tbeSGalllaltMWlre.
for tM Well 111uc1.::.-allo CODI ... of ... , Die
8rowa llDd Jaate1 l•fard, WU -... nae Soutb •• c.locbd ln •.M.
I
I I
11
-. . . ... -. . -~ .. ---,...., ~... . ~----
<Mnge Cout DAILY PILOT/TuHday, July 28, 1981
.---------------------~·
NFL could survive
court loss -Rozelle
From AP dlepatebea
LOS ANGELF.S -Natlooal Foot· [i]
ball League Commlasloner Pete • • Rozelle predictably considers the 9
league the favorite to win its court
battle with the Oakland Raiders, but he also
believes the NFL could survive a loss.
"I don't think the leaaue would fold up and
10 away (if it loses); it would lower the level we
are at now.'• Rozelle said out of court Monday
after closing a rguments
began in the trial of the an·
titrust suit brought by the
Raiders and Los Angeles
Coliseum against the NFL.
Rozelle also said that.
should the jury find for the
Raiders, the case would be
appealed and "We don't
think we're going to lose at
all levels."
Roulle NFL attorneys get their
final shot at the seven-woman, three-man jury
today when they present closing arguments,
hoping t.o preserve a provision of the league con·
stitution requiring three-fourths of the 28 team
owners to approve any franchise move.
Quote of the day
"I didn't want to go there. I'd always
question his motives. r have pride in my
own ability, and I didn't want anybody
sayinf I made the team because I was Don
Shula s son." -Davie Sbu.la, a rookie wide
receiver, explaining why be chose to try
out as a free agent with Baltimore rather
than with his father's club, the Miami·
Dolphins.
From Page C1
Rams' hopefuls mak9 exodus
Dtftaalvt end lolt Cobllll, a third· [iJ
roll1ld drift plck by U\1 Rama out of • • ~
Arl1ona, ha• lift camp lot pereonal
nHom. Nlnt othtrt have tittn cut and three
more have ltft camp. Waived were wide re·
tlever1 Macy Colbert. lobert Taylor, Muk
Tolbert and M.lke Braat. A1ao cut were 1afeUe1
Rick Mln,yard and Rick Mauro, cornerback
Barry Co~lHd, punter Jet KaJm and center
Lore_.. UUy. Leavins camp were Dave DoaJall
an.d Ray Polk ... Steve Myer, attemptln1 a
comeback at quarterback for SeatUe, has re·
tired . . . Backup quarterback Larry Fortner
was cut by AUanta ... Tom Oweo, a backup
quarterback ror most of Ms aeven-year~ld Na·
tional Football League career. rejoined New
England after signJng for the 1981 season . . .
Reserve quarterback Pete Wood.a waa waived
by Miami . . . BUJ KaamaJer, who won the
"World's Strongest Man" competition the last
two years, is attempting t.o become a member
or Green Bay. The 6·2. 300-poW)der is working at
nose tackle . . . llonale Lou missed the first
five days or camp because or contract snarls,
but he's getting a warm reception Crom the
San Francisco 49ers.
Players, owners on opposlt.e coasts
CHJCAGO -Striking major Iii
league players and club owners wiU
be meeting on opposite coasts Wed·
nesday as the walkout that has canceled more
than 25 percent of the 1981 baseball season con·
tinues through its seventh week.
Armed with a vote of confidence Crom the
player representatives, Marvin Miller, ex·
ecutive director of the union, will hold the first
in a series or regional meetings in Los Angeles.
Miller said no further meetings had been
scheduled.
At the same time, the 26 club owners will
gather in New York for an update from the
Player Relations Committee and their chief
negotiator, Ray Grebey.
Miller spent more than five hours Monday
night briefing the executive board or the union
on the negotiations, which broke down last
Thursday in Washington. The two sides had
bargained for four days with a news blackout
and Miller said he thought the players needed
an update on the status of their strike.
Some 25·30 players who are not executive
board members showed up for Monday night's
meeline.
Baseball today
On lh1a dat. lD baltball ln lt1t:
Blue Moon Odom (ftvt ln.nlnl•> and
Francl1co Barrloe (four 1DA1n11> com·
blned on a no-hitter u Ult Ch1ca10 Whit.
Sox defeated the Oakland A's , 2·1.
Today's blttbday:
San Franclaco ace Vida Blue ls 32.
Heritage sails to victory
MACKINAC ISLAND, Mich. ~
Heritage, skippered by Don Wildman
or Chicaeo. wu the first boat across
the finish Une Monday in the 57tb Port Huron·to-
Mackinac sailing race.
Heritage. a 63-footer based at the Chicago
Yacht Club, wu the first yacht to finish both
the 74th Cbicago·to·Mackinac Island race and
the Chicago-to-Sarnia International Yacht
Race, sailed concurrently last week.
Two-time Rose Bowl captain dies
Retired Marine Brig. Gen. Jolm •
W. Beckett, a captain or two different
Rose Bowl wiMers (Oregon in 1918
and Mare Island Marines in 1918), died Sunday.
He was 88 ... Argentina's Joee-Lala Clerc beat
GuUlermo VU11, 7·5, 6·2, to win the Washington
Star International tennis championship ... The
New York Rangers will conduct part of their
1981 National Hockey League training camp in
Finland and Sweden ... A boat which compel·
ed Sunday in the Columbia Cup unlimited
hydroplane races in Pasco, Wash., has been
stolen. authorities revealed Monday. The van
used to tow the U ·S -known as •'The
Machine," and owned by retired Eastern
Airlines Captain Carroll Kem -was taken from
the Red Lio"n Hotel early Monday, detectives
said . Crew Members thought it was a joke and
figured the van would be returned, so no report
was flied until the crew later discovered that
the hydroplane, docked in the pit area of Colum-
bia Park where the race was held, also was mis-
sing.
Television, radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Baseball -Tucson at Salt Lake Ci·
ty, 6:30 p.m .. KMPC (710).
Kuhn has
a decision
If strike settled, then what?
From AP dhpatcbet
If -and it's becoming a big 1' -the 1981
baseball season is ever resuoted. what format will
it take?
WUJ teams simply pick up where they left off.
or wUJ some more complex formula be adopted to
determine the champion or this strike-scarred
season?
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn's staff has been lo·
formally polling teams in an effort t.o get their in·
put and reactions to various proposals as to what
shape a resumed season should take. A spokesman
for Kuhn said it's premature to discuss those plans
right now.
"IT'S PREMATURE to get into something
that may occur Aug. 1, Aug. 15, or whenever,"
said Chuck Adams of the commissioner's office.
BASEBALL
··A key to anything is to get a settlement. Once
we've got a settlement. we'll be able to say where
we go from there."
One direction could be to make 1981 into a split
season -declare the leaders at the time of the
strike the winners of the first half, then start from
scratch when the strike is settled and play a
second half. The two winners would meet in a
mini-series t.o determine the four division cbam·
pions, and the r est would proceed normally.
The s ptit·season concept was proposed by Al
Rosen, president of the Houston Astros, who
believes there are too many inequities in the
schedule to pick up the season where it was inter·
rupted.
"SOME TEAMS WOULD end up playing more
borne games than others, and teams would play
each other different numbers of times," Rosen
said Monday.
PAY TO PLAY BECOMING A REALITY IN HIGH SCHOOLS • • •
"One of the most important factors is that If
we just picked up where we left orr. many teams
wouldn't have the opportunity to make up lost
ground. They're so far behind they'd be out of the
running right away and there would be diminished
fan interest in those cities.
"lf you start it fresh, it wilJ give the fans in
every city something t.o root for." avenue to pay, it's a matter of survival."
Newport-Mesa chief John NicoU went even
further in urging his board to drop the fee plan,
asking for an additional $90,000 for the 1981 ·82
budget for extracurricular activity busing.
Nicoll cited the pending legal action and called
the proceeds of such fees "picayune."
The district's trustees went with Nicoll on a
unanimous basis. Todd Hess, however , one of the
trustees, said: "Reality is going to cause some
sort of fee in the future if it remains legal."
One potential ramification is the plight of a
substitute, who seldom plays, but also pays his
money. On the other side, the coach, using his
personnel to his best advantage, is obviously going
t.o play his band to what he considers bis best ad·
vantage and the goaJ is very simple: Victory.
•'To date that hasn't really happened,'· says
Laguna Beach football coach Walt Hamera.
"We've had kids say they couldn't afford the time
commitment, but the money factor hasn't been
dangled over our heads. Athletes seem to un·
derstand.
"InitialJy I wanted no part of this. I felt it
wasn't proper. But when faced with realities. you
have to do something. Your tune changes when
faced with realities."
BOB HUGHES, THE PRINCIPAL at Laguna
Beach, says he bas not received a single complaint
about a player not getting enough playing time
during the two years fees have been implemented.
"Communication was made and people seem
to understa nd," says Hughes. "We 've sailed
through thus far, but yes, there are potential
problems. "It's permitted us lo retain our programs and
we have an escape clause, a form which goes
borne permiting those who find it impossible (to
pay) to have the fee reduced in half or reduced
completely. We get about 10 percent response (no
ree) per year ...
The participation fee includes transportation
and "replacement" of equipment.
Allie Schaff, football coach at San Clemente,
has been strongly vocal against it, but he, too, says
the times are dictating it.
"EVERYONE LOSES players because of it,"
says the v eteran Schaff. "You lose some
borderline kids, kids that wanted to come out, but
it just happened to be the straw that broke the
camel's back.
"Shoes are $35-$40, most buy their shirts and
insurance is close to $100 now. Some give up a job
on lop of it, then have to pay to play, too. Any
school that has this situation is going to lose kids.
"A lot of them will say the boosters or some·
one will pick it up, but a lot of kids won't ask
for it, it's a matter or pride. Others simply won't
sponsor a kid.
··our fees have been S2S·$35 for the entire
year. now they're talking about $100.
"It hurts. I don't care what anyone says. Often
limes I hear people stating they don't lose any
participants because of it, but our staff sat down
and checked out all of our sports and we feel we
lose 40 percent.
"Our sophomores have suffered. We had less
than 20 on in our sophomore football program, and
that's one step away from the varsity.
"It's going to get worse before it gets better."
OTHERS CONTACTED -Corona del Mar
High athletic director Ron Davis, Fountain Valley
athletic director Ken Duddridge and Saddleback
College assistant football coach BiU Cunerty. a
former head coach at Dana Hills and Capistrano
Valley, similar objections and effort for the school
should have to pay to do it," says Davis.
"It's a last resort thing," says Ouddridge. "If
if it is what it takes to save athletics, than it la a necessary evil.
"But it will keep some out of a second sport,
sports which may not be an athlete's No. 1 love,
but which ends up a very successful venture.
"RegardJess of what anyone says about the
needy being taken care of, a lot of them aren't go-
U.S. poloists closing in on gold
Americans remain unbeaten at World University Games
From AP clqakbet
BUCHAREST, Romania -
The U.S. water polo team ex·
tended it.a unbeaten streak to
fl ve matches by beating
Hunf ary 7-3 Monday, assuring
lt.sel of a medal at the World
University Games.
For tbe third Ume in a row,
ioalle John Ganael of Stanford
Untvenlt.y, a former star at
Foothill H1&h ln Tustin, wd out.
1t.andlnl to lead tbe Americant
to u uay vtcton.
Former Newport Harbor Hllh
1t.andout James Ber1esoo and
Orel BoJ.-alto excelled foe the u.s. lqUd. • • a&,lll now we',.. ln the bell
po1lt.kJD for the 10.kl," Hid U.S..
Coacb Dute DettamnantJ. UDdlr tbe comp.licat«t ICOriDI
system UMd hen, the Unlwa Stai. bu .,,ured It.MU ol a
med.al.._ ll lt klMI qatmt u.. Rom--...., today.
A VJ('T08Y over Romania wOukl lllife the Americ ... ol
u...r.:~ la 1wlmmtna,
llUW!id Y-••• al 8oiUtbsn Ce[ ·'aay laave 1urprlHd a
•••• ftl .-.i• wua •la• b1elk• tM •orld UalvenltJ O••• •·•et•r ladlvl•••l •. m ... eT rilord. Ille IUrprii.111
I
herself even more by doing it
twice 1n one day.
Yokohama shaved six seconds
off the previous record of 5:06.6S
wben she was timed in S:00.49 ln
qualifying Monday morning. She
lowered that mark by another
five seconds later 1n the day,
capturin1 the gold medal in
4: 55.45 lJl t.be final.
"I WN pretty surprised by the
whole day,," Yokohama said.
"I'm usually preu.y nervous dur·
ln, competltloa and' doo 't expect
t.hla sort at thins.•·
T8B tJNITED STATES lolt a
1Uver·medaJ performance ln tbe
race. 5'.anfOl'd'a Anne TwMdy
waa aeeood ln tbe 400-me&er ln·
dividual medley lD 4:57.• but
WU dbquaUfted foe •atmi ID
me1&1 tum &Iona ~tb Can.dlan
lba Dlsm and Barbara Seit«
of Wiit. Germany.
American toac:bea ftled a pro-
teet but to no Hall. ••lt11 a pritty ran thlq to,_
te.rH dl1quallllcaUoa1 IA a
•ln•le nff," 1atd U.S. aaRltuc
eoacb malt Comlan.
Tb• 81vw IDeidal •• aw.rded to aomma•1 lrtDtl Pn..a..ei,
wltll• Polaad'• Roayelu ............ tM ....... Ktm Lheb1n ot t'-.1·
Unlvedltj ol TU&I •ave UM
Americans a second swimming
gold Monday. taking the 800-
freesty le ln a games record
8 : 37 .50. Irina Laritscheva of the
Soviet Union was a distant
second.
Sergei Fessenko of the Soviet
Union won the other awlmminc
final Monday night, wlnnlni t.be
m e n's 400-meter Individual
medley in a games record time
of 4 :25.53.
THE AMERICAN women's
basketball team advanced lo
today's aold medal game
.,ainst the Sovie\ Union, de:feat-
lna Romania 74.e.t behind a 21·
po1nt tame by Ore1on State
center ~arol Menken. The Sov· leu downed China 'lt..$3 in the .
other aemltlna.1.
Semillnal action In men•a
b11ketball 1eu underwey IOda)'
wll.b the United Stata meetiq
Romania and t.M Sovleta play·
ln1 Yuc-lavta
Local Idol Vlr1tnla RmJel
captured a pair of told med•la
la tnnl1. Sbt do"'1led Latia
RomaDOY l ·l, ~1 la lM all·
RommlM women'a llall• ftaal
and thtll team.i wllli · PlorlJt lejarcea. to pmt a N; N wte.
torf o•tr R•Hla•1 lw1•
Leontak -Luclmll• •llllirof• ln the n:Ued dovblM ftM1 , .
\
ing to come forward. You can't help but lose a
few." says Duddridge.
"1 battled it," says Cunerty. "It really stems
from the fact all of education is not funded correct·
ly and athletics is the easiest area to cut. But in
the long run it may be more detrimental than peo·
pie know.
"They did this in the Palos Verdes d istrict
with about a $75 fee per sport on a sliding scale
and the eUect was disastrous.
"Coaches would love to coach and not walk
around with their hands out.
"It becomes a source of embarrassment for
the kid and it's a tough double standard. I think 10
of 140 athletes at Capistrano Valley, that's one in
every 14, may have been in this situation."
DICK ROCHE, University High's athletic
direct.or. says he expet'ts lo lose a handlul of
athletes because of the new fee.
"I bate to see it come, buf maybe we're creat·
ing our own money and running our own show. 1
don't really know what is going to happen.
"We've talked about that (if you pay, you ex-
pect to play), especiall y in basketball. Con·
ceivably there can be some problems, there are
still a lot of things we have to try to figure out."
All of this, of course, may be moot pending the
court case regarding the Santa Barbara situation.
But then again, maybe the Supreme Court's de·
cision will be moot, too, once the state legislature
gets involved.
That's where Mike Moropoulos, Santa Barbara
High Athletic Direct.or and former lootball coach.
comes upon t.be scene.
Moropoulos paints a grim and frustrating pie·
lure, citing the chances are good the State
Supreme Court will rule the whole mess iUegaJ,
but just as convinced the state legislature will in
turn pass new laws to make it legal.
He was against the recent suit primarily
because of the liming, since it would have
destroyed Santa Barbara's athtetic program in
mid-season.
But the $33 a sport per student imposed on
Santa Barbara High athletes bas had an adverse
effect on the program, according to MoropouJos.
"LET'S FACE FACTS," says Moropoulos.
"Kids can come by $25 pretty easy these days. But
as a coach I toJd my players on the fifth day or
practice that for those that have paid the fee, come
back tomorrow. Of 60 players, 13 returned.
"We have a 'scholarship program' wbJcb
amount.a to a form for the kids t.o return and we'll
make arrange men ta for the fee, but many won't do
it. It's a matter of pride and J tried t.o tell the
board of education th•t 1n the tint place.
"MlnoriUea. especially, won't do tbat.
"I bad one famlly, a minority mother too
proud to accept welfare, with athletes in the faml·
ly: They had to buy insurance, shoes and still bad
to pay and just flat out couldn't do it. I've paid a
couple myself."
The big question for Moropoulos baa been
whether Santa Barbar a has actually lost athletea
because of tbe fee.
"Yes, we have, but I can't say it's because of
the pay for play of just coincidence," be replies.
"Parents are saying we'd ratber pay than
abandon a program, and I'm saying that, too.
"Btrr F~OM THE STAllT this tblnl ls preJ·
udlced a&ainlt athletes. No one else pays. Not atu·
dent.I twnc a food clua, tor fleld trips . . .
• 'Tbe way the trend ls 1oin1 J think the
legislature ls going to chanae the law to mile it
lttaJ. But ll \be truth were told, this 11 UlegaJ.
Fabrication and clrcumventln1. bowner, wlU
make it appear lepl.
The Atlanta Braves have endorsed this pro·
posal, according to executive vice president AJ
Thornwell, who described it as "the best way t.o re·
vive interest in the season in all major league
cities."
Nonsense! says Eddie Einhorn, president of
the Chicago White Sox.
"YOU'RE NOT GOING TO FOOL the people,"
Einhorn said. "They know a bad team when they
see one , some people favor the split season
because it keeps everybody in the race. but the
bad teams will still lose. To start alJ over again
and play another inequitable season would just
compound the situation and penalize the good
teams."
Instead, Einhorn proposes expanding the
number of teams which qualify for postaeason
play. Instead of just the division champions, he'd
let the top two, lhre~ or four teams in each division
advance into mini-series.
"My basic feeling," said Einhorn, "is that an
extra tier or intra-divisional playoffs is necessary
to redo the imbalance in the schedule. There are
inequities and they can't be corrected by having a
two-part schedule because that would only double
them.
"THE SCHEDULE JS A BIG THING in
baseball. Over 162 games everything equals out -
long road trips and short road trips, home games
and road games. playing every team the same
number of times. it's the most testing schedule in
sports -but when you t¥e that balance away,
you just have to treat it in a special way."
Einhorn offers three options t.o his plan of put·
ting more teams into the playoffs. Under Plan A,
the top two teams in each division would play a
best-of.five series. Under Plan B. the division win·
ner would draw a bye and face the winner of a
best-of-three set between the second and third
finishers. Under Plan C, teams 1·4 and 2·3 would
play best-of.five.
Louf eks sweep
to Prindle title
LONG BEACH -Richard and Gretchen
Loufek of Newport Beach -to no one's surprise -
dominated the Prindle Cat State Championship re·
gatta here by winning the highly competitive 16-A
division.
The Loufeks have been winning locaJ and na-
tional titles in the class since they switched over
from Hobie Cats several years ago. The husband·
wife team ls considered the top small catamaran
sailors ln the U.S.
Trophy winners in each class :
PRJNDLE-18 -1. Randy Smyth.Jay Glaser,
Huntington Bea ~h ; 2. Jorn Curtiss-J ennifer
Roscoe, Mi ami, Fla.; 3. Nigel and Mike Wood, San
Diego.
16·A -1. Richard and Gretchen Loufek,
Newport Beach; 2. Gunnar and Otto Kruse, San
Diego; 3. Steve Quant-Leslie Llndermann,
Phoenix.
16-8 -1. John Clark-Julie Rethwtsh, San
Diego; 2. Peter and Joey SanUey, Dana Point; 3.
Glenn Ross·Bill McGraw, La Crescenta.
18-Novlce -1. Tom Wllaon-Scott Payne,
Woodland Hills; 2. Peter Mahoney, Gwen RUI,
Lona Beach; 3. Mike Kellerman-Sandi Babbitt,
Long Beach.
PRINDLE·l5 -l . Mlke Staudt, Rivenlde; 2.
Earl Kinna.man. Bellfiower; 3. Dave Perry, IA'
Crescenti. ''Tbe bottom llne II th1I: Whft tlMy start
cbarlina tOf' other elute• J can accept It. ltduca· ----------..----------l
U.on Ia iuppoeed to be tree. Tbla ii co-curricular
and dellnltely part of the c:urrtcuhnri. Our coacht1, aaus J
tor lmt~. t.eacb t.brff pertodl a day and the """' I
other two periods IJ'e foe coechlni. but tbey•re l'rll'Oll nc•m l-PJ1d foe five period.a.. ,)IA} ft
"What. reall1 bolben me ta llo1' memben ot
the achool board ~an be IO ..w.imoua and ••JIAI bow lmportaat atbletl~ are, ad what a pal job I ···;,,~like·~ .. : 8oml are cl0tiil1t now, 21M&~1111
IOIDe an walU..,, to '" wb8t tbe 9lat. .. ,..... CAiii tw 1• • .,, COurt deddel.
IUl,........, lt •ppem"I the, ............. OI'
GD lM Dar lliorilan. Aild aiaft they ate, WeU1 Ilka &.axn. tbeJ .... , be e.m,...-,.
4 a •3 ....... 5'.L ..... -"'-"'-..---------------....... ----··· . . . . . .. . -------~ L-..;:..----
Dally Pilat
TUESDAY,JULY28, 1911
COMICS 83
-
I ra~---------------------
llllll 111£1/lllTI ClllT BUSINESS 84
TELEVISION 88
Oil firms prepare
for Gulf Coast
coal boom . . . B4
Who'll fill Laguna. City Council seat?
It shOutd be a relatively Sill\f
pie thine, selecting a flftb coun·
ell member from among 20 ap-
plicants tor the Laguna Beach
post.
But given politics in Laguna
Beach, toniehl's meeting at 7 in
council chamber• could go on
for hours, some council ob,
servers say, and even then it
miRht end in a deadlock.
Tbe four council members re-
maining on the panel traditional·
ly have split 2·2 on most city
Law sui t
aim e d at
• meeti ngs
A new lawsuit has been rtled
Monday aimed at preventing
Christian student groups from
meeting in school facilities dur·
ing lunch periods at Mission Vie·
jo High School and other Sad·
dleback Valley schools.
The laws uit, filed Monday in
Orange County Superior Court,
is sponsored by the American
Civil Liberties Union and is
b rought by a group of
c le rgy m en , parents and a
teacher in the Saddleback
Valley Unified School District.
lt is the same group that tried
unsuccessfully in June for a
court order barring the student
gr oups from meeting in such
places as Mission Viejo High's
little theater .
Superior Court Judge Luis
Cardenas denied that request.
Law ye r Richard
Petherbridge, an ACLU volun-
teer , said the new lawsuit
represents a chance to "spell out
more clearly bow we think the
present system amounts to an
establishment of religion."
A hearing has been set on Aug.
27 in Judge Cardenas· court.
Petherbridge said the group
needed to clarif[ in their su.it
how the s choo district has
become involved in the religious
education at Mission Viejo High
by allowing its little theater to
b e u sed and c ondoni ng
lunchtime visits from a local as·
sistant minister.
"The group feels everyone is
entitled to his own religion. bot
not in school." Petherbridge
said.
The policy to allow religious
groups to meet on campus was
approved by the school district's
Board of Trustees . Board mem-
bers clalm their policy is one or
non-involvement.
Pelhe rbridge sa id the key
seems to be , whether granting
the use of school facilities con·
stitutes ties between church and
stale.
Riley names
new airport
p a nel member
Gregory Hirsch of Newport
Beach bas been appointed by
Supervisor Thomas Riley to
r e place Walter Koch as a
member of the Orange County
Airport Commisak>n.
Hirsch, 24 . the son of promi·
n e nt Newport Beach busi·
nessman Clement Hirsch and an
active Republican Party
member, ·•was more than happy
to accept the appointment," Ken
Hall, a Riley aide, said today.
Koch, by mutual · greement
with Riley, resiened effectlv~
July 31. Koch said he disagreed
with recent decisions by county
supervisors to embark on a $75
to SlOO million to improve and
enlarge airport facilities.
Asked for his position on the
controversial iasue of airport
enlargement, Hirsch aald, "l ha·
ven't really come up wltb a
stance. It's difficult for any two
people to see eye to eye on
airport issues."
Hirsch said be believes the
commiaaion, which 11 an ad·
vlaory body to the board of
superviton, "can play H lnte·
aral role" in decldlnr critical
airport-related lstues.
Hlncb cradueted from Stm-
tord University In 1978 wttb a detree in ~mies. The Bil
Canyon resident LI pr•ldent of
Hlrach Enterpri.HI, an lnv.t·
meat compan7 that mana1u
real estate aad aeewlUn. Hincll serv• u bultMu m•IUll• far
hla taQMr'a lluitdal empire.
Youns H1ndl ii a •••blr ol board IA dlreeton of United Way
of Oran1e Count7L ~~·-• Kos.,._. 152 C1ub, Bii BrOUMn
of Oraa1e C4)UDt1, asd tt•
Reg:.t.UcaD State C.traJ Cam· ml . . ,
matters. 1'oniaht they face the
task of selecting a fifth council
member to serve the unexpired
eight-month term or former
Mayor Wayne BaeUn who re·
signed earlier this month.
By the noon deadline Monday,
20 Lagunans bad submitted re-
sumes ouUining their qualifica-
tions for the interim post.
And tonight, following the
Pledge of Allegiance at 7 sharp,
the council will concentrate on
the single item on the agenda.
How Iona. and bow smoothly
the selecUon will go is anyone's
guess. An informal poll of
several council members and Ci·
ty Hall observers range Crom
estimates of a ball hour to three
hours.
The mayor pro tem, Kelly
Boyd, said he hopes each counclr
m·e m ber will agree to select
three names Crom among' the 20
as their top choices.
From there be suggests each
member narrow their choices to
two, and from that Hat, select
their final choice .
Each member would then
rank the four remainina can·
didates from one to four and the
candidate with the most points
would be in.
But, he said, councilwoman
Sally BeUerue has told him she
wants each member to select
their top five choices. Boyd says
that member would be unwieldy.
Mrs. Bellerue could not be
reached for comment today.
Ho wever they go about it.
most of the 20 candidates will
probably be watching the selec·
lion process from council cham·
be rs.
Those who have applied for
the job include :
Jerrold Bloch, attorney; Ben
Blount, reder al consultant; Jon
Brand, former mayor ; David
Carter, deputy di strict attorney;
Michael Easley, former Laguna
employee; Scott Ferguson. en·
vironmental consultant; Karen
Mo'rrison -Ford, interior dee·.
orator ; R0bert Gentrv. UCl ad·
m mist rator. Gerald Hallahan,
engineer; and Henry Hampton ,
chair man of Ar ts C'omm1-.swn
Also, Dan Kenney. Design
Review Board; J ames Lynn.
student: Maggie Meggs, former
councilwoman . Bobbi Minkin,
pro per ty m a nagt.•ment. Carl
Schwarz, un1 vcrs1 ty proft>ssor .
Fred Solo m on . forml'r city
manager , Arl WC1hl ~lhool
counselor . J Earl Waterhurv.
planning comm1si>1oner . Andy
Wing , a r tis t : and William
Wilcoxen. allorney
Niguel repairs awaited
Residents fearful of slopes below their homes •
....,,... .........
Laguna Niguel Communitu Association member Wick Hartung
stands next to Golden Lantern Street slope he says needs to be
repaired.
Drinking and drugs
b e fore killing told
A day of drinking and drug
takin g preceded the night
Ste phen Ciaconne, a Garden
Grove drug deale r , was re·
peatedly shot with arrows in a
Huntington Beach oil fi eld, a
participant in the slaying has
testified.
L a urie Agu i rre . 20, who
pleaded guilty to voluntary
mans laughte r , said h e r
estranged husband, Joe Agulrre,
36, was among those at their
Gothard Str eet residence who
was drinking heavily on July 18,
1980, whe n the plo t to kill
Ciaconne is all eged to have been
made.
Aguirre a nd James Robert'
Marvin, 24, are facing murder
and cons pirac y c harges in
Orange County Superior Court in
connection with the death of
Ciaconne, who was living tem-
porarily at the Aguirre home
while attempting to hide from
narcotics investiga tors and
former customer s.
Ciaconne was among those
drinking whiskey on the day of
bis death, Mrs. Agu.irre testified.
He also took several tablets ol
the drug Quaalude.
only portions of her previous
testimony for the prosecution
about events that took place in
the oil field where Ciaconne was
slain.
She quoted Ciaconne. who was
stumbling along a dirt trail, as
saying he knew it was to be "the
last night or my life."
Mrs. Aguirre s aid s he told
Ci aconne "not lo think that
way."
Under further questioning,
Mrs . Agu.irre conceded that she
was attempting to gain a favort·
ble outcome in her own criminal
case by testifying against her
husband and Marvin.
"It's fair to say you don't want
lo do anything to displeas~ him
(Deputy District Attorney Pat
Geary)?" Beecher asked at one
point.
"R i ght," Mrs . Aguirre
res ponded.
She has yet to be sentenced on
her gu.ilty plea to manslaughter,
pending the outcome or the trial.
She fa ces a two to s ix-year
prison term.
Two other defendants, James
Garwood, 24, and Brian Miller,
21 , also have pleaded guilty to
voluntary manslaughter.
By JOHN NEEDHAM
Of .. Oeltt ...........
Laguna Niguel residents living
along Golden Lantern Street are
still waiting for repairs to begin
en the long-negleded slopes
l below their homes, nearly five
months after they were told the
work would be done.
And offic ials representing
Orange County and Avco Com-
munity developers sa y snags
have develo-ped in the agree·
ment they reached in March for
the developer to restore the de·
teriorated grades rising above
the street.
County and Avco officials are
s c h e dul e d to m eet wi th
representatives of the communi·
ty Friday to try to work out a
solution to the problem.
Under the agreement reached
in March and announced at a
m e et i n g o f abo u t 3 0
homeowners . Avco represen·
tatives said their firm would ful·
ly rd tore the slopes at a cost of
$150,000.
In turn, county officials said
after the work was completed
the county would then take over
responsibility for the slopes' up-
keep. Money to maintain the
steep grades would come from
county Service Area 3 funds.
which are d esigna ted for
municipal services in Laguna
Niguel.
Bill Gaboury, Avco's direct.or
of Project Development, said
work in the three-acre area
would include removal of all ex-
isting plant growth except trees
and bushes. The slopes would
then be seeded with drought·
r esistant plant coverings and the
irrigation system would be re·
paired.
In addition to the cost of re·
pairs. Avco also agreed to con-
tribute $100,000 to Service Area 3
funds for park improvements at
Crown Valley Community Park
on Crown Valley Parkway.
This was to satisfy the Laguna
Niguel Community Association,
which has set as its first priority
completion of the second con·
struction phase at the park, in·
eluding the building of a gym·
nasium.
Since park construction and
slope maintenance would com-
pete for funding from the same
~ource, the community associa-
tion did not want the county to
take responsibility for any more
slopes until building at the park
was comple ted. But Av co's
$100,000 contribution satisfied
Goll lessons set
for Laguna seniors
-Goll lessons for older Laguna
Beach residents wlll begin Aug.
8 at Thurston Intermediate
School, with golf pro Werner
Schram instructin1.
Individual lessons, as well as
group cluses are offered at a
low cost through the Council on
Aging of Laguna Beach. For in·
formation, call 497-2441.
•
During the day, she told the
jury in Judge Kenneth Lae's
courtroom, Ciaconne and
Marvin became involved in an
argument that ended when
Marvin was pushed into the
bathtub. A.a for the cause or the
argument, Mrs. Aguirre said,
"Steve was telling Bob, 'You're
aJways doing this to me, taking
the girls away'."·
Sizable souven1r·
Under crocs examination from
Deputy Public Def ender Michael
Beecher, her husband'• at-
torney, Mrs. Aguirre recalled
Senion to view
'African Queen'
"The Afrtcan Queen." •tar·
rtns Humphrey Bogart and
Katbarlne Hepburn, will be
sbown lre6 to L11una Beach
aealor e:Wiem Au1. a1.
Tb9 movie ii IPOOl«ed Jo81U1
b7 Lapna ...,.... Savlnp ud
Loae and I.be Sea.lot ctu..,
Club al Lal\ID,a Beac:b, It will ac:reen at 2 p.m. at tbe Sou&b
CO.at 1'bMa. ud tJc:lleta are
available from Bob Porter at lble
leihir Oiil.9'. SU l'ONlt Aft.
35·/ oot tequila bottle stolen
WbUe more than .00 volleyball
enthualatU celebrated below,
som eone stole the 35-foot plut.lc:
CUervo Gold tequila botUe from
the roor of the Tortilla Flatl
rtttaurant in Laruna Beach ear··
ly Monday. ·
Tbe theft of the metcaJ mon9-
ment came Just bourt after tbe
cooclu1lon of the two da1
La1una Beach Open Pro Buch
Vo1leyb11J Tournament, apon~ in part by UM Cuervo
people.
The eoaMlt aruuaally f eature1
tbe bqe alr~ed tequUa boWe,
vtatble from Cout Jlltbway dur-
tni the compeUtlon at Maio
Beacb Pan. Police aaid ownen of tbe •.ooo ~Ill belloon defla~
ed It toUoWinl the compedUGD.
tbn ... tan ... It • t.M root ol
the Mexican restaurant prior to .
a late m1ht party at that loca·
tlon at the south end of town.
Steve Levinson, wbo OW'DI the
rettaurant. said thievH ap·
••renUy defiated the coatly bot·
U., whUe celebraatl were 1tlll ln ...1Juild1n .. ·•~veryone wu partyin1 and
bavins a 1ood tJme," Levtnaon
aaid. "Who would know 1c>meooe
wa1 ttealln.Jcs tbe bottle T"
Police one 'Wita.., -a
r•taurant employee -saw two
men • tbe root earlier ln tbe nenlq.
The p1lr, one deaerlbed u
bload wltla eurlJ balr. UM oUlel' . wttaa Mn .. T7 balr. took ..,
the plaaUc lnnatable botU1,
ltHIQI ~ a 1m1IJ mot«
uaed to pump air lnto Ute bus•
ballOOll.
associaUon officers.
B ut ac c or d i n~ l o Pete r
Herman, executive a ide to 5th
District Supervisor Tom Riley,
Avco is now say in~ it already
has surplus cr edits in park ded·
ication fees.
"They don't owe us any more
money," Herman said .. At our
meeting Friday we will try to re-
solve t his and revive the deal.
Meanwhile. the hitch in the
slope repair agreement leaves
Golden Lantern Street residents
at odds with their own communi·
ty association over how Service
Area 3 funds should be spent.
"I don't see what park fees
have to do with rcp:unng slopes
that are deteriorating and in
danger of eroding." said Wirk
Hartung, the community a'
soc iall o n mt·rnbl'r "'ho
re presents the area
He said lhc assoe1alion's first
priority should be lo maintain
peoples' properl). rather than
expand recreation faulit1t·s at
Crown Valley Communit~ Park
Gaboury said ht· bt:lll•\e., a
solution can be work<'d out to tht•
satisfaction of a ll lht• p:.irt1t•:-in-
vol vcd. "There an• some snugs,
but we arc prepared lo mo\'e
after our meeting Frida'. · the
Avco prOJe<'t developer said
OellJ P!Mt l uff -
Marlo Bartels displays examples of hrs tile> art <ti the 1.oquna
Beach F est ival of Arts
Fe stival exhibitor
gets $5,000 grant
To Laguna Beach Festival of
Arts exhibitor Marlo Bartels,
there's nothing like a ceramic
glaze for intensity of color and
richness. _
For the first display of his work
at the festival, Bartels has a selec·
tion of ceramic Wes featuring ex·
otic birds and fish lo tropical col·
arts patrons, lo organize funding
for the project.
Bartels said he enJoys his part
ti me teaching JOb a t Leisure
World because of the interest
shown by his students
"I really enjoy teaching people
who are interested in learning,"
he s aid. "Older people bring more
to the class than younger people
ors. simply beca use oft heir eagerness
"It's my intention to show the to learn."
beauty of ceramic glazes,'' He said he quit his teaching job
Bartels said. "A lot of the old at the Laguna Beach School or Art
tones ot maroon, blue and tur· three years ago to work full time
quoise are hard to find exceJ>tin a in his Laguna Canyon Hoad
few old California homes built in studio.
the 20s, 30s and 405." He hH just finished a 19· foot tile
The Art Colony resident sald he wall mural for the Chart House
has been awarded a $5,000 grant restaurant in Ventura. his biggest
fromtheNaUonalEndowmentfor commissiontodate.
the Art.a to research the history of Bartels said he nevtr knows ex
ceramic ti I e ma k 1 n g 1 n actly what color hi s wor k will be
California. ·UOUI it is Clred In the kiln.
Bartels, who leaches ceu~ca "Ceramic glazes aren't like
at the Leisure World reUrement .paints," he said. "Whal you see
community ln Lisuna HilJa, a1ao isn't what you get. A glHe that s
bas approached Laiuna Beach of-treen when it ls brushed on may
nc:lila wtth a plan to tUe the be a brlJbt red art r it comes out otthe klln:• bencb .. alongForeatAven11e. Bartels aaJd Ma desil.J\S are
"When you aee the bencba now brushed on sever al Oles •nd then
they're Juat 1ray concrete," be separated for flrlnt. They art
aaJd. ·•1•vet.hou1htofu1lns flued lben pl1ced back totelher tofonn
Wea showint blatorical 1ctM1 of the tlnlabed pJctute~'/'1 i
tile beech ana from about • "RICht now l JJftJtl' workiJll
yevaqo.'' wlt.b tilel ralber ~ modular
Bartell aald he wa1 workln1 type ceramlca," he sald. ··1 dcm't
with tbe Lasuna Be1c:b ArU AJ. think there I• 1njt.h1na that can
llanc:t, a private tund·ralllnl r •bow the rkhiH!a or • color llkt
lf'OUP made up of cll1 art!ltl and c ramlct.ll ••
, ~ ·-....,~· ______ _.__..;;~·--------------,...;;..--............. --...J.4.~--------._;~._ ...... .J.o,,_._ ____ _., ............ ~----.... --------------....c:.;:~ '
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tueaday, July 28, 1981
MARCIUNG SLOWLY BACKWARD
-Got a call just yesterday from a very
nice anonymous lady from Huntinaton
Beach who would Uke to see clvtllzation
slip back to the old-fashioned
pushbroom. Her story gives you an idea
why.
"I just want to complain about an ln·
rernal machine that's supposed to
. replace the push broom for sweeping out
~·
/'o' TD_M_M_U_RP-HIN-E~i;
places like carports and parking lots,··
she explained.
"It's a very noisy, motor-driven
blower type thing which does nothing
more than blow the dust around.
l "I work at a night job and you just
lry getting some sleep during the day
'whe n one of these machines goes into ac·
lion ..... -
WELL I CAN TELL you I really
sympathize with that one. Noise and
racket seem to be a major bedevilment
or our supposedly advanced civilization
these days. •
Consider the phonograph. for exam·
pie.
When Thomas A. Edison first invent·
ed the phonograph. you could barely
hear it over the scratchings of the needle
across the cylinder. Then somebody im·
proved it so it didn't scratch so much
and you could hear it all across a big
parlor for dancing.
So do we leave well enough alone '?
We do not. We continued to .. im·
prove " old Tom E's machine by adding
more power. multiple speakers and then
more power again.
Today, you couldn·t hear a Tom
Edison's needle scr atch if it did scratch.
Stereophonic, multi-quad s peakers and
all blast out the sound with enough dee·
ibils to deafen dogs three blocks away.
And in my neighborhood, 3 a .m . is
the prime time for this kind of thing.
Alas. unlike the frazzled nice lady
from Huntington Beach . I am not s up-
posed to be a night worker. But I'm not
much of a night sleeper these days
either, thanks to the improvement on the
original invention.
NO WONDER THE LADY wants to
re-invent the pushbroom. Few people
have ever been.awakened by one, unless
somebody wu beating on y'ou with the
business end. ..
Also pushbrooms, when applied to
the regular task, tend to pile , up the
debris at the end of the strokes so you
have to do something with the rubbish.
Like pick it up and haul it away.
And s he's right about the new
blower gadgets. They just get the stuff .
airborne so it becomes somebody
else's problem when it settles back down
again.
It's like the r otters in my
neighborhood with the stereo. lt's
somebody else's problem aft&r the
crazed sounds blow out their windows.
ONCE, AROUND THE Newport
Beach, Costa Mesa and Irvine areas,
they had jet aircraft flying overhead
that lots of folks thought were very
noisy. So they re-invented a less noisy
"She wa.s quiet. Zeb, before they put that engine on
one and now a lot of people think it's
noisier than the noisy ones were.
ffs very confusing, all this progress.
Year s ago , we s o improved
automobiles that they were getting 29
miles to the gallon. Then we wanted to
get rid of noxious fumes so we fixed
those cars so they got 14 miles per
gallon. Now we've fixed what we fixed ·
and autos are back up to 29 miles per
gallon again. ·
Sometimes it seems like progress is
one step for ward and three to the rear.
Sagittarius to make new st8"
Wednesday, July %9
By S\'DNEV OMARR
TAURUS <April 20·May 20>· Restnct1ons are re·
moved.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20>: Be wary when it comes
to arrixing signature lo legal document
ARJl ES (Marckh 2l·Aprtl 191 Opportunity exists lo CANCER (June 21-July 22 >: You could win populart
correc past m1sla es ty contest.
• · LEO <July 23·Aug. 22>: Famil y member .conndes Patterning help needed a s~::~o <Aug 23-Sepl. 22> Aura of romance
· dominates scenario.
VOLUNTEERS are needed to help a brain·
injured youth through patterning exercises 30 HOROSCOPE minutes twice a day. Hours can be arranged. Contact
Jack or May Beresford at 631·3404 for more informa·
tion.
COMMUNICATION FORCOUPLESwilhJoyce
and Robert Simpson will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tues-
day in Santa Ana. For information, caJl 532·5646.
WINNER AND LOSERS: That's Us is the theme
of a free workshop sponsored by the Mental Health
Association of Orange County at 9:30 a.m. Friday in
Santa Ana. For information. call 547 · 7559.
LIBRA <Sept. 23·0cl. 22>: Emphasis on promotion
production. timing and Intensified relationship. '
SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21 J. Longstanding project
can be completed.
SAGIITARIUS <Nov. 22·Dec. 21 > You'll make new
start In new direction. ~APRJCORN <b ee 22·J a n. 191. Emphasize caution,
meticulous attention to detailll.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20· Feb. 18). Perceive situation tn
tL'I entirety.
PISCES <Feb. 19-March 20> Doors open and you
have opportunities for creative endeavors. PLANNED PARENTHOOD of Orange County is
seeking volunteers to take part in a countywlde
telephone survey in August. For information, call ···RUFFELL 'S
973·17Z7. UPHOLSTERY .
PROBLEM SOLVING is thetopicof adiscuss1on s.-.. .,._,, ......
Jed by stress specialist Murray Oxman at 10:30 a.m. 1922 HAHOl llVi>.
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
M2-5e18
Saturday in Newport Beach. For Information. call ,COSTA !t4H•_-::_l!f.l.:l llA
(213) 936-9~1~76!!.:,.. ____________ J.!!~~~~~~~~--------_J
SHUTIERS CUSTOM QUAUn SHUTIERS
Designed,
Finished
Installed
f.INEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILAB~E
ON THE MARKET TODAY ••• AT FACTORY
DIRllCT PRICDI call (714) 5tM141 or 548-1717
1977 PllClntta Av.nue • Costa Mes-. CA lllD
Receptions
by MARY JANE SCARCELLO Of •• o.uy "6.e ,...,
T he Laguna Beach Museum of Art hosted
a private reception for Blue Ribbon
Sponsors who contributed to the Junior
Council's Art Education for Children
before the opening of ''Southern California
Artists: 1940·1980."
Contributors, who each gave $100 or more,
were presented with a specially designed blue
ribbon for display at the museum's entrance by
Janet Eggers, the museum·s fund-raising
chairman.
Guests enjoyed classicial guitar music, a
hosted bar and hors d'oeuvres while viewing the
exihibit, curated by Maudette BaJI of Newport
Beach.
The hors d'oeuvres, served on the patio, were
prepared by Kay Pastorius, director of the
Sc~ool of International Cuisine. Her husband is
sculptor Ha1 Pastorius.
Mrs. Pastorius, assisted by Kathy Douglass
and their committee from the Junior Council
prepared such gourmet delicacies as poached
s almon with dill sauce, curried atuffed
mushrooms, Italian sausage quiche, campignon
pate and assorted fresh vegetables with a
spinach dip.
Among the members and guests at the party
and ope.ning were Ken and Marla Bird, Norman
and Virginia Nixon, lrmeli Desenberg, Cindy
Prewitt, ~r . and Mrs. Nick B. Williams, Arlene
Isaacs, Jim and Wendy Wood, Dr. and Mrs.
Richard Newquist. Tom Enman and Adrian
Kuyper.
N ewport Harbor Art Museum's opening,
held the same evening, attracted the
rest of Orange Coast's art world.
Mark Boyle's "Journey to the Surface
of the Earth" reproduced chunks of terra firma
from all over the world, evoking cobblestones,
At the Laguna Beach
Mu&eum of Art were
r top from Left J Mrs.
John 8 . Parker. Mrs.
Richard Newquist , a
Dr. and Mrs. Norman
Nixon. At the Newpor
Harbor Art Museum
were r photo at left fro
left J Damd Steinmetz.
Margarita Shaw. B.J.
Richter and her husbard
George.
,
I
are artsy
vacant lots and meadows in fiberglass.
Museum members set aside wine glasses to l
travel through •·Bram's Very Own Fault," an 1
architectural sculpture creating passageways I
for exploration.
Artist Peter Berg toolt 12 days to install his 1 work, and a scale model on the wall gave vis-1
1
ilors an overview of the project.
Among the viewers were Betty Turnbull and i
I I
~~~~~~~~ho also had attend~ J
Laguna opening. l -
Rumors in the art world are that the twol
women may open an art gallery together which
will feature onJy California artists.
Other guests were Bill and Bobbie Stabler.I
Laurie Brown, Tom and Ginny Haley, Davij Steinmetz with Margarita Shaw, George and
B.J. Richter, Andrew and Ursula Cyga. Steve
and Judy Strauss, Max and Carolyn Dunn, Cora
Baldikoski, Harry and Charlotte Selling an
Snoozie Ullman.
Bomb group al.ates reunion j
A reunion committee for the 345th Bom
Group, a bomber outfit that flew B-25s in th
Pacific during World War II, Is looking for thei
comrades for a September 1982 reunion i
Colorado.
Retired Col. C. V. True, reunion chair, said th
committee knows the whereabouts of only 1.000 o
the 8,000.member group.
Committee officials are requesting squa
members or anyone knowing the whereabouts of
member to call 886·2169.
$1,000or1110te-I,12 weeks
Racked by Seaarttiesoft.be U.S. or U.S. Government
Agenoea. THIS OBUGATION 18 NOT A SAVINGS
ACCOUNT OR DEPOSIT ANO 18 NOT INSURED 8Y111EFEOERALSAV1NGSANDLOAN
INSURANCJ: CORPORATION.
•
%
A10111nl Hulr
Todayi inll're'I rail'
gwrantl'l'd w
the term b~
~n•:an Savviics
~ phis intereat plid by American S.vinp at
maturity. NO FEE, NO SERVICE CHARGE. Availible
to California tt1ident1 onl)t Interest r1te1 ft aetJ11ib;.
Brine any bank or .. vlnp puabook. We'll tranafer
thtluftdt.
SAVINGS
•
--------------------------------------
..., ..... ---r.~----------------------
TU ESOAY, JULY 28, 1981
111111
'Christian .. meetings
target~d
A new lawsuit baa been ft.Jed
Monday aimed at preventing
Christian student lfOUpe from
meetift& in school faclliUes dur-
ing lunch period.a at MINlon Vie·
jo High School and other Sad-
dleback Valley schools.
..
The lawsuit, Ciled Monday in' ~range County Superior Court,
1s sponsored by the American
Civil Liberties Union and Is
brought by a group of.,
clergymen, parents and a
teacher in the Saddleback
Valley Unified School D1strict. :· j
It js the same group that tried •
unsuJ:cessfully in June for a
court order barring the ltudentf
groups from meeting In such
places as Mission Viejo l!1b'i
little theater.
Superior Court Judie Luis
Cardenaa denied that request.
Lawyer Richard
Petherbridge, an ACLU voh•·
leer. said the new lawsuit
represents a chance to "spell out
more clearly bov. we tbiok tM
present system a01cu..U lO •11
establishment ot reu .. ,o ...
COMICS 83
BUSINESS 84
TELEVISION, 88
A hearimt h.ols be~ •f't °'' A1.&a .
27 in Judge C&J't1 .. na~ "!(•ur t.
Petherbrid~ saio ll1c gt<iup
nt>~ded to clarify In their :,.:.i1t
how the school dislri('t bas
......,,.. .... ,....
Marlo 8'.JTLels di.$plays examples of his tile art at the Laguna
'leach F~tival of Arts
become involved in the rell&ious
educatlon at Mission Vat-JO Kith
by allowing its little tbe'-lttr to
be us e d and co ndoning
lunchtime visits from a loeaJ as·
sistant minister.
"The group feels everyone ls
entitled to his own religion, but
not in school," Petherbrldge
F es ti val exhibitor
gets $5,000 grant
said. To Laguna Beach FestivaJ of
The policy to :\llow religious Arts exhibitor Marlo Bartels,
groups to meet on campus was there's nothing like a ceramic
approved by the school district's glaze for intensity of color and
Board of Trustees. Board mem-richness. .
bers claim their policy is one of For the.first display of his work
non-involvement. at thefestivaJ, Bartels has a selec-
Petherbrldge said ttte kej° ~· t.ion o~ ceramic til~ featu_ring ex-
seems to be whether granting ,. otk bll'ds and flSh 10 trop1caJ col-
the use of school facilities C41b· ·r 0~· • . . stitutes ties between church and It s my 1ntentio~ to show the state beauty of ceramic flazes,"
· Bartels said. •·A lot o the old
NB to hire
law firm in
airport fight
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. Deley ..... , ....
A law firm is to be retained by
Newport Beach to determine
whether annexing Santa Ana
Heights will give Newport new
clout In battling expansion of
John Wayne Airport.
tones of maroon, blue and tur-
quoise are hard to find except in a
few okl California homes built in
the 205,:l>s and40s."
The Art Colony resident said be
hu been awarded a $5,000 grant
from the National Endowmentfor
the Arts to research the history of
ceramic tile making in
California.
Bartels, who teaches ceramics
at the Leisure World retirement
community in Laguna Hills, aJso
has approached Laguna Beach of·
ficials with a plan to tile the
benches along Forest A venue.
Council members agreed Mon-
day that once they have the
answer to that question, they'll
decide whether to beiJn annexa-
tion proceeding1.
"When you see the benches now
they're just gray concrete," he
.. said. "l'vethoughtofusing glazed
tiles showing historical scenes of
the beach area from about 50
years ago."
A majority of the property
owners in the 250-acre eastern
area of Santa Ana Heights have
signed petitions favoring annex· ~
ation to Newport.
Bartels said he was working
with the Laguna Beach Arts Ai·
Hance, a private fund-raising
group made up of city artists and
arts patrons. to organize funding
for the project.
Bartels sajd he enjoys his part·
lime teaching job at Leisure
World because of the interest
shown by his students.
·'I really enjoy leaching people
who are interested in learning,"
he said. •'Older people bring more
to the class than younger people
simply because of their eagerness
to learn."
He said he quit his teaching job
at the Laguna Beach School of Art
three years ago to work fuJl time
in his Laguna Canyon Road
studio.
He has just finished a 19-foot tile
wall mural for the Chart House
restaurant in Ventura, his biggest
commission to date.
Bartels said he never knows ex-
actly what color his work will be
until it is fired in the kiln.
"C'eramic glazes aren't like
paints," he said. "What you see
isn't what you get. A glaze that is
green when it is brushed on may
be a bright red after it comes out
of the kiln."
Bartels said his designs are
brushed on several tiles and then
separated for firing. They are
then placed back together to form
the finished picture.
"Right now I prefer working
with tiles rather than modular
type ceramics," he said. "I don't
think there is anything that can
show the richness of a color like
ceramicWe." Newport city officials conlirm
tb at 262 property owners
representing nearly 52 percent
of tbe total assessed value of
eastern Santa Ana Heights have
signed the petitions.
According to law, this means
that Newport officials can in·
itiate annexation pt"Oceedings
without holdinc an election to
pose the question lo voters.
Ruling on student
sports irks parents
But first, council members
agreed, attorneys should detail
the ptos and cons of 1uch a
move.
Santa Ana Heights, bordered
by the Upper Newport Bay to
the south and Bristol Street to
the north, is the area molt
heavily affected by jet noise
from the county airport.
Eleven parents involved in a
suit against the Huntington
Beach Union High School Dis·
trict reacted angrily today to a
Superior Court judge's decision
requiring students to remain at
their aaaigned schools in order
to play sports next year. .
said she was reUeved by the
judge's decision.
"We've spent more time on
sports decisions than we have on
curriculum," she saJd. "I hope
now we can get down to
academic matters." .
Trustee Doris Alle.n, who has
·been an outspoken critic of Ute
district's sports transfer policy,
was unavailable for comment
tbls morning.
Oil firms prepare
for Gulf Coast
coal boom . . . B4
Irvine council to try
for new mayor tonight
The Irvine City CouncU wtll
once again attempt to select a
mayor tonight.
Two weeu ago, council mem-
bers deadJoeked, 2·2, over the
mayoraJ choice with Mary Ann
Galdo backing Larry Agran for
mayor and Bill VardouJis sup·
porting David Sills' bid for the
post.
Councilman Art Anthony was
absent. He was fined $5,000 and
Partying
preceded
slaying
A day of drinking and drug
taking preced ed the night
Stephen Ciaconne, a Garden
Grove drug deale r . was re·
peatedly shot with arrows in a
Huntington Beach oil field, a
participant in the slaying has
testified.
Laurie Aguirre, 20, who
pleaded guilty t o voluntary
manslaughter , said her
estranged husband, Joe Aguirre,
36, was among those at their
Gothard Street residence who
~as drinking heavily on July 18,
1980, when the plot to kill
Ciaconne is alleged to have been
made.
Aguirre and James Robert
Marvin, 24, are facing murder
and conspir acy charges in
Orange County Superior Court in
connection with the death of
Ciaconne, who was living tem-
porarily at the Aguirre home
while attempting to hide Crom
·narcotics investigators and
former customers.
Ciaconne was among those
drinking whlskey on the day of
bis death, Mrs. Aguirre testified.
He also took several tablets of the drug Quaalude.
During the day, she told the
jury in Judge Kenneth Lae's
courtroom, Ciaconne and
Marvin became involved in an
argument that ended when
Marvin was pushed into the
bathtub. As for the cause of the
argument, Mrs. Aguirre said,
"Steve was telling Bob, 'You're
always doing this to me, taking
the girls away'."
Under cross examination from
Deputy Public Defender Michael
Beecher, her hus band's at·
torney, Mrs. Aguirre recaJled
only portions of her previou'!I
testimony for the prosecution
about events that took place in
the oil field where Ciaconne was
slain.
She quoted Ciaconne, who was
stumbling along a dirt trail, as
saying he knew it was lo be "the
last night or my life."
Mrs. Aguirre said she told
Ciaconne ·'not to think that
way."
Under further questioning,
Mrs. Aeuirre conceded that she
was attempting to gain a favora-
ble outcome In her own criminal
case by testifying against ber
husband and Marvin.
"It's fair to say you don't want
to do anything to displease him
(Deputy District Attorney Pat
Geary)?" Beecher asked at one
point.
··Right,'' Mrs . Aguirre
responded.
· She has yet to be sentenced on
her guilty plea to manslaughter,
pending the outcome of the trial.
She faces a two to six-year
priaon term.
Two other defendant.a, James
Garwood 24, and Brian Miller,
21, also have pleaded guilty to
voluntary manslaughter.
•
given three years probation laat
week for assaulting his wife,
Elaine.
Anthony said this morning
that he hasn't yet decided
whether he will continue as a Ci·
ty Council member.
Other items up for City Coun·
cil consideration at 7 : 30 in City
Hall, 17200 Jamboree Road ,
Irvine, include: ,
-A pr<?posaJ to _place on the
Nov. 3 ballot an ad v1sory ques·
lion asking the voters whether
the city should build a new Civic
Center .
Irvine Councilman Larry
Agran's proposal to place on lbe
Nov. 3 ballot a measure that
would res tri ct to $100 the
amount of single-source con-
tributions lo counci lmanic cam-
paigns.
Newport man put
on airport board
Gregory Hirsch of Newport
Beach has been appointed by
Supervisor Thomas Riley to
r eplace Walte r Koch as a
member of the Orange County
Airport Commission.
Hirsch, 24, the son of promi-
nent Newport Beach busi·
nessman Clement Hirsch and an
active Republican Party
member, .. was more than happy
to accept the appointment," Ken
Hall, a Riley aide, said today.
Koch, by mutual greement
with Riley, resigned effective
July 31. Koch said he disagreed
with recent decisions by county
supervisors to embark on a $75
to $100 million to improve and
enlarge airport facilities.
Asked for his position on the
controversial issue of airport
enlargement, Hirsch said, "I ha·
ven 'l really come up with a
stance. It's difficult for any two
people to see eye to eye on
airport issues."
Hirsch said he believes the
commission, which is an ad-
visory body lo the board of
supervisors, "can play an inte-
gral role" in deciding critical
airport-related issues.
Hirsch graduated from Stan-
ford University in 1978 with a
degree in economics. 'l;he Blg
Canyon resident is president of
Oally ~llet Sutf ~
AIRPORT PANELIST
Gregory J-11rsch
Hirsch Enterprises. an invest
ment company that manages
real estate and securities. Hirsch ser ves as business manager ror
his father's financial empire.
More hearings due
• on center pro1ect
A public hearing on the Irvine
Company's proposed expansion
of Newport Center has ended
with only the promise of more
hearings to come.
About 20 people used the 90
minutes allotted by the Newport
Beach City Council, which con-
ducted the hearing, for a wide-
open discussion Monday of the
pros and cons of the plan.
Although those opposed to the
plan outnumbered those favor·
ing it by about 2 to 1, most of the
opponents said they could back
the expansion if provisions were
tacked on to ease the impact of
increased traffic volume it re·
portedly will bring.
Backers of the expansion said
it would bring more business
and tax revenue to the city, and
that a planned $8 million road
improvement package that is
part of the expansion plan would
greaUy benefit the city.
The Irvine Company wants
permission to build a 300-room
luxury hotel with 100 to 150 con-
dominiums and nearly 900,000
square feet of office space. The
plan also calls for construction
of two restaurants and a 165-
room expansion of the Marriott
llotel.
opportunity to relieve the traffic
situation in Corona del Mar "
Expansion backers said that
tr affic in the area will increase
even without the expansion, and
that developers would add office
and hotel space in neighboring
communities if it was not al-
1 owed at Newport Center,
worsening traffic problems in
Newport with no benefit to show
for il.
Mayor Jackie Heather in -
structed city staff members to
gather more information on the
issues addressed at the hearing
before it is conti nued Aug. 10.
14 Irvine
streets due
treatment
Fourteen streets in the Irvine
area will be slurry sealed -a
chemical treatment designed to
prevent deterioration during
the next two weeks.
The city has sent letters to res-
idents living near the streets
telling them the exact dates o~
which cars shouldn't be parked
on the street.
The streets to be slurry sealed
are:
-Rldgellne Drive between
University and Turtle Rock Drives.
Helghts resident.I favorinJ an·
nexaUoo contend their ftSJtt to
block airport expaMlon will be
aided by the move.
Newport Councilman PauJ .
Rummel, wbo favon th anno· "
atlon said Newport would have
some control over wbat bappeu
to Santa Ana Hellbtl If the u-
Judge Robert Fitzgerald's de-
cision Monday upheld tbe Clis-
trlct 's disputed poli('y that re·
quires freshmen to attend their
assigned school In order to play
sports. Those tranaferring must,.
wait one year in order to
participate.
Pat Em.ma, the mother of a Sizable souven1.r ·
The major arguments cited by
opponents were that the' ex-
pansion would worsen traffic
conditions in Corona del Mar
and along Pacific Coast
HJghway, and that the added
traffic would create more noise
and air Pollution.
They alao arfued that the ex·
panalon would require more use
of John Wayne Airport, ag-
•ravatiq noise and traffic prob-
lems there.
a Walnut Avenue between
Culver Drive and Franciscan
Street.
-oexaUon la completed.
Safe stolen
froJD.m•rket
••
A f1aor Mfe ~laiq SI.-baa Mm reported alllllu &.a
the lrvlne Rancll. l'armen
Marktt ID ln'lM. ~ ..W to-
day.
It ........... u,. ftllMW ..
from tbe floor of t.M ....... ,
offtn With a dllll ud .. Calf
IDd Wal Hrri .. 09' of lM
mubt iD a biirilM'J''W. ._.
daJ ar early ....... , • ,..._ ..... n. ....... cliacoTweid ....
lq al I a.m ....... , if a -~ ......... ...
tranlf erred runtb grader at
EdllOQ and one of those involved
ln the ault, said 1be was unsure
whether the parents would con·
Uaue tbelr ft&bt .
.. We're ver'i disappointed,,.
Hid Kn. Emma, "bote toD Lan~ wUl now have to wait one
,....., befare playtq baaketbNJ.
• t All tbe children were palllJMd.. I lhe 1ald, I 'lie ebole w 10 to tbe 1ct,ool bit ~
1"4-to and now be'• lolQa to
IOM Ida cblnce to play 1,..U."
Muell of the aporta tramfer
COGlroYstY bu centm!d around
Oceaa Vie" Hl1ll Scbool Me•-of ....... ••yarta111e ' ._. .. P"F~ _la eaJatlllel
.... 11'11 ........... " eoat•
........ .... • lportl tnalW
policy ibould DOt •pplJ' to -.. ... •ant.lal to ..... OeMD View.
1'rilMee Ua ............
•• ..,,..,.. .... dlttrfctt1. pale,,
35· foot tequila bottle stolen
WbUe more than ..00 volleyball
entbuslasta celebrated below,
aomeoae stole the 35·loot plastic
Cuervo Gold tequila bottle from
the roof of tbe TortUJa nata
r"taurant IA ~a Beacll ear-·
'ly Monday.
Tbe theft oft.be mescal moDU·
ment came Jua& how-1 after tlle
eonclu1lon of tbe l•o_ day La.-. Beach Open Pro ~ Volteyball Touraameat,
lpoucnd la put bJ the C9erYO
P90Ple. -; 1'iie ~annually featunl
lM ..._. alf·ftlled tequ.Ua boUle.
vlllble fNm COMl lll.llawar .-. I•• U.e competltlon at Maki BHeb Park.
PoUee nld owners of U.e
··-~ bellOGa deftll&.; ed It loUw:::.tJ. H•P4dllil t.IMia ,..111111 Lt cm UM roof~
the Medcan restaurant prior to , a late ailht party at that loca·
Uon at tbe IOUth end of town .
Steve Levinsoa, who own1 the
restaurant, said thieves ap·
p•enUJ deflated the coeU, bot·
tie whlfe celebranta were •tll1 in
the buildJnC.
"Everyoae Wal part)'lnl and ha~lnc a pod time," LevlnlOft
'la.kt. "Wbo would k1t0W aomeone
.... 1taljq tbt bottle' ..
Police 1ald oae wttneu -a
resta•ut emfloJM -H" two
men °" the roof Hrlier lD the neniq .
Tbe pair, OM d•cribed ..
blODd wllb CUl'Q laa1r' tM ...
wltll dart W•YJ batr. toot cmtJ Uae pluttc lanatable bottle,
lffYlal belliDd a amall moe.
.... to pamp air into tM .....
blilloGa.
The opponent.a called for a re-
vision ol the plan so that an ex·
tenalon of San Joaquin Hilla
Road and conatructlon of
PeHcan Hill Road near the
center would be a condition tll the Dian'• approval.
Ol.ber opponent.I, moeUy r•l-
dent1 Uvlns near the center,
asked that COllltrucUon of oolte
•nd air pollution abatement
waUa at'OWld Ulelt bomet be
made a eondJtkm of aPJll'OYll.
A Corona del Mar woman op.
P09ed to the upauloa •aid tbe San JoeQU!a Hllll and PelleaD
Hill l'OllCf projects were a mutt
"before HJ more tralflc ls
dumped on Pacific Coast lllpwey."11.taDOUMl'r....,_
bee~ lbe upauAol't u.MI die
lrvlne "tom.PQJ plan to lnclude
road llillrov•• •• la LIM a · pauloa la •·a OGC9 ln a Wed me
-Culver Drive between
Walnut Avenue and the Santa
Ana Freeway.
-Turtle Rock Drive between
Sierra Canyon Road and Sierra Majorct.
-lord an A venue between
Miehe.lion Drive and University
Drive.
-Royce Road betw•n
Mlcbelaon Drlve and Yale
Avenu..
-Tamarack Way between
Jotdan A\leoue and Royce Rotd.
-Almond Tree north or
MJchel80ft Drive .
Mldaea.oa "·
-B•:1:TrH north of
-Ill [Olive bet,...
Yale Avenue au UnlveriilJ Drtn.
-Vile Annue from ltvtle
Center Drive to Deerfl.Sd Ayenue.
-Booth Stl'eet. -0..-fllld A•enue betW'tlfn
Cul•er Drive and Yale Avenue
1
)
(
J
I
I
t 0
f
d
d
h c
0
' y
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, July 28, 1981
MARaDNG SLOWLY BACKWARD
-Got a call just yesterday from a very
nice anonymous lady from Huntington
Beach who would like to see civilization
slip bac k to the old-fashioned
pushbroom. Her story gives you an idea
why.
"I just want to complain about an in·
fe rnal machine that's s upposed to
replace the pushbroom for sweeping out
. ~·
/"&\
TDM MURPHHH ,~
places like carports and parking lots."
she explained.
"It's a very noisy, motor·driven
blower type thing which does nothing
more than blow the dust around.
~ "I work at a night job and you just
lry getting some sleep during the day
'when one of these machines goes into ac-
tion ... " -WELL I CAN TELL you I really
sympathize with that one. Noise and
racket seem to be a major bedevilment
of our supposedly advanced civilization
these days.
Consider the phonograph, for exam·
ple.
When Thomas A. Edison first invent·
ed the phonograph, you could barely
hear it over the scratchings of the needle
across the cylinder. Then somebody im·
proved it so it didn't scratch so much
and you could hear it all across a big
parlor for dancing.
So do we leave well enough alone?
We do not. We continued to "im·
prove" old Tom E's machine by adding
more power. multiple speakers and then
more power again.
Today, you couldn't hear a Tom
Edison's needle scratch if it did scratch.
Stereophonic, muJti-quad speakers and
all blast out the sound wit h enough dec-
ibils to deafen dogs three blocks away.
And in my neighborhood. 3 a.m. is
the prime time for this kind of thing.
Alas, unlike the frazzled nice lady
from Huntington Beach, I am not sup·
posed to be a night worker. But I'm not
much of a night sleeper these days
either, thanks to the improvement on the
original invention.
NO WONDER THE LADY wants to
re-invent the pus hbroom. Few people
'
have ever been-awakened by one, unless
somebody was beating on you with the
business end.
Afso pushbrooms, when applied to
the regular task, tend to pile up the
debris at the end of the strokes so you
have to do something with the rubbish.
Like pick it up and haul it away.
And s he's right about the new
blower gadgets. They just get the stuff
airborne so it becomes somebody
else's problem when it settles back down
again.
It 's like the r otters i n my
ne ighborhood with the stereo. It's
somebody e lse's problem after the
crazed sounds blow out their windows .
ONCE, AROUND THE Newport
Beach, Costa Mesa and Irvine areas,
they had jet aircraft flying overhead
that lots of folks thought were very
noisy. So they re-invented a less noisy
"She t.OCU quiet , Zeb, before they put that engine on
one and now a lot of people think it's
noisier than the noisy ones were.
It's very confusing. all this progress.
Years ago. we s o improved
automobiles that they were getting 29
miles to the gallon. Then we wanted to
get rid of noxious fumes so we fixed
those cars so they got 14 miles per
gallon. Now we've fixed what we .fixed •
and autos are back up to 29 miles per
gallon again.
Sometimes it seems like progress is
one step forward and three to the rear.
Sagittarius to m.ake new start
Wednesday, July 29
By SYDNEY OMARR
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Restrictions are re·
moved.
GEMINI <May 21-June 20): Be wary when it comes
to affixing signature to legal document.
ARJES (~arckh 2l·April 19! Opportunity exists to CANCER (June 21.July 22): You could win populari·
correct past masta es. ty contest.
• LEO (July 23-Aug. 22>: Family member confides Patterning help needed a s~c;:~o <Aug. 23-Sepl. 22 ): Aura of romance
dominates scenario.
VOLUNTEERS are needed to help a braln·
injured youth through patterning exercises 30 HOROSCOPE minutes twice a day. Hours can be arranged. Contact
Jack or May Beresford al ~1-3404 for more lnforma·
tion.
COMMUNICATION FOR COUPLES with J oyce
and Robert Simpson will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tues·
aay in Santa Ana. For information, call 532·5646.
WINNER AND LOSERS: That's Us is lhe theme
of a free workshop sponsored by the Mental Health
Association of Orange County at 9:30 a.m. Friday In
Santa Ana. For information, ca11547·7559.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22 ): Emphasis on promotion.
production, liming and Intensified relationship.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21 >: Longstanding project
can be completed
SAGJTTARIVS (Nov. 22-~ 211: You'll malte new
start in new direction. ~APRJOORN (bee. 22-Jan. 19> Emphasize caution,
meticulous attention to details.
AQUARJVS (Jan. 20·Feb. 181' Perceive situation In
its entirety.
PISCES (Feb. 19·March 201: Doors open and you
have opportunities for creative endeavors. PLANNED PARENTHOOD of Orange County Is
seeking volunteers to t ake part in a countywide
telephone survey in August. For information, call ·-·RUFFELL'§
973·17Z7. IJPHOLSTHY .
PROBLEM SOLVING is the topic of a discussion S..e .,._., ......
Jed by stress specialist Murray Oxman at 10: 30 a.m. 1922 HAHOlt ILVD.
DAILY PllDT
CLASSIFIED ADS
M2•5e78
Saturday in Newport Beach. For information, call ,cosu !"ISA_-;:_19.:1 llJ,
<213> 936··~91~76!!.:_. ___________ _u~~~~~~~~L _______ ...J
SHUTIERS CUSTOM QUAUn SHUrrERS
Designed,
Finished
Installed
•
p-• a
A
1 tr n a
Receptions
by MARY JANE SCARCELLO
Of ... DMty,.... , .....
T be Laguna Beach Museum of Art hosted
a private reception for Blue Ribbon
Sponsors who contributed to the Junior
Council's Art Education for Children
before the opening of ·'Southern California
Artists: 1940-1980."
Contributors, who each gave $100 . or more,
were presented with a specially designed blue
ribbon for display at the museum's entrance by
Janet Eggers, lbe museum's fund-raising
chairman.
Gudts enjoyed classicial guitar music, a
hosted bar and hors d 'oeuvres while viewing the
exibibit, curated by Maudette BalJ of Newport
Beach.
The hors d'oeuvres, served on the patio, were
prepared by Kay Pastorius, direct.or of the
School of International Cuisine. Her husband is
sculpt.or Hal Pastorius.
Mrs. Pastorius, assisted by Kathy Douglass
and their committee Crom the Junior Council
prepared such gourmet delicacies as poached
salmon with dill sauce, curried stuffed
musbrooml, Italian sausage quiche, campignon
pate and assorted fresh vegetables with a
spinach dip.
Among the members and guesla al the party
and opening were Ken and Marla Bird, Norman
and Virginia Nixon, lrmeli Desenberg, Cindy
Prewitt, ~r. and Mrs. Nick B. Williams, Arlene
Isaacs, Jim and Wendy Wood , Dr. and Mrs.
Richard Newquist, Tom Enman and Adrian
Kuyper.
N ewport Harbot Art Museum's opening,
held the same evening, attracted the
rest of Orange Coast's art world.
Mark Boyle's "Journey to the Surf ace
of the Earth'' reproduced chunks of terra firma
from all over the world, evoking cobblestones,
At the Laguna Beach
Museum of Art were
rtop from Left ) Mrs.
John B. Parker, Mrs.
Richard Newquist. and
Dr. and Mrs. Norman
Nixon. At the Newport l
Harbor Art Museum I
were f photo at left fro,fi
left J David Steinmetz. l
Margarita Shaw. B.J. J,,
Richter and her husba,i
George ,
' • •
I
I
l I are artsy I
vacant lots and meadows ;n mierglass. I
Museum members set aside wine glasses to I
travel through "Bram's Very Own Fault," an
architectural sculpture creating passageways 1
for exploration. I
Artist Peter Berg took 12 days to install his .
work, and a scale model on the wall gave vis-I itors an overview of the project.
Among the viewers were Betty Turnbull and :
I ' I HAPPENINGS j
Victoria Kogan, who also had attended the I
La-guna opening. • -Rumors ln the art world are that the two I
women may open an art gallery together which ,
will feature only California artists. I
Other guests were Bill and Bobbie Stabler,
Laurie Brown, Tom and Ginny Haley. David
Steinmetz with Margarita Shaw, George and I
8 .J . Richter. Andrew and Ursula Cyga, Steve j
and Judy Strauss, Max and Carolyn Dunn, Cora
Baldikoski, Harry and Charlotte Selling and •
Snoozie Ullman. I
I
Bomb group slates reunion I
A r eunion committee for the 345th Bom
Group, a bomber outfit that flew B·25s in th
Pacific during World War II, is looking for lhei
comrades for a September 1982 reunion in
Colorado.
Retired -Col. C. V. True, reunion chair. said th
committee knows the whereabouts of only 1.000 o
the 8,000-member group.
Committee officials are requesting squad
mem hers or anyone knowing the whereabouts of a
member to call 886-2169.
Sl,000or11..,..1, 12 weeks
0
AHH1wl Hair
Thdayk llllt'~l!l l'lllt'
guanantt'td for
the ltrm b~ A~rican ~'inRS
Anierican Savings tpays hi,gh interest with safety.
11ie1•121llriell• .. 11rzl ... , ........ l ... lr•••lr••••lll
~by Securitiea of the U.S. or U.S. Government Aeenciea. TRIS OBLIGATION IS NOT A SAVINGS
ACCOUNT OR DEPOSIT AND 18 NOT IN8UREO
BY nlE FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN
INS\JRANCI CORPORATION.
Prindpll pNa Interest plid by American S.vinp It
maturity. NO PEE, NO SERVICE CHARGE. AVlillbie.
to CaliforM relidenta only. lntete1t ra~• ~ ect.Jllibt
Brtnc any bank or .. •tntt ,.llbook. We'll trander the....... .
'
.. ~· ' -
-----I ~ -------------------
llllyPlllt
-----r.~-=======-=-.;;..:;.....------------.
TUESDAY, JULY 28, 1981
COMICS 83
IRllliE ClllT B U SI N ESS 84
TELEVI SION 88
Oil firms prepar~
for Gulf Coast
coal boom . . . B4
..
Golfers and joggers: showdown near?
Delly ................
JOGGING ENTHUSIAST
Councilman McFarland
I •'IEaaY CLAuSRN __ ..., ...........
Costa Mesa City Councilman
Eric Johnson complatbed during
a r ecent council meeting that
joe1ers are interferinc with play
at the city's golf course.
The avid golfer suggested that
something be done to keep run-
ners off the links.
He could have stroked a
medium putt Crom where be sat
that night and hlt one of those
runners.
School aide
• • • gives pa1ntmg
to preside nt
A painting of the sinking of a
World War II aircraft carrier is
to be presented to President
Reagan today by 10 survivors of
the sinking, including Harbor
Area school administrator
Norman Loats.
L oat s, a Newport-Mesa
Unified School District deputy
superintendent,· said the paint-
ing, "The 1'1nal Hour," depicts
the sin.king of the USS Gambier
Bay.
Two hundred men died when
the carrier went down in the
Leyte gulf near the Philippines
after being attacked by the
Japanese .
The painting by artist C.G.
Evers will be presented along
with a petition that President
Reagan name a future carrier
after the lost World War II ship.
Councilman Ed McFarlandil who reclined ln hl5 own counc
chair some 15 feet to the east,
dons running shoes, shorts ind ~
an old sweatshirt about four
times a week to ramble around
the munlclpal course.
He euageated that running
trails should be mapped thcough-
out the 250-acre facility. After
all, he reminded, the 36-hole
course was purchased at a re-
duced cost from the atate
¥cause it offers public recrea-
tion.
The proposal was tossed to Ci-
ty Manager Fred Sorsabal for
study and remains on one of
several back burners in the ad-
m i nistr ati ve kitchen of City
Hall.
Mc Farla nd began running
more than 20 years ago -long
before jogging became a
popular 1970s pastime.
He was fresh from the Marine
Corps then and getting fat and
dull, he confides.
"I realized I just wasn't doing
anythlng physical," McFarland
recalls.
He was 27 then and sellin& in-
surance.
He began jogging three days a
week for 30 to 45 minutes.
It became habit, one so dif.
ficuJt to break that even while on
vacation be ran the grassy parks
and malls of London and Paris.
Now an insurance broker ,
Mc Farland, in January, set
three personal goals for 1981.
·'They were to run in a
marathon, get my private pilot's
license and get Pete Wilson
nominated as the GOP can-
didate for governor . . . ''
Mc Farland received his pilot's
license in June, finished the
grueling Daily Pilot-sponsored
Irvine Marathon in March and is
s ti II working toward goal
number three.
The peppery, red-haired coun-
cilman r e member s t h e
marathon well.
· · 1 settled in with a bunch of
guys doing abottt 8.5 miles an
hour, a reasonable pace.
"I was moving along feeling
very, very good at the 10-and
Newport man put
on airport board
o.Hy ~ ..... """"
Al RPORT PANELIST
Gregory Hirsch
Rites h e ld
for N e wport's
Mrs. Wardle
Gregory Hirsch of Newport
Beach has been appointed by
Supervisor Thomas Riley lo
replace Wa lter Koch •• a
member of the Orange County
Airport Commission.
Hirsch, 24, the son of promi-
ne nt Newport Beac h busi-
nessman Clement Hirsch and an
a c ti ve Re publican Party
member, "was more than happy
to accept the appointment," Ken
Hall, a Riley aide, said today.
Koch, by mutual greement
with Riley, resigned effective
July 31. Koch said he disagreed
with recent decisions by county
supervisors to embark on a $75
lo $100 million to improve and
enlarge airport facilities.
Asked for his position on the
controversial issue of airport
enlargement, Hirsch said, "I ba-
ven 't really come up with a
stance. It's difficult for any two
people to see eye to eye on
airport issues."
Hirsch said he believes the
commission, which Is an ad-
visory body to the board of
supervisors, "can play an inte-
Dmlty ...............
NOSE TO NOSE -Two-year·old Lelah Cotton of Costa Mesa
rubs noses with Mic key Mouse during a visit by Disneyland
characters to Hoag Memor ial ·Hos pital. The appearance
was part of a nationwide tour of non-profit hos pitals.
Newport eyes legal
aid against airport
gral role" in deciding critical By STEVE MARBLE t h at 262 property owners
airport-related issues. Ot-..._..,,........, representing nearly 52 percent
Hirsch graduated from Stan-A law firm is to be retained by of the total assessed value of
ford University in 1978 with a Newport Beach to determine eastern Santa :o\na Heights have
Funeral services were held to-degree in economics. The Big whether annexing Santa Ana signed the petitions.
day for Newport Beach resident Canyon resident is president of Heights will give NewPort new According to law, this means
Lucille M. Wardle, the formet Hlrich Enterprises, an lnvtst-. clc>ut in battling expansion of that Newport officials can in-
owner of Buggs International ment company that 1114nages John Wayne Airport. ltiate annexation proceedings
gift shop who died last Friday lo real estate and securities. Rlracb Coul'\Cil members agreed Mon-without holding an election to
Los Angeles at the age of 63. serves as business manager for day that once they have the pose the question to voters.
Following services at the bis father's financial empire. answer to that quesUon, they'll But first, council members
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter -decide whether to begin annexa-agreed, attorneys should detail
day Saints in Newport Beach, Young Hirsch is a member ~ lion proceedings. the pros and cons or such a
her body was to be taken to board of directors of United Way A majority of the property move.
Ogden. Utah for burial. of Oranee Cou nty, Hoag owners in the 2SO·acre eastem Santa Ana Hel&hts, bordered
A Utah native, Mrs. Wardle Hosplial 552 Club, Big Brothers area of Santa Ana Heights have by .the Upper Newport Bay to
owned the gift s hop In th~ of Oranee Coun ty, a nd the signed petitions favoring annex-the south and Briltol Street to
We stcliff shopping center for 17 Republican State Central Coll\· aUon to Newport. the north, ls the area moat
years. mittee. Newport city officials confirm • heavily affected by jet noise ~-~----~---~~-~~---~---'----~----------~~~~---fromthecountyalrport. Heights residents favoring an·
nexaUon contend their flsht to
block alr,port expamion will be
aided by ~e move.
'Newport Councilman Paul
Hummel, who favors the annex·
ation said Newport would have
aome control over wbat bappeoa
to Santa Ana Het1bta if the an-
nexation la completed.
Currently, county planner• are prepartn1 a land use study
for the unincorporated Helshta
area.
"Because of the land uae
plan." warned Newport Mayor
Jackie Heather, "we don't have
much ttme to dWy-daUy around.
But the queaUon la are we real·
ly belplq them a;i ourselves?"
lf Newport 1 .. c1eu move
ahead wltb aMnatlon, an •·
vlronmmtal lln,.et report mutt
be p...,..... 9-la a report, It la
ettimat.d,wW~ . q::.r: ::.... ol : .::..
LITTlll CRI W --lle1ldeau Of Balboa
Penlmul•d::, In half~ay deanup actlvttr lD
N•1'POrt ti IMt weehnd "1 mno.tnl
....... -...
traah from lee ~t OD bllac:b. More than 100
penom parttctpeted ln the cleanup activity
Wllteb ,........ two t6lie er truh.
wl1lalni to be aaeaed ,a, a '250,0Cll ............. But, It
... pobded -tbt • '" coWd be •alVtd b7 eGUDeU .ate. -•
15-mile marks. I couldn't believe
I was feeling so good.
·'Then at 20 mites I hit what
, they call 'the wall.• My legs aU
but gave but. You couldn't
believe the absolute pain. From
there on, I was probably doing a
12-minute mile."
McFarland finished the race
-in three hours and 41 minutes.
considered by many an excep-tional feat for bis first and
probably last marathon.
"Actually, 1 run stricUy for
physical fitness," be says.
McFarland says he runs the
perimeter of the city golf course
before most golfers get their
clubs in their car -at about
6:30 a.m.
He stays a way from bone-
j arring concrete and asphalt
surfaces and from fellow run-
ners.
"I don't like to run with people
because I'll use them as an ex-
cuse not to run or they use me as
an excuse not to run.
"I run when I have the time,
not when someone else has the
time."
AVID GOLFEH
Councilman Joflnsun
More hearings due
• on center pro1ect
A public hearing on the Irvine
Company's proposed expansion
of Newport Center has ended
with only the promise or more
hearings to come.
About 20 people used the 90
minutes allotted by the Newport
Beach City Council, which con-
ducted the hearing, for a wide·
open discussion Monday of the
pros and cons of the plan.
Although those opposed to the
plan outnumbered those favor-
ing it by about 2 to 1, most of the
opponents said they could back
the expansion if provisions were
tacked on to ease the impact of
increased traffic volume it re·
porledly will bring.
Backers of the expansion said
it would bring more business
and tax revenue to the city, and
that a planned $8 million road
improvement package that is
part of the expansion plan would
greatly benefit the city.
The Irvine Company wants
permission to build a 300-room
luxury hotel with 100 to 150 con·
dominiums and nearly 900,000
square feet of office space. The
plan also calls for construction
of two restaurants and a l&S-
room expansion of the Marriott
Hotel.
The major arguments cited by
opponents were that the' ex-
pansion would wor~en traffic
conditions in Corona dei Mar
and a l ong P ac ifi c C oast
Highway. and that the added
traffic would create more noise
and air pollution.
They also argued that the ex ·
pansion would require more use
of J ohn Way ne Airport, ag-
gravating noise and tr affic prob-
lems there.
The opponents called for a re-
vision of the plan so that an ex -
tension of San Joaquin Hills
Road and cons truction o f
Pelican Hill Road near the
center would be a condition of
the plan's approval.
Other opponents, mosUy resi-
dents livif8 near the center,
asked that construction ot noise
, and alt polh1tlon abatement
walls around. their homes be
made a co~ of approval.
' · A Corona ~ Mac woman op-
posed to the expansion said the
San Joaquin Hills and PeUcan
Hill road projects were a must
"before any more traffic ls
dumped on Pa.cific Coast
Highway." But another resident
backing the expansion said the
Irvine Company plan to include
road improvements in the ex-
pansion is "a once in a lifetime
opportunity to relieve the traffi c
situation in Corona del Mar"
Expansion backers said that
traffic in lhe area will increase
even without the expansion, and
that developers would add office
and hotel space in neighboring
communities if 1t was not aJ .
1o wed al Newport Center .
worsening traffic problems in
Newport with no benefit to show
for it.
Mayor Jackie Heat her in
structed city staff members to
gather more information on the
issues addressed at the hearing
before it is continued Aug 10.
Ne w laws u it
file d in
school fl ap
A new lawsuit has been fil ed
Monday aimed at preventing
Christian student groups from
meeting in school facilities dur·
ing lunch periods at Mission Vie·
jo High School and other Sad·
dleback Valley schools
The lawsuit, filed Monday in
Orange County Superior Court,
is sponsored by the American
Civil Liberties Union a nd is
br o u g ht b y a group or
clergymen , pare n ts and a
teacher in t he Saddleback
Valley Unified School District.
It is the same group that tried
unsuccessfull y in June for a
court order barrmg the student
groups from meeting in such
places as Mission VieJo High's
little theater.
Superior Court Judge Luis
Cardenas denied that request.
Lawyer Ri c hard
Petherbridge, an ACLU volun-
teer, said the new lawsuit
represents a chance to "spell out
more clearly how we think the
present system amounts to an
establishment of religion... ·
A bearing has been set on Aug. 27 in Judge Cardenas' court.
Petherbridge said the group
needed to clarify in their suit
how the school distric t has
become involved in the religious
education at Mission Viejo High
by allowing its little theater to
be u sed and co nd o n i n g
lunchtime visits from a local as·
sistant minister.
• Sizable souven1r
35-f oot tequila bottle stolen
While more tban 400 volleyball
entbualaata cele bn ted below,
someone stole tbe as-root plaltlc
Cuervo Gold t.9quila bottJe from
the roof ol the Tortilla Flat.I
r ettaurant 1n La1una, Beach ear··
ly Monday.
Tbe theft ol the mescal monu-
ment came Just boun after the
con elUllon of tbe two da)'
• La1una Beach Open Pro Jleacb
Volleyball Tou rn aQ;;~
1pouored ln pal\ by tbt "" peoJle,
The coat.at ADQually featarw
th• bUl9 air·ftlled tequila baWe,
Ylllble from Coat R.IPWAJ dar·
•1 tu eompeUtloD at Mall .Bemcll hrk .
Polle. aald owner• of lb• .... adYwtllliai balloon dtft8&.
id lt ftllUowUii Ile eompetldan
t .... ,..11111.-. lt -.. Nil;;
the Mexican restaurant prior to
fA late night party at that loca-
Uon at t.he IO\lth end of town.
Steve Levinson, who owns the
restaurant, uid t hieves ap-
parenll)t deflated tbe costly bot·
Ue wbUe celebrant& were atlll In
tbe bulldlna.
"Everyone was partying and
hntna a lood time," l..evll\IOD
aald. "Who would know someone •H •teaUlll .. bottle?"
P.AU.ce Wei; -wttnep -a •••ut•91wa -aawlwo m'ea on the rid 9ilhf In Ule •••Dtnc· The pair, on• described u
blond wttb eurl1 ba!r, the otMr
wttll dark wavy hair, took onb
tbt plMtlt taneteble bottle.
t .. rinl MIUd a •mall m<Mr
uaed tD pump a1r lnto the ~ .HUoea
I I
I I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTueeday, July 28, 1981
MARCHING SLOWLY BACKWARD
-Got a call just yesterday from a very
nice anonymous lady trom Huntington
Beach who would like to see clvillJatlon
slip back to the old·fashloned
pushbroom. Her story gives you an idea
why.
"I just want to complain about an in-
fernal mechine that's supposed to
replace the push broom for sweeping out
. ~·
/"e\
Tll IUIPHINl@lt
places like carports and parking lots."
she explained.
"It's a very noisy, motor-driven
blower type thing which does nothing
more than blow the dust around.
~ •'I work at a night job and you just
ilry getting some sleep during the day
iwhen one of these machines goes into ac-
tion ... " -WELL I CAN TELL you I really
sympathize with that one. Noise and
racket seem to be a major bedevilment
of our supposedly advanced civilization
these days.
Consider the phonograph, for exam-
ple.
When Thomas A. Edison first invent-
ed the phonograph, you could barely
hear it over the scratchings of the needle
across the cylinder. Then somebody im-
proved it so it didn't scratch so much
and you could hear it all across a big
parlor for dancing.
So do we leave well enough alone?
We do not. We continued to "im -
prove .. old Tom E's machine by adding
more power. multiple speakers and then
more power again.
Today, you couldn't hear a Tom
Edison's needle scratch if it did scratch.
Stereophonic, multi-quad speakers and
all blast out the sound with enough dec-
ibils to deafen dogs three blocks away.
And in my neighborhood , 3 a.m. is
the prime time for this kind of thing.
Alas, unlike the frazzled nice lady
from Huntington Beach, I am not sup-
posed to be a night worker. But I'm not
much of a night sleeper these days
either, thanks to the improvement on the
original invention.
NO WONDER THE LADY wants to
re-invent the pushbroom. Few people
have ever been-awakened by one. unless
somebody was beating on you with t.he
business end.
Also pushbrooms, when applied to
the regular task, tend to pile up the
debris at the end of the strokes so you
have to do something with the rubbish.
Like pick it up and haul it away.
And she's right about the new
blower gadgets. They just get the stuff
airborne so it becomes somebody
else's problem when lt settles back down
again.
It 's like the rotters in my
neighborhood with the stereo. It's
somebody else's problem after the
crazed sounds blow out their windows.
ONCE, AROUND THE Newport
Beach, Costa Mesa and Irvine areas,
they had jet aircraft flying overhead
that lots of folks thought were very
noisy. So they re-invented a less noisy
.. She waa qwet, Zeb, before they put that engine on
one and now a lot of people think it's
noisier than the noisy ones were.
It's very confusing, all this progress.
Years ago. we so improved
automobiles that they were getting 29
miles to the gallon. Then we wanted to
get rid of noxious fumes so we fixed
those cars so they got 14 miles per
gallon. Now we've fixed what we fixed •
and autos are back up to 29 miles per
gallon again.
Sometimes it seems like progress is
one step forward and three to the rear.
Sagittarius to make new start
Wednescby, July Z9
By SYDNEY OMARR
TAVRlJS <April 20·May 20): Restrictions are re-
moved.
GEMINI <May 21-June 20>: Be wary when It comes
to affixing signature to legal document
ARJt ESt (~arckh 21 -Aprtl IS) Opportunity exists to CANCER (June 21-Jidy 22): You could win popuJari·
correc pas m1sta es ly contest.
• LEO <July 23-Aug . 22 ): Family member confides Patterning help needed a s~::~o (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ): Aura of romanl'e
· dominates scenario.
VOLUNTEERS are needed to help a brain-
injured youth through patterning exercises 30 HOROSCOPE minutes twice a day. Hours can be arranged. Contact
Jack or May Beresford al 631-3404 for more informa·
\ion.
COMMUNICATION FOR COUPLES with Joyce
and Robert Simpson will be held al 7:30 p.m. Tues-
day in Santa Ana. For information, call 532-5646.
WINNER AND LOSERS: That's Us is the theme
of a free workshop sponsored by the Mental Health
Association of Orange County at9:30 a.m. Friday In
Santa Ana. For information. call547-7559.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22 >: Emphasis on promotion,
production. liming and intensified relationship.
SCORPIO IOcl. 23·Nov. 21 >: Longstanding project
can be completed.
SAGIT'JIARJUS CNov. 22·Dec. 211 : You'll make new
start in new direction.
. CAPRICORN <bee. 22-Jan. 19): Emphasiie caution
melicuJous attention to details. ·
AQUARJlJS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18>: Perceive situation in Its entirety.
PISCES (Feb. 19·March 20): Doors open and you
have opportunities for creative endeavors. PLANNED PARENTROODofOrange County Is
seeking volunteers to take part in a countywlde
telephone s urvey in August . For information, call ·-"RUFFELL •5
973-l727. urHOLSTERY .
PROBLEM SOLVING is the topic of a discussion s..e .,_..., ........
led by stress specialist Murray Oxman at 10:30 a .m . 1922 HAHOl ILYD.
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
842·M78
Saturday in Newport Beach. For information, call .COSTA ~H•_-::Jil.;:1111, (213)936-·~M~76~-~~~~~~~~~~~_l!~~~~~~~~L__~~~~~~~J
SHUTIERS CUSTOM
Designed,
Finished
Installed
UALinSHUmRs
At the Laguna Beach
Museum of Art were
f top from left) Mn.
John 8. Parker, Mra.
Richard Newquist, and
Dr. and Mrs. Norman
Nixon. At the Newport
·Harbor Art Museum
were f photo at Left from
leftJ David Steinmetz,
Margarita Shaw, B.J.
Richter and her husband
George.
Receptions are artsy
by MARY JANE SC~RCELLO Of •• Deity ...... llaH
T be Laguna Beach Museum of Art bostect
a private reception for Blue Ribbon
Sponsors who contributed to the Junior
Council's Art Education for Children
before the opening of "Southern California
Artists: 1940-lSfK>."
Contributors, who each gave $100 or more.
were presented with a specially designed blue
ribbon for display al the museum's entrance by
Janet Eegers, the museum's fund-raising
chairman. •
Guests enjoyed clasaiciaJ guitar music, a
hosted bar and hon d'oeuvres while viewing the
e:dbJbil, curated by Maudette BaU of Newport
Beach.
The hon d'oeuvres, served oo the patio, were
prepared by Kay Pastorius, director of the
School of International Cuisine. Her husband is
sculptor Hal Pastorius.
Mrs. Pastorius, assisted by Kathy Douelass
and their committee from the Junior Council
prepared such gourmet delicacies as poached
salmon with dill sauce, curried stuffed
mushrooms, Italian sausage quiche, campignon
pate and assorted fresh vegetables with a
spinach dip.
Amoog the members and guests at the party
and opening were Ken and Marla Bird, Norman
and Virginia Nixon, Irmeli Desenberg, Cindy
Prewitt, Mr. and Mrs. Nick B. Williams, Arlene
Isaacs, Jim and Wendy Wood, Dr. and Mrs.
Richard Newquist, Tom Enman and Adrian
Kuyper.
N ewport Harbor Art Museum's opening,
held the same evening, attracted the
rest of Orange Coast's art world.
Mark Boyle's "Journey to the Surface
of the Earth" reproduced chunks of terra firma
from all over the world, evoking cobblestbnes,
vacant lots and meadows in fiberglass.
Museum members set aside wine glasses to
travel through "Bram's Ve~ Own Fault," an
architectural sculpture creating passageways
for exploration.
Artist Peter Berg took 12 days to install bis
work, and a scale model on the wall gave vis·
itors an overview or the project.
Among the viewers were Betty Turnbull and
HAPPENINGS
Victoria Kogan, who also had attended the
Laguna openine.
Rumors ln the art world are that the two
women may open an art gallery together 'Nhich
will feature only California artists.
Other guests were Bill and Bobbie Stabler,·
Laurie Brown, TGm and Ginny Haley, David
Steinmetz with Margarita Shaw, George and
B.J . Richter, Andrew and Ursula Cyga, Steve
and Judy Strauss, Max and Carolyn Dunn, Cora
Baldikoski, Harry and Charlotte Selling and
Snoozie Ullman.
Bomb group slates reunion
A reunion committee for the :W5th Bomb
Group, a bomber outfit that flew B-255 in the
Pacific during World War II, is looking for their
comr ades for a September 1982 reunion iQ
Colorado. •
RE'.tired Col. C. V. True, reunion chair, said the
committee knows the whereabouts or only 1,000 of
the 8,000·member group.
Committee officials are requesting squad
members or anyone knowing the whereabouts or a
member to call 886-2169.
$1,000 or 1110te-I, 12 weeks
A.11111#1/ Hull'
'fodayll interest rat~
j!Uarantttd ror
11ie term br
Amt!ntan Savin~
American Savings 'JXl!YS hil}h interest with safety.
n.1•• .. .,1·m1 111 .......... , ...... ,,"••••-•
~by Sec.tdeaohbe U.S. or U.S. GoM1wtMiil ~ .... ...._ ,.W by American S.ft\p at ~. ftll8 OBIJGAftON 18 NOT A SAVINGS m1b1rttJ NO RI. MO SERVICE CHARGE. Awilable
ACCOVNTOR DBP081T AND 18 NOT IN8URBD co CallfDnil ..,....., only. lfttentt J'lleS n tetJIH».
BYTH& PEDEllALSAVINOIAND LOAN artns_, lllUk•...tRP,_11, Mk. W.11 tnu..IH
INSURANCE COIPORATION. IM,_.., '
...... ····--
UC 0 a 0 . ... .. -.. .. .
llllyPllat
TU ESOAY, JULY 29, 1981
COMICS 83
IRAIGI ClllT BUSIN ESS 84
TE L EV IS!ON 88
a a
'~· '/~\
':' ~,~, •.• ) ,. ~·. ,
.~'· ) · .. ~ ,.,..
' '
azcassz Ji 2
Oil firms prepare
for Gulf Coast
coal boom . . . B4
2
G:olfers and joggers: showdown near?
Delly ...... St.ft,.....
JOGGING ENTHUSIAST
Councilman McFarland
By JEa aY CLAUSEN ..... DellY ..........
Coata Mesa City Councilman
Eric Johnson complained during
a recent council meetln& that
joggers are lnterferin& with play
at the city's golf course.
The avid golfer suggested that
something be done to keep run·
ners off the links.
H e could h ave s troked a
medium pull from where be sat
that night and hit one of those
runners. .
School aide
gives painting
to pr.esident
A painting of the sinking of a
World War II aircraft carrier is
to be presented to President Reagan today by 10 survivors of
the sinking, including Harbor
Area · school administrator
Norman Loats.
Loats, a Newport -Mesa
Unified School District deputy
superintendent, said the paint·
ing, "The Final Hour," depicts
the sinking of the USS Gambier
Bay.
Two hundred men died when
the carrier went down in the
Leyte gulf near the Philippines
after being attacked by the
Japanese.
The painting by a rtist C.G.
Evers wiU be presented along
with a petition that President
Reagan name a fut ur e carrier
after the lost World War II ship.
Newport man put
on airport board
o.lly ...... , .... ,,_
AIRPORT PANELIST
GregOTy Hirsch
Rites h e ld
for N e wport's
Mrs. War dle
Funeral ser vices were held to·
day for Newport Beach resident
LuctlJe M. Wardle, the former
owner of Buggs International
girt shop who died last Friday in
Los Angeles at the age of 63.
Following services at the
Church of Jesus Christ of LaUer·
day Saints in Newport Beach,
her body was to be taken to
Ogden, Utah for burial.
A Utah native, Mrs. Wardle
owned the gift shop in th~
Westcliff shopping center for 17
years.
Gregory Hirsch of Newport
Beach has been appointed by
Supervisor Thomas Riley to
r e plac~ Walter Koc h as a
member of the Orange County
Airport Commission.
Hirsch, 24, the son of promi·
n e nl Newport Beach busi-
nessman Clement Hirsch and an
active Republic a n Party
me mber, "was more than happy
to accept the appointment," Ken
Hall, a Riley aide, said today.
Koch, by mutual greement
with Riley. resigned effective
July 31. Koch said he disagreed
with recent decisions by county
supervisors to embark on a $75
to $100 million to improve and
enlarge airport facilities.
Asked for his position on the
controversial issue of airport
enlargement, Hirsch said, "I ha-,
ven 't really come up with a
stance. It's difficult for any two
people to see eye lo eye on
airport issues."
Hirsch said he believes the
commission, which is an ad·
visor y body to the board of
supervisors, "can play an inte-
gral role" in decidlng critical
airport-related issues.
Hirsch graduated from Stan·
ford University in 1978 with a
degree in economics. The Big
Canyon resident is president of
Hirsch Enterprises, an invest-
ment company that manages
real estate and securities. Hirsch
serves as business manaaer for
hia father's financial empire.
Young Hirsch is a member of
board of directors of United Way
of Orange County, Hoa1
lfospital 552 Club, Big Brothers
of Orange County, and the
Republican State Central Com·
mittee.
Councllman Ed McFarland, who reclined in his own council
chair some 15 feet to the eaat,
dons running shoes, sborta and
an old sweatshirt about four
times a week to ramble around
the municipal course.
He sue.tested that running
trails showd be mapped through-
out the 250'-acre facUity, After
all, he r eminded, the 36-hole
course was purchased at a re·
duced cost from the state
because it offers public recrea·
lion.
Tbe proposal was tossed lo Ci·
ty Manager Fred Sorsabal for
study and remains on one of
several back burners in the ad·
mlnistratlve kitchen of City
Hall.
Mc Fart and began running
more than 20 years ago -long
before jogging be ca m e a
popular 1970s pastime.
He was fresh from the Marine
Corps then and getting fat and
dull, be confides.
"I realized I just wasn't doing
anything physical," McFarland
recalls.
He was 27 then and selling in·
s urance .
He began jogging three days a
week for 30 to 45 minutes.
It became habit, one so dJf.
ficult to break that even while on
vacation he ran the grassy parks
and malls of London and Paris.
Now an insurance broker,
McFarlan'd , in January, set
three personal goals for 1981.
·'They were to run in a
marathon, get my private pilot's
license and get Pete Wilson
nominated as the GOP can-
didate for governor ... "
McFarland received bjs pilot's
license in June, finished the
grueling Daily Pilot-spo,nsored
Irvine Marathon in March and is
s till working toward goal
number three.
The peppery, red-haired coun·
c ilma n r emember s the
marathon well.
· 'l settled in with a bunch of
guys doing about 8.5 miles an
hour, a reasonable pace.
''I was moving along feeling
very, very good at the 10-and
De61y ......... ,,_
NOSE TO NOSE -Two-year-old Lelah Cotton of Costa Mesa
rubs noses with Mickey Mouse during a visit by Disneyland
characters to Hoag Memorial Hospital. The appearance
was part of a nationwide tour of non-profit hospitals.
Newport eyes legal
aid against airport
By STEVE MARBLE ot-.OeN,,.....s_..
A law firm is to be retained by
Newport Beach to determine
whether annexing Santa Ana
Heights will give Newport new
clout in battling expansion of
Job~ Wayne Airport.
Council members agreed Mon·
day that once they have the
answer to that question, they'll
decide whether to begin annexa-
tion proceedings. ·
A majority of the property
owners in the 250-acre eastern
area of Santa Ana Heights have
signed petitions favoring annex·
atlon to Newport.
Newport city officials confirm
•·
t h at 262 property owner s
representing nearly 52 percent
of the total assessed value of
eastern Santa Ana Heights have
siened the petitions.
According to law, this means
that Newport officials can in·
itiate annexaUon proceedings
without holding an election to
pose the question to voters.
But first, council members
agreed,. attorneys should detail
the pros and cons of such a
move.
Santa Ana Heights, bordered
by the Upper Newport Bay to
the south and Bristol Street to
the north, is tbe area moat
heavily affected by jet nolse
from the county airport.
Heights residents favoring an·
nexation contend t.beir fi&bt to
block airport expanaion will be
aided by the move.
Newport Councilman Paul
Hummel, who favors tbe annex·
atlon said Newport would have
some control over what happens
to Santa Ana Het1bta if the an·
nexaUon ts completed.
CurrentJy, county planners
are prepartn1 1 land uae study
for the unincorporated Rqbta
area.
•• Becaaae or the land UH
plan, 1' warned Newport Mayor
lackle Heather, "we don't have
much time to dilly-dally around.
But tbe queatlon la are we real·
ly belptns tMm and ou.rttlves1''
II Newport leaden mo••
ahead wttb nnexatlon, an •· rirollllMll&al lm,.ct Nporl ill\llt
be Pl'8PU'ed. eue• • reart. tt 11 .. uma&M. wW~
l'llrtMi', = ... "'Caiiir• Uaa& ~ II aa .,.. wl1btu to ba amaed ,., a lllO.OOi ·mwettee M . a.&. lt
WU.,.... out, UMlt a fM aould .,. ...... ., eaa.etl rite. _,.
15-mile marks. I couldn't believe
l was feeling so good.
"Then al 20 miles I hit what
they call 'the wall.· My legs all
but gave out. You couldn't·
believe the absolute pain. From
there on, I was probably doing a
12-minute mile."
McFarland finished the r ace
-in three hours and 41 minutes,
considered by many an excep-tional feat for his first and
probably la.st marathon.
"Actually, I run strictly for
physical fitness," he says.
McFarland says he runs the
perimeter of the city golf course
before most golfers get their
clubs in their car -at about
6:30 a .m .
He stays away from bone-
j arring concrete and asphalt
surfaces and from fellow run-
ners.
"I don't like lo r un with people
because I'll use them as an ex-
cuse not to run or they use me as
an excuse not to run.
"I run when I have the lime,
not when someone else has the
lime."
AVID GOLFER
Counctlman Johnson
More hearings due
• on center pro1ec t
A public hearing on the Irvine
Company's proposed expansion
of Newport Center has ended
with only the promise of more
hearings lo come.
About 20 people used the 90
minutes allotted by the Newport
Beach City Council, which con-
ducted the hearing, for a wide·
open discussion Monday of the
pros and cons of the plan.
Although those opposed to the
plan outnumbered those favor·
ing it by about 2 to 1, most of the
opponents said they could back
the expansion if provisions were
tackt*l on lo ease the impact of
increased traffic volume it re-
portedly will bring.
Backers of the expansion said
it would bring more business
and tax revenue to the city. and
that a planned $8 million road
improve ment package that is
part of the expansion plan would
greatly benefit the city.
The Irvine Company wants
permission to build a 300-room
luxury hotel with 100 to 150 con·
domin.iums and nearly 900,000
square feet of office s pace. The
plan also calls for construction
of two restaurants and a 165·
room expansion of the Marriott
Hotel.
The major arguments cited by
opponents were that the· ex·
pansion would worsen traffic
conditions in Corona del Mar
and along P acific Coast
Highway, and that the added
traffic would create more noise
and air pollution.
T hey also argued that the ex·
pansion would require more use
of J ohn Wayne Airport, ag-
gravating noise and traffic prob·
lems there.
The opponents called for a re-
vision of the plan so that an ex·
tension of San J oaquin Hills
R oad and construction of
Pelican Hill Road near the
center would be a condition of
the plan's approval.
Other opponents, mostly resi·
dertls living near the center,
asked that construction of noise
and air pollution abatement
walls around their homes be
made a condition of approval.
A Corona del Mar woman op·
posed to the expansion said the
San Joaquin Hills and Pelican
Hill road projects were a must
·'before any more traffic i•
dumped on Pacific Coast
Hi1bway." But another resident
backin& the expansion said the
Irvine Company plan to include
road improvements in the ex·
pansion is .. a once an a lifetime
opportunity to relieve the traffic
situalion in Corona dcl Mar."
Expansion backers said that
traffic in the area will increase
even without the expansion, and
that developers would add office
and hotel space in neighboring
communities if it was not al·
1ow e d at Newport Center.
worsening traffic problems an
Newport with no benefit to show
for it.
Mayor Jackie Heather in·
structed city staff members to
gather more information on the
issues addressed at the hearing
before it is continued Aug. 10.
Ne w la ws u it
file d in
school flap
A new laws uit has been filed
Monday aimed at preventing
Christian student groups from
meeting in school facilities dur·
ing lunch periods al Mission Vie·
jo High School and other Sad·
dleback Valley schools.
The lawsuit, filed Monday in
Orange County Superior Court.
is sponsored by' the American
Civil Liberties Union and is
bro u g ht by a gro up o f
c lergymen, parents and a
t eacher in the Saddleback
Valley Unified School District.
It is the same group that tried
unsuccessfully in June for a
court order barring the student
groups from meeting in such
places as Mission Viejo High's
little theater .
Su perior Court Judge Luis
Cardenas denied that request
Law yer R icha rd
Petherbridge, an ACLU volun·
leer. said the new la ws uit
represents a chance to "spell out
more clearly how we think the
present system amounts lo an
establishment of religion ."
A tiearing has t?een set on Aug.
27 in Judge Cardenas' court.
Pelherbridge said the gro\Jp
needed to clarify in their suit
how the school district has
become involved in the religious
education at Mission Viejo High
by allowing lts lltUe theater lo
be used and condo n i n g
lunchtime visits from a local al·
sistant minister.
• Sizable souvenir
35-f oot tequi la bottle stolen
WbUe more than 400 volleyball
entbu1la1ll celebrated btlow,
someone stole the 35-foot plutlc
Cuervo GoJd tequila botUe from
the root of the Tort.Illa "•ti restaurant la Lquna Beach eai'-.
lyM-.y.
Tbe th.t\ of the m•caJ moau-
ment came Juat boun after the
cooclualoa of the two day
Laauna Beach Open Pro Beach
Volleyball Tournament , •PoUcnd la part by tbe C"9nO
Pt0'8•. The eoateet annually featuna
t.bl bqe •·ftlled t.caWl• boWe, vl1lble from Cout ffllbwQ dur·
1., Ute ......,.uuoa at Mala
••eti~. Pollo tall ow••• of tM ....... ,,.."&......_ .......
tel It lollowllll COIDPltlUolt .................. ,.,flt
.
the Mexican rutaurant prior to
• late nJpt party 1t that loca-
tion at the ICMlth end or town.
Steve Levlnlon, who owna the
restaurant, said thieves· •P·
parenUy deflated t.be costly bot·
Ue whlfe celebrants were sUll in
tbe bulldlD1.
"Everyone was partyina Md
havlnc a IOOd time," LevtnlGn
said ... Who would know aomeoice
WH ltealtM tbe bottle?"
Policei Nld ... wtlMll -a
rMtaurUl ... _. -aaw two
men on the roql earlier In tlll "·""· Tbe pair, oat ~
ll&oad wltb ctarlJ "*· .. Willa dark wavy Ult. • tM pautlt lafta&t'81i Mlmt; .................. .,..
UIH to SMMDP air bltO tM lHlle .........
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT{Tuesday, July 28, 1981
MARCHING SLOWLY BACKWARD
-Got a call just yesterday from a very
nice anonymous lady from Huntington
Beach who would like to see civilization
slip back to the old-fashioned
pushbroom. Her story gives you an idea
why.
"I just want to complain about an in·
fernal machine that's supposed to
replace the pushbroom for sweeping out
. ~'
~\
Tll IURPHlll ,~It
places like carports and parking lots,"
she explained.
"It's a very noisy, motor-driven
blower type thing which does nothing
more than blow the dust around.
l "I work at a night job and you just
1lry getting some sleep during the day
1when one of these machines goes into ac·
tion ... " -WELL I CAN TELL you I really
sympathize with that ooe. Noise and
racket seem to be a major bedevilment
of our supposedly advanced civilization
these days.
Consider the phonograph, for exam-
ple.
When Thomas A. Edison first invent·
ed the phonograph, you could barely
hear it over the scratchings of the needle
across the cylinder. Then somebody im·
proved it so it didn't scratch so much
and you could hear it all across a big
parlor for dancing.
So do we leave well enough alone?
We do not. We continued to "im·
prove" old Tom E 's machine by adding
more power, multiple speakers and then
more power again.
Today, you couldn't hear a Tom
Edison's ·needle scratch if it did scratch.
Stereophonic, multi-quad speakers and
all blast out the sound with enough dec-
i bils to deafen dogs three blocks away.
And in my neighborhood, 3 a.m. is
the prime time for this kind of thing.
Alas, unlike the frazzled nice lady
from Huntington Beach, I am not sup-
posed to be a night worker. But I'm not
much of a night sleeper these days
either, thanks to the improvement on the
original invention.
NO WONDER THE LADY wants to
re-invent the pushbroom. Few people
have ever'been-awakened by one, unless
somebody was beating on you with the
business end.
Also pusbbrooms, when applied to
the regular task, tend to pile up the
debris at the end of the strokes so you
have to do something with the rubbish.
Like pick it up and haul it away.
And she's right about the new
blower gadgets. They just get the stuff
airborne so it becomes somebody
else's problem when it settles back down
again.
It's like the rollers in my
ne ighborhood with the stereo. It's
somebody else's problem after the
crazed sounds blow out their windows.
ONCE, AROUND THE Newport
Beach, Costa Mesa and Irvine areas,
they had jet aircraft flying overhead
that lots of folks thought were very
noisy. So they re-invented a less noisy
"She waa quiet, Zeb, before tMJI put that engtM on
one and now a Jot of people think it's
noisier than the noisy ones were.
It's very confusing, all this progress.
Years ago. we so improved
automobiles that they were getting 29
miles to the gallon. Then we wanted to
get rid of noxious fumes so we fixed
those cars so they g9t 14 miles per
gallon. Now we've fixed what we fixed '
and autos are back up to 29 miles per
gallon again. .
Sometimes it seems like progress is
one step forward and three to the rear.
Sagittarius to 01ake new start
WednHday, JaJy 29
By SYDNEY OMARR
TAURUS <April 20-May 20 ): Restrictions are re·
moved.
GE"1NI (May 21-June 20>: Be wary when It comes
to afflxlng signature to legal document.
ARit ES ( ~arckh 21-April 19> Opportuna.t.y exists to CANCER <June 21.July 22): You could win populari·
correc past rrusta es. ty contest
• LEO <July 23-Aug. 22>: Family member i:oofides
Patterning help needed a s~~:~o (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 1· Aura of romance
· dominates scenario.
VOLUNTEERS are needed to help a brain·
injured youth through patterning exercises 30 HOROSCOPE minutes twice a day. Hours can be arranged. Contact
.Jack or May Beresford at 631-3404 for more informa-
(ion.
COMMUNICATION FOR COUPLES with Joyce
and Robert Sitnpson will be held al 7:30 p.m . Tues-
day in Santa Ana. For information, call 532-5646.
WINNER AND LOSERS: That's Us is the theme
of a free workshop sponsored by the Mental Health
Association of Orange County al 9: 30 a . m. Friday in
Santa Ana. For information, call 547 · 7559.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0cl. 22 >: Emphasis on promotion,
production, Ummg and intensified relationship.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21>: Longstanding project
can be completed.
SAGl1TARJUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): vou·11 make new
start In new direction.
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Emphasize caution,
meticulous attention to details.
AQlJAJUUS CJ an. 20·Feb. 18): Perceive situation in
its enUrety.
PISCES <Feb. 19-March 20): Doors open and you
have opportunities for creative endeavors.
PLANNED PABENTllOODof Orange County is
seeking volunteers to take part in a countywide
telephone survey in August. For Information, call ···RUFFELL'$
t73·1727. UPHOLSTERY .
PROBLEM SOLVING is the topic of a discussion s..e .,._.., ......
led by stress specialist Murray Oxman at 10:30a.m. lfJJ HAHbl IL.Vo.
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
842·N78
Saturday in Newport Beach. For information, call .cosy A ~HA_-: .. H.l;:.115.-~
c213> 936-·!;91~76~·------------1~!!!!!!!~~~~~~L _______ _J
SHUTIERS CUSTOM QUAUTY SHUmRS
Designed,
Finished
Installed
~ -------'! ..
.
..
ReceptiOns
by MARY JANE SCABCEU.O Of .. .,.... ,.... .....
T be Laeuna Beach Museum of Art hosted
a private reception tor Blue Ribbon
Sponsors who contributed to the Junior
Council's Art Education for Children
before the opening of "Southern California
Artists: 1940-1980."
Contributors, who each gave $100 or more,
were presented with a specially designed blue
ribbon for di.splay at the museum's entrance by
Janet Eggers, the museum's fund-raising
chairman.
Guests enjoyed classicial guitar music, a
hostf'd bar and hon d'oeuvres while viewing the
exihlblt. curated by Maudette Ball of Newport
Beach.
The hors d'oeuvres, served on the patio, were
prepared by Kay Pastorjus, director of the
School of International Cuisine. Her husband is
sculptor Hal Pastorius.
Mrs. Pastorius, assisted by Kathy Douglass
and their committee from the Junior Council
prepared such gourmet delicacies as poached
salmon with dill sauce, c urried stuffed
mushrooms, Italian sausage quiche, campignoo
pate and assorted fresh veeetables with a
spinach dip.
Amon& the members and guests at the party
and opening were Ken and Marla Bird, Norman
and Virginia Nixon, lrmeli Desenberg, Cindy
Prewitt, Mr. and Mrs. Nick B. Williams, Arlene
Isaacs, Jim and Wendy Wood, Dr. and Mrs.
Richard Newquist, Tom Enman and Adrian
Kuyper.
N ewport Harbor Art Museum's opening,
held the same evenine, attracted the
resl of Orange Coast's art world.
Mark Boyle's "Journey to the Surface
of the Earth" reproduced chunks of terra firma
from all over the world, evoking cobblestones,
At the lAguna Beach
Museum of Art were
f top from le/tJ Mrs. l
John 8 . Parker, Mrs. J
Richard Newqui&t . andl
Dr. and Mrs. Norman I
Nixon. At the Newpo1t !
·Harbor Art Muieum '
·were rphoto at left fro,ft
leftJ David Steinmetz. I
Margarita Shaw. B.J. t'
Richter and her husba
George.
I
are artsy.
vacant lots and meadows in fiberglass. :
Museum members set aside wine glasses to
travel through "Bram's Very Own Fault," an
architectural sculpture creating passageways I
for exploration.
Artist Peter Berg took 12 days to install ltis
work, and a scale model on the wall gave vis-:
itors an overview of the project. :
Among the viewers were Betty Turnbull and .
HAPPENINGS
Victoria Kogan, who also had attended the :
Laguna opening. ~ --
Rumors in the ,art world are that the two ;
women may open an art gallery together which I
will feature only California artists. ;
Other guests were Bill and Bobbie Stabler. !
Laurie Brown, Tom and Ginny Haley, David I
Steinmetz with Margarita Shaw, George and I
B.J . Richter, Andrew and Ursula Cyga, Steve
and Judy Strauss, Max and Carolyn Dunn, Cora ,.
Baldlkoski, Harry and Charlotte Selling and
Snoozie Ullman. I
Bomb group slates reunion
A reunion committee for the 34Sth Born
Group, a bomber outfit that flew B-2Ss in th
Pacific during World War II, is looking for the·
comrades for a September 1982 reunion i
Colorado.
Retired Col. C. V. True, reunion chair, said th
committee knows the whereabouts of only 1,000 o
the 8,000.member group. ~ Committee officials are requesting squa
members or anyone knowing the whereabouts of
member to call 886-2169.
$1,000or••--I,12 week•
A111111t1/ H11tr
Thdayll lllterest rate
.rcuarant ttd tor
tht •~rm b~ Amencan S.Wll(\I
_American Savi'11f}B pays hi,gh interest wiJJi safet,y.
ftle~eflr•l11 I 1 •• ,. ........ ,1 .. lr1•1alll
~bJ 91aiildlsotthe u.s; or u.s. GM11118l Mldpll (11111-... plid bf American Sntnp at
Ajlftlin; THISOBUOATION 18 NOi' A SAVINGS matudy. t-to na. NO SIRYICE CHARGE. Aftillble
Mn>VNTO& RPOlrrAND m NOi' INIUUD to C.tlorall relidentt OQIJ latereet nte11re eetJlill. BYTBI PIDlaALIAVINOIAND LOAN Brtas_, ._._......_,..~, W. .. I trwler
IPfllVIUNClamoul'ION. Iller-&
l
-----~-~
Orange Cout DAtl Y PILOT/TUllday, Juty 28, 1981 .,-----------.... ~----------~------------""'""------------------------... ~ N
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
~OTATIOldllllCL.UN TUOllH "" .... vo111C.MIOWHT,PACIPIC ••••• eotTIHt, OUltOtf ••O ClllH:llttllATI l'rOCll lk<~•-••l"°'"&OIYTM••AMA•OllllOl••T.
I •
Dovv Jones Final
DOWN -6.47
CLOSING FIGURE 931.40
.... ,." :(CO• -t.'~ How Japan
handles aging
r Fira of a two-part •m~•. J
A gradual increase over a loog apan or years in the
traditional Social Security retirement a1e for U.S.
workers ii increuingly likely. Whether the advance is
from today's age 65 to 68 or to some similarly higher
level and whether the span over "°hich the increase
takes place reaches into the next century or some year
before 2000-lbese are questions that will be intensive·
ly studied and debated.
But agreement ia spreading that this is one in·
telligeot direction in which our system should head.
And moet significantly, the lines or disagreement
~t>!r!uwandc~~ ~ servatives on
this issue are a.. t«
sortening. ~
Older re· ~ ~
tiremenl ages, .-,-, .. -.-•• -IT-II--mandatory or LWUI
voluntary,
already are commonplace in our private pension plans.
U you look closely, you will see the rascinaling
phenomenon of milliona of workers voluntarily opting
for earlier retirement while millions or other workers
reluctantly take whatever retirement benefits they
have accumulated at older and older years. Are other industrialized lands "graying" as
rapidly as we are? If they are, what can we learn
from these other nations that might help lead us to
financially sound, yet emotionally sympathetic
solutions?
While the populations of all industrialized countries
are growing older, none is aging as rapidly as Japan• s .
By 1985, more Ulan a fourth of Japan's population, now
approximating 115 million, will reach that nation's
traditional compulsory retirement age or SS -a
percentage t.hat dwarrs the scheduled proportions with
which we arestarting lo grapple.
ln Japan, lire expectancy for men is now about 74
years and nearly 79 years for women -as compared
with 89 years for American men and 77 years for
American women.
At the top or the nation's readjustment agenda is a
policy under which Japanese firms must postpone the
age at which most workers leave their comparues from
tbepresentSSto60.
The Japanese government provides subsidies to
companies that extend the retirement age of their
workers. 1t has established formal guidelines under
which fll'm.s are pressured ~ but not legally required -
to meettbeext.ension in the retirement age by 1985.
Nevertheless, a recent survey diacloeed that a
large percentage of all Japanese companies -perhaps
40 percent -still enforce the o!d retirement age of SS
among their employees. These agt. levels reflect
practices that made sense when life expectancy in
Japan was much, much short.er.
Retirement in Japan, though, does not mean the
same as retirement io our country. Employees do not
ju.st st.op working entirely at age SS. Instead, most
merely leave the company for which they have been
working since graduation from high school or college.
Virtually every retiree then gets a second job. It
may even be a less important, lower.paying position
with the same company or a less important job with
another, frequently smaller enterprise.
Wediwtday -lAHOnt ~can~ from Japan .
' 117
H/ F Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, July 28. 1981
=--::s= TUBE TOPPERS · ~.cw.~.I
A~trtt91,1~ i
-ano·~1 INmollM• Jc*! lore. to
l'll9dlotl atlldlrlt Witt! •
tttloua Ht0tmlty fafta If..-, In I0"9 wfth I
Pf~ ..... ,...
-EVMG---e:oo1•• NIWI KUNGf'U
A rnac.brt plot unfolde to
lure Celnt bed! to Chlo•
end otrttln deeth.
I TIO TAIJ ooue»t u•A•t•"'
Hawlleya and Trapper
"petw.iade" Franll not to
~t I d~able
dltc:Mroe tor • wounded,
~IOldler
• GOOOT...a
J,J. -up with • voc:al
dl9cO¥etY i.. ca .. the
CHECKING OUT Walter Olkewicz and
Deborah Harmon are employees in a
small. haunted hotel on "Comedy of Hor-
ror" tonight at 8:30 on Channel 2. .. ~ ..
loow== NICNIWS
MO'M
•• ~ ''TM Madclntoeh
Man" (1973) Paul N9w-
man, Dominique Sanda.
8..-d on I ~ by Dta-
mond ~ A Brl11911
lntetllgence ag«tt and ""
female cohoft ar• forced
to coeie with double eganll
and trlple-cr~ on their
ml.ion to capture • com-
munlt1 IPY· uo I JOUR'I WILD AU IN THI FAMILY
Following a rob~. •
croolt brMll• Into the
&Inker home to 1YOld cap.
1ur1 by the~.
• MHNYHIU.
Benny lmplrlonat .. 10m1
..._.,_ entertalnerl
• Kc.T NEWMEAT
• l'T\008&
''Cobbler" Two COl>blerw anow k~ how to ,.,....,
their own "-· an "'""*
)Ouatlng l'l\9tCfl In South
CarOlina. (R)
Cl)CBJNIWI
@ 9MNEY MIU.EA
~ putt hit life on the
llnl ....,.. It c:omea 10 •
cholcl of outtlng I group
of tW*ltl trom a llNl>eg
llC>tel or lacing dlQMtmen-
tal ctlargea.(Part 1)
(J)MOVIE
"Don't MIN Thi Boel"
9:11 I EDITONAL 7:00 C8I HEWS 8 NICNIWS
• HAJtPY OAYS AGAIN
Fonzie lhockt Riehle and
hit lrl1nd1 when he
announoea that hi le get·
ting married. 8 A.IOHEWS
I llUL.LRYE u·A·a·H
A general r-ard1 lM
4017th with an Officer•·
Club af1er Hewlt9Y'9 and
T rae>oer -hll aon'a llfl
• ITI'DTI °"&AH ~
A ~ man from lhl
ghetto la lorn ~
IOHVno the eyodlcat• and
telling Ste>M wtlerl he wit·
-the Nylng ol an uildel wono c:t>1e1
• OVEAEAIY
au.ti· Roget Baldwln,
Teddi Sutton, Dr lrwtn
Portnw. (R)Q G MA/JHEl. I LEHRER
~
Cl) TIC TAIJ DOUGH ttl ...WGAlmH
GU181t: Slalr Fttrlngton
0-1, Ut>«ace, LM
Roy Rffma, Roger & Rog-
er.
(C)MOVIE **IA "Tiii Wreclc Of Thi
Mary O..re" ( 195g) Gary
Coop«, Chaflton Heaton.
A lhlp'I ~ le aided by
tlll llllpper ol • ..,.,age
bolt In clNrlng hit neme
of negllge!ICt dlargea.
(J:D MOYIE
"My Brllllant C•~••"
( 1980) JudY Olvla. Sam
....._ In turn-ot-1n.c.n1u-
CHANNEL LISTINGS
ry Auatralla, 1111 ln04lplncl·
tnl young women tt1ea IO
ma1 a c:er-M a writ•
delpltl toc:lel ~lor her to many
(I)MOVW
"Xanadu" (1980) OIM1
NewtO!Wohn, 0-Kiiiy
A young artist, a lwlvenly
-and • .-,1im.nta1
mllllonalr• join IOfcea to °'*' up a hl'OI roller·
dltco pal-. 'PG'
7!30 8 ~l.ANO: CAOWH
ANOTI40AHS
On tlll we or trhl mar-
riage ot Prince Chartla and
Lady Diana Spene«, :.i ..
Marlow laklt • look •• the I
Btlllth Monarchy and how
llfl la Ovid if> COf'letnpo-
rary Eng!And
I CllFAMILYFEUO
PNHCE CHAALES
A t>logr-i>hic.I 100i1 at
Great Britain'• Prince
Chan..
8 EYEOHLA.
Host• lnu Pedroza, Paul
Moy9( A \ltalt 1o thl Old
Culwr Chy Studtot: a
crvtM up IM calilornla
COAll on the swanlcleal
yacht to Nil lhl PICiftc, I
look al lhl women wN>
ride the rodeo Clfcuitl. IJ FACE THE MUSIC GI AU IN THE FAMILY
An;Ne ii OU1taoed Whir>
Edith gfwl IWI)' • valu-
able lnhlfttance left 10 her
~hercou.ln fD MACNEIL / l.EHREll
AEPOAT 6D NEWS
(I) P.M. MAGAZINE
(8) RACE FOR THE
PEHHAHT
Barry Tompllina and Tim
McCar,,.. r-p dMllooal
baMball ttandlnga and
lntl<VI-tome or th•
g11m1'1 top pla)'lfS. (II the
player1' 1trlk1 contlnuea,
an updat1 on Ule ~uaUon
wilt •Ito bl lncluOld.)
H08 CI) WALTEA
CAOM<ITE'8 UNIV£R8E D L080
An MC>if1nO rodl tit>Q1t
get1 Lo«>o and Pwtitna
mlxld up wtth r1C0td
plrat .. (R) 8 MOVIE
•• "M ... o: J-t Of
Dlllh' ( 1975) Richard
JMdlll. Jennifer Bf9hop
An ICOlogy-mlndld lilllet-
man tr• to ptot1C1 grll.I
wNll AllM1!1 from would-
bl lluntlft 8 9 Tl4£ AOYAL
WEDOING
A rlC)Otl on the upcoming
wedding or Brltaln't Prince
C,..,._ to Le<ty Diana
Spene:« will 1>e ~tld
IJ MOVIE
• • • "Caprlc4t" (1967)
Oorla Day. RICflatd Harrlt
A wom81'1 traYelt tnoognlto
to tradl down the narcot-
lct ring rnpontlbll for hlf
,.,,_ .• dleth.
W P.M. MAGAZINE
Slcydl'Ylng ot1 the 3000-loot
El Ceottaln Cllfla; thl prep-
a r atlona for Prine•
Charl11' w1ddlng: Biii
Hlnl8 with a mol/ll rl\lleW:
81....-Can.y makM •
-ter allde; Clpt.. C.rrOI
8 l<NXT tCBS1 Lo~ Angetl''> 11 l<NBC 1 NBCI Los Angele<. e KlLA !Ind 1 Lo~ Angeies G KABC TV 1ABC1 Lo<, Angeles
()) ~FMB (CBS1 San Diego
1J .)(HJ T\l (lno I Los An<.1e1es
(1JJ l<CST tABC1 San Diego
I ICTTV t lnd I Los An9e1~.,
KCOP TV j Ind ) Loo; Angell'~
fJl) KCET T\I tPBSI Los AngRll'S
'9 KOCE ·TV1PBSt Huntington Beach
Scott livens up
staid Britishers
By YRED aoTHENBE&G A,T......._.....,
NEW YORK -Watch out, London. Willard
Scott, t.be "Today" show weatherman, is coming .
to crub tbe royal wedd1nc.
You can take Scott out ol the country. but don't
expect staid ol' England to change hlm. He'll stllJ
be the 1ame clown wbo bu turned morn1ol(
weather rorecutini into 1tand-up comedy.
"Today" wUJ be •pend.lac tbis week ln London
ud hu plant for Scott to \Ue hls unique brand of co= to En1U1b publ, cricket matches and an else that 1trllre1 h1I rancy. "It will bf
•reat ~ 'el Uf, at 10 o'clock in the mornlnf Ukt human~. 'Scott aaid.
••Wtiat I really want to do ii put oa ooe of thoe4I
BHfeat.w outfits aad take a Jue of New York CllJ
wat.r around PlcadWJ Juat to ... 11~1e wilt driU lt. New York ••t. II• dam • " •aid .• "Maybe ii I .,..t • b .. d OD It, U..r'U to or lt."
Tbe=m ol U. bWkJ leot& bcNndln• Uaroqb
LolMlcm d turn • few bMda. For aae t.blD •• he
bean a llllbt ,_..bluee ID BrtUlb wit RoWt
Morley. l•mWu &o Amerle ... for bl• droll
all'plaM adl. MarhJ wW bt wortditc for Ar.1 "Good........_, A...tta" ......... .
·~ llaft < .. --...r: ......... ...... ---=::-.~=-'·ifi;: -........ -...... .... •llH a. .. , ........ .. ......... ,,........._ .........
on neutral tub blthl IOf
reluatlon
• MCMI
1t • "Star Hope" Oofothy
BUtlr'man, Starting Frular
Thr11 blaulllul young
women turn • lalllng drlvl-
ln Into • rMlly tuCCMalul
~.
• NOVA ,
"Animal Ofymplant" Thi
blluly, lf\duranc1 and
power or an1m11t In thl
Wiid are )Uxl1poMCI with
Ofymplc llhllCM perlorm-
lng IMll whk:h ha,,.· par.,_
1941 In the anlmal kingdom.
(RJQ
Ii) MYSTERY
"Thi Racing Game: Odd•
.Agalntt" Jodtey Sid Htllly
d1Cld11 to 1nv11tlgatt
myslerl~ happening• at
thl Seabury fllO«lOUlll
1h1r hi Irreparably lnjurM
hit hand In I lllll)tlch ...
rec» (R)Q
8 TENHIS
''Wlllt Fargo Open"
CB)MOVIE
"Rocliy II" ( 1978) Syiv.tttt
Stallonl. Talia Shirl Atter
loMng his l>OUI with lhl
world CharnplOn, an tmbl·
llous bO•er traina lor •
MCOnCI chtrlCt at tne 1101
PO'
BIZAAAEXXI
Jol'ln BY\'*' lhowt you
thing• llranget tha.n 1ru111
latger than WI•. and :ranllr
than 1111y1hlng you'v1 ....., -0MOVIE
"Magee And Thi LAIOy"
(1978) Sally Kl41erman.
Tony Lo Blanco An attrac-
11,,. lemlle trlea 10 br11k
Into tne high!y competltl,,.
trucking lrlduttry, aroutlng
thl wrath of one partk:Yl•r
"'"''" ii> the t>u•lneu ·pa·
1:30 II Cl) COMEDY Of'
HOAAOAI
A young couple go 10 a
euppoaedty haunted hOtll '°' their honeymoon • TOPSTORY
Holla: .Am Thomae, Mary
~~THON
A corn«llan llOll and lour
comic coni.1111111 .rho
comp1t1 agalnat on1
another ar1 featured In lhlt
uncanaored oomedy oeme .now
1:3& (%) CHAlll..D CHAMPLIN
T AU<I WITH RAQUE.L
~
1:41 cmTHAr9ME
t:OO II CJ) MOVIE
• "Stunt S-" ( 1979)
Chrlt1opher Conn11111.
CMat~ Lloyd A team
ot llunt ••Pl'1• attempt •
d1rtng land. Ma and air
reKU1 or a kldnap91d
m<>Yll atar. (R)
0 HILL 8'TAEET BLUU
A former cop otlwa to P<O-
Yldl ln!ormalion on polkle
corrupOon In 1xchange for
!flldom and • -ldenli-
• ,~ THME'S
OOMPAHY
Whtie IMC:hlng •I hit old
11<:11001. Jeck l>lcomM
tmbrOll9CI In • 1tldfy •llue.
tlon wtth the CllM'• nlle:e
(RJQ
• MEJW OAIFFIN
Guealt Blalr Farrington
Oancert, lll>er-. Lii
Roy "-"-· Roger a Rog·
•• Domlnldc. 0.¥'9 and
Suger,J1yJOflnaon
• MY8TIJW
"Th• Racing a-Odd•
Ag.llina1" Jockey Ski Hdly
decld11 to lnv .. tlg•t•
myat«lout llappenlnga at
the S..bury racecoura1
1fter hi lrr1C>W•bly lnjurM
Illa hand"'• tteeplld\eM
r-.(R)Q ID NOVA
"Anlmal Ofymplana" Thi
Olyn\C)lo •thleMe petform-
'"O ..... wt11ot1 ha\19 Piii'•· I
.... In the anlMal lllnodOm
~~
"WadWM "°911" ( 1171)
BlrllOnl Slgnot91, Cleude ~.Awoman'•Plf·I
t01111tty undlro<>M an
eatrern. tr•n•lormatlon
Wtllnthl~'-tlff
in a romenllc aJfalr wtllcfl
bf1dOal two wtdely dlft•·
~~leYelt.'R'
"Mid Max" ( tNO) Mel
Otbaon, Joanne 8arflUll. 111
an Aualrtll• of the not·too-
dlatant tvtura, the frilndt
and family of • top htgh-
w•11 purault pollceman
blCOml the tar~• of
aadlattc motorc~ oang.
'R'
(.I) TH! Wla(Y WOAU>
Of' JONATHAH WINTIM
Hoel: Orton WlllM,
t:Oe (%) ~ RAOUEl. wrTH
LOVE •.ao D ttl rre A LMNO
Loi• mak• an lmpu.-
alonld IC)MCl'I In deltnll
or wal••-In front of her
t0-1111r-old daugllt•r'1
ct ...
(l)MOVll
"Up Thi AcaOem(' (1M0)
Ron Lalbmall, Barbare
8ac;h Thi war-o~
commandant ot Welnt>«g
Miiitary Ac.dlmy It no
match t0t thl troubfetolnl
brat1""ollld111«1 'R'
10:00 II CBJ THE A0Y AL
WlDOING
A report on lhl UPQ<>mlng I
wedding of 8tltaln's Prince
Charlll to Lady Olan•
Spencer will bl pr-.nted I DU llJ6D NEWS 0 9 HAATTOHAAT
Jonathan and Jennfter are I
taken hottag1 by two
killlrt Who ••• alter an
Incriminating plee1 of evl-I
dlf'ICI hidden In thl Hirt
manlion (R)
fll) PRESEHTE
"Baqulne Ol Lo1 Angllllos
NlgrOI" Thlt 8-gull'I, 8
ufu-l>altlf and lraditlonal
c1l1oratton at which
frllnel1 and rel•tlYee of •
dlCIUld black Puerto
AIC:An chil<I dlrlCt 1a11 Into
the night 10 •sew• the
MC*>dllllCle of the Chlld'1
aoul to i-v1t1, IMtur•
orlglnal Mita mutlc by w11.
lllColon
OON8ENT1NG
ADULTS
VarlOut typae or rlletion-
tlhtpt thlt dlly thl lrld~
Uonal 11andardt Ml by
modern tocllty ar1 exa-
mined
@MOVIE
"R11urr1cllon" ( 1980)
Ellen Buratyn, Sam Shep-
ard Aher a near fatal auto
acetdlnt. a woman find•
that Ille llaa thl 1blllty to
hell Olhlft but It pl(·
MCUlld l>IC8uM of her I
r1IUNI to Claim a dMne
lnltuenol. 'PG'
(%)MOVIE
"M11r• Brecic1nrtdg1"
( 1g70) Mii WMI. JOhn
Huaton •
10'.IO . HEWS
• INOEPENDEHT
NE'TWOAK NEWS 9 FAST FOf!NtARO
"T ICflnOlogy Of Mullc:"
Muele II Ir aced !Tom Ill
-11111 acou111c: forms
'1i) JAMES MICHENER'&
WORLD
. ·spor11 In Am«1c:a Cht'-
dr1t1 And Spotu" J-
Mlehlner exp~lt thl
physical •nd emot10n1t
elt1C11 of the "win at all
c:oat1" •tutudl on young
athllt .. and thl pretlUf' ..
placed on 1111 gifted chltCI
atllllta (A)
10:46 (ID MOVIE
"Thi Opining Of Mitty
Blethoven" (197g) Con·
ttanc1 Mone y, J1ml1
011111. A renowned Mll
•uthorlty mak11 1 wager
th•I hi can turn • common
Parttlan tart Into a high·
P"k*S. je1 M1 call q!!_1
11:00. 0. Cl) 0 Q!)
fllEWI 8 STAATAEX
Mr Spock l>lowt hla cool
and almolt glll ~t Kini
killed wNn In 0-whllm-
lng "'9tlng urge tak• poa.
-'on of him . I =:EDGAMJ!
.. A vi.. or N°""9rl ..
Whlll llylng In a hallcop1lf.
Manni• ~ lll'a -
• woman murdered on • penthouM ,.,.,_, bvt le
blffled lo find there ta no
corJ)ll lrld no report ol •
crtme.
• IEHNVHIU.
The Thf11 Mulllet--. ride
aglln Into anolhtr -pacM wtttl pr'ltty Mllldtnl.
• DICK CAVETT
Gl.lelt: Harold Mac:MHtan.
CBS 8 7:30 "England: Crown
and Thorns." Jess Marlowe lookl at the
Britiah monarchy and Ute in modern
England.
KTLA 0 7:30 -"Prince Charles."
A biography or the bridegroom.
KCET @ 8:00 and KOCE 9 9:00 -
"Nova: Animal Olympians." Wild
animals and Olympic athletes are com-
pared.
ABC D 8 :00 -"The Royal Wed-
ding." A report on the Wednesday wed-
ding or Prince Charles and Lady Diana.
(Part 2 of 2)(RJ
~MOVW
"The Stunt Man" (1980)
Pel• O'TOOle. St-Rallt-
back. Wanted by 1111
pob, a dla11Kbed VIM·
nam veteran find• an
unaur• h-on • mow
Ml whlfl a World Wlf I 1f11c la being fttmld 'R'
(BJ MCa FOR THE
~
Barry Tomolcln• and Tim
McCarvlr recap dlYMlonal
bUlball •landlngt and
lntlNllw eome ot thl
gam1'1 top player• (ti the
pillyert' llrlke COl'lllnUM,
1111 upc:lall on thl 1ltu11ton
wtn alto bl tnctuclld.)
(l)MOvtE
"Cadd)'lhack" ( 1980) 9111
Murray, Rodney Deng«·
ll1ld. Thi d1m1 nt1d
ground•kllPI' of • awan-
kl' country club wagea war
agllnat the gopher• lnhl·
biting_ Illa turl 'R'
11:80 8 (J) THI! AOY AL
WEDOINO
Dlln Rath«, Olvtd Fro.I
and L.ay Antonia Fr-
repor1 on thl upoomlng
W9ddlng ol Brltaln't Prince
Chlirlll 10 Le<ty Diane
~~
Hott Johnny C•r1on.
G__.1· MIC Dlvll, J-
St-art
8 9 ABCNEWS
..aHT\JNE G LET'S MAKE A DEAL
• STANLEY SIEOEL
• ID) CAPTIONED A8C
NEWS ®MOVIE
"Allln" (197gl Tom Sker-
rltt, Yaphlt Kotto Thi
er-ol a apacegOlng
~-i> carrier follow • m~
terl0u1 lllgnal to a auppoe-
ldly dMd planet and. •ft•
!anding, dlllCOVlf thlt lhl
maeaage wu a warning lo
t tay-ay. 'R'
11:35 (%)MOVIE
"Thi l1land·· ( 1980)
Michail Caln•. David
warner Wl'lill ln-ttgll·
1ng • r Uh or lhlp dtaac>-
pear-"' the Bermuda
T riangte, a journallat atum-
1>111 acrou an ltOl•led, ,
400-ytat·old colon) ol
!*•I•. 'R'
11MeMOV11
.. L1pk1" (1975) Tony
CUt111. Ani-tt• c-
l.Nt "L1C>4<1" Budlllter.
a leader of America' 1
UndltWOf1cl, nead• up the
notorloua organization
k,_uMuroer.tnc 'R'
-Ml>NIGHT-
12«> 8 Cl) CANNON
Cannon tn-1ig.t.. mur-
d11 chargu lodg•di
-~ndlan(R)
• • *'"' "I~ Hunter" ( 1952) Anthony StHI,
Dinah Sh«ldan A gtrn1
warden M1t up. wtld anl-
mal unctuary In Ml. Kiii·
man)tlro National Park In
EMIAlrlca.
8 9 CHAAUE'S
AHGl.LI
The Mgtlt go undlrcovw
In a clrcut to find out wN>
.. C*llir>g • --°' mys.-I ter1oua and dMdly acd-
dlnta. (R)
• GUt-..OU
Doc ~ tlgtlta to JW•
-" thr• ~ l>ablea
trotn orCIWW'll up tn an
;':.:'
..clll•lf
The IMF flOhtt • mlnd.-dllttoytng drug that c:ould
en"""9 the "" wond.
(Pan t)
• IAMTTA
Tony i. atlrrld to a\l9ngl
hi• lather'• Olltfl •her
'-Ing the dMtllbld con-
lllalon of • oano•t•.
12:a0 8 at TOMOMOW
Gueat•: Llttll Richard and
Wayne Cochren.
1:00 G PSYCHIC
PHENOMENA I "Plychologlcel Impact Of
Ptlanomana" Ho.t: Dam-
ien Slmpeon. G'*': Stan-I
; "'::::', Ptl.O.
••• "Fut1°'u11"11gs11 I
Judy Holtlday. Richard
Conti. A man dittUpta thl
.. _ of hit -and prlO·
nant daughter-lrHlw
• IHOUBC>fHT NETWORK HEWS
{l)MOVW
"The Tin Orum" (1979)
David Bennett, Angela
W!Mler A amlll boy with
unu9Ulll ~ of percep-
tion ,_,. polltk:a, human
compenlon9hlp and -adulthOOd and W9ndere
•l>Ou1 Illa country dur1ng
lhl tumultuout )'Mr• of
lhl Nail ragiml, reatllllly
banging 1 toy drum. 'A'
1:10 8 THE IAIHT
Simon 1Nma of • t>turre
Cllalh Ol'"I bllng played
by groupe of paychology '
atudenta. (RI
8 0 HEWS
1:15 (C}MOVIE
"Our Time" (1g131 Pamela
Sue Martin, Park1r St1-
wnton. Thi 11\111 of two
~ng coupill '"'°'*' at privet• 1choof1 are
changed wMn °"' of the
gll'la dlacoYlrt thl It preg-
nant. 'PO'
1:260 MOVIE
"Magee And The Lady''
( 1978) Sally Kellerman,
Tony Lo 81anco. Ari atlrec>-
tl\11 ..... trill to l>f'lel<
Into IN highly COll'lpllltl\ll
tNClllng lnduatry. aroualng
the wrath ol -perttculer
,...,an In the~
'PG'
1:30. MOYIE
• • • "The Strlpp1r"
( 1~) Joennl Woodward.
Richard e.ymer. After
at~ In a ...,.. town for
• brief PlftoCI of tlml. an
••~al •tw dlokll8 to
-and ""' ,,.,., . (8) STANOtNO ACOM
ONLY: HA' I El l f.IAH
HOUYWOOO
From the MGM Grand
Hotll lo LM Vegu, a-
Kiily holtt a gtltl•lng lN
VIQM rewe Which Mlut"
the golden .,. or,
movlamaldng In tong and
datlCt.
(?)MOVIE
"Xanadu" (1~) OIMa
JOHN DARLING
°'*' up • ... folw·
dlaco pel90a 'llO'
t-.AO I TO. ANNOUMCID MllCW
TI'lll•Pa..T ATION
An u.amlnltlon of dlft•·
ant mettlodl of tranaootta-
llon 1:IOI HIWI 1:11 MOMCAMel & W1M
Eric and lmll dr-up M
choNa gtrta In "Hay, Big
SQander'', Ernie decldel
ltltt Eric: la too old and
._ U9 with • -pert· ,.., .
2!00 0. ttl 8 T-... AOYAL
WIOOINO
The wedding of Britain'•
Prlnoe Chwtea to L.ay
Olana Spenoar and rll•lad
ftt1MUM wtM bl llllCUI
11"9 from London 2:201 NIWI MOMiCAMM & W18E
Aa Starllfy and Hutc:tl. Eric:
and Ernie Cl9tt1 up crime;
Iller they Yl8lt 1111 mawnl-
ty l>out!Qua .,wi .-.ct •
blbyglft . 2:41 . NlWI
• MOYll
• •.,.. "Sou1h Of St Lou· t." (1948) Joel McCrea,
Zac:nary SCOl t Rancher.
banil Nortn and South 10
pr-lhlir lptNdl
from the de\lu1atlon of the
CMIWt1
~MOVIE
"Tar~t" ( 1968) Borll
KarlOtl. Tim O'Kllfy An
aging horr0<-mo\lll 11ar
trill to ,_, with • mur-
oerou1 81JIP1r at a dr1Y1-1n
me>Wthllllt
2:50 I EDfTOAIAL MOVIE
••• "TMy Wer• So
Young" (19&5) Soon Bra-
dy, Raymond Burr A
group of ln,_I rn<>e*I
.,, hlfdld to Sooth Amer·
lea under the thrM1 ol I
delth In Otdlr 10 blcoml
thl puppet• ol powerful
and lnllult!tltl """' a!OO • NEWS
1:06 (%) FAOM AAOUEL.. WfTH
LOVE a=-o {I) MOVIE
"OrMmlf" (1979) Tim
Matheaon, Sutan Blakely
A yc>ung l>Owllt hu lo
overcome meny obataclll
while trying to reach for hit
lifelong draam 'PG'
4:00 8 THE AOYAL
WEDOINQ
Thi wedding ot Btttain·a
~ Chartea to Lady
Diana 5Pl"C* and related
leat1Y11 ... wlH bl tlilCUt
live from London
llCllTOOAY
Continued COYWaQI or thl
wedding c1r1mony 1nd
leaUllit• ''"rounding the
marriage or Britain'•
Prince Charlll to L.aely
Diana Sl)ln(* will bl t.._ I
ca111tv1 lrom London.
~ oooo MOflNtNQ I
Continued COYWaQ1 of the
...cldlng ceremony and I
119tMtlll -rounding the 1
murfag• ot Br1ta1n·1
Prince Cl\arlll to Laely
Diane Spencer wtlf bl , ....
CA1111"9 from London
CJ) THE ..aYAL
Wl:DOING
Thi wedding of entaln'a
Prtnc:. CNtlla lo L.ay
Diana Spencer and related
llltMllea wlll bl tlMcaat
tromLondon
(%)MOVIE
"Myra Br1ck1nrldg1"
(1970) MM WMt, John
HUiton
4:118 VOYAOETOTHE
BOTTOM OF 1"E SEA
"Thi M~ 9-n"
4:30. MOVIE
•.,.. "Grein Buddha"
(19551 Wayne Morrla. May
Germal111. An ln\llftlgator
Mt• out 10 _., 1 prect-
ou• ChtnMI 11atue that
hU bMt\ llolen.
(C)MOVll
••~ "Of Human Bond-
age" ( 1"'4) KJm NOYall,
Laurenoe Henrey Bated
on Int n0\111 by W. S-·
Ml Meogharn A young
w.-4"~•da11'• Daytl.•e •• .,,,
-MORtH --~·
11IOO. • • "Nlw9 Hounde~ (11M7) 8-y ~.
llN Mclnlyf.. Thi
eel• tak11 action ""*' eo,. try to "unllJc" •
Ing-I
t1ll0 II •• .,.. "Thi Lonely
Man" ( 1957) Jack Ptl
Anthon)' Perkin•. A
rllorm-mlnelld gunflgh
11 prlMad Into one latt
blttll. CC)••• "Thi Young lq,f.
H1ar1" ( 1938) 0ouor.r>
Ftlrbln!C9 Jr . Paulette_
Goddard A ne'•-00-WWt
tamlly of card thail>it> chWmt .,. Old lady ~
refonnelhlm
12!00 • 1t * • "Thi Pl'llllcW-
phla Story" (!IMO) Katha-' I
rlne H1pburn. Jamn)
St.wart A young~
phla woman'• mtt~f1r
watc:hld over carefully ~I
the c:ity'I aodalitM
• ........ Sodom/11.nd
Gomorrah" (I~) St~
Granger, Pier Angell Al'IW
th• twin ctt111 111111
deatroyad, all 1hat ""'"1
atl thl HlbrlWI. Lot't
daughtlf and the qUll(I'~
brother ' 1:00 ~ "Kill 0t Bl Kttlld" 1,11
( t980) JOMJ>h Ryan, Cha~
lott1 Mtcl'lelll Two savage
aqued1 01 lilt• karate
champion• cla1h I
rlYlngl and IUNlvtl. ·p
1:30 cs:J • • * "lt'a Alwaya F
w ... ..., .. ( 1955) a-
ty. Dan~ A local
1tarlet dlCldll 10 br
cut • reunion ol t
World War II Army
d ...
2:00 0 "Ulllmtll Thrill" Br
Eldand, Barry Brown.
paranoid bu1ln111m
blccf'nll lnvofwel In •
ol muteler and
'PG'
3:00 a • • "" "The Land Timi Forgot" (1975)
McClure. Suaan Pin
gon Stntvors from
AJlild IUbmarlnl and
German c:ac>tor. land
an ltland rul9CI by pr
torlc animal•
CC) ••• "Heldt" ( 1965)
Eva-Marla Slngha
Glrtrand Mit11rm1yr. A
Ill Swiu girl It taken Ir
II« mountain hOml In
Alp• by hit aunt to t
city ~
1:80 IJ * * • "That'I My Boy''
(195 I) Dean Martin, J1r1Y
L-1• A weakling la aided
by hla llhletlc: roomma&a
to blcOtM • footl>tll ltlf
In order to plMM "'9 , .. ,_
Cl) "Wizard1" ( 1977) Ani·
mated Dlr1C1ad by Ralph
Bakllhl In • world of the
lvture. eorcery playa •
major role In thl ba10• of
two grail conllfcllng
armlea
4.-00 0 "Somlowhlr• In Timi"
( 1980) Chrlalophar Reew,
J-$eyt'nou< ~
with the portrait of a 1911>-
oentury actreaa, • modlm-
dey New Yen playwright
u-hypnolla to lrA\11111
bid< In time and mMI ,,., .
'PG'
4:30 CC) "T rocadero 9llu
Chron" ( 1978) M1Ch1l4
Shod<, Anny Oupt9)' A 1~A
yllr-otd boy It Mlltttq
with a 111111 glrl Who race( f •
bealdl him at Trocedlro. Z
1:00 (HJ "Coal Mlnlr'1 Daugh-·11;
t1r" ( 1980) Sluy SPIQ9k,
Tommy L11 Jo,,.. B
on Loretta Lynn'• aut
biography. A yc>ung otf
from • poor I~ In rur9l
Kentucky marrlll a mud\
Older local boy ""'° erv;..
,...,, her rial lo stardom
In tlll mutlc lnduttrv. 'PO'
by Armstrong & Batiuk
HE.Y, GUVS! 1,..00K WHO'S
GOING 10 BE. OU~
0UARTER0ACK! MIKE MAJ0~6, THE ~CA»T'ER!
SA'V. ISN'T HE "THE ONE
WHO SAIO OUR ~FENSIVE
LINE. RESEM0LEO SW IS~ C.HEE5Ef
NO NO! THAI W>6 8AtCK CHEE€>£! YOU 1-<NOW •.•
LIKE IN A ~ICI-< WALL/
Early birds see wedding
NEW YORK (AP) -The colonies may have leaves Buckingham Palace on a honeymoon pro·
rejected royally 200 years ago, but U.S. television cession to Waterloo Station. British TV personality
networks are betUog that a royal romance ia aUU David Frost will asaiat Rather with the running
enoup ol a ras,inatlon to get Americana out of commentary from an anchor position atop th~ bed early. Abby We Building and overlooking the cathedral.
The networks all have planned at least live Tbe Public BroadcasUn1 Service will use th
hours of live. early morning coveraie or the British BroadcasUni Co. 's 80-camera coverace r
eddi r P l C ... __ 1 d L d a three-hour wrapup on Wednesday. And aU-nEWS Wednesday w DI 0 r nee ,.._. es an a Y Cable News Network will plug into the BBC'a live Diana Spencer. · coverage !or tour hours.
Some or the biggest names ln American TV A combination or summer TV doldrum~.
Journallam -Chancellor, Rather, Walters, tact that UlUe regular pro1tamming will n
Brokaw and Pauley -•ill travel to London to co•· be pre-empted, and the pa1eantry and tairJ
er the historic ceremony. nature of this event has sparked the interest ol
Other parts of the apecttcle lnclud• the pro-U.S. television execut.ives -and, tbey beliele,
cession trom Buckintbam Palace to St. Paul's ,__A_m_e_r_ic_an_v_l_e_w_e_rs_. _ __,
Cathedral and the rttW'I) trlp to the palace.
NBC, which ls movU.1 ltt "Today" pro1ram to
London ror weddlet week.1. _~~~ scheduled tbe ton1e1t Uve broadeatt, 7~ noun be1ionln1 at •
a.en. "Today" hoeta Tom Brokaw and Jane Paule1
wlll anctJOr the cover.,• from a spot at Victoria
Gard-overlooktn• Buckinlbam Palace.
A BC'a "Good Momin• America," al.lo wW be
broadcut from LondoD that WMk, wlt.b weddin1 co•erat• naDn1al ·ttom 2 a.m . to t a.m . WtdD•·
daJ. David Harima11 wW anebor die 6roedcut
from t.be top floor ol UM a-.-llUloD, wtlltb of·
fwl I JIUOl"laUe new Ol U. cit;.
ABC N ... ~ larbu'e WalMn
ad ..... ,....., Wiii Nfalt • die aftmOGJ ,.... .. .,... .. ~.
DMllatlllrwW ..... Cll'..-... aialD t
• .•. mtil ..................... u..-...
T
tf It's got wheels
you'll move It
f•1terin•
D•llY Piiot cl•lllflect •d.tall
'4Z·5'11 •nd .. ,.....,
•d·VllOI' Wiit
helpyoutWll
yourwMet1
lntocftft.