Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-03-11 - Orange Coast PilotYlll 11111111 llllY NPll ORANGE COUN r Y C ALIFORNIA 25 CENlS HBman . accused of racism in appointment SACRAMENTO CAP) -A confirmation he aring for Youth Author ity Dire ctor Antonio Amador , a r es ide n t o r Huntington Be ach, is being postponed because of allegations he treated blacks unfairly as a Los Angeles policeman. But Amador's forme r boss, s tate Sen. Ed Davis, calls t.he allegations ''dirty pool," adding Lb.at they are "a wretetted att e mpt t o de s troy the reputation of a good man." Ri c hard Steffen, Gov . Edmund Brown Jr. 's press secretary, s aid Wednesday t.he governor's office asked the Senate Rules Committee to de tay the he arina bec ause Am a dor "did not have the votes" for confirmation. Steffen said, "With all these last-minute accusations flying, we -thought &nl>thet two weeks would be appropriate." He said the governor's aides aod the Rules Committee's staff w e r e "ch eck i ng into the allegations," but Brown was "still behind Tony." (Ama~r. 38, was unavailable for c omment today . He p re vi o u s l y s erve d o n a Huntington Beach fact-rinding c ommittee that r ec eived complaints from citizen( about city government. (He also served on t.he city's t r• n s portation commission before resigning last month becattSe or added duties with t.he Youth Authority.) A spokesman for Amador, Art German, said the director would not have any comment: "He doesn't see any point ·or dealing with the Issue until It comes up. He denies mistreating anyone." Amador, who spent 13 years with the Los Angeles Police Department, was appointed by . Dragnet ·I out for. CRUMBLING COURTHOUSE Roof and steps of old courthouse in Santa Ana were damaged ~---"Z by Mar c h 10, 1933 earthquake Tower al upp e r right was orde r ed re moved. One jolt followed another Some were less traumatic during county's 93 years By DAVID KUTZMANN Of -o.lty "i.t S\aff Orange County quietly marked its 93rd birthday today in a way that surprised some people. The place was still standing. You may recall that star-gazing doomsayers h ad predicted that a unique a lignment of planets on one side of the s un We d,.esd ay would unl e a s h a convuls ive wave o f earthqu a k es a nd volcani c eruptions . Such occur r en ces would certainly have s p o il e d t o d ay 's annive rsar y, which marks the signing of state legislation which led to incorporation of the county of Orange on March 11, 1889. Historians will note that, othe r than the us u a l political, social LECIL SLABACK and emotional upheavals of the day, WednesdaY. WORLD was about as uneventful a 24-hour period as they come. ·· But, there was some historical precedent fo r believing that March 10 could possibly have been more calamitous. That's because on March 10, 1933, Orange County and the rest of Southern California was jolted by an earthquake that virtually wiped out parts of Long Beach and Compton. Long-time Orange County residents who remember the quake, which measured 6.3 on the Richter scale, say its aftershocks still reverberate in their minds 49 years later. Though injuries were few, property damage was extensive in places. It was because or this quak e -and another whkh followed four days later -that county officials decided lo. remove a tower on the old two-story sandstone courthouse in Santa Ana. But even in those days, much like Wednesd ay, reports of Orange County's demise were somewhat exaggerated. Lecil J. Staback , a life-long county resident who now li ves in Silve rado Canyon, said he <See DOOMSAVERS, Page AZ> STATE .. • convict By PWL SNEIDER MAN Of tlM Oalty ~ S\aff The search continued today for an escaped convict who a llegedly raped a Huntington· Beach woman Wednesday while eluding police dragnet. Investigators said the convict, K e nne th F . Troyer . 36 , is believed to have stolen the rape v i ctim's a ut o, m a king.,.his escape after the dragnet was d is persed. Huntington Beach police Lt. John Foster said Troyer, who escaped Jan . 30 fro m the medium-sec urity California Me n's Colony at San Luis Obispo, was being sought by severa l Orange County police agencies in connection with local crimes. Fost er s a id plain clothes officers from Westminster and Ana heim were in Huntington Be a ch Wednesda y mo rning , following up information that Troyer was living locally in a Beach Boulevard home. Westminster police detective Michael Proctor approached a man who resembled the suspect near the intersection of Beach Boulevard and Slater Avenue, police said. Proctor gave chase when the man fled, and the two began scuffling in a parking lot at 17301 Bea ch Boulevard. Foster said the fugitive dr~w a re v olver whi ch discha r ged during the struggle, injuring neither man. Tr oyer then jumped over a wall a nd v ani s hed into a residential area, Foster said Ab o ut 40 \offi cers we r e s ummoned to cordon orr an area bounded by Beach Boulevard, Warner Avenue. Nichols Street a nd Slater Avenue. A police helicopter and dogs assisted as offi ce r s b egan sea r c h in g <See SEARCH, Page AZ> A new look for TV Log Your Pilot TV log will have a ne w look and a few new features this Friday. . The ne w, mor e attractive format, will feature a complete rolling log that will make it easier to find your favorite s h o w . The 36-p a ge weekly magazine also will feature a new column, Orange Coast TV Ante nna, writte n by Phil Sneiderman. Gone will be the program grids which some have found inadequate, but remaining will be the popular features such as J e ff Parker's "Inside TV," "Daytime Drama." Sports Highlights and the TV Puule. U.S. aid hacked Network demise seen WASHING TON -U.S. military aid is crucial to the government of El Salvador 'in its war against 1uerrillas, s ays Secretary of Slate Alexnader Hal& Jr. Page A3. NATION Soap opera a game NEW YORK -.For tbOle soap opera addicts who can't &el enouch of "General Hoepit.al," a board game lets them play the characters' parts. Pace CS. Girls 'rea&on-able' • . ' CIOCAGO -Can female students reuon • ftll u male CCMllerparta when conlJ"ODted wttb math proble•? A Unlvenlty ol Cblca10 1tudy 199 yes. Pac• At. LOS ANGELES -A former network executive hu written a scathing novel forecasting tbe rapid death ol network television. Page BS. Economic shift uked A Stanford University ecc>nomlll ~lleves there's a responsible way out of a "Globel l>epnlaAoo." Pa1e CS. COUNTY Voters aigning up SANTA ANA -Voter ~ Ill PolltlcallJ actlft Oranse County l1 headha1 fw • alMime M1b • .....,, 81. ' Brown to the Youthful Offender Parole Board in 1979 and was named board chairman in 1980. The governor appointed him last Dece mber to succeed Pearl West as head o f the Youth Authority, the prison system for young criminals. Se nat e President Pro Tem David Roberti's press secretary, Mel Assagai, said tbe Senate Rules Committee had received 78 letters opposing Amador·~ appoint me nt. He said some letters "call into question his fairness In dealing with blacks In particular." Assaga l said he didn't know exa ctly how many critical l e tters d ea lt with racial allegations. Thirty-three letters supported the appointment, he sald. Davis, R·Chatsworth, who was Amador's c hief for several <See CONFIRM, Pase A.%) o.lly"""' _.., 9M'f ·- EASY DOES IT Debbie Murray of Orange County Sheriff's Hazardous Device Unit remove~ some of plastic explosives found Wednesday in the Da na Point home of a former Ma rine Explosives found ·at Coast residence Plasuc ex plosive equivalent to 84 sti cks or dy n amite , and detonators to set it off were found in a Dana Point residence Wednesday afternoon. The military explosive. known as C-4, was confiscated from the home of former Marine Dennis Lyle Huff at 25121 Via Elevado after Sheriffs Hazardous Device Unit investigators received a tip from a "confidential source." S heriff's o ffi cer s o rder ed nearby residences evacuated. Huff. 26, was already in custody for passing bad checks and the D is tri c t Atto rn ey Is no w prepa ring a felony ,complaint agains t him for possession of explosive devices. According to Lt. John Hewitt of the Sheriff's Depa rtment, the C·4 explosive is a military demolition tool used in heavy blasting. The explosive was found in six blocks weighing 1.5 pounds each. He charact erized C-4 as a "relatively stable" substance that should never be stored with detonators. The detonators, or blasting caps, were found side by s ide with the explosive. Journalists flay Reagan on secrecy WASHINGTON <AP ) - Preside nt Reagan 's plan to broaden government authority to keep information secret is a threat to a well-informed public, news media representatives and civil libertarians contend. "Ope.nness in government is not a slogan, but a real goal," said Bob Schieffer , a CBS News correspondent representing Lhe S o c i e t y of Profess ional Journalists. Sigma Delta Chi. SPORTS The view from Florida What ls the Dodcers' secret to success? It mlcht have something to do with discipline. Manacer Tommy Luorda says he doesn't believe ln rules or fines. Pace Cl. INDEX Ann Landen Movies Mutual Funds National News Public Notices Sport.I Dr. Steincrobn Stoek Marketa Televtlion Th eaten Weatber WorldNen 82 At Your Service BM Erma Dombeck a . L.11.Boyd A.3 Business Oa..a California Ol-4 Clautfted m Comics C7 Croaword 8$ Death Notices BM Editorial A.I S.t.ertalnment A.I Horo1cope A4 Ba A• Cl-7 Al Dl,1>3-t cs cs DI M-T BM • From PageA1 stories ... - Belushi 'frie nd' known DOOMSAYERS • • • LOS ANGELES <AP> -The my1tery woman reportedly with remembered hearlna radio reports that Santa Ana High School bad been destroyed. Tb18 • com edian J ohn aeluabl the and Its aftermath, include morning he died apparently wu seelnc court proceedlncs taking no stranger to the entertainment place on the fr-ont lawn of a world and the drug scene, the •Jwas news 'to him because . Slaback, then 22, sat in his car Methodist church next lo the Los Angeles Herald Examiner courthouse; of seeing building said today. t · lookJng at a relatively unscarred hl&h 1chool campus. which looked like doll houses <no Cathy Evelyn Smith, who was walls), and of flinching each led away in handcuffs following Staback, who became a court l'reporter like bi s father, 'remembers the-day for other time a new aftershock rumbled. Belushi's death Friday, left Not since 1933, Staback and T 0 r 0 n t 0 in 19 7 8 a rte r a reasons. others say, bas Orange County r-elationship with Canadian endured s uch a tumultuous folksinger Gordon Lightfoot, 1 Before the quake hJl, he was •getting ready to go out on a 1,double dat~ with a woman who ~eventually became his wife. birthday eve. friends and unna med sources Though voters decided on told tt)e1new!ipaper. June 5, 1889 to secede from Los The 34-year-old Ms. Smith, a Angeles County and c reate singer who did back-up vocals ~ "J was shaving," he said , , "'when tbe...mirror began to move 'around a little bit." Orange County, the anniversary j\long with country singer is orricially-ttlebrated on Mareh Nicolette Larson on one of ffoyt 1' Staback said after his family heard a rumbling sound at about 6 p.m. they fled the house. On ~his way out, Sia back said he saw 11. Axton's albums, reportedly fell That's the date that Gov. in with the Rolling Stones' Robert Wate rm a n signed e ntourage and worked for a legislation which allowed new while with Stones' guitarist ·ic upboard doors fl y open and 1 dishes come flying out. counties to form in California. Keith Richards. The vote in Orange County in "I think she became involved 1 Reflecting on that March 10, 1ne said it was a "fortunate , thing" that the earthquake the June refer endum was 2,509 in the h ard drug mille4 In people in favor of splitting from response.to the Stones and their Los Angeles County and SOO J i f e s t y J e , a n d t h e LA people opposed. e nte rtainment scene,·· the paper occurred after people got home .>'from work and before dinner No specfal obser vances are q u 0 ( e d 0 n e u n n a med planned lQ today's anniversary. e ntertainment figure as saying . and theat'!r patrons went back 1 downtown. Previously, special celebrations Ms. Smith was taken in for marked the county's 8Sth and ques tioning Friday after she J• "In those days," SI aback ·observed, ''(people ) needed to -go downtown more often than 90th birthdays. drove Belushi's Mercedes lo his It is expected that the C h alea u Marmont Hotel they do now." ~ county's tooth birthday will lead bungalow as police were to observances of a special -investigating his death, which ' Other memories which he still carries with him or the quake but not too earth-s haking -has been attributed to an · From Page A 1 '.CONFIRM • • • nature. injected overdose of heroin and cocaine. Officers said she told them Belushi had awakened complaining o f troub l e breathing, that she ordered breakfast for him, then left. 'years, s~d two civil suits were filed against Amador but were later dismissed. He did not say what prompted the suits. ·'Anyone who did not wind up ,.with a civil s uit as a police ,.officer was probably not doi.qg ,bis job," Davis said, contending ,the s uits were used to "harass" '.officers. ''When he worked in Watts (a heavily black section of Los Angeles), he was not Little Lord Fauntleroy. No policeman on the .......... <; Al that lime WR!! '·ittlP !:<?r<1 Fauntleroy," Davis saia . From PageA1 SEARCH ••• 'backyards and homes for the fugitive. · Foster said police now believe Troyer broke into an As h Street home to bide from officers. When t he young woman who resides there arrived home, the fugitive alJegedJy lied her up, raped her and fled in her auto. The stolen car was a 1977 orange Mercury Bobcat with a white roof. Troyer, who was serving a four-year sentence for armed By U)at, Davis said he meant that Amador djd oot hesitate to make an arrest when he thought it was necessary. But Davis said he had never heard "one cr iticism against him within the department." Ir there had been serious problems with Amador, Davis said, he would have heard about them from black officers in the community relations unit. The state Senate can veto Amador's appointment. In that case, he must leave office within 60 days. burglary, was described as Caucasian, s feet 8 inches tall, weighing about 170 pounds, with brown hair and brown eyes. Trident bought LONDON CAP) -Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's Cabinet today gave the go ahead to buy the advanced U .S. Trident 2 nuclear missile system to replace the Royal Navy's aging Polaris submarine fleet. Police Cmdr. William Booth said Wednesday he believes she will be available for further investigation, if needed, but said he doubts police will be able to trace the drugs in this case. "Police are always interested in the full trail of any narcotics, from the user to the trafficker to the source," he s aid. "We do not expect to find such a trail in this case . We would be extremely s urprised if we would be able lo trace the source or the cocaine found in hi s a partme nt. Obviously. we have that interest but we can't give it that high a priority." Although the sources quoted by the paper reported Ms. S mith's involvement in the "drug milieu," none specifically said she used or obtained drugs herself. Ms . Smith was said to have socialized with cast members of "Saturday Night Live," the television s how that made Belus hi a star. She was seen with Belushi and "Saturday Night" sidekick Dan Aykroyd at s uch Los Angeles restaurants as Dan Tana's. Jimmy Cano. maitre d' at Dan Tana's, told the paper that Ms. Smith had been barred from the establishment six months ago Slwwers due today ••lien. SM> F.,....-s.ni. Cl•rll• v•lleys. A1vef"\JO.·S..n &.rMrdlttO •ru. hk;IPI --deMrt•. tnl•nd Or•no• Co..nly •nCI '"• <oul•I, m •tropo llt•n. B•nn l no. Hema•·E•ll-. -819 S.•• L•k• •rea1. Coastal , AOMD r•ll"91 ere H lollow•. Mo1Uy ctouCly 111ro\19h FrlCl•y, ~. O.ICJO, .,,,.,.•ltftful for MftSltlve becomlno f•lr wllh gully wlnCls p•ople, 101·700; unhe•llhlul for Frlcloy • .,...Ing. A 70 .,.runt cftence ••eryone, 201·>CIO, .,.., 1M11.,dous, of r•ln lodey. Cle<r•Hlno lo 10 30l·SOO. percent on Friday. HloM In mkl ltOs ----------lo low 10l. H"""lft91on-.,.ewp0r1 •rH temper-•enoino from u to.. Temperatures El-llere. from Po4nl Con<•flllon 10 tM Mnlc.,, boreler -out ltO mllfl: L.lohtv•ri.tllewlnOsnlOf\UnCI HI L• Ptt. mornlno "°""· be<omlno -•nt .1111>eny ll 20 .01 to wHt el 12 lo 20 ""°" In 1"41 Atbuclue._ 11 n etler..-Friday. WHterty •well of 1 Am•rlllo 11 Jj to J leet. Mollly c louCly wllt Aslle•lli. 62 33 oc<•MDMI 119111 ••In tonlQM. P•rtly All•nte 70 0 clo<ldy Friday .llll•nl< CIY 40 1' • ----------B•ttlmot• SS n io 81rml"9hm 70 ll t Bi1nlerck 3' U .OJ t. U.S. summary 11o1... n lS 8e&loft Jj 20 .OJ ! S-en -"""*•Jlormt 14>'•M 8rownsvHe 10 ff 8uff•lo 41 IS .01 I> alono llM mld·Mlululppl V•ll•Y Cl••rtstnSC " ., • locl•y. wNI• rein -,,__ • .,., Chert11nwv 6S 2' i.111 .. mucft IJf lite Nort!Most. c,..v•nne so 41 R•ln •Ito fltll •tono IN _._m Cftke90 o n .01 Peclfl< c .. st -In pens ot -c1nc1-1 n ,. .1n not11Mrn ,..._..._ ClevetanCI Sol 20 L•lff -.. r.in •• eapecteel to Colym-jO 11 .01 SPNMO<rossllwPocllkC .. ttl9-D•l·FtWlh 7S , Sl Aoclli.1, es -'1 H _, lfte ncw11Mrn Den••r 65 lS .lltt•nlk C-1 ttel!H. Ou Mol"" Sl 16 01 Tht for.cut •l•o c•ll•CI for Delrolt 40 " Ptl•nd.- Ptl•nd.Ore lleno S.11 Lekt s.." .. SI Louis StP·T•~ SI 61e MMle SCloll•M TYC:llOfl Tu~• WHftlftqtn Wlcftll• CALlllOllNIA tc•tlere<I ll\OW •how.,., over lfte Oytutft 2' ll U-r Greet Let.ft. El PHO 13 SS TemperelurH were eae>ected to H.,tforCI ll 11 01 e.aenc- 81ytlM • remeln -f-1"'9 Oft•Y In IN HeleM H :.. Upper Gt••• L., .. •r••· HIOll .._ ... u 11 .. temper•tuAS loelilY will be In tlM 40I Hovsi.n IS ltO encl 50s from New E,._fld tftroutll ,,,...,, SJ l3 tfte Oftlo V•lley end '"' .....-n Joell-lie 76 46 Pi.Ins to Ille Poclfk Nort!IWett, -1(-City 74 1S 111 tM tOI Ond 10s ec.-tie untrel Los v.... IS ff .10 E11rek• .OJ Fresno L~•­LotAnteiet ·°' Merysvllle NMdlff o•~ ,,_ ....... PlelM -In -Seuel. Lhlle Aoc:k .. SJ Tem,....iwn e,_ci I"' nellon ~~•lite •1 J1 .M nrty tod9y r.,..O from 7 lft F.,.oo, Mempflll u o1t .......... 11.....-c11y ! N.O., •ftd ~ F-·· N.D .. lo 74 In Mloml IS ,. Wosl Pelm lle«h, Fie .. ...i Y""'•· Mllw...... • t9 .tt Arl1. NIOl.,Sl.P .. H II•----------Nolllvlllt S' 40 .45 NewOn.-11 JO Extended · jorecaa~ H.-Vorll " a ..... Ill .. '1 Olte City 76 40 Of'Mft• " • on..-7t S4 ......... .. ., ,..._... a P ,........,. M • S«r •"*"" SellftM s..o .... S...llrenclKo s.nte•--· Seftt• Moria Si.<Uon T....,.,el Ullloll ..,..... ...... ...... CNllM ~9..ai l1 • .. 47 .. C2 s• • n 40 71 J1 11 sa ,. 11 SS JI ti ... IS 40 41 • 12 ,., 70 tJ .. so SJ •• S1 •• SI II M U SI IS 61 S1 65 S4 u SJ 70 ,. .. ,. •1 sa IO M .. " 61 S4 .. .. S7 17 " " ,. 5' 11 1t " 71 ,. 7t " IUIF llPllT ... ... ... .... ... .... I I ' . J • ' . " " " " •• t :.. OJ Monrovi. II s:i Mt.Wllt«1 s• 41 07 Newport llM<'I\ .. ~ Ofttarlo " Sl Pelm~ 17 " 10 PeMClefte 76 ,. Sen eernMdlno 76 SI 11 S...JOH 67 SI . " SMl!e.llne H 55 Senle Cnit ,, .. .33 h-V•llev S-4 .. PAN AMIUUCAN A<otlVkO .. n e~ 11 1'0 .JI e.,..mude n tJ 8090t• .. 4S CIOrKeo • 11 .07 F,..._, ,. ltO Gued•l•IM• .. 4S G11edel-71 .. .04 H•••no IO Kl ... ston IS 7S .07 Moflte9D9oy IS n Met•llMI II .. ..Wride ,, .. ·°' Mellko City " .. ~ *-rr.y .. ,. ' NftMll ,. .. ... 06 Soll J-, P.A. ll 10 • St. Thelme 10 .07 T 9911< '9011N ,. .. .01· Trlnldect ., 10 VefKNl 11 " CAlllAOA c ... ...., • ·'· E4-n • MMtl'MI tt IJ Otto•• 4 ........ n ta T~ M ~ v_.._ • D Winni ... tt 1J Tide1 l .,..,.....,. BACKSTAGE President and Mrs R~ugon greet cast memers of the JoffreY flullt.•t afte r a performance ;t Wttshlnl(ton 'K Kennedy C't•ntn The prc"lldc·nt und r1r11t lady Wl'rt1 grc•(•tcd by 1u..·11lh:rcd bt1011 :01 thcv t1rrlvt•1l 11t lht· opc·rn houM· Reagan booe d at balle t Scattered jeers meet president at Kennedy Center WAS HIN GTON <AP> - President Reagan and his wire were booed by several members of the audience when they entered the presidenUal bo'i at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts to watch a p e rformance of the Joffrey Ballet. A s imil ar demons tration greeted the Reagans when they returned to their box after the first of two intermis s ions Wednesday night. It was impossible to determh:ae how many people were booing, but it wa s a very smal l percentage or the capacity audience of 2,200. However, the boos came from several sections· of the auditor ium and were clearly audible. along with the traditional applause that greets a president on such occasions. An official who has been with Kennedy Center since it opened in 1971 said it was the first time a president bas been booed there . Each pres ident since Richard M. Nixon has visited the center It also marked the first time since Reagan became president t hat he has been greeted with bQos in a public appearance - except by participants in planoed demonstrations. As he left the box during the second intermission. Reagan was asked by reporters why the booing occurred. Before he could answer. his wife said, "It was just one young boy, just one young boy." The president added: "He probably had a broken s pring in his seat." The Kennedy Center official, who a s k ed that h e ~be identified by name, sarir he would "certainly agree" that m ore than one person was booing. · Deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said today. 10 react ion lo the incident.I!, "I thou"hl Pf"'1plf> who went to the ballet wer f> ladif's and icentlcmcn, putroni; uf th,. arl11." He said ht: w1t11 '11hMktd •hd 11 urpr1sed thut Pf>QPlr woo woukt go t<> the ha llnt woultl t-nJlll"-8 tn that 11ort of lhlnJC A h1x-lc~y game, yc11. A hulltJ1 , m1 " The ltcu1i~m11 lnlllally f"nlf'.,.,.d their hox, on lh•• f1r11t twT trver the orchestra 1u:atln1l l,.v.,J, jtMt before the curtain "'u Thf' house Ughts were alrc11dy dim, but television camna llJChta shined on the box There was no announcement that th e R ea gan 11 were attending, but the pres1dent1'aJ llf'&I &t'l(I tw>f'n p1ated oo th.-front hf the hfnc /\s t~ Ru~M f!ntt:-n:d , the· bMJ 1n~ b1"jt8n and. l1kt: the ~ pplittN. NJntltu~d for several Sf'N1~ f\C'C'ftr fl1nl( to a note In the prot r •m . the eve ning 's ~rform:.nce was in htJntir of lntnnatiifJnal Afghan111tan Day (Jn Marth 21 a"'1 wH dedicated ''' th.I> ~tple ol Arahamstan who arf' f11tht1n1 for their ,,,. .. ,,,,m Th,. Kninedy Center official ,.,.p<,rtM Lhat kobert Joffrey, the N1m p;,ny dirt-r.1.oT, said the note wH plaN:d in the program at the 11pec1f1c rnquest of the White flouae Jet engine flames; 62 evacuated safely LONG BEACH CAP> -An engine on a J et America DC·9 airplane caught fire while the plane prepared to leave for Chicago, but a Federal Aviation Administration spokes man said a l l 62 passengers were evacuated safely. The fire broke out about 6:35 p.m . Wednesday as Flight l.22 was preparing for take-off from Long Beach Airport, fire dispatcher Michael Robideaux said. "They pulled out to take off, started the engine, there was a backfire and the engine nashed over," he said. "It did destroy the engine completely, but the company won't Jet us re lease the dollar damage estimate." Four Long Beach fire department companies fought the blaze with help from two firefighting unit s from Mc Donnell Douglas Corp., whose plant is next to the airport. Battalion Chief Jac k Martin said. The FAA spokesman s aid the cause of the fire was under investigation. Passengers were evacuated via stairs and chutes, Robideaux s aid. They departed for Chicago on another Jet America plane at 10 : 15 p.m., an unidentified company spokeswoman said. Passenger Lynette Brandon s aid she was "scared to death to get on this plane," as she boarded the second jet, "but I've got to get home. I can't walk to Chicago." Jet America officials refused to give any information about the incident , s a y ing Alan Kenison, pres ident of J e t Am e rica , would issue a statement today. The company inaugurated flights between Long Beac h and Chicago in... November Short But Sweet Storekeeper Gina Garrett is wearing • a pair from a great selection A llOt'f tfttlt oJ/m flw tredhkHwl l/IOl'fl'lllfflr for"""'· '"'°"""'•""boys. in our Ladies Department ... Summer is just afewshort months away. lOU lrvint, N~port Be.ch, c.lifomia. ~ 642-7061 MOURNING VICTIMS -Maria Ferrer. left . and Tomasa Ferrer, center , sister an d grandmother of Adelaida Ferrer Colon. are joined QY unidentified mourner at the funeral of Mrs. Colon and her three children in Lowell , Mass. The family was among five ............... children and three adults that were killed in a tenement fire last week . T hree suspects have been arrested and charged with the fiery deaths. allegedly blamed on a drug deal gone sour. Navy to test career program NO RFOLK, Va. (AP> -The Navy may test a program under which sailors would be given the right to stay in one area for most of their careers , a Norfolk newspaper reported. Norfolk is one of six cities being considered as sites for the test, which the Navy hopes will r aise retenti on r ates and i n c r ease m o ral e amon g servicemen with skills that are in hi g h demand , th e Virginian -Pilot sai d o n Wednesday. Besides Norfolk, it said, sites for tests or the policy would be San Diego; Newport, R :1.; Charleston. S.C.; Pearl Harbor, and Mayport, Fla. If the expe rim en t i s undertaken, the first to benefit would be boiler technicians, whom the Navy finds difficult to retain because of the rigors or their jobs and the demand for them in pri vate industry, the newspaper said. The program i s bein g evalua ted, offi cers with the Naval Military Personnel Co mmand told th e Virginian-Pilot, and a decision on its implementation will be made later this month. A ra vorable decision could mean that the test would begin in October. If the experiment with boiler technicians is successful and such a program is put into effect for great numbers of Navy personnel, it could have a major i mpacl on this area and others with large Navy populations. Almost 90,000 active-duty Navy personnel with nearly 100,000 dependents are based in the Norfolk area. Most of those familie s move to new assignment about every t hree years. A broad Navy policy to restrict transfers could lead to stabilization of neighborhoods that now undergo nearly continuous transition, and school officials say children of Navy men would benefit from the increased stability. , Benefits of s uch a policy also accrue to an area's housing m a rket a n d the wives or servicemen would be a ble lo establish careers. WWII vet's burial delayed Penniless serviceman's body lay in morgue 3 months BOSTON . ...<AP> -The body of a penniless veteran who had earned battle stars in World War 11 was stored in the city morgue fo r three months bec ause Congress wiped out burial allowances for most veterans, officials say. Edward Arthur Reedy. who became a drifter in the later year s of his life, died of bronchial pneumonia Dec. 9 at M assac hu setts General Hospital. At 56 years of age, Reedy bad l ong been separated from any family connections, according to published accounts. He earned Pacific batUe stars in the Navy during World War II and later had a hitch with the Army. \ Arter an ignominious period' in storage, be was buried Friday at the Veterans Administration Cemetery in Bourne. Thomas 8. Materauo, the city's veterans commissioner , came up with $350 from the city. Getting Reedy buried was complicated. Materazzo said the $300 burial allowance previously available for all veterans was canceled for most veterans under the federal budget for fi scal 1982, which became effective on Oct. 1, 1981. The money prob l e m w as compounde d. be s aid , by a M assacbusetts provision that a veteran should not be buried in a pauper's grave. ··We are in a 'Catch -22' situation," be said. Public attention was focused on the situation by the medical examiner 's office, which spent weeks researching Reedy's case. Gordon Parry, the examiner 's administrative assistant, said there are two other bodies at the morgue that might be similar cases, but he said it was too early t.o say defmitely because some information has not been verified. The Tobin Funeral Service bandied Reedy's burial a t Ma t e razzo's behest. Tobin owner Maureen Mitchell said s h e helped because o f •'pressure" Materazzo was experiencing. Even with the city 's $350, the compa n y supplied an inexpensive pine box and a hearse to take the body 60 miles to the Cape Cod veterans' cemetery. "How can you do it for $350?" Ms. Mitchell asked . Robert Lynch, director of rehabilitation for the American Legion in Was hington, said in a telephone inter view that he hoped the Reedy situation would r a lly t he Massac husetts congressional delegation behind e fforts to restor e fun e ral all o wan ces for i nd igent veterans. ·'This was the second case to come t.o my attention," he said, saying the problem previously surfaced in California. "There will be other incidents, particularly in urban areas." Lynch said. "Nationwide, you are talking substantial numbers . . . It may be that the states might want to join with us to chan ge the law. We would welcome that assistance." President Reagan's 1982 budget wiped out the $300 burial al l ow.a n ce f or abo ut three-fourths of the nation's 25 m i llion veteran s, Lynch estim ated. It was continued for veterans receiving VA p<!nsion or disability payments at the time or death, and for those who die in VA hospitals. Abortion amendment advances R~strictive proposal faces tough battle in Senate WASIDNGTON <AP) -The Senate Judiciary Committee Wednelday approved a propoeed con1UtutJonal amendment that would allow Oonareas and the state lplatures to prohibit or re1ulate abortion. The 10. 7 vote marked a major victory for foes of le1aU1ed abortion. who have been sharply d lvlded over bow Con1re11 1houJd ad to bait or reduee the l .S ml.Ulon abortions performed annually ta tllle United States. Never before bave anti-abortic.a foreee 1UceMded lD pUlti lqlelntoa Uarouab tbe fQD dary ,.,. ••. But ........ .......... by Sell. Orrin Hatch. R·Utah, faee1 a tou1l b•ttle on the S.aata noor, wbere Uberala l have aald they wlll u ae all parliamentary tactics lnehad.lng . a filibuster to block puaage. "A ri&ht to abortloa ls not secured by lbla Coqtltution," 11y1 the proposal, wblch seek• to reverse the 1913 Supreme Court deeilioa le1allm1 most aborUonl. coo,,_. and the atatel would ha•• "concurrent power to restrict and problblt abortioa." But It.ate leliaJatuns would be free t.o enact more rwtrlctlve llmtu than Coaarea -.r the proposal. wblcb baa the rehadant "'"" ol tbe ••tlonal CoDfeftllel fJI Ca&bollt Blabopl and t.be N.u.al Al~ .. Life Com ...... ,,....... •tfllU. rlf ht·to·llf• eommlttee, J .c. W lllle1 coneeded tbe Hateb amenameal la a "modeat remedy" wblch races a tough battle in the Senate. Nanette Falkenberg, director of the National Abortion Right.a Action League, condemned the amendment a.s a backdoor effort to ban, not just re1ulate, abortion. "This la a setback, noc. a defeat, .. sbe said. Despite public opinion polla indlcalinl broad public support for le1alized abortion, she said, "some officialll apparently bUnd!y believe it is politically expedient to vote anU-cboice. ln November, they may well ftnd out bow wron1 they were." Tb• Hatch amendment need.a a two-thlrda vote In both the Houe md 8-N ud approHI by three-fourth• of the atate le1l1lature1 to become part of tbe ColllUtudc>n. Orang• Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, Mareh 11, 1982 8 , Reag8n 'feeling heat' Conservatives becoming less infatuated with the president WASHINGTON (AP) -For years they were best of friends: R onald R ea1 an and the bard-core me mbers o f the nation's conservative move - ment. But now, Reagan finds himself lhe s uitor as the conservatives, who once sought him as their candidate, are les!i lnfaluated with Reagan the president. The coMervatives are trying to hold Reagan's feet to the fire -on the budget, on taxes, on na tional defense, on White H ouse and a dministration personnel. on such 'emotional issues as abortion and school busi ng a nd school prayer . Apparently, from the president's remarks, he is feeling the heat. He paid a recent call on the a nnu al meeting o f the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington and repeatedly talked about "we conse rvatives" and h is ·'conservative administration." David R. Gergen, Reagan's assistant for communications, felt the president accomplished what he set out to do with his audience: "He m ade it very clear he was still very much with t he m and extr e m ely grateful for the support he's been given." But, said Gergen, Reagan also tried t.o get across the need to "build for a majority and take into account the concerns of a majority of Americans." Nearly every day at the White House, John D. Lofton Jr., editor of the monthly Conser vative Digest, shows u p to remind Gergen and deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes what the conservative position is on whatever issue happens to be under discussion in the daily press briefing. Ir Lofton senses a divergence betwee n the conservative line and Reagan, 11• 11111111 he makes it clear. And 'this month, his magazine devoted lts issue lo the question of just bow conservative the Reagan administration is. The publisher is Richard A. Viguerie , wh o gained prominence as an expert direct mail fund -raiser fo r the so-called New Right. In an open letter to Reagan, Viguerie told the president he immediately should remove "ma ny of the people who do not share your deepest beliefs and philosophy from the senior positions they now hold in the White House and key departl'l)ents and agencies." Elsewhere In the magazine, quotations from Reagan aides, as reported r ecently. were reprinted under the heading : "With Friends Like These Who Needs En e mies?" The quotations weren't fl attering and the magazine asked, "Can you imagine how long Ike or JFK or LBJ or RN or Jimmy Carter would have allowed their White House aides to bad-mouth them to the press?" Here's a s ampl e of the quotations: --"He probably spends two or three hours at most on r eal work." -"There are times when you really need hi m to do some work. and all he wants to do is tell stories about his movie days ." -"It's never been a question of his work capacity or his stamina. It's always been a question of his inte.,rest level." Still, the conservatives seem to recognize that Reagan is the only president they've got and paid tribute to him on page after page of their banquet proiram. There were salutes from the Youn1 Americans ror Freedom . the American Cof\servalive Unio n , Human Events • co n se rvative w e ekly n ews paper, Fund for a Conservative Majority and other conservative organizations. In his speech, Reaga n did little to quell t he bubblin1 di scontent among s taunt:.h conservatives. He made no reference to complaints aboul personnel, a nd only passing reference t.o the sensitive social issues he r ar ely discus~es in public except when aske~. And there was some more punchy rhetoric for conservative consumption. What could be a m ore Reagan-like statement than his talk about "sob sister attempts to portray our desire to get government spending under control as a hard-hearted attack on the poor people of America?" As they keep trying to remind the president or his aides about his conservative roots and their long-time support for him, Reagan's conservative friends might remember some recent evidence. In recent months, when splits have developed among Reagan's adv i se rs along mo d e r - ate -cons~rv ative l in es, he has sent out signals that be woula take a moderate course. But suddenly. often at the last moment, the word comes out: The president has shifted to the m ore tr aditional Reagan stance favored by the conservatives. It happened most recently in the debate over whether to increase taxes to narrow the deficit and it's likely t.o happen again. In the tax debate, the president came down on the side or those opposed to tax hikes. Haig says U.S. military aid vital to El Salvador survival W ASHINGTON (AP ) - Secretary of State Alexander M . Haig Jr. says that withdrawal or U.S. military aid would be a "fatal blow" t.o the government of El Salvador in Its battle against leftist guerrillas. Testifying before a Senate panel that screens foreign aid requests, Haig a lso said it is "too early t.o say" whether the United States would continue to s upply aid if extreme rightists win the March 28 Salvadoran election. Wh en Sen . J . Bennett Johnston , D-La .. asked what would happen in El Salvador if the United States withdrew its a id, Haig replied, "'It would be, I t hink , a fatal blow to the government's ability to sustain itself." The sec r eta r y added, however , t hat the outlook for the ruling junta is "not as grim as is sometimes suggested" and "in practical terms, the guerrillas are not about to overrun the country." Haig appear ed be fore the f oreign o p erati on s subcommittee of the Sena te Appropriations Committee on We dnesday as t he Reagan administra tion continued its efforts t.o rally pubLi c support for its Ce ntr al Am e rican policies. On Tuesday, intelligence exper ts sho wed off aerial photographs that they say show a m assive Soviet-s upplied military buildup in Nicaragua. Haig said the insurrection in El Salvador is "'largely" and "essentialJt" controlled from Managua , the capital of Nicar agua. · Sen. Robert Kasten, R-Wis., chairman or the subcommittee, said the aerial photographs were "helpful'' but "additional hard evidence"' is needed if the administration is going to gain support for its policies. Haig declined comment on a report in the Washington Post that the administration has a pproved a pla n to try lo destabilize the Nicaraguan government by u si ng a C IA-direct e d 500-m e mber paramilitary force drawn rrom other Latin American countries. Haig said it was "a matter or consis tent and longstanding policy" not to com ment on covert activities. He added that bis response s hould not be interpreted as confirmation of the report. Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., asked Haig whe ther t he administration would continue military aid if a far right party headed by former Maj. Roberto D' Aubuisson wins this month's balloting for a cons tituent assembly. "It is too early to say." Haig responded. D'Aubuisson's party is the farthest to the political right of the six parties taking part in the e l ection. The Chris tian Dem ocrats of ·President J ose Napoleon Duarte are regarded - as centrist an<l the others are in between. The leftist parties, including the guerrilla faction, are boycotting the election. H aig urged s upport lot President Reagan's policy in Central America. saying, "I would hope member s of this committee and the American p eople would give their pre si dent c red it for understanding the serious ness or the situation.'' · He described u nrest in E} Salvador and e lsewhe re in Central America as "the local man ifeslation s or a g lobal problem, the solution to which is not going to be found by the level of assistance we give l o El Salvador or don't give, or the number of American advisers." or furniture spedamlar ends March 30 Save 20% duri~g this SALE A most untraditional collection of traditional furniture from NCHOLS llSTOtE. Orange Co .. t DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, Maroh 11, 1982 DEAR READERS: The fo'ood and Orug Admlnlilra&lion a&nd Wyeth Laboratories Inc .• Phtladelphlli, announced a public wuning and recall of certain lots of 13-ounce cans or Nuraoy Concentrated liquid and 32-ounce cans of Nursoy Roady to Feed because the products do not contain v1t1tmin 8-6. The -single line codes on the ends ot the cans being recalled arc A26M, 82M and 89M for Nursoy Concentrated Liquid and A28M and BllM for Nursoy Ready to Feed The codes may be preceded or foll owed by a number such as 1, 2 or 3, which can be leno r ed . Example o f cod e . Nurso y Concentrate 2A26M. The FDA warns pa rcnlS to return all cans of the recalled codes to the place of purchase for refund or replacement The product has been distributed nationwide and may have been available for sale in retail stores since Feb I. The FDA said the total absence of vitamin B-6. an essential nutrient in the diet of an infant, for more than a few weeks may c ause serious hea Ith cff('(•ts s uch as irritability and in more st•no us instances. convulsions. Parents of mfant:. who ha ve consumed the recalled codes of Nursoy as their only source of vitamins ::.hould rontacl their pe diatricia ns for advtt·e. Roth reralled products are soy-basl'd formu las sold over the counter for the kt•drng of infants who may be allerg1r to m1lk -ba:.ccl formulas. Wyeth and FDA ha\'c n.·ee1vcd no report s of injuries. Mail order prob/,erm DEAR PAT DUNN: I noticed that several of your readers ha ve had problems recently with Mail Order Marketing. I've also been waiting months for merchandise I ordered and paid for . The $16.97 price was charged to my bank card and I've paid it. Can you help me get a refudf -E.8., Cotta Meta The $16.97 will be credited to your bank card, accordlng to Mall Order Marketing's customer service department. Incidentally, t h e me r c h a nd ise y ou o rde r e d i n mid-November is sUll "out ot st.ock ." 1ilt-top tabl~ tardy DEAR PAT DUNN : Early laat November I ordered a tUt-&op table from SMM MaU Order Marketln1 Inc. for $17.77. My cbeck was cashed, but tlae table never arrived. I've written twice aaldnl about delivery, but haven't received any response. Can you help? -V .C., Lapa a Nl1uel Mail Order Marke ting promises to deliver the table to you yia UPS promptly. Another reader, R.H .. Costa Mesa, who also had ordered the same table in November, will get the refund she requested. Mail Order Marketing does not have a sterling record with AYS readers when it comes to prompt delivery of me r chandise. The ex'cuse is always the s ame -"that item was on back order.'' However. when A YS has contacted this fi rm with a. complaint, it has bee n resolved ·promptly. MOM's customer service address is 11828 Glen Oak Bl vd ., San Fernando 91340. • "Cot a problem? Then wnle lo Pat '-,.. Dunn. Pal Wtll cut red tape, ge tting "' ..l the answers and action you need to • soltie inequit ies m government and ~ bustness. Matl your que&tions to Pal I I Dunn, At Your Service, Orange CO<Ut Dally Pilot. P.O Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 As many ~tiers C13 possible wd l be answered, but phoned mquines or letters not mcludmg the reader 's Juli name. address and business hours' phone numbe r cannot be corutdered. Tfus column appears daily ez. cept Sundays " ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Cla11Hled advertising 7141642·5678 All other departments 642-4321 Firebomb s trike survivors gather Thomas P Haley ,...,...,.... and Chtet f •ec:ul•v• OH•C«'f Robert N. Weed -Thomas A. Murph1ne Edtoo L. Kay Schultz Vloe- -ew.a0< of ~Al•Ona Michael P Harvey ......._,rtQ O.recto• Kenneth N Goddard Jr Charles H Loos 'Mono~·frt-01; If vou oo t\OI nAw\' yo.it 06C)i9r ov ~ 30 pm c111 tx>IC>lt1 I om ancll vour coov wtll oe ae11~~-a s.tunsay ano Sunoar u '°" OtJ •• •• :-:,r:':n C~y ~~f ~~'('9\M '~ del•-90 MAIN OFFICE JJO We\I B•Y St • C°"la ~.CA M,.11 •OOreu Boa 1560, Costa Mew, CA ~ COl>yrlQM 1'11111 Or-COHI Pubh•ll•nQ c...._..,, No newi \tor..-s. Ulu\trationi. •cUtor••I m•tef" or~ vertlwments r.r ... n may bee t4tProeh.K.O wlthotA \1>41< la I C>ef"mtuion of C01>yr191>t owner Tr~ Or-Co.st 0.ily PllOI, wtth whk h I\ um- 1>1ntd t.,. -Pren I\ Pubh>hed by the Or- Cout P"l>ll>h1r>e;1 Comp.ony s.ii.••t• editions ,.. publi\MO -•Y 111~ Frld•y tor C051• ,. .. , NeWPOr1 BM<tl, Hl#>lln9{on BH<h, "-'·"' V•l .. y, trvlM . L-BH<h, South Co.tit A •lnqie re9iaNt •Oilton •S P<AJ11Vw!d Saturday• anO ~.,. n.. pnnc•p.ot OU04•"'"'9 Plant " at l30 West Bay Street. P 0 Bo• 1560, Cm~ M•MI, C.tlllorn1a 91•2t VOL. 75, NO. 70 TOKYO CAP) -Sur vi vors of the most devastating firebomb strike on Tokyo during World Wa r II attend ed me m or ial services Wednesday and erected a statue to mark the day 37 year s ago when as many as 80,000 people perished. An a rmada o f 300 U.S. wa rplanes hit Tokyo wi t h f ire bo mbs for 211!! ho urs on March 10, 1945, wi ping out 40 per cent of centra l Tokyo. The air strike also wounded more tha n 50,000 people and razed more than 180,000 homes. We're Listening ••• What do you like about the Daily Pilot? Wh at don't you like? C:all the number below and your message will be rerorded. transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor The :.ame 24·hour answering service may be used, to record let- lt·r~ lo lh<' editor on any topic. Mailbo~ contributors must include thr1r nam(' and telephone number for verification No <.4'ircul ation C'a ll!>. plea~l' Tell u:-what ·s on your mind 642·6086 NEW DEAL! .. Sonia JobDIOD, the ERA s upporter expelled from the Mormon Church, says she now addresses her ~rayera lo a f emaJe deity, a · mother ln heaven." "Wlt.b her on my side, bow ca n I h e lp n ot to be vi ctor ious?" Ms. Johnson told the 200 women who were gathered in Provo, Utah, by the ne wly-founded Provo c h a pter o r t)le National Organization for Women. M s . J o hn so n wa s excommunk ated Crom the Church of Jesus Chri"llt of Latte r -day Saints in 1979 after criticizing the church's opposition to the proposed Equal Rights Ame ndment, w hi c h w o uld b a n discrimination based on sex. Move over, Mhaaeaota Fats. Step aside, Amarillo Slim. At 104 years old , Jennle B. Gunter is playing the ponies. Mrs. Gunter left Garland Convalescent Center in Hot Springs, Ark., for a trip to Oaklawn Park racetrack , and got royal treatment -a box seat, a gold horseshoe pr esented b y Oa kla wn ·Gen e r al Ma n ager W.T. Bishop, and a race named after her. Oakla wn offi cials called the rourth race "The Jenny." S he d i dn 't go h o m e empty-handed either. She won every race she bet on for $65 in lake-home cash and picked up the daily double of $22.60 in the second race. C aptain C arrot 's mother-in-law is having a fruitful time at Ha rrah's Tahoe, cashing in on three $10 ,000 Jackpots in four months. Alma J ean Circo, 59, whose son-in -law is Sacra mento health food advoca te Cary Nosier, said she had a hunch she would be a winner a gain before she lined up the three sultans on the center line of a dollar machine. She had been playing the m achine about four hours whe n she hit the jackpot. She said she planned to use the money to pay taxes. ' C h arles J . Haughe y , chosen the new Irish prime minister , is expected to have lunch at the While House on St Patrick's Day w ith President Reagan, a White House spokesman said. A personal weight ma.nagement program that really works! Save~ during our spring Our program encourages you to choose which foods to eat and to decide which behavior you would like to change! You're In charge. "IT'S YOU R CHOICE." $1400 $1J50 $1J500 TO JOIN P~R WK. 10 WK. SAVINGS PLAN f'or the class nearest you call (213) 929·4211 / (714) 964·3488 "it's your choice" <£\\tWR~ep~ ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••• couroN couron1 Join WlthA SA,TD •1~00 • rrtend And 1' W Lf 61' Orr 1 l\rolSTMTIO" • ~ -..-. lfor1g~:CQUAINTtD = ~I Ol'nR 0000 Tt1RU MARCH '82 • ···-·········~·········••••Ill ~ . wardrobe offer. Here 's a great way ro build a wa rdrobe and save at the same time. Choose any wardrobe combination from our new spring coll ection of men's clothing and receive an automatic $80.00 discount. Select from our most prestigious labels: Hart Schaffner & Marx, Hickey-Freeman, Pierre Cardin. Bill Blass. Austin Reed of Regent Street, Christian Dior and many more. ~I Wardrobe Value: 1 Sult, regularly ............. 210.00 or more 1 Sportcoat, regularly ........ 135.00 or more 1 Pair of slacks, regularly ...... 42.50 or more Total Value ........... : ..... 387.50ormore Sllverwooda then deducts 80.00 off the total. silverwoods . NEWPORT FASHION ISLAND ·~-........ HELLO THERE -Ed McMahon. Tonight show co-host , a nd his wife. Victoria, greet a leaping dolphin a t Ma rine World-Africa USA in Redwood City during a vis it to cele brate their sixth wedding anniversary. More than 19,000 people watched as Mormon Church Pres ide nt S p e ncer W. Kimball, livi ng an relative seclusion since undergoing skull surgery last year, made his first public appearance in seven months. S till weak fr o m complications that followed his operation, Kimball was Prince Edward, the third son aud youngest of Queen Elizabeth ll's fo ur children, celebrated his 18th birthday and the queen sent him a birthday cake. Ed ward spent Wednesday at Gordonstoun School in Scot l and , wh e r e he is preparrng lo ta ke exams in There ar e me mbers of Cong ress who r ead a bout Pranldin D. Roosevelt's 100 days in their grade school texts, and then there is Sen. Jennings Randolph -who helped s hape the New Deal legislation. Th e W es t Vir ginia De m ocrat, who turned 80 Tuesday. is the only mem ber he lped onto a platfo rm at Brigham Young University d uring c eremo n ies dedicating t h e 12-s tor y Spencer: W. Kimball tower. Kin'lball, who will be 87 this month, 1s the leader of the 4.9 million mem ber Church of J esus Ch rist of Latter-day SainlS. ad vanced English. history and politics. Reports on his progress say he is academically bright and js expected lo go on to a university. A Buckingham Pa lace spokesman said the queen had the cake baked in t he palace kitchens . o r Congr ess who served during the first days of the ·Roosevelt administration. Two members are older, Rep. Oaude Pepper, 0 -Fla .. who is 81 , and Sen. John C. Stennis, D-Miss .. who turned 80 last August Bu t Pepper a rr ived i n 1936 , an d R a n dolph h as 15 years seniority on Stennis. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, March 11. 1982 Al ~. Sex book's author /aces credit suit Taiwanese asking $6.3 million for stolen art, jewels LOS ANGELES (AP> -An $18 million suit was filed Tuesday agains t Or. Jrene Kas sorla, author of the besl-selllng book, "Nice Girls Do." by a writer who claims he CO·authored the "how-lo" sex manual but was not given credit, an attorney said. The Los Angeles Superior Court s uit filed b y writer I Herbert Margolis seeks $1 f million general damages, $17 million punitive damages and an accounting in order that Margolis receive 50 percent of the book's profits, said attorney William Chertok. T h e s uit al s o see ks a preliminary injunction against Kassorla holding herself out as author of the book. An April 12 preliminary hearing was set on the injunction, Chertok said. •'They worked together on it 17, 18 months before they broke 1 up in mid-1978," said Chertok, Woman arreste d ANGELS CAMP IAP I -A woman who chained herself to an oak tree in the Stanislaus Canyon to protest the continued filling of New Melones Reservoir was arrest e d Tues day for trespassing. Linda Cloud , 30, of San Francisco. was taken into custody by Tuolumne County s heriff's officials. noting that his c lient and Or.Kassorla had t1tpe-recorded dialogues and monologues a.nd had transcribed and organlied' them into chapters for a book tentatively titled, "The Loving ...,Experience." A disagreement led to a split between the two W('iters, and Margolis assumed the book project was dead, Chertok said. It was not until the book was published in December 1980 that" Margolis s aid he realized Dr. Kassorla had continued the book Dr. Kassorla's attorney, Gregson Bautzer, s aid he could not comment on the suit until he saw it. Or. Kassorla . speaking by telephone from Chicago where she was on a promotional tour for the book . said Bautzer had instructed her not to discuss the suit. However, she was vocal about the book 's authorship. "It's my sweet book and I'm promoting it every way I can," she said. "I had an oral agreement with Or. Kassorla from the beginning to co-write and share in the pro fits on a 50-50 basis," Margolis said in an interview. "We had a disagreement and we stopped working on it together. It was my understanding that the book was not going to be done:· ............. MUSIC STAYS Herman Silberman of L a Joll<1 , retired y1olinist. will be permitted to continue to pla~ his mu~1c· at hom e despite complaints of his neighbors Music wins respite LA JOLLA (AP) -It was the s wee t sound of s uccess for He rman Silbe rman's violin stude nts who took on their t eac h e r 's c ond o minium association and won. Arter six years of teaching, Silberman was ordered by the co mpl e x 's homeo wners association last year to quit t e a c hing b e cause zoning prohibits residential businesses. A petition in behalf of the 75-year-old teacher was sent to th e Sa n Diego Plann i n g Commission , signe d by 46 m e m ber s of the San Diego Symphony. A pupil o r S ilbe r man , s y ·m pho n y v i o I in is t A II c e Goodkind, commented that "we are not t a lk ing he re a bout people who play in e lectronic bands and make a lot of noise to annoy neighbors. We a re talking abo ut c l assicall y t r a ined musicians." ==============~~----.,_,n.,rinl'T-Jl"VT':~~nr11"'r"',..,,....,r1~· ---· I • " .... '"' -..,, ... , \.J \., J .J \..,, ~ ,.., V \.J v '-~ ..1 ,._ ~ , , I Store Hours A Fine Selection of Imported & Domestic Wines Daily 9 a .m.-2 a.m. LIQUOR STORE Free Delivery Home or Office 646-6878 PRINTED TIN CANISTERS FROM PRETZELS TO PAST A From Hong Kong Full color with portra11s. patterns and l•lles BLUE & WHITE SPAGHETTI 3•1, .. d•a x 11 tall 1.39 4 • d1a x 11 •. 1a1t 1.99 NATURAL CANE LOS ANGELES !AP) A Taiwanese fugitive has filed ins urance claims totallpg $6.3 million for jewelry ~d fine art stolen from his &ll·Air home late last year, and also has sold the home, according to the Daily News The cluims by Weng-Peng "Wellington" Ct.e ng Included $3.5 million in jewelry and about $2.8 million in art objects, I.he San Fe rnando Valley -based newspaper said it was told by police and insurance sources. The Los Ange les P o lice De partment assessed the value at $4 5 mill ion , w i th an additional $150,000 cash taken from a safe, the News said in its Monday account. Additionally. Cheng has sold his home in Bel-N r, as we ll as a Santa Monica condominium. and 1s a tte mpti n g to "avoi.i r e p ossession of a condo in Ha waii and his Roll s-Royce," the paper said it was lold by an insu rance investigator. The Bel·Air home was sold for a re po rte d $1.3 m ill ion . according to the pa per. The burglary was reported in mid·December. Several weeks before. Che ng obta in ed $6.2 mi 11 ion 1n ins ura nce on his jewelry and artwork, the News said Two wee k s b e fo r e th e hurglary, the coverage was increased by $400,000. according to lhe newspaper A II of the Jewelry. except fo r t wo wa t ches an d ring . in Colorful, unique and fun CALIFORNIA WINES GAGGLE OF GEESE BALLOONS & IRIS s· x s· .44 Pkg ol 24 4 >;," 10 8 '1r" d1a 5 •1, • 10 I. 1 'Ii QT. CLEAR GLASS PITCHER From China Roomy, trim pitcher holds 11 all lrom water to many martinis. 8 '1·. 1all LETTER TO LOG BASKETS From Mex ico Perennial favoriles to hold letters. loaves. laundry. logs. litter c,r leaves. Especially hand· some lacquered baskets have burnt accents 7 •;, • deep I I' 5 SIZES Closed or Open Circle designs go neatly neutral 1n any decor 4' x6' 18.88 .69 to 2.49 6 'Ii " 10 11 • dla s· tog• deep 1.79 10 3.99 36 )( 36 '" Slides Cheng's Jewelry c laim wu covered in his insurance policy, while his c laim for the art objects covered "almoJit the entire policy," the News quoted two in s uran ce company representatives. Some of the stolen ite ms were found by a recreational diver on the o·cean bottom near a pier in Redondo Beach in January. A deportation hearing against Cheng is pending . He also is wanted in Taiwan for up lo $7.S million in real estate rtauds. Falwell raps Brown SAN DIEGO (AP> The Rev J e rry Falwell, founder of the Mor al Majority, said he hopes Gov Edmu nd Brown Jr. is never elected to anything again He called Brown a "disgrace." F a lwe ll wa s c r itica l of B rown 's appo intment o f a l es bian l ast Aug u s l t o a mun icipal Jud geship in San Francisco. The appointment "1s really gi vin g c r e de n ce t o a very pe r verted lifest y le, d oing da mage to the moral fiber and fabr ic of the natio n," the broadcast evangelist told a news conference ··1·m glad he 'll soon be an ex·govem or and I hope he'll be a n ex·everything polit1cally," Fctlwell said . HANDPAINTED EGG fi=!~~~ IN DISPLAY CASE From China A beautifully painted egg perches on a brocade. glass and wood display case s· 101a1 n1 2.88 FROM OUR CLOTHING SECTION TIERED COTTON VOILE SUN DRESS PLEATED COTTON PANTS & SHOATS From Pakistan Well made panis and shorts have front lucks side pockets. button fly and elas11c1zed r;;_~~~ back wa ist A Assorted Solid uni Colors S·M L _ SHORTS 6.99 PANTS 7.99 Sea ts 6 Comfort· , ably 48" )( 36" WE'RE A LOT MORE THAii A BELL ON Y•R WALL 16" x 16" x 16" 32.33 Handsome, wood rein· forced chests have incised brass clasps. , ~ 22· x 22· x 22· 64.33 open 10 60"1ong ~ 119.88 Fully n·s~i:~ to 78" long 46.88' Behind the bell Behind the famous Seacoast sticker. Behind 111 the state-of·the art protection . de"lces we mike and Install, 1s Seacoast centr1I st1tlon. When an alarm goea off on your property, we get the 1lgnal in a neuby. 24·hour·1·d1y centr al 1t11ion. If the sign11 Indicates fire, burglary or hoodup. we call the Police or fire dep1rtment. Since our central station is UL fisted , our c entral station customers can quallfy for a sizable dltcount on their Insurance. And to Increase our reach, make rHpOnM time even fester and Improve effic iency we 're • computerizing our 11atton. But •mpro¥ements er9n't new to S.acoHt. We'v. t>Mn getting better tor 21 ~ra. Altd tod9V •'re the le9dera in the MCurlty business In the harbor area with over 10,000 CUllomeB lnchldlng a wl"-range of big aod small retall, lnduatrlal end commeici81 "'-bliilhments. To find out more ebout Seeco•t cent.rat station write or coma by our new facility It 2481 Newport Blvd., Costa MeN. ~ 24tl-.oA1'8<NUMARC 8ftlTEM8 (7f 4) 642-34~ . HARDWOOD I CANVAS FOLDING SAFARI CHAIR From Singapore Comfortable classic Is at home on the hearth .or In the Jungle. Walnut finish frame with beige canvas or natural finish frame with brown canvaa. 39.99 4·SHELF WALNUT WALNUT FINISH FINISH HARDWOOD BENTWOOD BOOKCASE From Romania BAR STOOL From Well construcled, smoothly I ~iJI~~ Romania finished th Beautllully and designed eminently and useful! finished Folds lor classlc has easy two· tone toting. stenciled 48'/r • tall 28" wide 10Vt. deep 44.99 wOOd seat 29" tall 29.99 DIRECTLY ACROSS FROM SOUTH COAST PLAZA SLIGHTLY WEST OF BRISTOL AT 1313 SUNFLOWER (TAKE llUITOl EXIT Off 405 FREEWAY) V1IA • llAITll CMMll NO TILJPttM Ga MM OUIRI • AMP\I Flft ,..._ • Assembled or in Carton NATURAL OR WALNUT FINISH HARDWOOD FOLDING CHAIR From Romania Well constructed and designed chair has easy-action. brass fittings. 18.88 NATURAL BUAi RING CURTAIN From The Philippines Braided 1• rings form a cool and airy curtain OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK MON. TO FRI. 10 A.M.-1 P.M. SAT. 10 A.M.-1 P.M. SUI. 11 llOOll-I P.11. ., J J r T' ) ,. .. Q "' '·' ,, ""' '·' .. .. s Orange Oout DAILY PILOT/Thuradey, Maten 11, 1912 Parks pleasant, but I maint~nance costly Huntington Be a c h offlcials s ay they'r e running s hort of money to c ut gr ass and trim bushes in the city 's 50 pa rks. Four new parks recently were developed in Huntington Harbour and 15 more are planned in othe r parts of the c ity. The more than 400 acres of developed park land cost $1. l million a nnually to maintain. But since Pro position J3 reduc ed re venue, the par k •m ainten ance budget has been squeezed tightt'r e ach year. One solution would be to stop d e v e loping pa rks, b ut m a ny residents we re pro mised parks a nd recreation areas when they pufchased the ir ho m es. L a nd de ve lo pe rs don ated c a s h and la nd s pecifically for community parks. Las t year . cit y o fficials ex perime nted wi th "l o w mainte nance" p arks that h ad "natural groundcove r " a nd bark g ro undcover to reduce m owlng costs . But m a n y r e s id e nt s c o mplaine d t h a t the natural gro und co v e r lo o k e d l l ke 'ove rgrown weeds a nd the bark wa s dry and unsightly. City officials curre ntly have as ked private landscapers to bid on m a intaining eight city parks. inc luding the four new sites, in hope that they can do it for less mo ney. The r e 's a lso the poss ibility t ha t assessme nt distric ts m ay be r ecommended in future years to pay for de v e l o p i n g a nd m a intaining parks. Ideally. city officials should plan pa rk s tha t ha ve reduce d main ten a nc e c os t s but s t i ll provi d e s ceni c . r e l ax in g r ecre ation are a s. For the lim e being, µerha ps it is worthwhile finding o ut if priva te la ndscape rs can do the job for less money. The missing artists Anyone who h as visited the La guna Beach F estival of Arts in r ecent yea r s pro b ably has noticed tha t not m a n y o f the a rtis t s themselve s bothe r t o a ttend the annual event. Booths sit unattended dur ing the s low daytime hours and even during he a vy visiting times when the Pageant of the Mast ers is being presented -many of the artists' booths are void of the people who · have create d the work that ha ngs in them . Las t m o nth. the festiv a l board of directo rs decided to do something about it. They r aised the fe es charg ed by the sa les booth which hand les sales for a rtis ts when they are not pres ent from 10 to 25 perce nt T he r e a son for the r a ise. th ey s a y. 1s to encourage a rtists to be present on the grounds b y reducing their profits if the y're not And while the propos a l to penalize artists who do not sit by their booths seems a bit extreme . the festival board raises a good point. A main attract ion o f t he s umme r f estiva l for m a n y vis itors is the opportunity to chat with the a rtists a t the ir booths . The r esult is a n atmos phe re of artists and apprecia to rs of a rt. mingling together in a n informa l setting On the o t he r h a nd . artists ca nnot be expected to be sitting at the ir booths for up to 12 ho urs a d a y. When would the y have the time to cre ate a rtworks., And m a n y fest i val exhibitors have full-time jobs in addition to t heir art. The re sho uld be m ore a rtists i n atte nd a n ce duri n g t h e s even -week fes t ival run. That a ppears obvious . But ins t e a d of a heavy, a c ross-the -b oard i nc r ease in s a le s booth fees. the a rtis t s the m selves s hould get togethe r to propose a syste m whe reby m ore o f their pee r s are manning the booths. A s yst em o f s c hedul i n g a rtists' attenda nce m ight be an a lte rnative -a lbe it probably loo st r uctured for ma ny . But t he a lterna tive a 25 percent cut in profits s hould e ncourage fest ival exhibitors JO work out their o wn means o f keeping grounds v is itors happy A nnua_l process painful ll m a y seem like nothing m or e than a crue l sh ell game to the 120 t e a c h ers 1n th e N e wpo rt-Mesa Un ified Sc hool Dis trict who will receive layoff notices this week . Not all o f thos e t eac hers actually will lose their jobs. In fact, trustees vot ed Tuesday to s have 43 full-time te ac ht:rs fro m the district's payroll in June. a long with anothe r 30 who are on temporary s tatus . But in orde r to be on the safe s ide , notices of inte ntion t o dis miss will b e mailed lo 90 full -time t e a c h e r s b y t h e s tate -mand a t e d Ma r c h 15 deadline . Why put s o many people through the pain o r wondering whether they will ha ve a p ay c heck to s upport them selves a nd their families? It is some thing t hat the Newport-Mes a and othe r districts have had to do for years because of declining enrollme nt a nd financial uncertainty and the • inflexible s t a te edu cation code require me nt. Last year the district s ent no tices of intent to d ismiss to 100 t eache rs a nd 79 actua lly wer e la id off. It is a g rueling process that me ans a lot o f worry tor m a ny familie s . But failure t o s e nd the a d v ance n o ti ces m ean s the district must keep teachers on the payroll re gardless of need. Last year . a miscalculation on layoffs obliged the Huntington Be a c h High School District to k ee p 30 e xtr a t eac h e r s throughout the s chool year. We e mpathize with the t each ers who will receive the n otices and must wait in limbo for the next three mo nt hs. But at the same time, the dis trict is s truggling to make e nds meet. Supt. J o hn Nicoll called the $2.4 million saved by tea c her layoffs "just a piece of the a ction," with $2 million more that will have to be cut. lt is not a happy picture . $)pinions expressed in the °fpace at>Ove are those of tfie Dally Pilot. Other views ex-pressed on th is page are those ol their authOrs and artists. Rea-der comment is lnv1l I .ed. Address The Dairy P1101, P.O. Box IS60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714)' 642-4321. ~M. Bo y d/Bandit chase r What is most likely to scare off a bank robber? The American Bankers Association checked police records to fi nd out . In t hose cases where would-be bandits turned tail to nee wit.bout getting tile money. they did so after women sc r eamed . Dan gerous, this. No authorities advise female victims to scream. Not all screamers survive. But it is a fact that the scream ls so rar the most efteetlve alarm. What.ever ll is you want to say, ii ORANGE COAST DlilyPilat you s ay it to enough people, somebody Is going (o be offended, evidently. Remember that 9001 "I Saw Mommy Kissine Santa Claws?" Numerous irate cilliena tboulht it so damaging to children that t hey organized an effort to have it banned from the air. Q. Why is the Emerald Isle of Ireland reputedly so much greener than other countries? A. Umestone under the sod, raln over it. Thorus P. Haley Publisher tlMifNs A:"Murphlne · Ed~or · Ba rbar• Krelblc" ..,Editorial P~ ~Clltor "TME StN~TE VOTES ON SENATOR WIL.LIAMS 'Superagencies' inflate ~osts It isn't surprising that a legislative co mmittee has found the s t a t e government's superstructure of agenc) secr etaries superfluous. 'J'.he only surprise is that the legislators have identified the problem so soon. The idea for the superagencies was born during the administration of Gov. "P at" Brown. He complained that the inc r easing numbers of department heads reporting directly to him was overre aching his s pan of control Actua lly. his executive secretary and another known as his "governmental sec r e tar y " r od e h erd o n the de partme nts. But Brown created a .. Resources Secretary" in charge or the De partments or Wa ter Resources, Fo r estry and Parks, a nd planned further reorganizations of that type to create a five-man cabinet supervising all of the departments. THE PLAN was implemented by Ronald Reagan as governor and has been maintained by Jerry Brown. In the less than two decades which has followed the introduction of the "superagencies" they have expanded into "super bureaucr acies" and now cost the state more tha n $l2 million annually. Reviewing their work an Assembh committee has found that, "Instead of serving primarily as a policymaking a nd coordinat ing agen t o f t he governor's offi ce, the agencies have taken on an operating role or their own" interfering with the operations of the departments. Of course the intent was to provide lieutenants for the governor who could IARl WATIRS ad vise departmental heads and keep th e m in line with the governor 's polic ies But when those lieutenants build themselves staffs which now total more than 140 persons it is inevitable that the staff people quickly involve them in the ope rations or the departments. Such is hum an nature. The result is the director b ecomes nothin g m or e than a messenger carrying out the dictates of the superhead on a day to day basis and is no longer essential to the operation. The answer then is to either eliminate the directors or the s uperse<:retaries. T he committee has recommended the latter, suggesting that whatever work n ow bein g d on e by the a ge nc y secret aries that is necessary be given ba ck to the departments and the overseeing of the d irectors be done by some "highly qualified" members of the governor's offi ce Di rectors are paid high salaries to r un the departments. If they can't be trusted to a dminister them without const ant s upervision the gove rno r shouldn't appoint them. OF COURSE the public as well as the employees s hould have someone to appeal to when a director seems to have gone off the trolley. The governor can't be expected lo ente r into every breach. But his executive secreta ry and a dep a rtme ntal s ecreta ry should be a d equa te t o ha nd le mos t of the p roblems. And you ca n be sure the gove rnor will st ep in post haste whenever it becomes more than a problem . ~ Th e wh o l e s c h e me for th e superagencies was a bad idea from the beginning. Now th at it has been recognized it will be interesting to see how long it will take the Legislature to rid the state of thjs wasteful method of ma nagement. Cunch hour not long enough at DMV To the Editor : This afternoon I returned to work alter s pending my lunch hour standing in the line for registration at our local D M V offi ce on 19th Street in Costa Mesa . If anyone has not been lo the OMV lately they should know that nothing has changed except the addition of chairs in the long a nd winding path MAILBOX from front door to the window area. I would guess there to be about 36 chairs,· and I say guess because I never got up close enough to them to see them all at once around the corner to co1mt. I will sa y that upon entering the door I was probably 20th in line to the chairs and when I lef\ at the end or my lunch hour I was 10th in line to the chairs with nine behind me to the door That means another approximate 36 were in front of the 10 in front or me. During the whole time there were never more than three windows open and yet there is room to ac commodate approximately eight employees. AS I WALKED to my car at 1: 1S p.m. I spoke 9.'ith a lady also getting in her car and she bad made it up to the window. It had taken her 3 hours. It is about time something was done to correct this situation as in the slx years I have been using this office it has ne ve r been any better. Ir this is an office for the public then it is about time the public do something about it. If that means me, then I will be the first to s tart the movement to correct the situation. As if this is not maddening enough, I would like to also mention the young pe ople posing a s youth of Orange County taking donations outside the door or the OMV and have been doing this for over a year that I am aware of. The y are nothing more t h an brainwashed American youth begging for t he Hare Krishna movement pretending to be social, active youth of Orange County. They prey on non-En1lish speaking people, older senior citizens and anyone who enters or leaves the building. They are as un-American as any institution that I have ever known about and are a, Un -Orange County-youth as a ny teen-ager can gel. Since when have we raised our children to be1, and ror what? U this is public property tbeo let me be lbe first to say that I am part of the public and this off ends me to the core. MARY JANE SANBORN Boon or banet To the Editor: How would the c•ble t•lnllke ,...... Uke to receive the kind of treatmtDI they d.ilh out? SpeciftC?ally, without 8fta.ee llOIS•. their atl'ffl dJ11tn1 ...,,.....lid•• ran1 doorbelll ln l:aat...,. Ill~ hours ta st.te tbetr ln~ to .. Up near curbside areas to install cables. Besides arousing every barking dog in the area they required personal and guest cars lo be moved out of the path of t he diggers This meant, in our instance. moving four cars promptly several blocks from the house. THIS PRESUMABLE benefit for the c i t izen r y b ega n la s t y ear i n November'/Oecember. Since that time sli t trenches have been dug, about four inches wide and si¥ inches deep - finally installing cable two months later without completing the trench openings which were partly fllled with cement but not finished or · leveled with the street. This is now the third or fourth month since they. the television cable people, beg an the ir nuisance, noisy , and nonsensical maneuvers in the name or neighborhood benefit. It's too bad they couldn't have begun their last-minute ale rts , noisy inconvenient drilling, m essy, badl y lit, s pace hogging maneuvers in front or each of the city officials' residences meaning the homes of those who gave city approval without time limitations. courtesy notices and penally condjtions for delays. When it comes to "improvement" such as cable television, it should be rem embered that it is perhaps more bane than boon. -ART WEISSMAN Kindly cat cur b To the Editor : Keeping cats off your flower beds does not necessitate drastic dangerous and cruel measures that threaten lives or children and animals. Just simply sprinkle a fe w moth cryst als on the area, or gel something s im ilar fro m the nei ghborhood veterinarian. Another word of advice, this one for pet owners : If you love your dogs and cats do not travel with them in the car o r truck without s afety meas ures. Leash the m and attach the leash to the vehicle. And if you park, don't shut them up In a hot, airless vehicle, and don't leave a valuable, beloved animal In a car that is unlo c ked . The heartache is unbearable. • J . ROGERS Price prediction To the Editor: Many lettens reach the op-ed pages, citing the need for lower Interest rates to stimulate a near-dead rnl estate market. No. Properties are overpriced. • Lrttrr4 from T"cddtT• ort wt'comt. Th•· nght to c:Olldc'ftl~ r~ttns to fU SJ)Oer or rlim1naf~ Ubtf IS rtltrwd IAftt'f'a o/ 300 wt>rdf or lfn wilt bf O*Wft pr~erenct. All lettfrS """' lncludt tigftOt\lrt and moUmg oddrus bat "°'"" mo., be wUMtld on rt · Qllttl ., llil/IC1tnt rfGIOll •• Opf)Orent P~1'11 all not be publuhed. Ldl.,1 ma~ bf tt lqla'*fl to en.-N41M CMd phoftf nWMhr o{ t"9 c°"tribvtor mu he QtVCft tor u1n/ltdoa """°f'S• . r Working on a related paper I •found staggering d at a' Over the next 12 months . prime coastal residential properties will probably take a bath rro m 12 to 40 percent or a ppraised values! The only saving grace would be a smoking inflation rate of say 13 to 20 percent per year. No one wishes to make a prediction or projection as this, Perhaps this is the reason no one has done so earlier. But the numbers work. While they might realize my findings only instinctively, the largest group or sellers unloading their properties now a re real estate a gents a nd othe r professional investors. K EN PORTER llCial year To the Editor : The irresponsible statement made by a Capistrano Unified School District official, who implied that there Is no irtformation concerning the educational value inherent in an 180 minute kindergart en session versus the arc haic 150 minute session, was fallacious. P s y c holo gis t s s ay that th e kinde rgarten year is the most important year in the child's formal education. This time has to be of a high quality. particularly in the light or the broad scope or learning that is involved in the kindergarten program. EDUCATIONAL research gives firm evidence of the value of the extended kindergarte n progra m and all experienced kindergarten teachers will agree. Wlth so many parents involved in assisting as parent aides in the kindergarten classroom, this move by the school board has outraged them as they wonder why they were given no indication of this very serious move on the part of Che school board. Why wasn't this matter brought to the attention of the parents and teachers involved before the matter was acted upon by the school board? Our school d istri c t motto is "Excellence in Education" and yet programs are being cul that arrect children's academic growth. SUE WHITE MARGARET RHOADS CllDIYCll Are the protesters protest.lnc the nae Sn their I*' bUli the Mme ones wb(> protested t.be productioe of nawal , .. that caused tbe rlH! G.J . .......... ~-..................... = _._..,.~ ... .,......... . ... .-.r • ............................. l.:f ' • ( Orange Cout DAILY Pll.OTIThureday, Maron 11, 1982 . Why speed through the magic of reading?· fhdlo pro1rammln1 chanees; fads co m andJo· and last year 's ulhum-orient ·rock 11 replaced by this ycur '11 all-newa-and·talk, whkh will be replaced b)' ne xt year's n•w·•lt·top..40. One thins nevttr chan1es. however : the e ndless commercials ror 1wcd·reading couraes. It sffms they have been a part of Ame rica 's J background noise for 20 years or more. The other day -as I was listening to yet another pitch for a free , introductory speed-reading seminar -I wondered why it was that I had never even considered glving the concept a try. The answer was a simple one. Speed-reading Is not a good thing. Jl was never meant to be. It deserves not to be learned. READING IS one or life's great pleasures. Reading should be Avored; words should be chewed like the most expensive fine food, s hould be lingered over. should be cherished. Speed-reading promises lo do away with all that. The commercials and advertisements say that, if only we will all learn to speed -read. we will be able lo devour phenomenal amounts of words in mere minutes. Books that previously Look U6 weeks to finish can .. be done •w•y with in a few hours. Ousiness correspondence can be taken in In seconds. Well ... If lhat'as what happens, I'd rather not know how. The 1reatest pieces of literature known to man - elegant nov e ls. lov e letters , 111 lilllll •ood, thick novel . . fine. Who Is reially like ll. I will call a friend and appuenUy resigned, murder twitches better served If you learn to read that read ll aloud. There Is a certain maaic like a fetus. At some trifling new novel 11n an hour· and-a -hall? Those to the way the best writers put together assessment, aJI the colonies rebel" three weeks are not wasted time; &r lhe words: I do not think J want lo know It you knew how to speed-read, you novel pulls you into It, ir It makes you how lo avoid that magic. would h•ve passed over that In a tenth believe you know its characters and The speed -readin(I propon ents of u second maybe even raster. But care about their lives, then you promise that comprehens ion ls would you have been any richer for ll? probably would like the three weeks to Improved. too, when one masters their would there have been a relaUonshlp 10 on longer, not to be shortened. technique. I'm not sure how something between you and the author? called "comprehension" is measured; Th be MANY AUTHO&S work years on If It means that when you've finished ere are many arguments lo books. ls It necessary for us to learn to reading something you can recall whut made for the streamlining of our J read those books In a d•y? The reason a the pie<:e was about, then I'm s ure they society. It is cost-efficient to make book can take so long to write is that have a point. certain things less complex, more easy conscientious authors labor tQ find just to absort>. room-service menus -were not meant the right phrase, to set just the right BUT THERE are certain bits of But as we become a nation governed to be gobbled. Everything else in this tone. They are doing It for us, the writing that are so beautiful I cherish by computer chips and video 11creens, it world has been speeded up, but reading readers; tbey want us to become part of them, and I refuse to believe that I seems to me that the process of reading should be left the way it always was. the world they are creating. would even have noticed them if I had s hould be left as is. For a civilization to In this electronic age, information is Is It a good idea, then. to master a known how to speed-read. Here is rem aln a civilization, there must be fed to us instantanousty: we eet our· technique in which our eyes can zap in a something from John Barth: lime left for thought and reflection For new11 from television as fast u the ear scanning pattern over a pa1e? The "She paused amid the kitchen to a peol?le to remain a people, there must can hear and the eye can see. I am radio commerci"I for Jpeed-reading drink a gll!SS of water; at that instant. be honor left in that thought and typing this column on a computer say that, even at the free introductory losing a g rip of SO years, the reflection device that, with the pressing of a lesson, you can learn to read 100 next-room·ceiling-plaster crashed. Or I have no doubt that -in countless button, can transfer it to the type you percent faster . Undoubtedly, the he merely sat in an empty study, in Hol iday Inn ballroom s around the see on your n ewspaper page. All commercials are true. March-day glare. listening to the shelf country s peed-reading teachers have communications technology in the last I must confes8 that I do not wish to let go. For ages the fault creeps secret the ability to make us know the mastery three or four decades has been devoted read 100 percent faster. I am a fairly through the rock; in a second. ledge and of their cruft. But it seems like a craft to making us garner our information s low reader, and I like that about railings. tourists and turbines all not worth knowing , reading is magic, faster. myself. Orten, when I read a paragraph thunder over Niagara. Which snowflake and to reduce it lo a sprint for the eye•_. So reading s hould be left alone. Ir it that pleases me, I will go over it a few triggers the avalanche? A house s erves only to diminish that magic, and takes you three weeks to get through a times. This gives m e pleasure. If I explodes; a s tar. In your spouse, so in the end render it meaningless ~~--~~~~~~~;::.._.~-.-~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..-----..-~~~~~~~~~~~~__;;;._~~~- Newport Beach f'ash1on IJJand 644-4411 al Mr. e/1101'1· South Co.tst Plan 557-6080 ' 6-MONTH ACCOUNT ElfKhVt' through Mar 15. % ANNUAL RATE ANNUAllZEIJ YIEIO MinJmum 510,000. Earns above rate ior 26-wk. term. Yield assumes all funds are reinvested at same rate, though rate may change. Compounding of interest not permitted. Rate announced weekly. ' ' 30-MONTH ACCOUNT E!ft'\ hve through Mar. 15 ANNUAL RATE ANNUAi YIELD Minimum $1,000. Earns above rate for 30· month term. Interest compounded daily. Rate announced every two weeks. 13y Federal law, Certificate withdrawals are sub1ect to subsla.Ql.ial penalty. Savin~ insured to $100,000. RCA CLOSE-OUT Al Ca•al11 at DHler Coit, c ... & Cerry Al Seh Wcllde ,,.. Fectory Warr..ty lil Ant cw flrit ..,..eel INllll. Mmy to c .. oM from. FULL SERVICE DEPT. for Vid~o Recorde~. Microwave\ and TV '\ on Premi\es 5HZJll 23 T-Moc111 Aw.-~ Tl,.. & a-OtlPloy Ceble ~ ... th "' Ownolo Slft.00 vrs.41 o. y Al20 Ou•••' t Port1bl• V•d•o • 4 day l'iogiw111-,.,,..., 10& -Tunong Sfft.00 ZENITH SPECIALS nl-! SHl'6l -.. ..... ___ _ 1r ~ 3C4000 ~ COt11R11 - MY•-So.tee Pho,,. Tome Cont•ol ~C-.Aeqtllf.ot ~ "''°'r~ -1•-1r~--"""--sJlt..IO VHS TAPES 'I 250 1982 .. TACHI SIGNAL TRACKHS Cl CTltli tr r-a.10c111 ...,_ _.... ......,, *""' ...... ~ io.-11 ~PltM CT2116 II" '-..... ,__,. -,....,. .. .,..._°"""' Owwlll .,.,._. 161fM C11117 Ir 0.-Oiu•r•wr I OM .... -.... -T"'*ll ....... __ _.. •Oolfl ··-~ Tokai Bank will not only :~~~-,~'. . take good care of your money, we'll make it grow and growl Our Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) are currently paying 16%~ interest, guaranteed for the next 18 months.•• And since IRA accounts are tax-sheltered , the earned interest is tax-deferred. That's • about as good an insured investment as you'll find. Our NOW checking account lets you write checks and puts your money to work earning Interest. r;======= ~--1)~ .~Jt : ~ q~# " \\" OPEN A '.I'_,: .. , won't be any TAX-SHELTERED monthly maintenance TOKAI IRA fees for your 18 month term. That's a very ACCOUNT AT 1S°/o* good deal indeed. ~WAND HERE'S WHAT But there's sti~I , more. Tokai will YOU U. RECEIVE. also give you cuddly • Cu"ent IRA rate 16°/o•. • FREE personal checking account that pays 51~~ interest. • FREE EJNrs. · bears. They'll watch over you and let you know th~t everything's all right. Jus\ as everything's all tight when your money is growing and earning at Tokai Bank. Many banks charge maintenance fees for NOW acocunts. But when you open an IRA account for $500 or more, there Call or drop in at the Tokai office nearest you. And go home with new friends, and ne)N financial security . 'Sllnpi9 lntertet ··~111 penally tar Mfly ~ RIM Mlbfect IO chlrQI. TM otler le Qood wl'lill ltlllC)liM IUI. E8Ctl ~ lneureO u.p 10 $100,000. Mlmb9r FOIC. •~· IDKAI BANK "'-'• OF CALIFORNIA NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE - 3333 Wttt Cout Highway. (114) Me-7121 HUNTINGTON BEACH OFFICE 19008 Brookhurll Street• (714) 18N811 , Orange Coa1t OAll..Y Pll..OT/ThurtdlY. March ,,, 1982 . ,. ........ STAR RECOGNIZED Actor W alter Matthau holds plaque behind star bearing his name on Hollywood's Walk of Fame. Matthau's was the I ,745th to be dedicated , on the famous walk. Girls' mental gifts def emled CHJCAGO (AP> -Contrary lo an earlier study, adolescent girls can reason things out as well as boys, according to a University of Chicago study. Professor Za l man Usiskin disputed findings by a Johns Hopkins University team that said intellectually gifted boys and girls have widely differing reasoning abilities. Usiskin's study of 1,366 geometry students at 11 public high schools in fi ve stales focused on bas ic geometry skills, which the professor called "the guts of mathematics" because they require high-level mathematical mastery He said the study was a good test for sex differences because it requires both abstract reasoning and spatial ability In recent studies on problem solvi n'g, consumer application, and on the mathematics portions of the Scholasltc Aptitude Test, boys outperformed girls. But Us1skin said these tests rely heavily on outside experiences, where boys have an edge, rather t han s kills learned equall y in a classroom Sex differences fail to appear when students are tested on materials that are taught and practiced extensively, he s aid. Usiskin said this ability lo learn geometry skills and fi gure out problems is equivalent lo reasoning. However, Professor J C. Stanley, who directed the Johns Hopkins s tudy in 1980, said the University of Chicago s urvey doesn't s how an ything about reasoning ability but simply supports "something we've known for SO y~ars ... "What he <UsiskinJ is talking about is sort of irrelevant." Stanley said. "No one has ever found that girls are poorer learners than boys Wh al they don't do is reason as well as boys. There's a difference in reasoning s kills. and there's no point in saying there's not." Colu01hia landing views available County residents will have an opportunity to view the third l anding of the space shuttle Columbia on its scheduled return to the California desert on March 29. The Santa Ana Chamber of Commerce will distribute passes allowing vehicles to enter the shuttle viewing site at Edwards Air Force base on a first-come, first·served basis this week. Interested people should contact the chamber at 1616 E . Fourth St.. Santa Ana. . "WE·CARE" . FOtt ALL OF YOUR HEALTH MEEDS or£H EVEJr DAY EVIN~EHD 9:00 4M-,:OO PM U4SOH41LE HES THAI Sm: BLOWS! 1 Whale Watch Cruises Antique Show/Sale Today Thru Sun .. Mar. 14 at the Huntington Center Mall. Outstanding collections from 50 dealers. Also Free Evaluation Clinic. 405 Fwy. and Beach Blvd .. H.B. WEEKDAYS 10AM WEEKENDS 9:30 AM & 1 :30 PM Leaving froDl the MLlll PIWILllll Adult'> S8. Children SS . FREE ~00 Kodak Film with • new acrylic 1et1 and flls. offer · 1 30th .. -· -' Jury to decide drunken party liability JllAJJ.!!t SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -It's a party. One auest la a little tlpsy, but the host d002Sn't want to refuse him another drink. It wouldn't be, polite. But an appeals court here ruled that a jury should decide whether that host might htter be held responsible for a drunken guest's actions after the party. The case Involves Arden Gage of Redmond, Ore., who was seriously injured when his car was struck by a pickup •. truck driven by George T. Rhinehart, an employee of J .D. Dutton Inc. Court records showed that Rhinehart became intox..icated at a party thrown in Redmond by Dutton, an Olympia, Wu s h ., construcllon compa'ny . Rhinehart left the party and drove his truck the wrong way on a one·way street, hilling Gugc's vehicle. After Gage settled w(th Rhinehart, he s ued Dutton, Gordon Bjerke, Duane Wright and Rick Jones for serving liquor to an adult "with reason to know" of his intoxication and the likelihood he would drive a car while drunk. U.S. District· Court Ju<t'ge Robert Belloni held a social host was not liable in the absence of unusual facts. But the 9th U.S. Circuit of Appeals called Belloni's ruling premature and said a jury should decide Dullon's liubillty and the possible ne1Ueence by defondanta. It returned the case to the trhtl court. Gage argued that under common law, social hosts have a duty to re fuse i.lcohol to an Intoxicated 1uest whom they know wtll probably drive a car. He said a host who continues to supply liquor is liable for Injuries to a third party by,the intoxicated person. T-he fede ral appeals court noted that there was ample Hqud~ at the Redmond party, paramedics were called to revive one guest who arrived intoxicated and at least one right broke out. Three guests also were driven home at the request of the project manager . p E•PARKING LO ALE SAVOGRAN@ STRYPEEZE REMOVER STRIPEEZE •99-$17.27 We 59~~. SUPER STRIP - Reg. $22.00 s12aa G~. MINWAX Quality wood stains. All sizes 112 pts. thru gals ·SAVES ·TIME ·MONEY I OZ. SIZE lec)'l.29 Yo off .. SOCIETY'• Wille" ..... ....... cordltlls. s-..-...$4.99 Ru.Doctor. CARPET CLEANER 1 2 PRICE OFF RENTALS BEACH CHAIRS Aluminum frame with heavy blue canvas covers. 59'' W• hot» to hon ow R•w lot Mhlftd tt.. Cor0tta ct.I Mar StonCo~MntWHk CUISINART LIST OLC10ES130 DLC8E $185 CONCEPT wltll power .... 2 sp••d lftotor with h.adll9ht. Mf9. 51199. $259.95 #1101 s19999 lndudn 9 pc. tool set. ~. Ollfole_..c cord ...wtnd. 2 speed -.otor. ~Sugg. $329.95 I 9 HllO • • .. ASTROTURF by MOMG11to. Door Mats lhJO ..... $1.91 ECOLOGIZH Air Purifier 'l'HE Food p~· CITRUS JUICER 0 Fw-Tt. k'.~t. .. 21XXJ .. Fits roost food processors and ail Cuisinart models. s14aa ICONTINUEDI 2411 BRITE LITE Fluorescent hght fixture with S 88 replacable bulb. Travel/Stationary Smoke Alarm by First Alert Use for travel or install penrenently 1n yaur home Q:imes -Mth travel case VAUG ... RAM ING HAMMERS Miledfau, 20-24-28-32 OL 1 500-includes 5 attachments. pro style. s21aa PittsbunJh Paints SATINHIDE. Lo-Lustre Latex Enamel Reg. $12.99 I OO's of colors to c:hooM ...... TACO TRIO Includes everything you need to make perfect taco shells. Shell former. fi lling tae*. & turner. CROWll -·-~.~·ed-­HARDWARE WISTCLlff Pl.Ali 1024 ........... ALL STOllS OPIH 7 DAYS WISTCLIH THURSOAY lU. l:OO · HAllOI YllVt CIMTll 1614S..M .... Dr. Meq11il•••• 644-1570 1111c•111 THI coum T HURSDAY, MARCH 11 , 1982 CA VALCADE ENTERTAINMENT TELEVISION 82 83·4 BS In ' Whose Li/ e J s It Anyway ?'' R ic ha r d D reyfuss pla y ea a character close to his oum heart. See Page 84. D 0 Airport planner 'switches sides' for Newport By STEVE MARBLE Of ... 04llty ............ 1<en Delino knows a thing 01 two about airports. He's planned them , he's qu ieted them down and has wa lked the Cine li ne between those who hate them and those who don't He's worked as a top planher ror t he county's airport land w;e commission as well BR for the farm heading efforts lo helping John Wayne Airport expand Now he works for Newport Beach. a city that has spent nearly half a million doll ars in t ht: last year fighting airport expansion. Delino resists the thought that he has changed sides, that he has jumped from u pro-airport team to one th(lt is critical of the county airfield He describes himself as a Spare that serpent! Countian says snakes harm.less, wants them saved By JERRY H l!:RTENST EIN Di -Dally l"l ... SUH Michael Bloom cares about snakes. He's concerned about keeping them alive. Th e you n g Westminster resident, an employee at the F luor Corp. sn Irvine, says he will do anything to help capture a potentiall y troublesome snake. Snakes, including rattlers, sometimes slither from the wet , denser, wi lder a reas of Orange County to the sunny, warmer, hilly residential spots in s prang and late summer . That means residents can be surprised when they find the unwant e d v i sit or in the ir backyard or house. People panic. Bloom claims. Often the initial reaction 1s to kill the s n ake But Bloom contends rattlesnakes or other reptiles "never intentionally" hu rl anyone. "T hey only s trike out of self-defe nse,·• he said ... A sn ake's first instinct is to run but it can't get away so it is going to strike. "What can they do?" he asks . .. A person looks large to them. A snake 1s scared." Mike has been collecting and working wi t h snakes · for six yea rs. Although he isn't an expert, he says experience proves lo him snakes ''do feel pain. "I happen lo ca r e about snakes the same as l do a relative or person close to me," he sa id. "I feel snakes deserve some respect." Bloom is hoping to educate the public about snakes. He already has lectured at schools. He is also concerned with attit ude of animal control officers. Do officers kill s nakes, or. as Mike would like to see. capture them and rerease them in unpopulated areas? Oally ,,_ -.., ClMrtn S4MT MELVIN THE PYTHON Michael Bloom plays with a pet Burmese python named Melvin. The non ·poisonou~ snake is 7 years old and \H~ighs 40 pounds. A survey reveals differences in policies by animal control officers. Some do all they can to s a v e l ~e s n a k e . o t h e r s apparently kill them on sighting and take them to rem ote areas away from where campers and other v1s1tors congregate Sgt. Donald said Bloom would like to learn of problem areas so he can attempt to save snakes . For example. Tricia Cook, an\~al services control officer in Laguna Beach, says snakes are killed there. B loom contends anima l control officers should learn how to capture snakes. He sajd it is usually illegal to keep a captured s nake. but he wi II be sure it is released in wilderness area fret> of people lie said an ill or injured snake will be taken lo a veterinarian licensed to keep 1t long enough to doctor it lo health She s aid one rattlesnake has been killed this year . 40 to 50 were killed in 1981 and in 1980 when heavy rains drove rattlers out of the thickets, 50 were slain in Laguna. Or . he says. someone who finds a snake m their house can clos e th<• door tu the room and tu II for help A IJox can be thrown over u snake until aid arrives. P arker Hancock. head ranger at 5,500-acre Caspers Wilderness Park e a s t of Sa n Juan Capistrano, said snakes are part of the protected wilderness. Snakes are · a l ways destroyed ... s aid Sg t Biii Donald of the county Sheriirs office. He estimated 30 snakes were killed in 1981 by his men. Bloom can be r eac hed al 894 -6315 or 966-5578. And he says his name, along with the n a mes of others ed ucated in capturing snakes. are on file at the Californi a Alligator Farm in Buena Park and Prentice Park Zoo in Santa Ana. Rangers will round up snakes The majority of calls come from hilly areas of El Toro. Lag una NiRue l , San Juan Ca pistrano and north Fullerton, By CHARLES H. LOOS Of tlle Dally ...... JU H When it comes to guragc salt·~. th(• Port Abtx>y gang dol'sn't fool around On a March weekend memorable for its near-perfect weather. this remarkable group conducted a memorable garage sale A garage sale'.' Well. yes. And when it was over. the profits distributed and the debts settled, t'vcr yone agreed it was so much fu.n th at we ought to do it again. Someone eve n s uggested that it might s upplant the annual Port Abbey Place Beach Party and Fourth of July Picnic. This big mouth was booed into immcruate s ilence. The beach party and picnic. incidentally, never has been held on the Fourth of J uly. In fact. if memory serves, It has been he ld in July only once But I dlgre s. THE WOMEN, OF course. came up with the idea. By the time they were t hro u g h t a ppi n g t he ir con s idcruble organb.ational talents. fully half of the 20 houst·holds sn tht· 1800 block of Port Abbe~· Place were 111volvcd in the garage sale t\ fl'w households on neighboring stn'<•ts joined. too Port Abbey Plat'e is in a section of ~cwpnrt Beach known as Harbor View llo mes . The name sounds nic<.'. but it's doubtful any of t he fo lks living there can see Newport Harbor. even if the~· stand on their rooftops. Harbor View Homes. or Buffa lo I lilts as it sometimes is called. was built b~· Donald Bren in the late 1960s. in Bren's pr e· I rvine Company days. Once upon a time. it actually was a buffa lo ranc h. T hat red barn at t he corner of MacArthur ' Boulevard and Ford Road was part of t he ranch. Architect William Pereira. who likes old barns. took it over when he was master-planning the Irvine Ranch and dubbed the rambling building Ur banus Square. I HAVE A FRIEND who grew up on Balboa Is land and. as a teen ager. s he sold buffalo burgers to the folks on the tour bus4.!S that s topped at the ranch . But back to the garage sale. As Saturday dawned. the goods. a ll priced and identified as to owner. were spread over four driveways a nd garages techntcian who knows airport matters well and has been "in the middle all the lime." "I'm strn in the middle," he says, "even t hough my loyalty Is dltferent. l felt beforehand that Newport Beach is a reasonable com munity and I still feel the county is reasonable." Delino is Newport's executive assistant t o C i ty M a n ager Robert Wynn. He was sought out largely because of his expertise on airports and land uRe around airports. He s ays he has experience s 1ft1ng technical dat a from politi cal talk and gettin g communication established between airport operators and upset airport nei((hbors. Newport, which has been involved in one battle or another with the county over the airport oper ation, is now in a holding pattern or sorts. waiting for completion of a court ruling that str uck down the county's airport master plan. Delino s ays he's unsure what the' county's next move will be. whether to appeal the court decision or start work on a new master plan. While Newport officials have held up the court decision as a sign or victory, Delino says several othe r t hings have happened recently that could put the city at a disadvantage. Dally "ll .. S-- SWITCHING? Longtime airport planner Ken Delino now wor ks for Newport Beach as an opponent or air port expansion. For starters, he sa,Ys, there was a speech by Federa l Aviation Administrator J Lynn Helms in Dallas saying the FAA will fight California a irport noise restrictions and curfews Newport has relied 0 11 state noise laws a s we ll as the county's existing 10 p.m . curfew on jet departvres as basic tools for preventing noise around the airport from increasing Aliso working against th~ city. Delino says, is McDon nell Douglas' DC-9 Super-80, t he Jetliner billed as the quiet jet or the future. De li no says the jet has not lived up to its advertis ing. He says it's not nearly as quiet as hoped . He argues that these points alone could unr avel the county's mas ter pla n, w hic h relied heavily on the Super-80. Airport officials had hoped more nights could be added and noi se aroun d the airport reduced.· Regions of Newport and the unincorporated county island of Santa Ana Heights receive much of the: noise of departing jets. Delino speculates that t he county may come to believe 1t cann ot r e d uce t he noise - 1mpacted area around the airport. He says airport operators may even opt to increase flights fie suggests that could be done by getting airlines to s hift to the S uper· 80 Jets He s ays as Supe r-80s r eplace other jets in use at the airport. the county can permit more daily takeoffs wit h out 1ncrea sj n g t h e noise-impacted area around the airport Voter registratio.n soaring Co unty record seen as tot a l passes 993,000 By FREDERICK SCHOEM EHL Di t•• Dallv ~I ... SUH Voter r egistration in Ora nge County has s urpassed 993,000 • and officials say it 's a virtual certainty that a r egistration record soon wi ll be set Registrat ion in the county topped the one million mark just prior to the 1980 presidential election. and fell back to about 900,000 after rolls were purged. A s o( f ive days ago , registr ation had c lim bed t o 993,148. Registrar of Voters Al , Olson said he expects the figure to keep climbing at a rapid rate through May 10. T hat's the last day for persons to register lo vote in the June 8 primary elections for a variety of county and stale offices. Orange County has been identified by Secr etary of Slate March Fong Eu as one of 11 counties in California 1n which regis tration h a s s how n a dramatic increase Olson s aid the fi ve-day old figures for the county s how that the Republican Party holds a su b s tantia l lead over the Democratic Party. T here were 461 ,350 pers ons affiliated with the Republicans. compa red to 406,862 for the Democrats . Other parties and the size of their ranks were American Independent. l 1.592; P e a ce and Freedom . 2,591; Libertarian . 17 ,2 10 , and miscellaneous. 857. More than 92.000 voters declined to stale a pa rly affili a lion. Olson noted that 1l has been four years since the Democratic Party held an edge over its Republican rival in regist ration. And that lead was o nly 3.000 vote rs. Per sons who have not registered for the J une primary and wish to do so may pick up voter registration cards at many public buildings throughout the cou n ty , including public libraries, or can have a card sent lo them by telephoning the registrar's office at 834-2244 . In a related matter, the county Board of Supervisors approved on Tuesday a $120,000 study of ways o f improving t he computeri zed system t hat handles registr ations, sample balloL5 and election night totals . Olson s aid many programs have not been updated for 10 to 15 years. Th~ study will be conducted by Arthur Young and Co And today , s up e r v i sor s approved a second request by the reg1str~r ·s office for $99,000 to hire II 8 . Rosen beck to prov ide data processing consulting services to the county through February 1983. Co unt y officials say rea pportio n m e nt o f stat e Assembly, Senate and federal congressional dis tricts. t he need for a special election in a stale Senate dis t r ict and oth er last-minute electoral problems ne cessi tated hiring o f t he consultant Building to burn? This request may seem a bit strange. The Orange County Council of lhe Boy Scouts of America 1s looking for som eone with a building they want burned down. Any old house or otherwise condemned s tructure will do. T h e council ne e ds t h e s t ruct ure fo r f ire control training during the Ninth Annual C a l iforn i a Fire Explorin g Academy, April 5-9. Academy attendees are taught about a r son investigation. f1refight1ng a nd search and rescue techniques. Thal 's why the structure 1s needed so that the firefighting instruction involves "the real thing." Dean Egertson , a council executive, s aid a nyone who donates a structure can receive a tax deduction. If yo u hav e a building available for dest ruction, call 546-4990 a happening- ' up and down lhe s treet. There was a general merchandise driveway. Another served as the furniture and appliance section. There was a s idewalk clothes rack arrived earl~" One noted loudly to no one in pa rticular that. at some garage sales. customers arc offered refres hments Someone quieted her by handing her a cup of coffee. It, perhaps. was the fi rst garage sale in history with its own athletic trainer. He ministe red to furniture movers m t he group who re-discovered long forgotte n muscles T he neighborhood kids got mto it. One I know rather well sold a World War It born b (devoid of the t hings that make bombs explode l that his mother had been trying to get out or his room for months. To the disbelief of the garage sale organizer s. he got five buc ks for it. A man who sajd it was just what he had been looking ror to decorate a corner of h is garage bought it. YOU KNOW WHAT they say: One m a n's junk is a nother m an's treas ure. Another enterprising-youngster 'bought se~eral Items, marked them up and resold the m . His was sort of a garage sale within a gar age sale. The re was the ine vitable dog, the biggest.· homeliest puppy I've ever seen. who snatched up a s mall plastic football a nd loped off down the street. The cu lomers were inter esting. The professional garage sale·J{oers An e lderly gentleman carrit>d his purchases away oee at a time in his car. He came back half a dozen times. Entire families came from Santa Ana in beat-up station wagons. SOME HA RD-BA R GAI NING folks from who· knows where arrived in a truck they parked discreetly a round the corner. A balding fo rmer Stanford basketball star loaded several new-found treasures into his Mercedes coupe. Another man drove off toward Costa Mesa with a couch he fancied dangling precar iou s ly from t h e r ea r of his hatchback. Everyone wished him well It was more tha n a garage sale . really. I~ was zeal for spring house cleaning. It was a block party. lt made money. but nobody really cared about t hat . It was the universal appea l of a bargain. It was a treasure hunt. It tled up traffic. It was a social eve nt. People who wer en't interested in buying anything stopped by j ust to chat. It concluded with a big pizza pa rty. 1t brought neighbors closer togethe r . .. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thul'9day: Matoh t. 1982 •ANN LANDERS •ERMA BOMBECK •HOROSCOPE Bridge-partners should throw • Ill the deck DEAR ANN LANDERS: I don't know if you are a bridge player, but I think you will be able to give me an intelligent ·ans wer whether you play the game or not. Friday night m y husband Phil and I we re playing bridge with my cousin and h er h~s b a nd . The y are both tournament-caliber and give us a run for our money. We play for ralrly steep stakes. Phil has a ha bit of becoming too confident and overbidding his hand. I've told him a hundred times to cool lt, but it doesn't seem to soak in. Last night he bid six hearts. I couldn't believe it. All l said was, "Either you have lost your mind or I need new glasses." The look he gave me nearly peeled the paint oft the walls. Then he snap~. "Why don't you jus t play your own hand and keep your trap shut?" We fell two tricks short, which was exactly what I had figured. Phil was so mad~hought he would pop an a rtery. r my cousin and her husb and left . Phil aid in that controlled voice I know so well, "If you hadn't opened your yap we • HOROSCOPE BY SIDNEY OMARA Aquarius: Start anew Friday , March 12 ARIES (March 21-April 19): Period ej ha rassment is finished. You rebound from emotiona l setback. You also recoup recent loss. You'll be rid of burden and gain wider recognition. TAURUS (April 20-May 201 : New app roach to basic services wins approval. You're going to make new start. gain added independence and be in contact with one who s howers you With affection. GEMINI (May 21-June 20>: Follow through on hunch: you'll teach, learn and regain sense of direction. Individual who aided you in past will make reappearance. Confidence is restored. first impressions prove correct. CANCER <June 21-July 22 >: Green light flas hes for g reater freedom o f thought. action. You'll divers ify. make numerous contacts. socialize and travel. Sense of security is heightened, period of uncertainty is fin ished. LEO <July 23-Aug. 22>: Emphasis on revision, review, replacement of defective items. Focus on s afety measures and communication with relative in transit. Ve r satility. humor, added popularity dominate intrif!uin~ scenario. . VIRGO (Aug. 23 Sept. 221: Emphasis on change, travel. variety, payments and collections . Communicate needs in graphic manner . Financial picture is brighter than originally anticipated. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ): You win your way : circums tances favor your efforts. Judg ment. timing and intuition are on target. Make personal appearances. t a ke initiative in restoring f a mily harmony. SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21 >: Obtain valuable hint by studying Libra message . Source of irritation is removed. Family member makes conciliatory gesture. Be positive, gracious and express gratitude. SAGIT'llARI US <Nov. 22-Dec. 21 l : What began as flirtation could become a serious relationship. Lunar emphasis on romance, fulfillment of hopes, aspirations. Commitment is made. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19 l : Morale soars as compliment comes from one who previously seemed indiff erenl. Project or assignment will be completed. What had been an obstacle to progress will be pushed aside. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18>: Good lunar aspect coincides with new start. long-range project, travel and the overcoming of distance, langtiage barriers. Emphasis on law, conscience, ability to put views across in dynamic manner. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20 >: Hunt for clues will bring desired results . Dig be neath surface indications. Focus on · financial status of would-be associates, partners. POT SHOTS BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT LIKE You. I AM JUST AN ORDINARY PERSON, LIVING INAN E'XTRAORDINARY WORLD. would have made that damned bid. You and I have played our last bridge game as partners." It seems to me that I'm the one who should be angry, not Phil. Your opinion , ~lease. -DECKED IN PlDLADEl:.PHIA DEAR DECKED: It's not important who said wtat to whom. I see 52 good reasons you and you husband should never play cards together. Throw ln the deck, Toots. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Twice in the last few weeks I have re«td the phrase "hard of hearing" in your column. Surely you must be aware that the appropriate d esignation in recent years is "hearing impairment." Other than that. we Jove your column. -IN VALLEJO DEAR VALLEJO: I hear you loud and clear. Thanks for the correction. DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 a m a EDSEL ACRE -Willard J olley of Columbus, N .C .. has found a way to turn lemons into lemonade -he collects Edsels, the car Ford Motor Co. lost millions of dollars on in the 1950s. But Jolley figures Ford's bad 58· year-old woman who has been a widow for five years. l have been keeping steady company with a man who is 66. Roy has never married. He lives with his sister and an uncle who is nearly ~. They s hare a house left to them by Roy's mother. who had quite a lot of money. l want to get mar ried. Roy says he'd marry me in a minute but he promised his mother he would look after his sister. <She is 72 and in good health>. Meanwhile, I have passed up several chances to go with inte resting men because Roy says he wants me all to himself or not at all. I'm afraid if I press Roy too hard on marriage he wiJJ stop seeing me. He has a temper and I have seen him Jose it. I ne~r your head to go to work on my problem and help me decide what to do. -WACO, TEX. DEAR WACO: If you au around waiting for Roy's sister to die, you have oatmeal whe re your bralas belong. He could marry you and still look after bis sister . AJI___.. luck is his good fortune, as restored models are worth thousands of dollars to collectors . He has 42 Edsels that he parks in sheds in his yard , which he calls Edsel Acre. GOREN ON BRIDGE BY CHARLES H. GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF Both vulnerable .. North deals. NORTH • 53 I? 10 7 0 Q7 + KQJ9853 WEST EAST •QJ872 •K96 c::i Q853 I? A62 0 9'3 0 10&52 + 6 +A 104 SOUTH • A104 1:;;1 KJ 94 0 AKJ8 +12 The bidding: Nortl1 Eut South Weat 3 + Pae1 3 NT Pu1 Pu1 Pu1 Opening lead: Seven or •. Sometimes. which card you play from a combination is a matter of guesswork. But at other times circumstances might dictate younchoice. At this vulnerability, we think that North i1 a little light fo r hi1 preempt. especially since he had the worst possible distribution. Vulnerable, you should be within two tricks or your preempt, and North rated to take only six tricks. South's decision to bid three no trump was perfectly normal. All that remained was for him to fulfill his contract. West led his fourth-best spade, East played the king and declarer made the technically correct play or holding up the ace. Eut con· tinued with the nine or spades, covered by the ten and won by the jack. West carefully returned the queen of spades. suggesting that his entry was in the higher rank· ing suit. i.e.. heart.s: and declarer was forced io win the ace. Declarer knocked out the ace of clubs, and East dutiful· ly shifted to a low heart. Ir you were declarer, which heart would you play from your hand? Had declarer needed a trick from the heart suit. he would have a pure fUeSS whether to play the jack or the king. But a heart trick had no bearing on the out· come of the hand, for declarer had more than enough tr icks from the minor suits alone. Declarer's sole objective was to prevent West from gaining the lead to cash his spades. If declarer inserts the jack. West will get on lead whether he holds the queen or the ace. However. if declarer plays the king. West will be able lo win only if he holds the ace. The play of the king stands twice the chance of that of the jack. and woul d succeed here. Have yo. beea naaa.l.q ID· to double trouble? Let Cbrle1 Gorea belp yo. Hod yov way tlarousb tlle mue of DOUBLES for peaalU.1 ucl for takeout. For a copy of hJ1 DOUBLES bookkt, HDd 11.85 to "G ..... o..w.1," can of ttal1 Mw1r--per, P.O. Box 259, Nerwoocl, N.J . 076'8. Make cbeckt r--yabM to New1r--perbookt. Don't delay diagnosis DEAR DR. S TEINCROHN : It's natural to look for excuses to put orr a visit to t he doctor. I think the usual reason is anxiety about what the doctor will say. Is it serious? Will the treatment be painful? For example, conside r my problem. Until a few months ago I considered m yself an unusually healthy human being. At the age of 46, I had no symptoms until one morning I passed bloody urtne. It was not palaful. By the end of the day. It had cleared up. I was disturbed, but explained It to myself as 1 temporary cold in the bladder. I decided lt wasn't important enoug h for me to visit my doctor. Nevertheless, I worried. But a week ago the bleeding returned. This time It lasted for two days. I made an appointment. Examination by a urologist revealed that I bad a stone In my bladder. He removed It throu1h a tube. The rest or the examination was ne1at1ve. What a rellef! If I had lftft him earlier I would have saved myself two montbs of unnetttsary worry. I'm wrtU.n1 this to help T JOUI HIAlTH OR. PETER J. STEINCROHN a n y other of your r eaders who are r.ocrastlnating at this moment. -MRS. DEAR MRS. K.: Our guess is that hundreds of thousands or Americans are at this moment concerned about their health -unnecessarily. · I could mention scores of examples which indicate that procrastination causes unnecessary concern and actual fear. The point we're trying to m ake is this : When symptoms cause concern, don't let procrastination ruin your daily existence. The earlier you discover the cause the bett,er. But happily. the doctor's verdict will not invariably be that you are seriously ill. One way or another you wm reel relief. I have beard his story before. (Usually it's the mother, not a sister>. Accept opportunities to get to know other men. If ROy doesn't like I~. be can marry you and eliminate the problem. CONFIDENTIAL to Embarrassed by tlfe Fool : Why should you be? He made himself look ridiculous, not you. And please don't be so critical or fools. If it weren't for them, the rest of us wouldn't look so good. Are drug& OK 1f you learn how to control them? Can they be of help? The an.tweT1 are in Ann Landen' new booklet, "The lotodown on ~." For each booklet ordered , send $2.00, plu1 a long, ael/-addruaed, &tamped envelope (37 cents poitogeJ to Ann Lander&, P 0. Box J 1995. Clncago, IU . 60611. EIMA IOMIECI AT WIT'S END Attitudes hit nerve Our aerobics ins tructor told us the other morning that the highest suicide rate in the country was among dentists. She explained this was because of people's basic fear and general rejection of them as people. Des pite the fact these public servants are he re lo help mankind. they are shunned and associated only with pain . She added the second highest suicide rate was among aerobics instructors The reasons were the same. iT MAKES ME feel rotten that neither group understands how the human mind functions. They have to reali ze they're dealing with people who are bas ically weak, cowardly and unappreciative . . . especially when they're bleeding or have a cramp in th ei r l egs . Sometimes. precipients of their services don't even pretend they're havi ng a good time. A l o t of i t co m es dow n to communication. Aerobics instructors gel off to a bad s tart just by covering the walls with mirrors . They shouldn 't do that. It makes the aerobees surly and they say things they're sorry for. Then. they have you touch your knees to your chin. Ri ght off, we question why we 're doing that. We don't get a lot of requests for it. And just when you think your entire body is on fi re. the instructor will say. "I don't see anyone smiling." a nd "You're not breathing ... When the s tude nt hears this. she becom es quite desp ondent and th e instructor feels this a nd feels responsible for it. DENTISTS ARE NO better. Seeing that tray full of s harp instrume nts and the hanging drills at eye level takes away the party atmosphere . Most patients are so ter rified that even a s imple crack like. "How have you been'?" is construed as probing. • Sometimes they're not realistic. When they ask, "Does this hurt?" when they tap your filling with a metal hammer. what do they think you're going to say ? "No"? Grow up! It's a fact that cavities and cellulite will always be with us. We know it isn't personal. but the re are j ust some t hings you can't be grateful for. Incide nta lly. know what the third hig hest suicide rate is in the country'! It's a tie between dental patients and aerobic s tudents. lllftllf . . 8v ~Hll INTERLANDI of Laguna:.Beach 3 ·ll . --..:.. .. ~--.-~. •\, ---~._,...,,,,.._..,,. ........... . "Did you work t'dy'a cra'wrd pde1" . D'Oyly Carte 'dead' at 107 LONDON (AP> "Heavy the sorrow that bow!i lht' head," J osephine ws rbled sadly us the O'Oyly C•rte Opura Company 1ave Ila swan song pe rrormnnce of "11.M.S P lnutore ." Aftor 107 years or staging Gilbert and Sulllvon'is buoyunl operettas, as Enells h as bowler hoh1, the company hus closed for lack of money. 0 ·and·S •buffs lined up for standlng·room tic kets for the fina l ma tinee a nd e ven i ng performances at the Ade lphi Theater In the Strand, just up the road from the Savoy where the works of satirist William Schwenk Gilbert and composer Arthur Sullivan first cast their spell. "It's part of our her itage that's disappearing," said Keith Bell , 23, who traveled 200 miles from Newcastle in northeast England with three fe llow Savoyards lo see D'Oyly Carte's final curtain An American in the crush for tickets, Bra ndeis University student Naomi Hirs ch, 20, of Bethesda, Md., s aid: "I think it's terrible. England without D'Oyly Carte -it just doesn'tmake sense." there was a ray of hope, however, for D'Oyly Carte's 100 singers, musicians, staff and their loyal fans. A high-powe r ed committee head ed by Britain's wartime sweetheart Dame Vera Lynn has been set up to raise funds for a new D'Oyly Carte. The company announced Saturday that a $1 8 million fund appeal will be launched next month in ho pes or a re vival by ne xt year. More than $637,000 has already bee n pledged. But for the cast in Saturday's last "Pinafore" and an evening gala of highlights from the 13 Savoy operas, it was a sad day "The whole cast feels very emotional," said John. Ay ldon, cast as Dick Deadeye alongside vete ran baritone John Reed 's Sir Joseph Porter in "Pinafore." As telegrams, flowe rs a nd cards reading "Goodbye and Good Luck" arrived backstage, company manager Gordon MacKenzie with D'Oy ly Carte for 22 years -s aid. "We never thought it could ha ppen. "The cast is very upset. There won't be any party after the show tonight but they'll probably congregate in the pu b for a last drink together." T he head of the company, Dame Bridget D'Oyly Carte, 73. gra nddaughter of Richa rd D'Oy ly Carte who brought Gilbert and Sullivan together. was in t he t heater for the la st performance. The troupe claims it was the victim of its own success Unlike most opera companies, 1t has neve r had a penny in state subsidies, earning 86 pe rcent or its income from the box office . Despite this it lost $446,500 last year. canceled a p lanned U.S. t our a nd appe a led lo the gove rnme nt Arts Council for a survival grant. The a pplication was turned down with the verdic t that the D'Oyly Carle style had become "wooden and ti red " "This was a complete misunderstanding of how Gi lbert and Sullivan opera should be pl ayed," MacKenzie countered . ··we a rc upholding a tradition and have played to many m illions or people, lords. ladies and generals among them , the length and breadth of this country, the United States. Ca nada , Aust ralia. New Zealand. even Den mark and Rome." Irish /est slated in Newport Center Old Irish songs as well as a few American fa vorites will be pres ented Sunday in the m ain court al Newport Center in honor of St. Pat rick's · Day. The t: 15 p. m sing fest is being sponsored by the Newport Beach Arts Commission and the Fas hion Island Merchants Association. The event is open to the public and song s heets will be available. Oscar Fever rules I 1 \II 1•nll'lt'' mu'I ht• on .on 1111111al hlanl. 1 hl'lll'il ll'Om thl· 1>:11h l'1lot \:11 phntoe11p11•.., 111' h.onil tlr,1\\11 1·ntn hlanl.' "111 ht• ,11·1 1·p\\•tl :!• ll1tll\ 11111.ol' 111.t\ t·111t·1 '" rn.1111 tir1to·' ·" 111,., 111.1 :i , 1·:111111•.., nn"t 1;1• pn ... 1111.11 k1•tl 1111 l.1t1•1 th.111 \l.11d1 27. 1!111:! t • IJ:1th f'lilll \'lllflftt,\ t't'" .111tf 11ll'llll1l'I ' 11J lhl'll 1m nwd1ah• l.1m1 1o,., an· 11o1t •·l11:1hl1· 1•1 ••1111•1 :;, S1•lt•1·1111n' 11111,1 h1 · 111.1111• tn •·.1d1 t .ilo 1!01' 1111 omph-11·1•111 "'''' \\ill 11111 h t· .11·1·1·pt1•tl Oscar Fe ver OF'FICJ.'\L B.\Ll.OT Ht'T l'ICTl Rt O All antic Co ty O c nanots of Fort O On GoldPn Pood O Raider s of the Lost Ark O Reds O Warren Beatty O Henry Fooda 0 Burt Lancaster 0 Dudley Moore 0 Paul Newman S l l'PORTI"· \j TOR Q JamesCoco 0 John Gleioud Q ian Holm 0 Ja<k Nicholson 0 Howard E Rollins J r ~ w.-rr .. n BeAllV Huqn HuOWI\ .... LOu•S Malle [ i Mark Rydl'll Stevt'n Se>oelt>er g ) Katnarone Hepburn O Diane Keaton C Mar~ha Mawn ~ Su\t!n Sarandon ..] M l'rYI Stre,p Sl 1' l'ORT"(, \("TR t,..;, 0 M el Inda Diiion 0 J"ne Fond" 0 Joan Hacke ti 0 Elizabeth McGovern 0 Ma ureen Stapleton ORU:" \L SO,<; O Best That YoY Can Do O Endleu Love • O The First Time In Happen\ O For Y<>Yr Eves Only O One More Hour Deadline Midnight Much 27, 1982 OSCAR f'EVER IS SPONSORED RY THE ~Pillt PRl7.F.S PRF..SF.:'llTt:ll ll\' The Grand Dinner Thf'ater '\\It. ___________ ;;;.._ ___ _ i\llllR&<;.~--------------- C'l1\ ---------f'llfl'IE----- Moll 111 OKOr ~·,11tr-Tlit Oart11 Plll'/f PO Ror 1560 Cosio MtlO Cn 9%616 Spring-time la Superb Or nge Coast DAIL V PILOT /Thursday, March 1 L 1982 Antique Show ne Jewelry . -Appro ang, Repairing, Custom Designing and the F'ineat of Servict NEWPORT ER INN 1JEW ELERS /omwrly Mory ELlaworth f'me Jewel111 Hunltngton Center mall tOday thru Mar. 14 1107 J amboree Rd.1 New rt Beach Tit·..., WE(RE OPEN Fire-sale Specials Reductions up to 50% Come In and See Us ~'"''';{, =·_a\\= Can~n ,b1:.11 -.....-.~ " --·· .. --?;1/11\\~ 11111•SUPER•t1111 SURE SHOT The Canon SUPER SURE SHO r 1~ Ille mosl automaloe 35mm camera ave• created' II even loads 11sei11 Pius othe• 9'8~1 leaturts l•~e &ulOmahC locus au10 o•posu•e auto wlhdong and rewond•ng alld 11 1llE ... llu~t 1n pol)-up llasn make •I ......_ tne o<1ea1 camera to c11rrv dll\f"'l'W•e• Allftmla'l'll' 35nlnl indoo<SOIOUt dlyO< llU I ""911 IU n19h1 tne Super Su• e Shot SPECIA.l s 199'5 gives you pel1ect po<.t11111~ Automa1tca11y • •A..,ttJR,,.-jOo\ • •" ~·· • ,,.,,.,'•I • H I ,, A.,lo ••·• • ft''' C'l"C•• '~ '(II' •hl)C,lj. 1\#'loilll·f•' • • ... ,.,. Nr Ji~,.,....•·• t ""'° ~ ........ h • ..,. ...... ,. .. , .. ,.. • ei}. ~ ..... , F4t'• N'!,,j • "'l<Jolttl.,..,n••"Jll'll1W1f.lm ·~'r.M(l l•\tn H """')'\ •~...,,, ., .. .,....... •... , ..... PASSPORT P~TOS WHILE U WAIT "THE HARBOR AREA'S 1st AND FINEST CClOR lA8." Color film in by 10 out by S ave's ~~··9~s RffiERR j fthone 642-1012 I 47 4 E. 17th ST. •41!100=• COST A MESA FllmCC-•u ,----VA&.UAILE-COUPOM _____ I I $200 off cok>r print film processing : ---------------------- AS SEEN ON NETWORK TV An All-American Extravaganza happening right now! Special Otters on Quality American - Made Products! THE ENTERTAINERS ''Between Rock ... t111d a Soft place:' a1 • -•1U11~n1ra~ ..... ..-... IYI & n I '-"1,_ l '.' l •] i] : '-j : [.] iltJ ! =I VISE·GRIP Locking Pliers Buy a l.Mfldn' Buv a \Yeller ' m easuring tape and gel a FREE 6 Tape s711 Cl-Q, "" ~ . ... ~-' '. " '..: '. ~. ~· . "~'.',, ·: ... l • • "' f4," ... ', I, ....... I \ f 1 '' -f! fu10 s399 .\~399 HAMMER r IJCfQlass h.n!le & IUlXlef 9110 ~t i•lil\ trr au u~se , O'., aroonc1 1he tx>use CHANNEL GROOVE r~~~~ l fi.ltle~ I & the orotess1ona1 Ouls1aro1~ value' s11sg Reg 52099Sate •a l ;•· . Orang• Coa•t DAILY PILOT/Thurlday. March 11, 1982 'Life' challenge for-Dreyfuss NEW YORK (APJ -In the film "Whott Life ls ll Anyway?" actor Richard Dreyfuss faces one of tbe moat challenclna questions of hla career: How do you take an audJence from lau,bter Lo tea.rs without moving a muscle? t>reyfuu lll&ys a talented s culptor left paralysed from the neck down by an auto accident. R1tlher than live the rest of his lite lmprtsoned In • helplesa body, he prefers to die. "Thia film is not really about paralysis and death," says Dreyfuss. "It's about a man seiz.lng control of his destiny." The 34.year-0ld actor says that's what attracted him to the role. ··Most people ,•• s a ys Dreyfus s , "neve r allow the mselves to think about seizing control at any point in their li fe, about what they do for a living, whether to be married or not, or how to live. "They simply follow procedures banded down to them," he says, "without ever saying, 'Is this right for me,' and, 'Do I want to take a stand?' They never ask, 'What do I love to do?' They say, 'Can I get a job.' " Dreyfuss was asked how he would react if he were ever in the position of the character he plays in the film . .. I really do agree with the character I play," he says. "I might have a different criteria. But at a certain poini, I'm going to say, 'Pass.' I like history and acting and I like girls. If those th ree things were denied to me, I'd give it serious thought." The actor admits he's had some problems of his own. which he claims stemmed from having things col"'le t.oo easily for him. He attributes much of his success in living to therapy. "It saved my life," he says.·"After the third day, I decided l wanted to do this every day. "OnJy people who are in therapy understand its value," he says "You can never proselytize about it. But it's the best thing that ever happened to me ." As for his s uccess as an actor, he says it has This motion picture contains scenes of graphic and violent horror. A Har.-ey Bernhard-Gabriel Kalzb Production ''The Bwt Wdh1n .. Ronny Cox Bibi Besch Paul Clemens Don Gordon Music by Les Baxter Executive Producer .lad B. Bemsrein Screen SI()()' and Screenplay by Tum Holland Based on the NM! by Edward Levy Produced by Har.-ey BemtWd 'and Gabriel Kalzka Directed by Philippe Mora ,_. ,_ ~ ~· Color ti, o.a.· .... ._. MGMtl.w.cs Mists OOllOL!'l.,,,,,.,._,,,!TWUI==· • PU B<u Plaza 529 5339 COSTA IKIA Edwllds 8'1\IOI 540 7444 .._,._ ~6'\0 Mlt• ....... '4,l(;t10""'"'"1 STARTS TOMORROW ll TO..O (O,.lfOS ~~ sa1 saao FOIMTAI• uun f oun11111 l/attey °'"' In 962 2481 lliCS ._..,_.., '°" .... -...1 OMtl5l .. 1-.in Olive In &39 8710 OMIMI( UA C.ty Cinema &34 3911 something to cJo with his childish nature. "You have to have the aen.11e or the childlike to be an actor," t>reyfuss aays. ''When we were very youna, what we thrilled at most was playlna. What we do when we cre ate is play," "Whose Llfe Is l t Anyway?" Is lhe 10th film ln Dreyfuss' extraordinary motion picture career. Not only has be won an Oscar for his performance in "The Goodbye Girl," but three of bis movies, "Jaws," "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" and "American Gr a Ifill" ure umong the most profitable pictures ever made. Yet, Dreyfuss looks at hls profession as the kind in which you have to look for work every three or four months. "To thls day," he says, "my gr andfather thinks I can't hold a job. He's convinced J 'm a bum " With a competitor ... how close can you get ? fA'All V !WIN (lt.ll l\IA B•oo•h.,,.•\• •''ft•• .. " r 011"'~" VM..-V •IMI I J61 ORANGE COAST COUEGE TliEATRE TOURS DESERT SONG 1'11 Long Bt111 h C1ttu Light Orr'" WEDNESDAY, MAR. 17 TICKETS SIS. Inc Trans Info N 1sa-MC -556·5527 e1er st1nov EV1LUNOER THEIUN IPGI 1:00 3:15 5:35 7 ·55 10·10 v • .,.. Alril!_,,.,. .... ""'~ ... ··-·--~· ... ..-i•-. ....... .,_ .. ........... 9 ............. ... ,... ••• ,.aMll'IHt•t. CZ:::: "Peter 'Ustinov -=:JI EV1L.,_ll THE-IPGI Continent1I D1wlde (Pcµ,, Mariel H•min_jfW_ay Nll90NAL~ IRI Plu1Co·Hit Urban Cowboy (PGI I The Terror Be9ins GAEAT tMIT£ IPGI PlusCo·Hit The l•l•nd uu ~(Al ~~~u ''°' Ol''-IM °'*" t : 30 NIGHTLY Undef 12P RH Uni..Noted OOffTf1fl C~l~'S tvlL UnDfR Tttt 5un l.A)ruitli.ilU 0. Ut;.1Lu "'"' "'-.f•.4U\. ,.,., ~ fU.,..,l(.fM!&,CJ# .. M l•~f»UI•-- *BARGAIN MATINEES * Monday thru Saturday All Performances before 5:00 PM (Except Special Engagements and Holidays) ~ MIRADA M All M••OOO OI •o aec•o• .. LA MIRADA WALK·IN 994'·2•00 .. PERSONAL BEST"'•~• U">HIH l >OllH AMATEUR lltJ U 0 ) .. 11'1 0 ,. .. 144 O• '1 O J 11 • H 11 90 •• o.., ......... , ... f A'~···.,.N•MM•e.M CHARIOTS OF FIRE '""' U lll J M l .M t tt ttM LAKEWOOD CENTER WALK·IN t(An.tA• Hl.NUfl'N ...__.., l'OMOA ON GOLDEN PONO '""' ,, to J ,, •• , to ,. " CHAlh..t:I a*>lt.0. tN DEATH WISH II" 1111 11 .... , ._,_. U... U.4 Q.tt '6 ·THEY ALL LAUGHED .. '"" tJ M J JO t U I ti 11 >6 VICE SOUAO' 1•1 U M t Ml • MJ t M t M 11 II Fo cu1ry o• Co no1e wooo 213/531·9510 MISSING 1•01 tJ lll >OS ... I U 1tM Tk•M• ~I• f~ ~ 0.. ,., n..:t THEY ALL LAUGHED '""' '10 JJt SH l "llt '10 D•f •.,....,_.RU• 0 ............... ,..... ,., ,.... °"'--°"""' ...... ,.. .. """°' ......... ........ LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAlll ·IH fo..\lllV Al De! AmO 213/634·9211 El/IL UNOEA THE SUN' t"OI I tlD,JH.t ll,I M tt 11 ~GUNA REOS "'°' tJ )O •••• MAKING LOVE r•1 tJ .. t U 4M t tt tll H • h i Oflty 1 '' .IH , .. tlll ,., o"""' ........ ,, .. 1 0 11 C:lltOll AND \AM c;:tUrtl'll.M* CHARIOTS OF FIRE 1-01 , .. J .... ,, 141 .... so. COAST WALK·IN Souln Coool H1woy 01 l •ooowoy 494.1514 EVIL UNDER THE SUN··"'°' at.Ml,. Joe I H ........ ,.J .t Jt r te t H THEY All LAUGHED'" ll'Gl ....,,,..." 1" ... ... ~,,. ... ,,. .... 615 . 1100 ...... -.5 45 IMPORT AN f NOTICE' CHllDRfN UNOER 12 FRlf! Hit,bl' ,anO w,,.,,. tlilltn ffHu F1+5 30 • \itl Swn MOls,4 30 ,,. c111• " \OUIOD • •Ou• ... u~ MUtO •S •Ollf' Sf'IM[~ • '«>•MW l\l!llll \lllTM V.lt'ClOo ACC!UOA• l'OSll'IOll -•lllOIG AM 'l>lllAtll •AU C"'l 11 OOllVI "'S IJO °" llll llAOIO ANAHllM ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN ''•••OY 91 OI t1mon Sf 879·9150 ~~~~--~~~ 1 OOCTOR BUTCHER M 0 1111 2 .. SCALPEL 1•1 3. NURSE CHERRI 1•1 C••I 11 wiv•o 9UINA PAllk BUENA PARK DRIVE·IN l ince>'n A•• •••t ot 1non 121·4070 &UINA PAllK LINCOLN DRIVl·IN l1nco1n A•• We\I or u~ou 821·4070 ''·li!{lliii Son O••oo •rwv ol l 'OOkhun l Oo > 962·2411 ''"' Sl ... IN Sllll Hl·WAY 39 DAIVE·IN 'THE AMATEUR' 1111 .... "DRESS TO KILL ''" CINI "SOV•O ne..,... °' • M*-AA "°"' '"Q4RISTIANE F:· fill .... .. 0£ATHSHIP .. fill (14.AltU I • .,...,.. ... DEATH WISH It 1~1 ..... THE BURNING" 1111 THEY All LAUGHED ~ .... SEEMS LIKE OLD TIMES '""' °" f'M ....... nw ,. ... ,,.. ... ,__.,.....,.. • VICE SQUAD" 41'1 -HARDCORE" "'' El/IL UNDER THE SUN' t"Ot .... ''CONTINENTAL DIVIDE' '"°' ·MISSING !1'<11 .... PURSUIT OF 0 B COOPER .. - ko<r> llvG So Of ~oe-n G'«h't h ttwo, 891·3693 DEATH WISH II 41'1 . ... 'THE BURNINO 1•1 ~IHI JI SO\JNO 1 OOCTOR BUTCHER M 0 ' fill 2. 'SCALPEL !"I 3 NURSE CHERRI 1~1 CIH( fl SOVNO CIHl f1 SOUtlO lA HA811A LA HABRA DRIVE IN .,... ....... l't lt«..h .......... oc.. ""'° 17H l62 ''llANL.I .. MISSING .. 1•01 .... ··PURSUIT OF D.B. COOPER .. - ORANGE DRIVE·IN \onto Al'\o h •v • "ate t Oll•O• 551·7022 °" ____ , ...... ..__ .. VICE IOUAO .. fl> -"HA"OC<>l'l" 1111 ... .... .&1 I."'"' MISSION 0111VE ·IN 'THE AMATEUR'" 1111 .... "O"ESS TO Kill' 1111 ··-·--.. ON OOLOEN PONO" -,.... 0 ~'THl ELECTIUC HORSEMAN".,. .• , ., . ,..,. •1 •. WARNER DOIVE IN ··-....... °'hoc:" .... M7• ltl --·M.1.-n. MACttO l fONtCO -IL HOM9ftl llN lllmo I ... 00 "' CAILOAO • ~ ~~­.. , ...... QWILS'8ANMa.9 I WNITI IWoDOW ntl&UUCONI 0..,. ,_ • cNwlOt to ........ tMIMla. • HAWAII fllllS.O A11 lnt•rn1t10111t 11\tel ..... In ...... • UNDB'9TNGNG HWllM---~ 1"15~" .. wm..ooMm MOC. IC011'M -~--~ ...... pro- 111.mmtno 'M1 ... ~ due IO j)6'dge bf-6c1. ··--~ Cll8NEW9 (fl ININEY IALB' ® .. ..W.wmtYON OMKI ~. Prot. Ludwig "°" Dfllk• -Goofy'• ..,,.,..,_ to llluatrate tM proper W8Y to exerdN and~ In ip0t1L ())A CS R"ATIOM Some of !tie lliOoMt ti.,. of pop.country muaic: per-'°"" "*' or-i.a lllta at TM F-In Loe Angalll; loeluOed are M1ur"'1 ~ (''TM Morning AIW"). Krle Krte1°""9on ("Bobby ....... ,, Rodty llumln• (''T-" Up"). GMr\ ~ 1··~ ttona Cowboy") end Tanya T'udler I" Lay 8ec:lt In TM ~OfU-"). (Z)MCME • ••l'i "Monty Python And TM Holy Grill" (1874) Grlhlm ()iepman, John a-. IOng Arthuf end hi• band of kntghta encounter giant•. rlOdlerl llftd • lwodul rabbll In their -di tor the tegend- ue i :'ie ... wr 7:00 8 C.NEW9 I .CNIWI """"" MY8 AGAIN I MCNIW8 YOU AldD P'OR rT Feetured: ''Yoge In TM Sky'' and "London'• RM &wgeon." • w•A•a•H TM eaperierl08I of being wounded, llOwn by '*'- eopter to the 40ntti, oper- ated on Md t,..1ed In post-op --tflrOuGh • )'OUnCI aoldllr'I ~ I "*"'"8 WILD DOCCAVIETT au.t: A119n Olneb8rg. (RI (l)~.M.~ A ptollle of 9IMce oolurn- 11191 Abigail Van lurwn; a "-fOr·ll boet ,_ on Ouebac't lclM:fte*ed St. ~Rlvw. 0 INTIRTAMmn' TOMGHT An Interview with Gene HM:aman. 8lMl~ ~; Jullet Pr-. (t)MCME • • • ''The OtMr Side Of The MounUiln -Part II" (1871) Mwilyn HIUMt. Timothy Bott-. F«,,_ champion alder, JIM Kln- mont, render«I a qu4ldf1.. ~ t>y • tf8QIC acddent, ......... with lllf-doubt wllll'I a ,_ iow .,,,.,.. nar lite. (Q)MCME ••• "Hight Move•" ( 1875) Gene Had(man, Jennifer Wenen. A private 8\19 hired 10 loo.-tM ct.ughter Of a tonn. mew- SEARCH -M a.cnum <Tom Selleck, right) searches Hawaii's seamy side to find missing sister of Texas client (J ames Whitmore Jr.) on "Magnum, P.I." tonight at 8 on KNXT <2>. 1e ·_,.. beOOIM8 antan- Ol'd In • web of Intrigue with • Meywn amuogllng ring. .PC'CHfWtmf John ~ "' joined by Henny YOUfl9'TIM-oth- .,. .. ""' btlnO Iha go60-an dlyl of TV vlldetY ~bllCk tollt.. ,_. KCE1 NIWtelAT Wl'n4 CUTI! ......... 1:t0 9 I ON THE TOWN r=.at~. • look •t the competitive world of wallh•• reporters: an In~ wtth Jerry GllllM, 1 man wtio proleMN 10 know !tie ..cret of IMng I«-. a view of a 1- arlttoaata and theit ofllo. ... I QI FAMILY RUD LAV!ANE & 1H1ALEY & CIOflllPNIY u.-and Shif1ey -ttoten df-IO I fanoy party. • EYEONLA. Featured: behind the --of A8C'1 "Generlll Hoepltal": a profile of Rick ~ • w•A•a•H The personnel of lhl 40nth rNpOnd In the ueu- 11 ,,..,,,,., when tupply llnM are CIU1 thort and they f-c:tltlcal thortagea. I CJ) TIC TN; DOUGH MACNel. / l.EHAEJI MPOR'1' D NEWS . al YOU AIKE> FOR rT F .. tured: "Canad1't Tra1 Su~rmen" 1nd "The FutNt Heel In TM Wee!" CID ~~ "8'0RT8 l"MSENTlt "TM Smart Buy ShOw" Tlpt M QUiity, aatety and uvlng money.....,,~ aoap, food prOCHIOt'I, wood •IOYN and walil· around llC)e ptayera - Pf-led. &GO 9 Cl) MAGNlAt. P.L A hoe..fleeded young Texan twee Megnum to find hll ...... (R) 88FMa Montgom1ty'• mother (0-VwOOtl). a femoue ec1.-. Miiie 1M etudena with • lflOW !My -put· ting M kw tllelr ~ .... • MOYIE • • * ··Tony Rome" (1N7) Franll Slnetra. Jiii St. John. A prtvete deteG- thle ~ Mlll'N lot I c:ecN of llolln jaWat•. • 0 ..olJCE 8QUADt Detecthle Frank Orebln QOM under~ ... llgftt maneger to tnVMtlgll• the ec>P1rent 1Ulclde of 1 boxer G WOWE * * '"' ·'Tit• Cortlcan Brothers" I 184 ti ~ Felrbenltl Jr., Ruth War· rtdt. Two~ tw1<w eapentted 11 birth rall In loW with lM -woman wNle IYWlQlng tM mutder Of lhelt parentL • P.M. MAOAZJNE A profile of ldvlee colurn- nlet AA>igalf Van Buren; • loOll at old time bellroom denc:lnQ and 111 rNidenl •..cw. • • * "lfNitll~ To A ~,.,... (1"4) Yul Btynner, George Segal. A gunfighter .. hired 10 kll an OUlc:.t retumng to hll Wwtern town. e ntltOU>HOUM Norm Abftlll'l lhowt now to dry w..i • ,_ room and ~ loole with Bot> VllLQ • THE 'IOI: MOMEHT8 T'O PF'•leEft Arthur Godtrey llMdtlnN • 11ar-ttudd8CI llfle..up In • mutlcal Mlute to t"" romariuc Ilda of the poat- war era. G.-te lnGIUde RoNMlrf cloOn.y, Frink· le Laine. Guy Mltc:helt. Eddi• Heywood, Patti PaiOe and Thereu Br-. (R) CID M<ME • *"' "Amerlean Pop" (1881) Animated. TM nt. tory of American pop mualo, ff om YaudeYllle to rocll 'n' roll, le lrllCld '"'OUOh -111 oener•· lions Of 1 family of mu»- c:i8nl. 'R' ())MOYIE ••~ "Cerny" (1g80) Joelle Foeter. Gary BuN)'. An adventuroot young woman jOlnl • camlv81 troupe llftd '-"' •bout tna hidden emotion• and rru1trallon• o.hlnd the _._ h~ ot tM parlormarL 'R' 0WOYIE • t * "Thi Elac:1rlc Hor ... man" ( t878) Rober1 Red- r0td, J-Fonda. A LU VIQM COWboy etMll t $t2 mllllon thoroughbred nor... to NYI him from hit exploltettw-...... 'PG' (Z)MCME * • ~ "Jabberwocky" (1877) Mld\MI Palln, Mu w .. _ rn. kingdom of • ..... ly\"ant. Bruno The Oulltlonllble, II revaged by• lllthery mo11etar. 'PG' e:ao •a 908()M auooe Kip end Henry -llrend- 80 wltt>OUC food '°' _., ~ In a wretdled moun- laln cabin. Q • AU. .. THeF~Y Gtorl1 '1 aurprlte -11\al .... mlghl be pregnant 141llln INCi• to dreatlc llCtlofl by an uncenaln MMle 8:40. INENC ~ Roger Ellert and GerM Sllkat review "Rlcherd Pryot. LMI On Sun19t Strtp" and "M!Mlng " 9:00. CJ) IOIOTlt LAHOtNO 8a1Dff"MNT 8TIO(Q Whan Arnold and • friend we terrcwtnd by bulliel, Wlflla c:omN to hit aid and .. .,.. .... up '° t>adty he lends In the hoapl1al (Plr1 l)Q 8 111 MANEY MIU.EA Cl'OWde ot people llOfm e WWahouM to get •I gov- ernment -owned frozen chicken, and 1 min -.flt I reporter 10< pre- rNturety wntlng his obltu· ary.o !=ONmN ~ ........ ....... A~ K-. _, ttv. ...., gllW ...... --. ...... """ Niii'. llelp. Wld • )otl In 1 ltolt) a Ogd ~· ea TAii .... _°'.~ Ollll•tl opM. llwOMl'O • ............. INl .. Mlout to Well Allll. (R) Q •MCIJMOYll • * t ".-....,0 Non Trop. po" ( 1•1•1 Anlrlleted. ue. In the mecNne ."' ....... lllcl. 'PO' --11.:...--m.T .... A lllglttw wtlO once -..cl Renko'• ltl ~ the obllCl °' • flerOa ~ •• llftd Fa(e ...,._ "'*"*' . ledly1T" •"'--. , . MCMI • • ... "Chattll Ch8in And TM Co.1tM Of Tiii O..egon Queen" (1Mt) ~ u.tt- nov, RldwO Hetd\.Cfllttle CMn "' aided by hll bum• 1111119 grllldlOtl In aoMft9 I ttrtne of mutdltL 'PO' Cl)~ * * ,_. "&c.pl From AQ. tru" ( 1878) Ollnt Eaet· wood, Petrtdl McOooh8n. A hardened COfWlct INlllN ~... p1a11e to br .... out ol tM ~proof prteon. 'PO' OMOVIE • *~ "Thief" (1811) J1mH Caan, TuHd•y Weld. A prolaeelonll Ctooil oi-uphl8~ for a 1>1g 8l;Ofe thllt he hOpN wlll NCUfl hl9 faml· 1y·1 future. 'R' 10:90!= t t • ''Flrel Family" (IMO) Glfdl Rednet, Bob Newhlrt. The MltUllly ~ daughter ol the country'• weitdNt preal· dentler laml!y complicalN her r1ther'• ettempte to conduct IM 1ttlllrt of tlate. 'R' 10:41. PORTRAIT Of QMHDPADOC Melvyn DouglM tiara In tM story of • young boy'• -m relltlONhlp with hie Q!_andlether. 11:00BD8 CIJ«IQ! NlWI • 811.T\MDAY NIOHT Hoet: Elliott GoulCI. Gunt1 the Mc:Garrlgle Slltar9 • l(OJAK • THE JEff'EMON8 Geofge c:l8lhN with the Kiin .IAHFON>AHDSON 11:16(I)MOYE ...... "Rockllh<>w" ( 1980) Peul McC1ttn1y and Wlngt. Thie reeo<d of the b8nd'1 U.S. tour lndUdN perlormanc11 of "Jet," "Bend On TM Aun:' "Siiiy Low Songa'' end -ol<I Bulle balled1, 'PG' 11:30 9 CJ) NCAA ~ Flrtt-roond loornement COV9f tge (ffom Logan, U11h1. DQITOMOKT au.I hOS1: 0-V-ca.tin Gueel•: Paul Wllllem1. Keren v fllentlne. •«I MCNIWS fWCIHT\.Nl • All .. THI FAMll.. V • LOW. .-...NC.AH STYLE • l*:KCAWTT Gueet: Lowell Thomft (Part 1)(R) (Q)MOVE ....... Shogun.........,'' ( 1881) TomlMburo Wa/il.ay· arna. M...ntto Tomltew1 A former thogul1 a-.in wno wu maneu-.o out Of hit poeltlOn by a rutt>- .... Clan of IPiN YOWi to ta/il.e bloody r.-..nge. 'R' 11::M CID MOVIE • • "The Ftnlll COtlfllc:1" ( t881) Sam NelM. Roeaano Brazzi In !tie lhlt"d P8f1 Of "TM Omen" trlk>gy. young Damien, IM et'llbodimenl of IM Antlc:tltiat. II now an adult and • lrutt.d ecM90t 10 the prealdenl of IM u.s CHANNll LISTINGS * * "TM Atttc" ( 1878) Carrie Snodgf-. Ray Mii- iand, A librarian INN In Ille PM1 wffh her _... Of • io.... wno dllappear9d. 'R' 'R' 1~ 8 8"A NA NA GuNt: !Illy Crye181 8 0 YEGAI • t<NXT IC8Sl CD> • t<N8C (NBC) (JJ • t<TLA !Ind.I <ID On-TV Z·TV HBO cm uow A hypnolltl prog11mt Sinter to explode 11 tl\8 flnlll l>uZZllf of • bMlll.etbell • KABC (A&CI C1'J (ClnemaxJ **** ''200t: AS~ OdyaMy" (1"8) Keir Dul· le•. Gary Lockwood. Allronautt _,, to find tM ...... lntelllgenoe r-oontl- ble '°' • puzzling lun8r monolllh mutt contend with "'Oll·boetd compul- ., ltl8I It trying to take control Of th8lt ......... -~ • t<FMB ICIS) 9 l<HJ·TV (Ind.I • t<CST (A8C) • KTTV (Ind.) '• KCOP.TV (Ind.) (!) (WORI HY., N.V all IWTBSI (I) (ESPN) Cl) IShowtlme I • Spotlight • (Cable News Network I tt'A "Ear1h II" (t871) Tony Fr1nclo11, Ger)' Lockwood. The llrat m1nnecl •P-•l•llon --.. • labotllory and I hOme f()f' 2000 people. • MOYE • t<CET IP851 • l<OCE IPltSl t: 11 • asTZ ON INTAIN World W11 II .._... ... and • •• "The Other" ( 1872) Uta Hageo, Diana~. Are networks' days numbered? F ormer executive foresees collapse of free TV By JEUYBUCK ·-.. -~ ...... LOS ANGELES -Former network executive William Hogan has written a scathing satire in which be predict.a the complete collapse of network television. In hU recent novel, "The Year of the Mongoose," the collapse is virtually overnight. It doesn't come from the gradual 1nawinJ away of the networks' base by cable and pay television. Someone simply dllcoven that in the 1,200 Nielsen homes, nobody's watcbin1 but the famlly pets. ''I think tbe net#ort.e are ln their lut days," llYI Boean, now a bearded. pipe·•motin.I writer wlth a red vest. But he once worked for all tbree net works, and waa a vice prealdent for a produc~lon compaQJ. "I think every alp pobata to th• end of the netwom. Tbe admlulon by the A.C. NlelMn Co. that vt9"f'lblp h .. declined la the..., ... , of lM end," be uya. "To me ,.,an.11 what bapl*lid to •.wart radio. ; '''l'be ndlo natlUftS ID 119 did the same whisUlng in the dark. Given the alternatives to network prOJramming, the audience is going to choose the alternatives. The current lack of quality of network programming is going to hurry it along," Hogan says. Hogan is not optimistic about the alternatives, however. "I don't think it's going to mean better programming. A lot of cable wUl be just as bad as network television. But you will gel m ore community pro1rama," be says. "I believe the biHest fact.or in the decline of n e twork pro1rammtnc waa the arrival of the baby mosuls. You have top pro1ram executives In their 20a and 308. They're a 1eneratlon of executives who crew up with television. They're ereatln1 new showa off what they knew u . chlldren, and all lbey knew wu television. So what we're tett.lnt are lmlt*Uool of lmlt.atlona. "I think tbat'a what's d•1coura1in1 vlewen." Rotan aays. "These are tbt worst people to bt in cbar1e. 11My cu't tee the a.tt.ernaUffl. Tbey live and love TV aDd lt'• dJtq." Hogan's book, published by Atheneum, bites the hand that once fed it. His own background gives il a good foundation of reality. But he has _peopled it with network executives who are ou tr ageous. doing outrageous things and putting out.rageous shows on the air. It's a funny book, but behind the rldiculoue ~acade you wonder.· It's also a 1lttle scary. "I spent 10 years coDJumed by network television." Ao1an says. "But once you cet out of it and look back, it's reillly a very small world that Is consumed by fear . When I started writine the book I had a fant.uy -what ii no one was watching televlalon. And the Neilaon company aakl for lbe IPt time viewtnbip bad fallen otl." From hia own experiences, Hogan tells of boun ,!&;: deballnl the volce of a dog in a cartoon show. And be writes of a daylon1 meetiq 1n which it became apparent the pro1ratil chief wd l0tlD1 bla job beeaute every Junior execuU•• moved away from him at the conf8"1Dee tabal ad chlltM'ed around the belr ll'PlNllL .. Orange Cout OAILV PILOT/Thureday, March 11, 1982 -TU BE l-OP:~ERS KNXT 9 8:00 .. Magnum.Pt:· A hot-headed Texun hires Mu"num to find his sister. KTLA e 8:00 "Ton~· Rom<•" F'rank Sinatra . Jill St . John I n moderate ly diverting detective etlper. KABC fJ 9:00 "Barney Miller" Cro wds s torm wurehou c lo ~et government-owned frozen chicken. KNBC 8 10 '00 ··Hill Strt•l•l Blues " A Cug1l1vE' who onc:t! suvrd Renko 's llf e becomes objeC'l of f wrcr debate A 1930a New Eng.l8llO town II ,.,.,Ottald by • ..,.. °' elranot ITIU'den ....... young :>oy .,._ on 11111 ·~dead twin~. • C0V.. Ut9UC.N snu ''L0\118 And o.er Old Mom And Dad" r: .... end Bii -~ INlf'ltal probllml. "Love And Tiie Play. wright" 8111 euOtect• hit wlle to""'** tlluatlonl. ! :::: ON IOQl1'Y * * "TM EJllennlnlltor" ( tUO) Chrletopner George, SemantM Egger. After hl9 war buddy II letl paralyzed by I Hew Yortc youth gting. • Vtelnarn Y9I decldH to take ·M1 revenge t>y murdering ,,,... Ct'lmlnalt thtQUOh gruetom•. tortuou1 -·R' 12: '° (C) WOWE * * * "Oh Godl" I 1877) 0eotoe Bumi. John o.n... "''· God 111ecta an uneuapec:ting young fUPlr• marti11 n\lf\I08' to dlllvet • n--oe Of hope end QOOd wll to lh8 ekaptlclll people Of IM~ 'WOt1d. 'PG' 12:80 D QI LA~ NIOt4T WfTH DAVID~ GuNta: comedl8o St- Allan, boxeB Mldleel and Leon Spink•. 8 MOYIE • • * "My Foot1911 ..._,. .. ( 1i50) 01n1 Andrew1, SuNn Heyward. A Pf-0- nant young woman llnd1 her'Nll In dNpalr when her loldler to.... II k llled dur • 1:=· • **~ "Menh11t1n" ( 1978) Wooay Allen. Dier. K-M. A Hew Yont City oomedy writer break• up with hit long-11"'8 gltl- lriend to IQUlfe around .,., ~vapid I~ ~·R' 1:00• MOVIE **'A "Footltepa On TM Moon" (1887) ~ta­ ry. Narnted by Of. Warner Yc>n Braun. Mlll'I ftrtt lunar ~t• ere r......O . (Z)MCME • • • ''The Ch8ngelirlg'' I tNOI O-oe C. Scott, Trllfl VIII 0.-.. A wlcJ. owad muelc profeHOf ~ an Old ~ ltl•t ..,.,_.. to lie haunted by • ,........ ~ with • 60- ~-0IO-• to Nftle 'R' 1:10• MOYIE * .. TM Vamplra1" (18ee) Gordon Scott, Giant'• Mar18. Golleth II called upon to conquer a deedly v1mplt1 cre1ture thll ~~mana. 9 HNS 1:21 CID MOYIE ••'A "Spf'llnx .. (1881) Frank Langella. L"ley· Anna Down. A ruthleN bl8Ck marllet anllqulltes •1ng 1ttampl1 lo Slop an Egyp10iogllt ffom dtllCOv· Iring the ...,._Nboult of I prk*Ne •tatue et.. wu pennltt8d to Yl9w 'PG' 1:t0.8NEW8 INT'Un'AINMEHT TOMGHT An lntamew with Gene H9'*man 1:AI CC) MCM1 • ._. "H.0 .T.S.r" (ti78) S.-Kiger, U.. London A -Oftty r9jeCt decldM to rorm nar OWt1 out> of oo- edt who ~tret• ()ti Ot•lltytng N•·•ttlMld 006- r~ * * "Pnobia" I 1080) P..., Mlch"I Gluer. Su11n Hogan. A gtoup ol mental petletlt1 are mutdatad according lo thelt lfldMdu.. alfeera.'R' ~1= *** .. The Bed Seed .. ( 19$8) Haney Kelly, P11ty Mc:Cofmaclc. A Ntlea of lncldallte rotcee 1 mother to reallz• thllt nar 6-~­ old daughl8' II a co4d· blooded murd«-. t:Ol9 WOYll ..... "FltehouM" 11873) Rlchafd Roundtr... Vince Edwarda. ,., young rec:Nlt ctllhll with a vet8'an lire. men when • w•ve ol ~­ doul flrN tweepe I gNllO ..... H08 MOYtE • • "Appointment In Hon- Ouru" (1853) Glenn FOf'd, Ann SharicS8n An Am«l- c:.... ralllM to tna cauM of freedOm lot a Sou1n Amer- ican country by convincing a bind of outlewl to Ulltt nlm. • MOVIE • * "Hotror RI-From TM Tomi>" (18701 Paul Natehy. Emma Cohen A young French couple Inherit • curte from their 1nca1tor1 whtn they return to the cutle -• 1 Franch II.night and his fl'fa1rws died. 0MOW * * • "Main Str .. 11" (1873) Harwy KeOet. Rot>- _, De Hlro. A tmell·llme hood and hi• lrreeponajble Mand find plenty or trouble In Hew Yont't Little Italy 'R' ~-Nl!W8 S.(I)MOVIE •'h "Big Bed Marna" ( 1974) Angle Of<*lnlon, Wllllarn Shatner. A woman cull a peth of vto6ef\08 and rornence through the Sout'-1 of Iha 18309 'R' *: 11 Cl) MCME * • ,_. "Cerny" ( t880) Jodie Foller, Gary &-.y All adventuroot young .omen join• • eatntvlll troupe and lellrn• 10out Ille niddan emotions end frustr1tl0nl behind the eurl-~ of the performers. 'R' S:tO Ct) MOYIE • * • "Firtl Family" (tNOJ Gllcla Rednet, Bob Newhert. Tha , H1Cu11ty reprellld daughter. ol lhl c;ountry't welrdNI pretl- dantlal raml!y compllcat• her father'• attempts to conduct IM attatra of tlale. 'R' 3:21 CID MCME * • 'A """-iClln Pop" (1981) Anlmeted. The hll- tory of llomerlean pop mutlc. ff om v8Udelllle to rocil ·n· roll, II tr-0 through _.. a--•· tlofl• 01 a !amity of ~­ clant. 'R' ~-MOVIE * * "City Of Shadows" ,, ... , V'*' ~. ~~~ .,... ,........,_ .. 111'18-... ..... .... MCW9 • • ... "..,,, WNc:ll w .-; VOii ell\" (1M0) tlint ~. londr• l..ooll• lefof9 .-no "-' "'"" 11111 girt Md pel 0t.,.,.an, • ~ "°"* llgr\I ~ tot ~ laet. luOf•tlw mateft, ''°' (%)MCW9 ..... "Illy Jealc" (11711 Tom LA4lgtllln, DllOtee T~. All .. ~ leret llllMw..O ~--the -°' I t...oom INltlOol tot ~ Ot1 111 M · sone lndlen ·~•tlOn . Frida11~• Da11t I•~ Hol'h•• -MOR...o- llOO Cl:) * * "TM A"IC" ( 1878) Carne Snodgr-. Ray MH· lend. A lltlflf't8n 11YN In the peel wilt\ her memo'1l8 of • 1oY1 wno dieeppMred 'R' CID •• "' "TM Cit And TM Cenery'' I 19711) HonOf' ~ITllll. Mlctllel Gallen Hek'I t>lllll lot • lortune 11 Iha epooily NIAle Of I dlcMNd mllllonalre. 'PO' Cl) * * "TM Ex1ennln•· tot" ( 1980) Chr11tophlt Gaoroe. Saman1ha Eoo•r Aft• hit war buddy II lett Pll'.ed by a H.w York youth gang. 1 Vietnam 118' deC:ldH 10 llk8 hit revenge by murdering ttreet criminal• through gruatome. torluou1 mNnl . 'R' e:30 G * * * "The Other Side Of TM MOUllllln -Part II" I 1978) Marllyfi H11N1t. Timothy Bottom• CZ)**'"' "Suttin' LooM'' (1881) Rk:h11d Pryor. Ctc:a- ty Tyeon 7:15 CID ••• "Simon" (1980) .a.tan Arkin, Auttln Pend .... ton. Sclenlitte 1111>12arre- ty mladlrec18d think tenk oonvtnoe I bumbling col- lege profNIOI thll M I• an auen from outer 19ace. 'PG' 7:30 (C) • * • ··ea111eg10Und" ( 1848) Vlll'I Johnte>n, John Hodllk. Amerleln IOldlett ol Ille 101tt Alrt>orne [)jyj. lllon angege In the French carnpelgn ano lhl Batlle or the Bulge. Cl)• •'h "The Shogun W81rlor'I. Starvenger1'' t:o6 (%) * • "Eyawltnus" (t970) Mark Leet•. Suaen George. A young boy known for having 1n overactive lmagln1tlon c:an't oonvlnc. anyone 1n11 he nu wllnesaed 1'le mur· oar ot a prominent black man 1:30 g * • • 'h "Bedknot>• Md Broomttlelll" ( 19711 Angela Lantbury, David Tomllnte>n. During Wc><ld War II. a novice -cer.19 1nO her 1nre1 young friend• Mt off for a magic llland -e She lntendt to learn enough about wltcncrett to UN It ao-Jnat the Nazis. 'G' 9:30., * 'h "Randy Rides llolone" ( t834) John Wavne, Alllerta VIUghn A cowboy lnflltrllM en out· ·-geng 10 gltller evl· dance agaH\11 thieves wllO raided an •llPf-comP•· !!t.. offlee. ~ • • • "TM Hatl11rom Chronicle" (1971) Doeu· rnentary. Nllrtllld by L-· rencll Pr-an The var· led tMJNIVlll tlQhnlques of 1nMc11. wfllch m1y eventu- ally put th41m Into direct and IUCC9Mful competi- tion with man. are r-'ed. 10:00 CID • • • ··on God I" (1877> George &Jm1, Jonn ~::.."The Tunnel Of Love" (1858) Doris Day, Richard Wldm1rk. A child· .... couple envy their neighbors, wno hive no trouble having children 1NI (J) • * • "TM CNlngel-~ ttMO) e...e 0 ho«, Trllih VWt 0.-e A ~""*°Pl'~ rent.a Ml old llOWe t~ ~ IO bt n.unt.ecl l)y • r.et .... lj)Wtl with • 00.. ~-old-• to ..-.i. '"' t0:.ao. • * "Thlt It (Me'' ON ti OOOumlntwy. Rim footlOI 11\0 Orwnatlo 11- ~11tlonll .,. 6Mld 'C> "" 1M t1ory Of 1!.11119 Prlllty't lllenc:I C!M- 11:00 CC) * t \'i "Thi Anglll Wore RIO" (1H0) Ave <WOf)tt, Olrll llogMdl. A prleet leave. hi• Of'dlr 10 r .. urn IO • world 10C1teo by I YlcMlnt WW tllOO. **'A "Bront<" ( 18711) J11ek Pelenc.. 0.Yld Bir· ~A~ dlll0- 1.... lnll/ttllN t "'"°IQ ring rtlllPOflllbll tor t Ill• low ottlclr'• dlllh • ***'"'"Pal .kw(' ( 1857> Frenll. Slnatta, Rita Htyworth ltued Otl t &roeow•v pl1y by ~· & Han end • novel by John O'H111 A ....,thy IOCllalltt flnencN • nlglltc:lub tor an tnltrlalnar wno 1•11• lot 1 lovely cOOrUI gill • * t •,; "I Could Oo On Singing'' I tee31 .JU4y 0 •· 111\d, ()j(k BogarOa. A llnQ- ar Yl11tt tn. ton th• g,va up tor adOi)liOn. er .. 11ng problem• tor mother. lltl'HW end Child (%) • • '"' "Bu•lln' Looae" ( 1881) Richard Pryor. C~ ly TYaon 1:00 (C) t * 'n "Thi Kid From Lett Field" ( 1978) Gary Colemen. Robert Gull· laume A bat boy'• 11rete- gy launc:llU 1 losing t>ue- btll INITI on a Winning 1treak 1ha1 lll)(M lh41m to the Wc><ld Setles CID • • '• "T11bute" ( t880J Jack Lemmon, Rot>t>y Ben.on. An 1rre1pooslt>le Broadwey pre88 1gent begins to regret Illa WU1ed Hie end ht• tenuou1 rel•· 11on.n1p with his g<own eon. 'PG' 1:36 (%) * 'n "Big Bad M1m1" ( 1874) Angie OIGklnton, Wiiiiam Sh1tnar. A woman cull a path of viotenee and romance lhrough the South-I of lhl t830$ 'R 2:30 0 * * * The Othlt Side 01 Thi Moontaln •• Pan II" ( t978) Marilyn Heuett. Timothy Bottoms 3:00 0 * • 'Bunny O'Hare" ( 1971) Bette Davis, EtnHI BorgnlM An aged meie-- f emele team or t>ank rot>bers disguise them· .elves u hlpplet with a oetawey motorcycle and are purweo by a redneck pot Icemen CID * * "Bronco Biiiy" ( t980) Clint Eutwood, Sondra Loch A former lhOe 181Hman from N- Jeraey reaHzes nls dream of performing In a Wiid West snow 'PG' (%) * *' 1 Biiiy Jack" (1971) Tom Laughter" Oe4ores Teytor llon ex· Green Beret h•ll·breed c:t1ampton1 the caUM ol a freedom IChOOI lot run•· w1ys on an Artzone lndlen r.-vatlon 4:00 Ct) t * 'i't · The Last Snow Of $p<"lng.. ( 1977) OllQ- nosed u having leukemia a 9-yeat-Old boy and his f1the< t>egln a Shor1. dllfl· cull perlOO or reacqualn- 1ence attlf years of MP•· ratk>fl 'G' (I) * * '"' "The ShOgun Warrior• Starvenger1" 4:30 U * * 'Roadie" ( 1980) Mui Loat. Ka~I Hunter A rock muslG roadie lets nothing get In his way In hit pursuit ot 1ne gtrt of his dreams 'PG 5:00 (%) * • "Ey-1tnes1 (1970) Mark Lester. Susan George 5:30 Ct) * • •,. The Angel Wore Red ( 1960) llova Gerdner. Dirk Bogarde CID **'> Oily, Olly Oxen . Free" ( 19781 Katherine Hepburh, Oet\r111 Olmster JOHN DARLING by Armst rong & Batiuk ! H~ CANOY, 1 IHC:>U<SiHT ~ MIGHT V'<IANT THIS TOTAKE 0.ACK ID 5CHOOL WfTH '<QUI ingvalues. ---------------• • I $1UOUT99 IE ftA._ 1$7.' Aft15-PIKl l ! °"' •, II'. I tAT7rfA I _..7=' ! ~ brown'~:n:;11:~~!o 0'c~~C:en ~~~ I Goo<I IOf nine pieces Of juicy, gOlden I Redeem 1n1s ,oupon tor a Carry Pack g :::> single stMngs OI cole s~w iNslled I brown Kentucky Fried Chteken, with I IOacle<I wlln hlte~n pteets or 1uiey .,, 0 potatoes and gravy and a roel tour rolls, a large colt slaw, a large golden brown Kenfuct<y Fried Chicken 0 u ' mashed potaloes and a medium gravy z I llmll hfO otllra per tMcr1ue Couoon 9000 I I 1111111 two Olfers Cit' purchut COllooft QOOCI I only tor comblllltlOll Wh .. /Gafll orotn limit 1-0 otters per Pllrthlse Couoon QOOCI only tor conlC>INtton w11t111o~f\ ordMs Cvttoflltlf Plrs flt, __ salts 1.u only toi eoml>INtlOll w1111etOM• orO.rs C11Jlomtt i»ys an 1pphc1t)le u1u tu I I C11tlOllltf Plr• 111 1pp1tublt saltS 1u Oner tKplres March 21. 1982. I Oller expires M•ft h 21 1982 I Piic:ls mar v1ry 11 panlCIPlllllO IOUllOll• Oner ••Pitts Mart h 21. 1982 I Coupon 9000 only lft SOWlle!n 1 1 P11cu 1111y •lry a1 p,r1icio1t•rtQ ~llOll\ ~lorn11 W1*t ...... ._ ...... __ Pia. 11\tY YJry at partiCIPllillO IOc:atlO!IJ Coupon QOOCI Giiiy 1n Soutntrn C.11for~ Wlleft I 1~ ...,. .,,. ,,_,, Coupon QOOCI only In Southefn Cll1forn4.t Whtrl rO\I ..... Ille mtmblr ht I I ... I( I k btrsltl(I ..... ol 11111 K1111ucky Yoll ... 1111 menibet1h1p .... ot Utt KentllC~y Ft•• ..... s p ~ 0 '""' en UC y Filed Cllkiktn AISOClftitn. I Fr!llO Chlektn A11oclart0n I tO Chleken Associ.uon • ---• --COUPON --·--~nm~ rrtild (JbickeJI I .· . ... Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thur9d1y, M1rch '11, 1982 ..... " . " • ~ ~ ,. STCLIFF PLAZA . ANTHONY 'S SH OE SERVICE BANK OF AMERICA CHARLES BARR JEWELERS CROWN HARDWARE DICK VERNON SPORTSWEAR DR . LOLJ ELDER optometrist HAIRHANDLERS SALON HALLI DA Y'S MEN 'S CLOTHING HICKORY FARMS specialty food items HUMPTY DUMPTY children 's clothing JEAN DAHL designer and better sportswear LA GALLERIA elegance in fashion MARKET BASKET fv'\ES AMIES TEENS NANCY DUNN ANTIQUES NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS PAPER UNLIMITED gifts and ·stationers SA V .ON DRUGS STOREKEEPER traditional sportswear VETA'S INTIMATE APPAREL ... WESTCLI FF CLEANERS WESTCLIFF CORNERS gourmet ware and collectibles WESTCLIFF SHOES XAVIER 'S FLORIST ~ Quality in fashion and services with that personal touch .. ~ 1 f . THURSDAY, MARCH 11 , 1~ ,.. COMICS cs · BUSINESS C6 Estancia, CdM, Marina, Laguna are winners in baseball. C2 . ·Fire, briinstone: That's not Lasorda In contrast to Atlanta's Joe Torre, Dodger manager says he's not much on rules By CURT SEED EN 0t111eo .. ,,,....,., .. " VERO BEACH -Florida and dis· cipline. The words aren't exactly synonymous. Yet, 20 of the 26 m ajor league baseball teams make the traditional j ourney to the Suns h ine State, beginning in late February, to lalfl'ch the all-important first step toward more than six months of baseball. If you're a manager, you have lo get tough early in the battle against the elements here. At least, that's the theory set fo rth by Atlanta Braves m anager Joe Torre, who, according to the Atlanta Journal, has his own Ten Comma ndme nts for those fun-loving, froli cking and fifth-place (in '81) Braves Atlanta trains at West Palm Beach where there are no known mountains Crom which Torre has delivered his purported laws of the game. His list in cludes fines for not being in uniform at a designated time. to a ban on backgammon, sunburns and even the presence of player agents in the dugout or on the playing field. "Can I keep this copy">" Dodger manager Tommy Lasorda innocently inquired after being shown a copy of Torre's list. But don't jump to the conclusion that the Dodger manager is going to institute a few Torre-like rules of his own. To begin with, Lasorda doesn't go ove rboar d with th e rules . Dodgertown, the Dodgers' pleasant spring he adquarters h ere, is n't exactly in the sam e mold as a prison · camp. The ope n-tit-midn ight lounge, tennis courts, movle tbea(er , golf courses, dlnlng room -all within the boundaries of Dodgertown -don't have the players, media and guests huddled in the corn e r of their s pacious rooms . "I'm not much of a rules man or a fines man," confides Lasorda whose philosophy on team discipline may or I just think the players should set a good ·example for the kids who are going to look up to them and emulate them. -Tommy L•aord• may not have had a bearing on the Dodgers' 1981 World Championship. "I just think the players s hould set a good example for the kids who a re going lo look up to them and emulate them." Lasorda continues. "When the guys put their uniforms on. I want them to give it everything they've gol. I want them lo exemplify the Dodgers wherever they are and be good representatives of Los Angeles a nd Southern California." In West Palm Beach, if a Brave inJures himself. he better report early for medical attention or it's a $100 fine. according to Torre's laws. Atlanta players cannot play cards or backgammon or even Chutes and Laddel"s, for that matter, in the clubhouse. That too is a minimum $100 fi ne, reportedly If a Brave reports to a game with a RELAXED DODGER Kenny Landreaux appears very relaxed as he _goes throuJ?h a drill r ecently in .,. .......... the Dodgers· spring training camp at Vero Beach. Fla. sunburn. a nd Lord knows sunburns are virtually nil in Florida (it was 80 degrees Wednesday). he may be fined up to $250. "I lik~ a player to be on ti me," Lasorda firmly admits . "And, I like a player to work hard. I don 't like beards and I like the guys dressed up when they are traveling." Lasorda. comfortably decked out in a nice outfit, complete with a little <See LASORDA, Page C4) Run-and-gun test Anteaters, Aztecs get ready for shootout By JOHN SEVANO Oftl•e0911y ...... S- lf UC I~ine's basketball team thinks it received a bargain in being matc hed aga inst San Diego State in the opening round of the NIT, the Anteaters had better look again. Sure, the Aztecs are willing to run with UCI. but why shouldn't they'? San Diego State is 16-1 this season when it plays within the friendly confines of San Diego's Sports Arena, where Friday night 's C7 . 30 > contes t just happens to be taking place. Actually, San Diego State's fi rst three home games wer e played on campus at Peterson Gymnasium. but Y,OU s hould get the picture anyway . And. to add more intrigue to the Aztecs· success at home, their average winning margin is 15.5 points. JUST TO illustrate the home court importance a little more, the Aztecs beat BY U by 14 at home and then turned around and lost by 40 at BYU. They lost to Nevada Las Vegas by six on the road and beat the Runnin' Rebels by 13 at home. As for othe r scor es of interest (if you're into such comparisons). the Aztecs beat Oregon (87-74 ). Long Beach State (92·84) and UC Santa Ba rbara (95-60 ). UCl s wept past those teams, too, (the 49ers and Gauchos twice, in fact). but because of ball control tactics by Long Beach Slate and UCSB, the scores were much closer. "We're going to go at 'em," sa ys U<..:l Coach Bill Mulligan. "It's so nice to play somebody who will run for a change -like Utah State." NIT roundup Wednesday Scores Purdu e 72, Wes t ern Kentucky 65 . Dayton 76, Connec ticut 75 (Ot ) Illinois 126, Long Island U 78 Texas A&M 60, Lamar 58 Washington 66, Brigham Young 63 Tonight's Games Temple ( 19-71 at Georgia ( 16-11 ) Iona C24·81 at Rutgers ( 19·9) A m e rican U (21 8·> at Bradley (21-10 > Murray St ate (20·7) at N'evada-Las Vegas < 19·8) Friday's Games UC Irvine (22-16) at San Diego State (20-8 ), KWVE radio (108 fo~M l. 7:35 p.m Mar y land < 15 -12 ) at Richmond 118-10) St. P e t e r 's ( 20·8 > at Syracuse ( 15-121 Fordham (18 -101 a t Virginia Tech ( 18·10> Mississippi <17 ·11 1 a t Clemson c 14-131 Tul a n e (17 ·81 a t LSU ( 14 -13) sy ndro m e aga in ," says Mulligan, which would explain UC l 's 5·5 record its las t 10 games (the Anteaters are 22·6 over all). "I think a n"-mber of rea sons have caused thM -the defection of Jason (Works). the bench not being as good as I thought. and all the wear and tear on Magee is starting to tell. .. Wh1eldon, Kevin Fuller and Ramer Wulf were rested ... if you call between three a nd five minutes to rest "I can 't r ead 1t," says Mulli gan of UCI 's a ttitude during practice this week. "It's going to be a tough game. I know that. Plus, they're (the Azt-ecs 1 so physical and such good a thletes. "What I'd like to do is rest everyo11e sometime during the gam e except Magee ... Mulligan adds that only Bob Thornton and Curtis Crossley will probably see action off the bench. Since both are forwards, McDonald may be as ked to play the point guard spot to spell Fuller. J ohn Barkey, who normally would handle such duties, asked not to play the second half of UCl's game with Fullerton (he is recovering from mononucleosis) and Mulligan isn't counting on him for San Diego State. either . "I TIDNK WE 'VE got to shoot ou r percentage that we're leadi n g the na tio n in (56 percent) if we're going to win the game," Mulligan explains. "The fact we're on the road, though. doesn't make things very easy for us." The Aztecs are expecting a crowd of close to 8,000 for their game with UCI Friday night (the Sports Arena holds 13,000 >. The crowd , however, shouldn't be as much of a factor as San Diego State itself. In that respect, Mulligan plays down the favorite's role his Anteaters have acquired. BLOCKED Dqug Pinckney of Estancia (9> blocks the spike attempt of Laguna D•llY "''"' ....... rt O..,y A....,_ night's volley ball match pitting two area powers. Laguna won tight match in four sets. See story, page C4. Mulligan readily admits that although the Anteate rs will run, their lack of depth combined with the large number of minutes logged by his starters this season won't help. "l 'm not sure, but I thinlt we're back in that worn out In UCJ's most recent outing -a 62·61 loss to Cal St•te Fullerton in the semifinals of the PCAA Tournament -Magee and Ben McDonald played the entire 40-minute game. Randy "The NIT is just too tough," says Mulligan. "and we 're at a disadvantage because we can't get a hom e garnJ!. Vegas_ <Ne vada-Las Vegas) reached the finals a couple or years ago, but they played their first three games at home ." The winner of Friday ni1ht's a Hair will play Oklahoma University Monday night. And yes, that game will be played in Norman. Okla . · Beach's Adam Johnson during Wednesday • • Angels lose, Dodgers win in From AP dlspatcltes single from Juan Beniquez. San Diego had loaded the bases with two out in the eighth but Flannery grounded out to end the threat. • • extra-inning games RAMS HIRE Wed nesday, his ag e nt, Antonio JACK SNOW De Marco, told the Associated Press. F AP dis t .. _ , • , , . . rom pa c""'a He s going to wait there until Former Los Angeles Rams . I Tim F1annery's two-out single in the bottom of Lhe 10th inning drove in Rick Lance llotli with the winning run Weanesday as the San Diego Padres downed the Angels ~-0 in an exhibition baseball game. ---- Bill North singled and doubled lo lead San Diego's nine-hit attack. Guerrero, who had rour or the Dodgers' 10 hits, led off the l2t.h with his second double. Steve Yeager sacrificed and was s afe on an error, Ron Roenicke was walked intentionally and M_aJ.ru2~_..f.l)lt"w.R.d~ 11/~-Ui. ~ game-winning base b.t. something positive happens with the end Jack Snow has been hired u -~«?.d~~ .:.· said D.e~~·~l.1--arr a"1strmt ro1r<1l hlDlttlltrCp·;;.ass~-·-­ conllnUe lo tra1n there and continue to receivers the National Football take care of himself. He's not saylng League' c lub announ ced Arter rookie Angel dgbthander Kirk Brown retired the first two Padres in the 10th, Rick LancelJotU singled and catcher Pete Gavilan drew a walk before F1annery's game-wiMing hit. Five Padre pitchers limited the Angels to two bit.a. •Held hitless for the first six innings by San Die10 starter Juan Eichelberger .and Tim Lollar, the An1els got a seventb·lnniq atncle from Brian Downin1 and a ninth·lnnlng --'Fin: game--warthl'"-!-ec"'o.-cn~a......,e""'x"'"'h1"'6~1l..,..io""n==--­ con test for both clubs ; the Padres nipped the Angels 2-1 on Tuesday. Dodger• nip Red Sox VERO BEACH -Candy Maldonado's bases-loaded sln1Ie in the bottom of the 12th innin1 scored Ped,ro Guerrero as the Los Angeles Ood1ers poeted their first exhibition victory or the aprinc, a 3-2 decision over Boston. The Dodgers had a 2--0 lead with runs In the first and fifth Innings before the Red Sox tied the score ln the eilhtb, taking advanta1e of a two-out error by Derrel Thomas. Fernendo head• for Mexico M e'anwhile, pitcher Fernando Valeozuela, who has bea unable to come to terms with the Pod ...... left for an undltclosed locadon \n Mexico ( whe re he will be in an effort lo Wednesday. concentrate on bis work without Snow 39 bas been worklnt distractions." with a development firm, but ln Valenzuela, the flrat pitcher in the spring and early tall bu major·lea1ue history to win the Cy gone back to his alma mat.er, Young Award and tbe Rook.it ol the Notre Dame, to wo1it with the Year Award in the .. me MUOO, baa receivers. been a holdout alnce March 1, the day Snow came to the ftamt la the Dodpn unllattrally renewed bl• lMS Uld spent his entire NPL contract at a reported ~.ooo. carHr with the club. ~. ' :e -:c:nes '.F ' p ¥ Otaoge Coat OAl~Y PILOT/Thurtd1y, M.,ch 11, 1882 ............ ..._ __________________ ~ Grant wants a ban~ from Ut backers From AP di tche • l,O , Utah -This small m north n Utuh c ity may be unfamiliar territor y tor eastern • basketball powerhouses like Georgetown and West Virginia, but Coach Boyd Grant says ttis Fresno State team s hould feel right at home. No. 6 Ceorgetown, 22·6, and 11th-ranked Fresno State, 26-2, drew first-round byes in the sub-re1ionaJ at the Spectrum at Utah State University that beginR tonight. The tournament opens at 6:08 p.m. with 14th-ranked West Virginia, 26-3, meeting North Carolina A&T, 19-9. Western Athletic Conference champion Wyoming. 22·6. and USC, 19-8, play in the second game at 8:40 R.m. The winner of the West Virginia-North Carolina A&T ga m e plays Fresno State Saturday, while the Wyoming-Southern Cal winner meets Georgetown. Fresno State , the champion of the Pacific Coast Athletic Association, already has played in the Spectrum this year against PCAA foe Utah Stale Quote of the d·ay Allan Bristow, 30-year ·old forward of the Da llas Mavericks. on the future of the young franchise: "This team is a few years away from being a top contender and I know I may not be here when it ha ppens. But I look at it as a war. The first wave usually dies off, but makes it possible for the second wave lo win the war. I reel like I'm on the firs t wave ." Baseball Hall adds two m3mbers A.B. \"~ppy" Chandler, who a served lhl-gar\-le as commissioner for six years, and Travis Jackson, a slick-fielding shortstop for the New York Giants, were elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame Wednesday. Chandler and Jackson were chosen by the Veterans Committee. whose function it is to add o ldtim ers to the Cooperstown shrine . . . Mark Broabard hit a pa ir of home runs and Ned Yost added a three-run blast to lead t h e Milwaukee Brewers to a 6-5 victory over San Francisco in exhibition p la y W e dne s · da y ... El se wh e re , Mike Tyson's bases-loaded triple helped t he Cubs outlast Oakland, 9-6 ... Mike Laga homered in the top of the 11th CHAHDLU inning, leading Detroit to a 9·8 victory over Minnesota . . Four unearned runs in the seventh inning helped Cincinnati top Pittsburgh, 4· 1 . . Rick Manning and Aadre Thornton clouted two·run doubles to pace Cleveland to a 5· 1 victory over a split Cubs' squad ... Greg Lualnskl's broken-bat s ingle with the bas;es loaded capped a three-run second inning. leading the White Sox to a 5-2 win over • Kansas City. Detroit opt for a coaching change wa,.•• •••••' WH flred ~ Wednelday 11 c:oac:h or the_1Detrolt ' Red Winp The move ma.raed the lSth coaching chan1e ln Detroll In 14 yean. Maxner, 38, will be succeeded for the remainder of the season by .. alstant BUly Dea • . • On the Ice, Clark GUiie• ta!Ued twice as the Ntiw York Is landers fouaht back from 1t lwo·1oal deficit to Ue Minnesota, •·4 ... Derenaeman Dou1 WUllOtl and center Tom Lyalak scored twice apiece as Chicago nlppped Toronto, • 7-6 ... ~rre Larouche scored two of three llartford goals ln the second period l.n the Whaler1' 6-2 wln over Wlnnlpe1 ... aoa •'locllhart•a powe r -play 1oal w lth 1: 17 remaining llrt.ed Ph.Uadelphta Into a 5-5 tie with the Rangers ... Rookie Mike Bullard and veteran Andre St. Laurent scored twice apiece i n Pittisbur14 h 's 7 -2 romp over W ashJngton . . . Robert Moa1raln and Gllle1 Hamel eacb scored twice as Buffalo stopped Vancouver. 7-4. Bucks drop fourth straight Rick~ Soben scored l3 of his 17 points an t h e fourth quarter Wednesday night and Jeammates Artis GUmore and David Greeawood cornbined for 43 to lead Chicago to a 101-98 NBA victory over Milwa ukee. It was the Bucks' fourth s uccessive defeat. their worst losing streak in three seasons . . . Veteran center Oaa laael scored 35 points while Klki Vudewe111te bad 30 and Aleir English 21 as Denv• routed Detroit, 124-113 ... Maurice Cbeekll and Lloael Hollins le<t a tttird-quarter suree that broke open a close game and sent Phlladelphia to a 134-114 win over Golden State . . . Bay Wiiliams poured in 25 points a nd Darwin Cook keyed two third-quarter rallies, leading New J ersey to a 113-105 victory over Phoenix ... Larry Bird returned from a five-game layoff to score 21 points to lead Boston to a 121-100 triumph over Indiana ... Rookie_ g.u .. rd Jlolaado Blukmaa scored 16 points in the fourth quarter to rally Dallas lo a 104-102 victory over Portland. Longhorns sour on Lemons The University of Texas, saying • simply it needed a new direction for its basketball program. fired colorful Coach Abe Lemons Wednesday. Lemons had taken the Longhorns to a 14·0 record and No. 5 national ranking before the team collapsed and finished 16·10 and eighth in the Southwest Conference ... Sally Little, who collected $22,500 a year ago for playing just 36 holes of golf in the LPGA tournament at Industry Hills. was scheduled lo open defense of that title today. Television. radio • Following are the lop sports events on TV tonight. Ratings a re: o1 .t " o1 excellent ; . / " worth watching; o1 1 fair. " forget it. 8:30 P·rf!-. Channel 2 I I I I COLLEGE BASKE TBALL : use vs . Wyoming. Announce~: Gary Bender and Billy Packer. Dwight Anderson, the miracle shot worker, leads the Trojans in Logan, Utah tonight .. Wayne Carlander, a graduate of Ocean View High, is also a star\er for USe. Wyoming has a tall front tine of Bill Garnett (6-8). Chris Engler (7-0) and Greg Thesenvitz (6-10) that the Trojans will have to overcome to advance to Saturday's second round game against Georgetown. RADIO Basketball -USC vs. Wyoming, 8:30 p,m .• KDAY C1S80>. ,,. FRIDAY'S RADIO Baseball -Detroit vs. Dodgers at Vero Beach. 10: 10 a.m .• KABC (790); San Diego vs. Angels at Palm Springs. 12 : SS p.m., KMPC (7101. Estancia tops Monarchs CdM explodes early; Laguna ·Beach, Marina. also win Estancl1t aot P•llt Mater Del whilt Corona del Mu hitters bad a big day In a win over Tustin lo area prep baseball action Wednesday. Elsewhere, Laguna Beach beat Woodbridge while Marina dereated Paramount and University and Irvine both sutrered 11etbacks. Here's how lt went: Eatencl• I , Meter Del 3 Jlm McCablll picked up hi& first wln with a complete.game effort for the Eagles, striking out seven while issuing only two walks. Estancia m1&de the m0$t ol its six hits tu1 shortstop Jeff Cardner went 2 for 3 wtth a double and a triple and one RBI while Eric Rius belted a solo home run to lert fi eld in ttie second Inning. Mater Del used five different pitchers In the non-league game. Mike Kelly was 2 ror 3 with a double for the Monarchs whUe shortstop Mike Linsten had a 2-for-4 performance. The win improved Estancia's overall record to 3-3. Coron• del Mar 11 , Tu•tln 5 · The Sea Kings scored nlne times ln the bottom of the first 1nning and coasted to victory with sophomore pitcher John Bums on the mound. "We've bad so many of our pitchers sick this past week. we had to bring Bums up from the JV's," Coach Tom Trager said. "He went four innings and did a good job for us with the others out. He only had one strikeout and that was the first batter he faced." The Sea J{jngs scored nine runs on six walks, an error and three base hits in the opening frame. Gordon Moss got the only extra base hit for the Sea Kings as the leadoff batter in the first. In the fifth inning Burns ran into trouble when the Tillers put together a double and home run to score twice. He was pulled from the game at tttis point but recorded the victory. The win gives CdM a 5-1 record with Woodbridge the final non-league foe Friday. The Sea Kings open Sea View League play next Wednesday against visiting Irvine. Laguna Beach 5, Woodbridge 2 Evan Chalmers went 3 for 3 for the Artists and scored the go-ahead run as Laguna Beach came up Kroyer paces Pirates Kris Kroyer led all scorers with 24 points and two of her Orange Coast College teammates finished in double figures as the Pirates remained unbeaten (2·0J in South Ceast Conference play with an 82-51 win over Santa Ana in women's basketball action Wednesday night. Cyyndi Carroll and Tammi Parker had 21 and 15 points, res pectively, but it was Kroyer . a 6·2 sophomore center and All-State selection last year , who led the way for the Pirates. The win puts Orange Coast at 10-1 overall going into Friday's non-conference meeting with Mira Costa al 3:30 in the Pirates gym. BASEBALL wllh three ru.ns in the bottom of the at.th to break a 2·2 tie. Woodbridge had just three hit.I, but two of those went for extra base . Rick Lee doubled for the Warriors while Kevin Burke had a triple The loss dropped Woodbridee to 0-6. Including one loss by forfeit due to an a cademically ineligif>le player. "We're gonna have to regroup," Warrior Coach Dave Cowen said. "Friday we 10 against Corona del Mar so we're gonna have lo play our best baseball and hope they have an off day just to be competitive." Marina 7, Peramount 1 Shane Flores had a double and a triple to drive in two runs to pace Marina's 10-hit attack as the VikingR upped their overall record to 3-1. John Berry started on the mound for Manna . striking out four and allowing five hits over four innings. Terry McClure came in in relief, holding Paramount scoreless while yielding just two hits. Kevin Eisler dr<>ve in two rum for the Vikings witb his fourth-inning single. Marina <3·1) opens Sunset League play Saturday at Edison at noon. St. Anthony 10, University 3 ~ The visiting Saints put together two good innings lo win going away. Phil Alvers and Leo Nelmes hit back-lo·back home runs in the fourth to give St. Anthony a 6-0 lead. University countered with three runs in the bottom of the fourth but the Trojans ~ommitted three errors in the top of the finh. opening the door fo r four unearned runs. Brad Guess had an RBI single while Mike Miller contributed a run-scoring double for t he Trojans. Catcher Mike Frei had two hits on the game. Troy Larsen suffered the loss as University d ropped to 4-2·1 overall. Artesia 1 S, Irvine 7 Artesia 's Pioneers used a big second inning to stop Irvine's Vaqueros. Nine of the second inning 11 runs were unearned on four errors, two passed balls. a hit batter and two walks among other things. J ohn Scott was one of the few bright s pots for the Vaqueros as he went 3 for 4 at the plate and scored twice Irvine took the lead in the opening inning. 1-0, but it was shorl·lived and the Vaqueros were never again able to catch up despite scoring three times in the fifth and seventh frames. Artesia added rour runs in the fifth for its final total of 15. The loss brings Irvine's record lo 3.3 for the pre-Sea View League season. Bonar puts clamps on Gretzky Scoring sensation held to two assists in Kings' win I NGLEWOOD IAPl -Dan · Bonar didn't have any goals or ass ists. but a s fa r a s Los Angeles \ Coach Don Per ry is concemoo. Bonar was the main reason that the Kings were able to beat the powerful Edmonton Oilers. one a ssist the last time the Oilers faced lbe Kings . weary tonight. but that's not an excuse," said Gretzky. "We're paid good money to play, but being on the road for 21 days is ridiculous. We all have wives and families a nd whether you're a doctor or whatever. you miss the m if you're gone that long ... Washington advances in NIT "I can't say enough about Dan Bonar, who shut out (Wayne) Gretzky," said P erry after the Kings n ipped the Oilers 3-2 Wednesday night ··Gretzky gets a lot of ice time and this shows Bona r's stamina to do s uch a job Gretzky. who has 2 goals and 105· assists with 10 game s remaining in the regular season, ha s no w gone four games without scoring a goal. Last month, he broke the NFL's set by Phil Esposito in the 1970-71 season. "It was nice to be able to shut Wayne down," s aid Bonar "He's such a talent and hard to s tay w it h b eca u se h i s anticipation and knowledge of t he game are so great. He knows what to do every minute.'· Wednesd ay n igh t's game co m pleted an eig ht-game, three-week road trip for t he Oilers. who play their next fi ve games at home. Bio la stays unbeaten with victory in N Al A playoffs "We can win the Stanley Cup but we·re not playing like we were during the first half of the season," added Gretzky . "We're going to have to gel back to fundamentals." from AP d.Jspalches · PROVO, Utah Guards Alvin Vaughn and ~teve Burks combine d for a ll but 11 of Washington's second half points. igniti ng the Ruskies to a 66-63 comeback victory over Brigham Young Wednesday night in the first round of the t\lational Invitational Tournament. • Vaughn scored 15 of his game-high 23 points and Burks scored 12 or his 16 in the second half as Washington overcame a 40-28 halftime deficit. . The two Husky guards combined for six steals itnd made several foul shots in the waning minutes lfS BYU tried to gain possession. . Purdue 72, Western Kentucky 65 WFST LAFAYETTE. Ind. -Keith Edmonson scored 29 points as Purdue held off a late rally and beat Western Kentucky 72-65 in the NIT. . The victory put the Boilermakers. 15-13 for the season, int-0 next Monday's second round against t.n e winner of tonight's matchup between Jona and Qu~e~. · · Purdue. third-place finisher in the NIT last iear, runner-up in 1979 and champion in 1974, took libe lead midway through the first hall. Led by ~ ~t. Patrick's Day regattas slated t"~"~~~ABEY ~ AU yachtsmen go frish on St. Patrick's Day -cit so it would seem from a glance at the Southern ~alHornia Yachting Association weeke nd t lendar. Three yacht clubs in Orange County are • wearln' the green" with St. Patrick's Day { • gattas scheduled by Bahia Corinthian Yacht' lub, Saturday and Sunday; Newport Harbor acht Club <Lehman-12s) on Sunday, and aplstrano Bay Yacht Club for Performance andicap Racing Fleet ( PHRF> yachts on Sunday. r, The BCYC regatta will feature small boats on lDslde course Saturday and larger boats sailing ~ean courses Sunday. f Jn other SCYA areas : on him " BASKETBALL Texas A&M 60, Lamar 58 COLLEG E STATION, Texas -Claude Riley con verted a three-point play with 35 seconds len .lo give Texas A&M a four -point lead and the Aggies he ld on to beat Lamar 60-58 in the NIT. Gretzk y, Edmo nto n 's 21-year·old supers tar who bas ec lipsed nume ro us National Hockey League scoring records, assisted on the Oilers' two goals, but both came while Bonar was The victory was the second in a row for the Kings, 20-34-14, who blanked Colorado Tuesday night, 2-0. The Oilers, who are winless in their last four games. fe ll lo 42·16-12. The Kings took a 3-0 lead on a firs t -period goal bv Ma r cel Dionne. his 42nd of the season. and second-period goals by Dave Taylor and Greg Ter rion. on the sidelines. Gretzky had four goals and "We might have been a Little The Aggies. who fini she d third in t he Southwest Conference, led by as many as nine points against the Card inals and were ahead 31·30 at halftime. The score was tied ri ve times in the second half and the lead changed hands 12 times. A&M took the lead for good at 55·54 with 2:33 remaining when Gary Lewis ttit a pair or free throws. llllnots 126, Long Island 78 CHAMPAIGN, Ill. -Perry Range scored a career-high 28 points as Illinois demolished Long Island 126-78 in an o pening-round game of the NIT. Six other Illinois players were in double figures as the filini set new school and NIT records for scoring. Illinois helf a 65-29 lead at halftime on 56 percent shooting from the floor. The Illini. 18-10, held a 40-poinl lead at one point in the half. LIU entered the game scoring an average of 87 points per contest -highest in the nation -but was held to 30 percent shooting in the first half. The rout continued in the second hall, during which Illinois led at one time by Sl points -120-69. Dayton 78, Connecticut 75 DAYTON, Ohio -Sean McNaJly's basket with 48 seconds left in overtime gave the Dayton Flyers a 76-75 victory over the Connecticut Huskies in the first-round of the NIT. Basketball ~res College N•I ..... l11vltMleft T-m ... 1 "'"'·-WuhlnQton'6, B•IO"-m vounon Tun A&M 60, Lam•• st 11111\0is 12'. LOtlQ f\l•nd U It O•YIOf'I 7', C..._U<VI IS loll Pwr-71. W~tem ICtntvcky •S NAIAT....,._I lat•-~Cltyl s.c.-•.--8 IOI• U. Qvln<y 1111 I '6 Sovtll CMoflN·SCNlt1e,,burv ~. St M.,y·~ ITt.11.I SJ Mtft'IPIOft ln"llwle '3. C•ntr•I w .. hlft9Mnft H-'-1 S1. 70, Moor ... -.! SI." Wla.·E.., Cl•lrt "• SI Thom .. """'" .. n . Wetle,.n Ort~n •>. Brl., Cllft (towel SS Kurney St. '1, H•nover 7• St9ln•w lltltey SI 67. Southern Te<h '1 COii Htgh achoo! STATLJllGIOMAL l'LAYOl'Jll lat u.. 9M<11, ....._. ...... , ~.-... c ..... •-cL&I • 9annlnt I WllmlnQIOnl '1, 11e11..-11i.1c1 n SI 9-'1. M-.i u c.,...,...11.1,...._ .. Moore quits al Long Beach With Connecticut leading 67-75 and one minute left in regulation, Husky guard Karl Hobbs was ejected for hilling Dayton guard Kevin Conrad and a two-shot technical foul was assessed. Roosevelt Chapman hJl both free throws for Dayton to send the ume into ove.rf:lme. Chapman fintahed wt~ 21 points lo lead all LONG BEACH CAP> scorers. -Perry Moore, the Connectlcul held the ball the final 41 seconds d I rec tor o r s Po r l s • of overtime but could pot score after McNally's athle.ticg and recreaUon final basket. at Long Beach Slate slnce 1974, has asked to Blol• 12, Quincy 58 be reassigned and his KANSAS CITY -Top-seeded and un~te_A....,.u..q u.e.a..1-b.a .h~a .. BiOta ua ~8Cfa,-ted tiY "Jecooo-6altnerolcs accepted'" by John w. from Wade Klrchmeyer and Pat McDougall, Shal.illne, the vice defeated Quincy of OUnols 62·~ Wednesday in the pretldeat for student second r'O\lftd of the NAIA tournament. servlc. at the school, it Blola. 37-0, will m•t Sa&lnaw Valley Stai. of w a a an a o u n c e d M.icbllaD ln a q...n.r·flnal 1ame toda.y. Wedneeday. trcDou1aH scored el1bt polnll, and MOOft'• reuaipmen.t Klrctuneyer added tlx duriq a H·2 nr1• lbat will be effecllwi nnt save BW• a 55-~ lffd wkb 1:51 left IA the..... July 1. Slwtnltne tald. A. Qulney'1 ltekh DcM&clal wbo lbdlblld w1U1 a wal•er1lt1 1poke1man 11me-1Qb • palnta, .~ to dale thl 1ap to aald a naUoDwtde •areb 5S·M ...... Biol•'• Rieb Qmdal) emtftnld • for lloore'a IUC<MllOf lbree·Polnt plQ that made It SNt. will bectn '!-UY· • \, , .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ' Learn how you can earn $25,000 to SS0,000 and more annually a• a prole .. ional photographer -beginning with little or no experience and only a ba•ic 35 mm camera. Earn $ J 0,000 part-time alter •chool or your pre•ent job. Oa111d Ross, nationally kno~ profes· s1onal photographer with 32 years ~f exper· 1ence in advertising, oommerc1al, industrial and architectural photography, will show you how to break into the exciting aod well paying field of professional photography. This Is a no·nonsense seminar. Ross, who has years of t)(perlence counseling novlc. photographers, will lead you step-1'.4y-itep through all of the Inside movei necessary to become 1 professional photographer. You will learn the fastest, most direct way of striking out on your own. This Seminar can save you thousands of dollars In time 1nd effort, wasted money, false staru. 100 dis• ~~~!~Id II~--·--------- DDN9T Ml•• HI• S•MINflfll • 3 hour tax dtdUctible .mlnat -fee: S36 • 1:00 P.M. S.wrdly Merch 13, 1882 • Regis1tetkw\ 1t1r111t 12:00 • N9wport H.W Hlth Auditorium 115ch ..,_. Ind lrYIM Avenue NewpOl1 ... ,CA Addi .. lafonMtlon ~ (714» 1114011 .. RUNNN9 JIM McCURDIE Letson's job • • • . JS pre c1s1on Orange Co .. t DAILY PILOT/Thursday, March 11, 1982 · .. His duty is cer tifying courses · I NO DEALER SALES) AD STARTS THURS: -Robert Letson is a perfectionist. He likes things precise. Like a Swiss watchmaker, he strives for the ultimate in accuracy. It's all part Qf his job, or, In this case, jobs. By day. Letson works for a San Diego computer firm. Many nights and weekends are S&Hml certifying -cpurses for long-distance running events. · · Letson is a fully accredited member of the TAC Long Distance Running Standard Committee, an organization he claims is in great demand these days. Jn order for a runner to set a world or American record in ·a lOK or marathon event, the course ror that e vent must be certified. That's where Letson comes in. Certifying a course involves making s ure that it is the correct distance and cheeking it for safety and run-ability. Sounds simple enough, right? On the average, Letson spends 20 hours of work pe r cours e , e mploying techniques of engineering. mathematics and physics, subjects he studied in college. Maybe this stuff isn't so s imple. LETSON BEGAN certifying courses in 1973 and estimates that he has personally measured and certified 130 courses since then. He 's recognized as t he man race officials contact when planning an event anywhere along the West Coast. "It's gotten a little out of hand," he admitted. "I've been trying to get out of doing this, but it's very much in demand right now." Distance is Letson's primary concern when evaluating a course, and it's also the most difficult part of the job. "Measuring d is t a nce is ex treme ly --<hmranding, "-tie-s aid. "It's become very sophisticated. It's much easier to measure time with a ll the diHerent electronic timing devices." With an instrument caJled a Jones Counter mounted on the front wheel, Letson rides a bicycle over the proposed course in order to gel a distance reading. ''Measur ing wheels or steel tapes are ex~eptable, but I think bicycles are the best." he said. ' "THE COU RSE has to be meas ured at le ast twice along the shortest possible route. You have lo ride the route which will be run on race day." That, Letson said, can create problems . On most occasions, Letson measures the course in its pre-race stage, when unrestricted traffic is at its peak Cutting across blind intersections is just part of the JOb. ·:Qne of t,hes~ dats" I might not be around," Letson saia "H~in Of~risky , . I've had some close calls. "There are so many windy, semi-rural streets with blind, bushy turns . Drivers are kind of ir1 their own world. They don't really expect to see a bicycle rider come around a blind curve." Letson's most recent endeavor was certifying the course for last weekend 's Laguna Beach School Power lOK along Laguna Canyon Road, a course which he found to be quite accurate. Running schedule ~J,,,,_.rthU Entry l tf' •> H w oll• T '""t ,. Otl s-. 1111.. 8"'11M <II 3 a m •t wll!lout 55 on r.cf' dh For turiner M•)On Park 4n '' v 1ne forloin•I '''~ •ntorm•hon. COl\\iK.I N..,oort Be•<" ••> Back Bo 1 .. wport Buehl Run,,..,.A•-••t-•t•....OSS. AYSO t e ain bids for seinis A Division V soccer team rrom Lido Island and Balboa Penins ula has gained the quarterfinals of the A YSO Southern California playoffs and will play a Chula Vista team this Saturday. The Newport Nas ties, composed of boys in the -fourth amtfifttrgrades; will take on Chula Vista at l o'clock Saturday at Kaiser School in Costa Mesa. Kaiser is located on 21st Street If the Newport team wins Saturday, it will play in Upla nd the following weekend in the semifinals. The finals will be played in Pasadena in two weeks. Team members mclude Matthew Barnes, Scott Ehrlinger, Peter Grodach, Garett Gruber, Jamie Hardin, Kyle Kofford, David Lamb, Poncho Lozano, Timothy Mas krey, Joshua Otting, Michael Robinson, Brandon Simon. Eric Slutsky and Steffen Spizziri. The head coach is Joel Slutsky and assistants are Fred Barnes, George Spizziri, Bill Ehrlinger, Lucky Teachanarong a nd Noy Teachanarong. The Nasties advanced to this Saturday's game with a 6-2 win last Saturday over Palm Springs. Call 642-5678. Put a few words lo work for ou. Upto 400 Gallons or oa11 ---'", In the Dally Piiot's Great Gas Giveaway Contest. 111 FrWly'1 P1p1r .... J./EY.1 IJ-IAJt; fY)ll OLD G/RLPR1€AID flowers are 1uch beauty things. You can express yourself through the llower1 you plant in your yard. Gardeners are the a rti1ts ol nature. .,~ ANNUAL ···~~H \ RYEGRASS I . RYE_ 1· ~ SEED / Good seed to plant in the winter 10 that your spring and 1ummer gra11 will have a good solid base to grow on. Limited quantities. WATER PIK SHOWER MASSAGE Great for tight. stiff musc:les. These babies put the water out with a pulsating force that 1tlmulates circulation to loosen up the sore spots. WALL MOUNT I 5 97 NSM-2U HAND HELD 2 3 97 #SM-3UV ~ STANLEY CURVED CLAW 16 OZ. RAMMER This is the best thing for pounding nails (no kidding?) just be careful not to hit the ol' thumb by mistake 'cause that really smarts. 3~5~16 ,- liiti ~ IO wlrW ~.: ·"" J STANLEY 4'' CONTAINER AZALEAS I~! SWEET BROOM SCOTTS TURF BUILDER PLUS 2 feeds while it clean• (mother. is that you?) out morethan40 weed1that have been determined unwanted by the lawn 2000 SQ. FT. a•• 4000 SQ. FT. 1499 6000 SQ. FT. 1999 STARLITE WRANGLER SEAT COVERS Howdy pa.rdners. what' 1 that seat In the ol' pick up look like 1 Need new co•ers? We got these for mini or standard pick-up and low or high bucket. In blue. black. or brown. 19!?. 5!!. ·oRTHo 8UG·G£TA Snlil&Sk.og Plllts ORTHO BUG-GET A SNAIL 81 SLUG PELLETS I hate to but I gue11 I'll have to get some ol thi1 stutt 'cause these guys are eating the top• off my radishes. Won't lose potency in rain. . / l ··~j SHELL nRE & ICE ALL SEASON MOTOR OIL Buy 5 quart• of oil from our display and pick up the SHELL REBATE coupon. Receive a Sl.50 in the mail from Shell. (What a deall) IOW40 WT. 83 c QT. .~ -~·1 1{' .>~ . .- EVEREADY C OR D BATrERIES You know what Ben franklin said. "A pennysavedisa ~ penny earned". You can save a lot ol pennies on this deal.(That Ben really knows his stuU.) 15 ~. CD-2 GAS TREATMENT Doe1 everything but clean the kitchen 1ink. Cleans your tuel sy1tem. helps eliminate 1talling . and reduces ca rbon depo1ils. I I " ----~ KINKEAD SHOWERFOLD TUB ENCLOSURE Easy to install. fits most tubs and 1hower units. Doors are made out of translucent shatterproof panels. ~--~ PRE STONE SUPER nusH II the water in your radiator has a rusty lock to it. you need to dump this stuff in. Gel• rid of the rust and oily residue. 1 49 22 oz. nus~ FILL 2 29 STANLEY o/.t'' PARTICLE BOARD STARLEY COMBUfATION SQUARE No ma lier what you' re building. this'll come in bandy (unlns you don't care whether or not it comes out croo~ed. that i1). 2~4~12 STANLEY 12 FOOT POWERLOCK TOP READ TAPE 5~!T !\ l don't know who the guy was who thought thi1 upoul he sure must be smart. Just read the lop numbers and you get the inside dimensions. As ha rd as Unc:le Herky' s head, you can drill it like Aunt Polly's safe. you can sand ii like Lamar Jean's flngerlip1. (Unlike them it's all honest stuff.) .,.... i iml fm/;.(':7."J iii ti?@~ ~ ~ ... ··-· ~ ./ ·-~-~ TREATED MUDSILL DUPONT FLAIR SQUIRES CLOSE.OUT! BIBI PROIE QUll.1' SwlfCB BEHR PLUS 10 OIL-LATEX STAIN For new wood. 1tucco, ma1oruy or pre•lou1ly painted or 1tained 1urface1. Cleans up with water. That's the Behr facl1. .. 7••· OAI.. Stand back here comes the crowd (what ltlnd oJ llem la thl1 lo put ln an ad?). Meets the code. Long 1trip1 of wallpaper can be a me11. tbl1 man• lt ea1y. Ju1t dip In water. put In place and 1ponge smooth. A1aorted patt•n11.12"x12". DECORLITE BRICK PAllELS Sw. looka Hire the real stuff, Margo. but lt' 1 not IMcrfy. For interior or exterior uae. Com•• in New Irick or UHd Brick look ----- • ~~AHEL Hook thl1 gadget up to the phone and you C<lll Olp the switch so the phone won't ring. ltJu1t Oalhea a light 1oyou know there' 1 a c:all. Cl . . . ·1 • Orange Coaal DAILY PILOT /Thuraday, March 11, 1982 ... ------------~----~.....;; ______ ,.. ~~-----------------------------------------------. -. NBA WHTau1 C:Otl"EllEHC:I Pacific Ol•klM • L PCL Ga ~. •2 10 611 tMttle •O 11 •S6 11, Go!Oe" Slaw u ,, ~) I ,.._,.,. 34 11 HI ,.,, PortlaftCI )1 19 Sii 10 Sall DI-.> 16 .. JSI ,. ~IOM1._ SM Antonio 31 lJ '23 Hou11on 35 11 S.l 3~• Dlnv•r 32 'JO si. .. ,., Oallu 11 •1 33' .,.,, Ke"'a' City ,. ., Jl3 11 llleh 19 ., J11 1' I ASTEllH C:OHf'EllEHCE AlteAlk Ol•bloft los1on •6 IS TS. Phlle<Nlpllle H 11 121 2 H•• Jeney ll 30 S2• " WHhltlQton 21 )I us II Hew York 2• JS OJ 111..., C ... lfAI Oi•lsi.., lllllw..,kee 41 10 •11 fftCllene 19 )4 ..0 11~. Alleftle ,, 11 01 13 .... Detroit 11 n •JS IS Chi<-2S JI 40J " Clevelend 13 •• no ,,,(, W .... MUy'\ScorH loSlon 121, Indiana 100 Hew Jrrwy 113, P~nox IOS P"lledelphi• 134, Go•°"n Stai. I u Denver 12•. Oelrol1 I 13 Chl<"91) 101, Mll,.aukH 99 Dalio ICW, Portland 101 r........-soam ... Uleh al AU.,.t.t Phoenll al Clewl""° K•nus City •I S.n Olf'QO COMMUNITY COLLEGE WOMEN Orange Coast 82, Santa A na 51 SAMTl AHA S.11 9 Jonnson 11 0••1\ 1, lll~ue 2. Hardy 1•. Wiiham\ 1 Totah 11 f·1' SI OllANGE COAST Corlan1an 1 Elttnoer 4, Carroll 11. Mllrll. 4. Sandv1a..~n 4 Kroyf'r 24 .. :M~.:~~.e:;n.!~:·!~ 2~,, 1rn Total fOlill S.n1a AM IS, Ora1190 C°"'1 ZO: Fouledou1 Efltn!lt'• COranQt' Coa•tl HIGH SCHOOL State R egional P layoffs 1•1 L-aeKh AreMI Ol•biellllMff I Batv1lno •• R••••o.t•~ I .ti 8urrouvtu f A•OO~• '"'\tt v \ W•lhlnQ1on I Fr•snol Olvl•lo11 ti • .,,,.,. •-Artl!'\•• ¥) S,.,.. Joaquin s JO Minion vie10"' V•llo Cnrt•li•n W omen HIGH SCHOOL All·S.0-ILH .... f'lrslTHm Liu Ginsburg IFounta•n V•ll•vl 11 J ••o.; OHnN O••l• 1Foun1a1n \/allo l. "1. Tammy WOOi> IO<eon lll•wl 110 Tin• O... tieytr IEdl\on), 17 I , ~.,,, Corr :~~~~':fl~~ 2BH<hl, 'l, Sandy Cort>o11 Sec-THm Terese Pucl\alSlll (Fountain V•ll•r l "' T .1mmy Bucket\ IHunl•"Qton Bue n I t3 l T<K•Y Cllnkenburd (Hunlt"Qton B•..:M 10 . .t; M•rv kruo"• (fdt'\on• I o 1(1m Tanebe IEOIM>nl tl 6 Most v.,tu•btc Pl•y~r\ Dt~n"• 0•'11\ Cf'ounlaln V•lley1 •r>CS T ammv Wet>O IO<••n View I NHL CAlllPaELLCONFEllENCE Sm11M Olvmon • L T GF GA Pl\ •·Edmonlon 0 16 ,, 366 7•} Cl& caioarv ,. lO 16 110 30S 04 Vancou~ 2• )1 " 117 no ,, 1u .. s 10 l4 •• ,., 311 54 COIOr.00 16 .. II lO'I 1'1 '3 fritorrl1 Olvis10ft Mln,,.sola 30 1' 10 304 110 80 Winnipeg ,. 2t lJ 1S4 198 •s SI Loul• 18 3S • 261 JOI •2 (hlC AQO 16 33 10 m 3°' ., Toronto " ll 111 265 )76 \0 Oe1roll 18 3'I 17 236 JOJ '8 WALES CONFERENCE P•lrlc~ Oivl\lon •·NY l•l•n<I.,, ., ,. 8 ).a 118 10? NY llatlQr<\ 31 1• 11 H' ,,, ,,, PhllecMlpfl•a 33 11 8 ,,. 211 " PllhburQh 16 n " H I ,. 6) Wts~lnQlon n )I ' 170 211 )) Athimt Otvl,fOft -n1rHI 3' 11 11 31' 1"3 •s l uttato J• 10 1• 1/JO 211 11 I011on 34 1l ' ,.,, 112 11 Quebec 30 1S 1• 'J04 ,.. 14 Heriford .. 31 •• 12• ,., S4 •<llnO'lfJIO first place 1n d1'11\1on W-...C.y'• S<orts Kl .. , 3. Edmor11on 2 P"ll•Clelpllla s. NV Rar.oer• s PltUburQt! I, Wa\ntn9ton 1 Hartford 6, Wlnnl~O 1 Cflk aQO 7, Torortto• HY hlender\ •. Mln.,.50lo. luffelO 7, Van<Oliver 4 'fMl..,..•Gamn Winni-•1 B~•on NY Rat191~ al OelrOtl ColOr-•t Pt\11-ll>fl•d Cllk"91) al Mt)fltru l V•"couwr •• C•IQarY Kings 3. Oilers 2 Sc-by Peried• Edmon1on 0 0 , LOS A"9fl" I 2 0 f'lrst "-"" 1. Los AllQll1et, Dionne 41 ( E •&n\, M Murpfly), 13 .. P•nall1P\ Bo"hman Edm, mlror-malor. I 7S, ~eotv, LA, ma1or 1:25; H"'1he•. Edm, •:31, Bon•r. LA.• 31, We111, LA. 4:)1, FOQOlln, Edm, I 1', l ow., Edm, 11:09, M. Murphy, LA, 11 09 Se<e,.. Period 2 Lot Ano•IH, T•ylor le tNlt hOll\ H•rdyl, •·43, J L"' Ar>Qelt\ Ttrr•on I) IL ~rpflyl. 11 07 Peni!ll•o Fogohn fdm •· 2S; lloKll,,,.,. Edm, 6 IS Boto~ LA •·IS; Hardy, LA. I Cl), Coffey, Edm, 16 2• Olonrta, LA. 17 JI Tlllf"d Perled • Edmon1on Semen•o O IGrol1-y Men ier), l :n; S Eomon1on S11lanon 10 CGreUky, Kuo<ll. S 1' Pe.,.tue. H•rdy LA,:2'; Simmer, LA, • Os. t<uQhu. Edm 12:4'; WetlS, !-A• 14' .. Sflotl on -• Edmon1on s ..... 21 L~ Anoei.1 IM~._33, Go•lln Edmonton, Fuhr, Low Los "noelas. Lesw rd. KHlll. A 1',00S Men'• volleyball COMMUNITY COLL.IOI C)ol-WHI ci.t Sarl1a Afta, 1,_7 IM , 4-11, ''""· NIONKNOOL L...-... ,, *'· ea .. 11<1•, IMS lt-t, t ..... '"'"· Nerti! Ton"ance *'·Corona <Ml Mar, IMS, ~ . . . .. . Exhibition .. _1,A ....... 1a1 'f1tm•, Arh.I C•nfornl• OCIO OCIO 000 0 0 t 0 ~n oi... ooo ooo ooo 1 -1 • I MO<eno, KIMlll UI, SUIMldtr (II, .,_II -t 111 •"" 041, •--OH 114 ... IMT .. r. Loll•• 141. si-m , ftooM Ctl, k "lffer 1101 ano l lno11v. G .. a11n ( 101 W S<flllftr L Bro..,n o-..n J, ""SH I Cat Ver• 9-111 80110<! 000 000 ozo 000 , 11 1 Los AF19118• 100 010 000 001 J 10 2 llalney T-141, A-le (rt, Sml1h""" 1101 t nd Gedm•n Ll<ktrl t 71, Wei<"· Power CO Sllirley 171. Ni.dtnf..-r Cll. Hollon 1111 and Sctc>Kla. Crow Ill, Y•-• 10 w HOiion L Sml111-. -r!Mn 11, Arla..,. lt..lt I lel Tam,., Arla I Arhona Sl•te 000 000 000-o 4 1 S.ame 014 !02 001-12 14 o 8oudru 11. Koch CAI. Newman UI and Toono111 Pryor Ill; Bea111e, O<•QO IAI. 801 Cl!, R6wl•y (81. Andersen "' arid 6u111no W Bulli• L 8ouoreau HR·Sff11 .. , BO\l.V Tl .. n '·Twitt• I (•I Ori•-. f'i..I Oe1roi1 000 OCI< 011 01 ' 12 1 Mlnne\01• IJO 000 030 01 I 14 J W1lcoa S.UCorr UJ TOOi~ 161 l -1 Ill. 111111 1101 •nd Patrl"' MtlYtn t6), 11-m Vewllc 10 Corben 161 HOdQe Ill H- t 11 I •nd Wyn•o•r w Ruu L Hobb~ HR\·Oetro1t, Cowen\_ t•Q• MJnn11ot•. .... tCht't W111HJ flldl•ns S, Ci*• 1 , .. Tue..,., Ana.I Chlt•QO INLI SS 000 000 100 I I I Clevel•nd 000 310 00• I 6 1 Bord, Griffin 141 E••lw10. 161 and O•vli, C>••• Ill. Bren,,.,n, Ander'IOn 10 , Bol\net Ill SPlll~r Ill and Haney W Brennan L Grlflln ai.. J•Y> 1, Pllllll .. Z tot c 1 .. ,. ... ,. Fla.> roron10 010 100 211 7 10 t Ph1l•delpfl1• 001 000 ~1 1 4 Cton<y Goll U I G•rvtn 171 and M•rtlne1. Pf'tr•IU .,, '""~•rns.on M O•"•' (4) BtuHlar 171 Monge l'I e nd Ot••. McCormec:k I II w Gott L M Oavl• Wlltl• So• S, lloyals J l•I S•r•~. Fl• I K•n•"' C•tY ooo 110 ooo 1 14 o Cnoc•oo IAU 130 010 00• s • I Crtel W•llS Ill. M.lrt1n i.1 and S••11Qhl, T •ou1. Ge1oor ISi, Bor,,..s 161 Agosto "I ft"<f Fo\k Hiii (61 W~Troul L Crol 8ravn 1, E1pet S (•I WHf P•lm leKh, f'la.I All•nt• 023 001 001 1 11 J MOnlrtal 000 107 110 I 11 0 O•yley BtO•OSl•n ,., MCMur1ry '" GarO.r Ill and Slna1ro Roqers, B•hntall 01 En91P Ill Frymen 191 end Bl•0-11 "ll•mo \ 11 1 w Oayl<'• L Ro9e,. tt R M ontrf'al 8rHJCJ\ l,..w.n IS, Gianb J 1•1 Sun Crty, Arh I S•n Fran<t\<O 011 000 10? S U J Mtlwau~... 131 107 llOI U 17 O l a•kev. Tu1h 141 ·capoll• Ill and R-. C ummlnQ\ ISi. Lercn. P•r<011 141 0 1..,,, 161 JO~\ (8). Mueller f'I and Simmons. YO\! Ill w Ltrcn L L•••o HR• MllW .. ulU!~ e,-oun.ard 1, 'V ~· S•n Ft•n<t\iCO. Sum m f r\ c ...... • ..... l•IP-Al•I Ch•< •QO INll SS 100 llJ4 001 • IS 2 Oek ••no 000 soo 010 • 11 I Nolt-\ Caudill u • ,_.,,,...~, U> Sm•th ,., dnd Co• Bff!ton IU KeouQn. ROOrlQU.I (ti Hpn\lf't n• SwtM:~I ct) Ht-im uel .. r Oi Ru.<.,. ta• ano <e•rnty w HernMOtl L Sw1•<._1 HR:-Oa"l•no Davi\ Y M llMt l, R t1"91f"t 1 i.t Fort uudonwle, Fl•.I T ... , 000 000 001 I S 0 New York tALI 010 100 !Oa J I I Houo" M•ll•<k 141 Oarltno 17) •r>CI Suno~ro. B JOlln\Ofl 161. Nfl'IOn, MorQtn 10 Mav m Go""ll"' and Gulo.n Rech 4, P1r•te\ 1 IA1 8rt--, Fl.> I Ctn< lnnall 000 000 4C)I) 4 10 1 P111•1>urQh 000 000 010 1 I 1 Lttl>ranm la(~\ I•) Hu-111 LOI .. ti > •nd Tttv1no o•et .rry UI E\Qu.tr. Joni'\ 1)1 Romo I SI Camaclto I 71 Cuon It! An(! N ie 0''" W H\lmf' L C•ma<hO U of Ml•ml 7. Orio'" 6 l•1 Ml•mtl tS•lt•mO<f' Ull 11U 100 • I 1 Ml•m• 000 004 Ola 1 10 0 Fl•n.tgan. Davi" (0 Gr1m\lfP( ~n •nd O•mo\ey, Roysteor lb) PaKu•l. Sour• U>, Hfl'c)tDn UU Smith (9) •net S•ntov•n• w..-.1;;,., tn W >-if'"l\on l Grlrrulry HR 8-ttlimort-A1ptiif'n 10 College scores C•I Poly Pomona 12 Cdt Sldlt F'ullt'1on Nf"Y«tda la .. Vf9,a\ 13 Gani~· I UCL A I u of S•n o .. qo. U( R:1vft,10t l UU" "1 USC 10, CMpman l N .. ..s.t La\ VeQa• 1:.. Gon•.-i• I UC Sant• Bart>a<• I . Ctl Stale F•ono O High school Ar1 ... La IS. 1 l'Vlnt 1 Arl•SI• 011') 0.00 0 IS I I 1 r•ln• 1 O 0 OJO ) 7 1 I Rol>ert Padilla, Columba "l •nd Ray Padilla Simms, Zangl (21 llerney 161 - Arm\lronQ \Iv Rooe'1 P6dlll• L Simm• 7B Gullo flrvonrl JB Gritton (Arie.la) CdM '1, T11t11n S Tu\lin OJO 010 0 S tO 1 Coron•°"' Mer 910 010 a 11 1 0 Por1tr Ouewntll 111. Frenk UI. VM E•<'•V !•I -l<OOWO ttum\, WyM UI end Melbon W Burns L-Por1er 28-MOu I Cd Ml Bollinger CTu\ltnl HR Coller<! 1Tu\11nl St. ........ , It, Ulllvenlty I SI An1hony 004 1.i ~ 10 IJ 0 Un •• r,.11y 000 JOO o-J I > Morai.•. Corral ISi ar>CI T al>leda, Larten, E~rnA'1 ISi •nd Frei W Moreles. L - Larsen 11 II 2B Proc1er IS\ An11!ony), Yta1on tUnlve<5ilyl, Mlllor tUnlverlllyl. HR Al•erer (SI Anll•ony), Ntlmt• CS1 Anthony I L-lt•lll. W-~ 2 Woodbridof' 000 110 ~2 3 4 L •oun .. BN><~ 100 001 x s I I llu\'.Mlll, WIW 161 •n<I NOian, 5olomM, O'Connor ISi. Br~td Ill and Crowl W Solom•n L RuH~fl 18 l•• IWoodbrt~I JB Burke 1woooorld9tl EllMl<i.6,Ma..,Oe4J 111a1er Oe. 001 •oo 1-l 1 O E'1a11<la u~ 011 •-t • 2 Oauer, K-.gll 111, Ill-141, Cont UI, Oubar c•I •ftCI ll•ernol" M<C•"lll aftd RIOO• W -lll<Cahlll. L -c -. 2B -G•rdner IEI, Kelly tMOI lB -Garoner tEI, Neiman CEI. HR-RIOQt IEI 11\aMa 1, l'ara-llt 1 Par•m-1 000 100 0-1 1 2 Merine 100 600 x-7 10 0 Sellers, R-IOUH CS) -Gonl•I ; I«.,,, McClure Ol end Floro W-Se llers. L Berry 28-Laulo Clller1ftll, Floru Clllarl11a), G-on !Par-) 18 -FIO<'ft I Marina), i.-Clllal'lna) .7. tl·.IJ, JJ.:1!-_.._._. .... _.._ ·---~ -··--r;,n '1'tm1to'i' .... _, I -.. .. -.. .. Y:: 11 ~n,:,11• ... llc• COUAea --Cllall ttr .... LA¥ .... ni.N "--~ coco, u : .... -......., COCCI. 1.-CL.AV), tlM It Ltt ...... ....,._ M411f!fton coca. l ,J; ,,.., -'--ILA\11, U.t; All__. -... llllff coca ... wawtHDAY'S •HUI.Tl It ............ .__.._. ... , 1'111tT 1tACa.o... mlle ~e. Juli. s~ CC:""""'I • • t • IA Ml11ltl•• <Tessler) • tO J 20 Siar Rk •y (J. AU11ir11 J .• AIM rac.d• on,. Juke, St*f CM,_, Foell•",.,,_. It ..... on .... HMMM, T'-' l IM. U 8JIACTA 0 ·.11 "61d l U tO, T•u•o ttAC•. 0... '"'"'MU. ... , ... Cllllfty! , •• '"'11flt"" CDeWMrl •• •• ..... Af'fV't T ..... C'fMd 111 Al\O rl(ff, l lt o.Ml<t, Howdy •1141 ... ~. Mlle-to Wl11. Tim•. I.OU/I U aJIACTA U 41 .. 141 UJ to l'OUllTM ltACa. 0"4I mile 1<04 •• ...... H..ie Victory H ll'athrl I JO J 00 UO Jwll • Hllllltr flj .,_Ill 11 40 •·• U-r Cr'V'I N C"'-tltfll 1 to Al• , • .., . ..,_ -•w.o, "'""'' u. N, Twk• Rei.<IM, Teo Ca l M Giit ..... Oewn~NM Tlmt I OJ Pll'TN ltA(l.0...Mlle lll(e El To,.,llo CSltelhl ) tO ) 20 I JO BOier• GN91 1"°"901 10 JO 4 .• l'orever Wl111 i.-IL19"t"llll l.IO Alto recadt weirut, Montl,11or 0•••, Tlme'l"Ot'YIV!i: lllltlov C"811<e, 'Tiit ~. Oa1e'I OendY 'flme: t :OI 2/1. U llCACTA 1•41CMllCI'4400 SIXTN ltA(I.. One mlle pece 111•1•"1< A.,,• IBlllarl 2 flO J IO uo Miiiy Gritty ll.ailerl It 40 I 00 ldr• ILIOflthllll l IO Alto reced lllll• lnllnlly, 8eau1eout Bent. '-"-"· Laop Ll1tlte, C•-ia. Ar90 SI••~ Time I W/l. SEVENTH llACI. o ... mlle oace Kiwi lar~y (Ratchlordl ' 40 I 10 110 Haver lkllar H llerNll 4 to 2 :IO Tualahl llldge (~Clelr) 1 10 Also ••eel: Al>M Bow•r, Ouo1e Hiii, Bye Away, Top lint A, Kendalla Boy, Sm lllno P09 Time: 2:02 J/S U llXACTA tlr71 peld Ut.olO u PICll SIX l).2-4+WI peld u p 10 wll~ to wlnnlr19 tl<keh Ola ltorMll U PIO Six tonsol•11on peld $1.40 w ith 10 .. 1nnln9 llOeU 1flw horltsl '2 Pock SI• M:ral<n conwleUon peld n •O w llh U2 wlnnlnq tic kets Uour hOrW\. on. K r•l<" three nor~i. tM \.<r•l<tW,\ or tour 1W>rw1, two •cr•tchH) EIGHTH llACE.One mlle 1ro1 Wyn Darnley I Parker I • 00 1 IO 1 .i Chief Guy A ((Dpelandl • 40 1 flO flkle Colli"' IM•lerl J 10 Also rKed: Nol>I• Rule, Andy' Meteor Jay's -le•. -rY'• Win ~no. S.llor Be.,are. Bold Stre•k Time: 2:013/S. U IXAC:TA CIT21 P•lcH 1S AO MlllTN ltACE. One mil• P•U Noble 111119 IAndtr'IOnl 13 IO • 00 J., Ranee's Gold IOoudrnut 3 40 J eO Phoenix J .ck IK...,bler) • 00 Also rKed' hrpor1 Black, PhenlOm Don Yu100. Buo Filly Oinly Rowen Coov't Only Boy Time 1·st 1 S U EXAC'fA ll·SJ Patd ~1 to TEN TN llACE. One mlle P<Kt Bl•O Bannt<' N IShl!rrenl tO 10 34 IO I 00 Bio Sprf119 IWllllemsl I IO s IO Spry'• Best I K.,maierl 12 00 Al'° r.c:f!d Blue Sum~r J•u Fe\tlv•I, Ten 8ercenter. James Gr•tt•n. Corube Command, E••Y p II Time: 2:013/S. n E XACTA ,,.,,paid t l,323 60 A It end.net 4,Jn WCT tournament CatMM<lll f'lnl llWM Sl,..ies Joh•n IC.ri<!k def John S•drl, 1r'i. 6·1, \/ljay Amr•1••1 def llolf Gehrln9, '"· lt-2, J01111 Flugoratd ml Cflrls Mayotle. >• . ._,, t.-4, R•w:al P<lne\ 0.1 lll<•r<lo Ycu•, i..2. 6·2, Heinz c;..ntllerdt oef Mark Ed,,,_...., •·3, 7-4. Belgian Indoor tatllnoMatl) Fln••-s..,...s Jol'ln Mc E,,rof' ctet Kim W•r wl<.ll I re 11 redl; Mah Wll•ndtr def Bruce ManM>n, lr4, i..1. SlllOmO G ll<U teln def LIOVd Bourne. lt-J. l·S, Tim Mayot1e Otl Ull Pinner. 1... ..... Brtan TeKner def Erl• l\Ursky, !Tl, ••. Fr111 Bueflnlno Clef Boo l11t1, l·S, 6·3 Women'• tournament lat O .. Lasl SeaMlll_S..,.les AndrH J_..,.r dtf Anne While, i..J, •·2, C•lflt rln T .,.vier def Sylvla Hen"•· '"· .. 1 lwllh<lr-1. Andree T...,..varl dtf Bellina Bun~. 7·S ...... S.t>tna SlmmortO\ cMf Anne Smllh,f>.4 i..2 College UC Ir ....... Yale 1 -..... Snvdt• tVCll cMt w~i.nttolma, J-4, lt-0, 7·S. Ou<lld IUCll def Franco. !Tl, 2• ...... Nelwn tUCll Clef Layende<ker, lt-2, 7-4, Slanlar (Y) O.f Mcf>herw.n. 6 1, • 1, ll•mol tuCl1 oe1 Pomc>an. 6-4, 6-1. Zoller tuCll Clef. S1off•I, 6-2, 6_. a-es Ouald-Snvdtr._CUCll cMI Reynal Franco &·J •·•: N•tson Ramo\ IUCll def Pom~n-St•n1ar. "-'1. J •. • 1. Amor P~r<tf'• IUCI I cMt !>tolfel Herioo, ''° 6 J High achool C.U-11, L .. Ami..s 1 M"91H Wer~ ICMI Clef lMm,• I, def llyu,lrl, dtl Vu, 6-1, IOs1 Pr•n. 1-4, KOO• ICM1 !011, H , won, tt-3. M . <Ill C.,mona, lr4, Tr.,. (CMI lo.I, 4-4, 1-4, won, lt-3. I0\1 Prall. l-4, Pham ICM) lo.1. 4-4. 24>, won, !Tl O.f Carmona.It-I -Rlch•y·NQuyen (CMI O.f. A!oahl·Alhar•, •·I. 7·S, def. Coffeman·Olm11ed, • l , 1r2. llemmlnqton·Smllh tCMI won, •-4, •.O, won, •·l. •·2 '"'""17\'t, EIO.-ltli> ~ ....... Herper Ill IOl1 IO LlndwY. , ... IOSI 10 11•1. 1 .. ; del Leye1, lt-O, Clef LIM, 7·S. Pham Ill, 10\1 H , won tt-J, H , ._1, Slt•w (I) 1011 0... 1 ... won~. 1-4, KnlQhl Ill I0\1 I•.""°" It-•. ''°· •.•. -Frl••·Huenv (If cMf LY•kCKkl W•l•Nbe, •·1. •·2; del. Ande,,.on·Euler, •·l , 4·2. Grlfll1h·VelaKO 111 lo•14,., won .. 1, 10114,., , .. CweNI -.i -Jt, aHerly Nlllt I Slfltle1 S111t1va n CCdMI. def Hecht, •·•. cMI. Rlchlln, lt-0; dtf. Nagler, .. 2. dtf G....,,, •·2; Heyward ICdMI. won lt-1, •·1, .. ,, lt-1, BrownlbarOH CCdMI. won '"· •·2 ... ,. lt-1, Ahler (CdMI. won lt-1, 6·t. 1 ... 1·• -Wa •her ·E w ln Q ICd M I <l•I Errelow-Preulen. 6·0. • 2. dtl Navon S.•lltkl, H , H TroPt»Ho•1•11er won•·•. tt-J. .. 1, 7·S ~ lhecll It. Ulll•enlty 11 ~ W iiia rd <LBI del. Grear, •·l . def. Martinet, 6-4, *'· 111ar.-111, •·I, Oef. ,,_.., ••>; Scllantt CLll IOtt, U , 4 .. , won, H . W ; l(olle11d9 CLBI IOSI, 1·•. 4·•· , ••• •·•; tlrumlleld CL81 IOs\, 1 ... WOfl, .... •·t. tt-i. o..e.. C•P04'1nc:o.~rrv (Lii lot1 C>•y·Paul11on, , .. , 2·•· def. VenkelHh·Ollver. ...... o. Laa<h·8r8"dt ILBI won, 6-J, •·1; .iwt, •>. .. 2. M-Oel 17¥1':~ V .... y 1tVt IMtlet Rve ... r IMOI •f. Flnden, .. 1; Otf Ml-... I; ci.t. S..Va, H ; .... T-. .. I; Sc .... tMOI -.. >. M , .. J. M , Wllllams IMO) 1M1 0.., j.7, ..., .. 2, 7-4; La<l't CMO) teM t ... S.'. W , H . 0...... H al l ·R•ton• IMO) SP111 •11" L l 11d1trom •Ht l11 , S·I , 6'1 ; dtl . Oe•v•r·Wlllletm, .. ,, •·t ; Schmldl•ft•ll (MOl lot:tM,2 .. ,wont..t.•-2. c.. ............ ....... ,...ic-6111 -~,.....-........... 1 ... t . , ... "9 -I • ..._ COWl, 1titU; l. "k• CICCI. •·•1; I. Um11111 -COW), U:11.6. -ff'lll -t. ewuMI (OW), lt.,.111 t, terre COW>, l1MA1 I I. 0'9"111 CIC:Cl1 ,,,.... . .. ti fl• 1, l'r-1111 CI CCI. n 4, I. lll•llaltey tow>, ti •. a Wri.M 1ow1.11-e • tOt 1111 1 l.111\Cf COWi t 10t.t; t . Stellhe111011 (OWi, t 01 '· t, Oevle Cl()CI, t ·U t. too fly I Get•, COWi. ,. .. •1 2 yen, I IC Cl, 2 10 t, > Or ow• tlCCl1 2: "·'· 100 Ire• 1 "'9"'11n ClcCI. 4t.t, t. Woeclt \OWi, ,.,,1; I ... ,o COWi. ti.I 2IOMO 1 UMtMllOUr COWl,t :tt.t ;t . Sl•llf\en'°" COWi. t 10 t; I Davit CIC:CI. '10 MO Ir• I Bur<.,.11 IOW>. • 4' •; 1 Mallafln tGWI,, n '· ... '"''d tlO llt'N•I 1 lultllll tOW), 1.UJI; 2 Woe4'• COWi ) 1t 0, ) G•o• .. CICCI, 1,. 0 .iotfr .. retay Gtl-WHl,I t1.tl Hlah achool 11-.wl Mftr M. c .... IMU M ttO ....-Y •••o 1 Ht•-1 Ha'11ef, 1:•l.4' * lreffty.. I Woolfol-(NHI . 1.,L•; ITTI TtMl , 1 S4 I : l HuQhH tCMl, 1·HO, toO IM I lll!Ollel INH). I k 1, 2 S1•nlay IHHI. ' 01 •. , P1lci.t11 ICMI, , 10 Ot '° fr-1... 1 Pr1<ae11 CC:MI, 21 .,; 2 rrt0mpton INHI, U 41, l HlnH IHHJ, 14 0 100 fly I H•rrl'IOn IHHI. Sl •., n,,..., CNH), 1:001, J Cn llllo CCllll, 1 01 7 • 100 freetlvlt 1 Thomoton IHHI, .. 47. , Earnes1 ICMI SI • J HUQllM ICll\), SJA Sh~k~-r.·~I. ! ~':.'O~k 1::~-~ Sit~?. s 1S °' 100 PtOllrOH I H•rrl'°" (NHI, 5'.0, 2 .Stenley (HHI. S7 •. 3 Prl<kelf ICM), Ml. 100 br•••h"Ok• 1 MCHft1 IHHI, St.•7. 2 Sh111•off ICM>. I 0.10 l 1..6 Min INHI, I 07 1 ; Esu 11Cla 11t, ~•O•O M 200 mNl•y ••••v C\tan<••, no Urn. repe>rteo 200 frf(! I Sou111ron IE ' I S4 ' , lrel•nd IE I 1 00 H l Car•l•Y I E I. ? 07 ,, ?00 IM I Bero IE I 2 R•9Q• IEJ J Wick\ IEI no1trnt\rfl00r11'd SO lrH 1 °''°"' IE I 14 6, l Ptrtm.,. tEl,15 ... 3 Cernc>t»ll l EI H .. 100 fly 1 WOO.ltr IEI SO,, 1 WI< .. (El 1 0701,l Flnle y lEl 107 H 100 Frff I 0<•11< IE I S4 4, 1 Pittman tEI, S9 40, l C•mt>b<'•l IEI SI J7 SOO lrtt 1 Sou1nton IE I, S "S. l Irela nd !El, S 3S )S, l C•r\ley IEI. S CJO 100 tHICk I Wel>'lltr t E J. I 00 OI, , BtrQ IEI 1 01 "14 J Wtnle•• t!>I. I IJ u . 100 brU•I 1 Sihn I [I 1 00 4, 2 111- 1EI.1 Oii sq l w n1tt 1S1. • 16 u •OO frH rel•Y I E\\pn<•• J 43. CdM 11, U11lvenHy H ?00 medlrv r•l•Y ' Coron.a ckt ~' I ''I 200 free I S<,...,.,n IUI, 1 S. • 1 w .. 11~r .... fU I I \9 s ) hmPI<' ICJ 2 01 0 200 tM I Carl\Oft CUI 1 09 0. 1 Loos1>ourrow ICI 1 u • J Smlln tCI ' 11' 50 Ire~ I T•ylo r ICI. 13 A Schlueuman ICI, H 1 J ROI! ICI, 14 l 100 fly 1 Moorow CCI. SI 0, 1 B•r11e11 IUI I 01 0 ) Sml1t1 ICI I 019 100 '"'" I Sch .. 81m I u I s' • 1 T •Ylot !Ct, Sl 3. 3 ROii tel. U 3 SOO 1rH I C.,l,on IV). •·SJ), 1 Wasnbourn~ IUI \ 11 I, l v.,,.,.., tCI s 31 • 100 b•<k I B•fll"ll IUJ 1 01 9, 1 Loo~bourrow ICI 1 CW S 3 Scon ICI I 04 I 100 br•ot 1 J•COI)\ ICI I Ol 1, 1 Krr<~M<IUI I 09 S ) Gellrlcl\IUI 1101 •00 free ••lo 1 Corona <ltl M•r. J JO 1 Women COMMUNITY COLLEGE a-w ... t u , El c:amlM .. ?00 ~. relay c;o1oen Wo1. 1 010 1001M Carr IECCI 1 ,_9 S01rtt Kent I ECCi. 1S IS 100 o.O SMn•han IECCI, l 16 0 100 l)teU1 Baur IGWI. 1 11.0, 100 fret Sttltlds IGWI. 1 OS '· SO lly ICtn1 I ECCi :!'I 4. 100 frN" SMnahan CECCI. I 00.S 100 fly Sn•olO\ (GWI. 1:04 S; so back Shl•ld\ tGWI, JI '· 100 Im -c;,,,, IECCI, I 11111, SOO free P•rrlln IGWI. I 4S 2 ~ l)<H\1 T1m1 I ECCi 34 9; 100 free rf'lay El Cam11'\0. 1 '' O HIGH SCHOOL ..._, H.,,,.,, too, c ..... -w S1 100 mf'OWv '"'•' t Ntwoort H•rt>or. 10.1 100f•tttlylfo 1 lUnQ INH l,7017, 100 IM ' Ounnono tNHI, 2 )7 7. so frtt\hi. I Mowt•v tCMI 11 6 100 flv l Loyd ICM! I II 4 100 fr ... !\fylt I MclCtnlo INH) I 04 . lOO tree.1yl<o I Perk., INHI 6 OS ) tOO IMO\l•OH - LonQ INHI, 1 09, 100 br .. stroh Ounn1no INHI I u J tOO treo relh N<'WOOr1 H•rbor • JI 11 E ... ncw 1~l. ~<~ S• 200 m4!Cllo rtl•• Es1•n<IA, J ·O) •: 100 fre• Avoroll ( f\11, 2·01. 2no IM - Crhmon IE11I, 1 11 I. SO free M•ddo• IE•ll 1441 100fly M.-s (E•ll.1'033, 100 lrot CMPtnler IE\11, 1 S9 •. SOO •- Wolfe ISdodl. s .. ••. 100 b.10 Av .. 111 I E1ll I Oii i 100 t>,.a\I Crl\mon IE•ll. I 1' 1 000 tror rtl•v S.Ocll•IMO, 4 l4 SI WOMEN'S CdM ... U111ve,...1y H 100 mt'dt•Y rol•Y 1 Coron• del Mar. 1 01 8 100 lrff 1 Brown tUI 1 OS 0, 100 IM t Rt<N!Okl ICI 1 2• J ~fret I Bird tCI 14 1 100 lly I K*•n IUI. t 12 0, 100 lrtt I Bird CCI II S, SOO lrH I Rol>b ICI. I 3J •. 100 IM<.k I Cav•n•uoh ICI. 1 1& 2 tOO b<t.,\1 1 Brt\Cor tCI. 1 14 I . 4ClO t,.ef' relay 1 (CM'Ofl• Ofl M•r, .t 00 1 ~ I I .. . Women's tottball COMMUNITV COLLEGE ~West 1, Sa~ Mefllu • Sanl• Mont<a 000 000 0-0 3 0 GOiden Wf'S1 000 000 1 I 1 0 Munn .no Brk..,M• Otlp and McElr•• 1 Saft O'-'·~Mell 2 S4n OleQO 112 021 O ' 11 1 Saddltb•Ck 010 001 0--2 1 10 Lun end 8;1rtwr , li"9fl, LO< kt UI •nd Rul>al<••• W Loan l LltlQrl 7B Car1er !Sa n OltQO) 3B ICuktr IStn OltQOI HR Jo""'°" !San OttQOI ~AMS, Or-Cu110 S.n1e Ana OJO 001 I -s • I Or•nv• Coa11 000 000 o--o l • AQulr,... -F-nau•r Culp ano Crw )8-Ripley 1San1a AMI HR Wand• ISanla An•I HIGMSCMOOL ............... -111, ill .. Mle 1 E•1er<la 000 001 000 00-t 3 1 HuntinQlon llMch 000 000 100 01-1 11 1 Chrl•lman and vat<ner, Phllllp\ end Reno. JB-Hollm.,, IE•l•nci•I. s...c-.1.1 ...... • !>an Clemente 000 100 o 1 l 0 lr•lne 000 000 0-0 1 0 Bu«lnl and LoO.flerJ, Merlin •nd Cowarsc.h o .... Hiiis 11, cw ...... , Illar I Corone Ott Nt.ar UOO 000 0--O o l Oana Hills 306 101 •-11 ' J Oo<lch and Burgo 111,..re Thom .. 01 and Cflrl•1ry, Lawr 161 W lltwre 11·11 l - Oodch 7B Sllulda coane Hllh l Ml•siefl Vie .. I, WfftmlA•lf I 1111u1on vi.to ooo ooo ocn-2 Wntmlnslef 000 000 ~ t Ewar1andM<Ewan. Wedneaday'a transaction• au1aAL.L ·~-1. ..... SEA'f1'LE MAltlHEltS -Sl•ned Jim Maler, 0-Edler, M61111Y CatUllO - Oom1"90 R-. lnfle!Hn, Edwin HUN&. BM S~ and S.m Welborn, pllc~. end Tllo M-4, outtltlder ......... , ....... PITTSBU,.l)H PIRATES -$old Illa con1••ct Ofllllft Cw."OM.'*', lb evllfdWlllr"""' Of Illa A,...,k •n AUotlttlon l'OOTIALI. ............... u.... LOS AHGELH "AMS -Hamad J•.11 '"°" ... ..._._ <Ntll HEW CiHOLAHO P}'TlllOTS ~ L..a._, ~ • .._..,, .. tetklt: IU<loeN Hener, ,.-.... M<'-_,,. lrleft Wiii...,_, lltf\t-. WASHIMOTO.. ,_lote<IN\ -~ -Le"WMlf, c..,_.11;, .. I terlet., ttww, _,_~.,. .... .,. ............. u..- 0 8 T9'01T RIO WINOS -.. ._. W- Mt11Mt, NH ~II Me'""' JIUr ON IMtrll'll .... <.M<ll fW tttt ,...,........, "• .... -. EYEBALLING IT Lie f Hanson of Lag una Bl·<1ch ket·ps h1-; <tlll'ntion J.{lued lo the hall during Wedn esda~· night's vt1l leyball matt h 1.1.·ith Es tancia L a guna Beach w ins showdown Lagun<1 Reach High s taked an early sc·<1son claim to Orange Co<1 st area prep volleyball s upremacy Wednesday night with C:IO I 1·15, 15·9, 18-16, 15-12 win over v1s1ting Estancia T he match .. Pilling the two top-ranked teams in Orange County, was close throughout but Coach Bill Ashen's Artists rebounded after a first.game loss to sweep the next three "The t h ird game wa s Rustle r s win;OC C blanked Golden West scored a run in th e bottom of the seventh inning to defeat s ... nta Monica, l ·O. but Orange Coast dropped a 5-0 deci s ion lo San ta Ana and Saddleback was stopped by San Otego. 9·2. in community coUege wom en ·s s o f tball pla y Wednesday. On the high school front, Huntingt on Beach s had ed SOFTBALL Estancia. 2· l , in 11 innings, M ission Viejo edged Westminster 2-0 in nine and San Clemente and Dana Hills both won regulation decisions. Tammy IJelp had six strikeouts and gave up three hits as Golden West posted its third straight Southern Cal Conference victory and brought its season record to 19· l. The lone run came on a walk. stolen base, e rror and sacrifice n y Jan Culp pitched well for Orange C oas t des p ite a separated shoulder on her left side. getting nine strikeouts. The only earned run against her was a homer by Lynn Wands. The loss w cs the South Coast Confe r en ce opener for the Pirates. Sad dleback Co l l e g e committed 10 errors on the way to Its first Mission Conference defeat in three oulin1s. One or the few bright sPotS for the Gauchos was the 2 ror 3 performance by Dawn Thomas at the plate with one RBI. Va nessa Phillips had a three·hiller for Hunlin1ton Beach in a game that was de cided in the bottom of the eleventh on two ~rs. ,._. Ctndy 'K1v;..;rrie~e~a~n'~~'8-...k~iTTI"I Thomas combined for a no·bitter as Dana Hilla pounded Corona del Mar, 12.0. Debbie Hasan wu 2 for 4 and Mer*9ith Mi.ell 2 for 2 with a pair of RBI for Dana l{JU.. LIH Bucclnl had a perf~t t• me for four lnnin11 and a DO•hiUer (or ~ lMin11 for SUl Clemente before Wendy M.ar1in broke lt up wttb a 1ln1I• ID tbe 1hct.h (or JrVIDe. Bucclnl'• SRA la now 0.33 for t.bne 1•m•. • f pivotal." Ashen S(.11d ·They had the lead three times. we had it three times. then we rinally put ·em away •· As usual. senior Nell Riddell was a force 1n the middle for the Artists. Setter Rudy Ovorak and middle blocker Chris Larson. a VOLLEYBALL m transfer from Uni versity High in Los Angeles. also perrormed well. · · 1 was a little concerned arter the first set." Ashen said "We were down 14·6. but we got our game together 1n the second part or the game .. The Artists. ranked No. l in the most recent Orange County Top 10 poll, .. re the defend ing Cl f champions In other action. Corona del li ar lost a tight three game match lo North Torrance in the quarterfinals or the Inglewood Preseason Tournament It was close in all three sets as North Torrance escaped with the 12·15 17 ·15. fft5 win. Junior back row specialist Pete Roger s played solid defe nse and passed and served well for the Sea Kings. Senior middle blocker Joe B o rd e n a n d se tte r M i k e Johnston also played well for Corona del Mar. From Page C1 LASORDA . • • a lligator on his blue sweater, is Auick to point out he has nothing !against Torre's philosophy on )discipline. "I never question anybody's rules. I'm certainly not one to be critical I never t ry to meddle in anything someone else is doing," he said. La so rd a p r e f e r s to concentrate on his own team, and it shows. He boasts the best record among National League managers over the past five years and has led the Dodgers to three peooants durin1 his five years as manager. And while s pring training games are rarely an indication of th e season that counu, Tonoe may have com e up with a method for a fast break out of the gate this spring. The Braves won their first· thl'ee games or the s pring, including a 5-0 whitewash of the Dodgers Monday and a l ·O verdict over the Yankees tbe d&¥.Wore. Torre May just need one more commandment that reads: Thou shall not celebrate too early. ....... "°'9$-f'-°""'......., ............... 1o1• .. ,._. ...... ...... Del'Wlll. "· • .,.. Mii -lft .. -w , ..... , wl1!1 tM ttteft•Lff Afl991et """"" o.eawt ... --....T~ M .. ._.._.._ .. -let'l-"74 WMfl lie"" tS ,.,._ ... .,_ ... ,.._,_ .. TwlM. ... Wtll .... ... t.MA...--C-....-lllt"K ..... ..... tc,....._.,........... . AINlll .. _.....,.....,. ......... ~ ...... ... ...... .._ ....... ..._ ... ... o ................ , ....... "' .. ...., t ....... l.ett .....,. "' ........... ... A ...... , , .,...., .. t<W .... ..._..,_ ,. ....... . • • ' THE t',\MIL t' CIRCtM by 811 Keane "I borrow~d them for my robot." ,_:\H,.:\Dl'KE by Brad Anderson "You'll never be fully paid for!" BIGGEOllGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) "How's THAT tor a real cllffhanger1" "Yoo REMEM&R WUICM {)RAIN ALL 'THAT MONEY Wf.ITT OOWN LAST YEA!< ? II ....... --.:;;;_.-...-._.__.. MAYCE 5HE .JU5T WENl FOR A WAlK, ro 0ET SOME FRESH AIR' YOU'RE A OfteAMER! LET'S 5Pl.IT UP' THAT WAY WE CAN COVER MORE Pl..1'CES FA5TER ' ANO NOW, A WORD ~ROM OUR SPONSOR ACROSS 1 Aid S Ornament 10 Dispute 14 Actor - Novello 15Way 16 COfona 17 Finch. 2 words 19 "Oh.met" 20 Rain-snow 52 Unheeding 54 Fall mo 55 Intimidates 59 Rents 63 Amass 64 Teenager 66 Inquires 67 Care for 68 "'Kiss Me 69 Minus 70 81rr1eudas 71 Des1royed -----~ 11(i/rl'- [JI '1 I 114£ Rl.JSTL~ OFlµf PAm MONEY AND 1µE JIN~LE Of TJ.IE CotNS IN T~e;lft.L .. by Ferd & Tom Johnson BUT f;SPE:C/,ALLY 11-IE CLICK OF TM~ [)oOR LATCJ.I W~EN WE LOCK UP FOR THE NIGHT. ''Help!'' she cried . J II SHOE ~ ~·u. HEAR 'JUE ~DAT~OF ™E ear,e.r.curnN& CCMMITTEE.. ' Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurld1y, March 11, 1982 "Help! Help! Help! Help! Help! Help!" by Charles M. Schulz . l1LL AOO ANOTMER ·'Help!'' n • I f I by Tom K. Ryan (rA'mff n:NPIN~ ~l\1$S ~~ by Jef t Mac Nelly by Ernie Bushm1ller THAT'S THE THIRD WELL, YOU WERE NAUGHTY WHAT ARE YOU DOING, NANCY? I WANTIOSEE HOW MUC ~ I CRY SPANKING I 'VE HAD THIS..- WEEK GORDO TJIOSI! '1'RIMMED ~ ~~MILLED, ANO 7HE. JUICE FERMENTED ANO DIS- TILLED l/.JTD ~tJIL.Af ' °"' THERE AR:E 450 MtJ..L.IOAI EACH WEEK PLAJ.Jrs SWWL Y Gfa::::JWt)JG !Al THE..STATE OF JALISC.O AWNt=r . ~m:o••-......... DOSS "'f"HA1"' MSAN YOU'RS NSSPSP A"f "'f"HS HOSPl,-Al.-1 POC1"'0R? aJf 8HE CAME OJS'.. 1b 1ELL ME. How ~NHEHADI 6EENTOHER. WHAT D\O SHe EXf'ECTMEW oo? LIS~N . Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thuraday. March 11, 1982 I, \ :- International money supply policy urged ~ , STANFORD <O Wi -The current money t • crunch has caused a "global depression" but the r e's a r esponsible way out, a Stanford economist believes. Pro f. Ronald McKinnon s uggested the so-called "Friedman rule·· for smooth monetary growth should be shifted from a national to a carefully defined international level by the • Federal Reserve Bo)rd and its counterparts in J apan and West Germany. The Friedma n rule is named for Milton Friedman, Nobel laureat e in economics at Stanford's Hoover Institution. McKinnon discussed lhjs suggestion for~ new international monetary standard Wednesday at the Society for International Development's meeting in San Francisco "The way out of the unnecessarily severe and poorly understood world money crunch of 1980-82 ''Th e board of governor s must be pr epared t o a bandon 'domestic m onetarism'.'' is to restructure how t he Fed, the Bundesbank and the Bank of Japan jointly conduct their moneta ry policies," he said. "In particular the board of governors must be prepared to abandon 'domesti c monetarism' the doctrine that the Fed should key in on some purely domes tic U.S. monetary aggregate. suc h as MIB. in Uie face of great shifts in the international demand for U.S. dollars. ··But it would be a mis take to jettison dom est ic monetaris m unilaterally without r eplacing it with a better and easily understood international monetary standard. "For the Fed to regress to purely ad hoc or unarticulated monetary policy based on 'the feel of t he m arke t' or the level of nominal interest rates or the rate of unemployment would further destabilize already jittery financial gnomes. ·'T he pre fe rred international monetary standard is to calculate the sum of M 1 for the U S., Germany and J apan on a monthly basis and to instruct the three participatin~ central banks to maintain the growth rate of trus sum, at say 6 p"'rcent. over the course of the following year. "Having such a modest preassigned number which is well advertised in the financial and YOUR BETTER HEAL TH l~::IEF INTE, t, , •, • R. Ph. • We arl' m ('lo.r..l' l'onlacl PUii.iC MGOCE FICTITIOUS 'ltUSINESS NAME STATEME NT Tn"' tollow1n9 pfrSo"~ df.r do•n9 bu\tnf\~ a\ A RMEN'S 71)0 Pl.,<Pnll• 4•~nUf' (o\ta M~~ Cahtorn•d ~?&n S••doun Al 8<1v•1t Ill 0Ptl B"ll>o4' hi-. C•l•IOrn•• "7667 roreign exchange m arkets or each or the three countr ies is more import ant than the actual number selected. "Six percent reflects expected grQss national product growth in the triumvirate, laking into account the tact that Japan with its high saving rate may reasonably be expected to grow raster than Germany or t he U.S. "Technically, it is much simpler to s mooth aggregate money growth ror the group than to achieve national money growth targets for each of the three countries separately. "The reasoning is straightforward: the ebb and flow of international monetary de mand a mong the three countries is now so great that ir any one of them say. the U.S. -succeeds in hitting its separately specified target, the other two -say Germany and J apan -are unlikely to do so "Under this new international standard bch of the three central banks' domestic money market transactions would remain pr acticall y unchanged -the big departure from present practice would be in the Fed's reactions to foreign exchange interventions in dollars by the other two banks "If, say, the Bank of Japan is buying dollars, the res ulting sales of yen would expand the Japanese monetary base above its trend under the new regime. However , the Fed would allow these orfic1al J apanese purchases of dollars to contract the U.S. t rend so as ·to leave their joint money supply unchanged. Each central bank would not "sterilize" <or orrset) the domes tic monetary consequences of _offi cici! foreign exchange interventions by the other two, a change which would be "much more effective in s tabilizing wild exchange r ate fluctuations·· similar to those of the past decade, Mc Kinnon said While U.S. money growth rates have been quite smooth. aver aging about 6 percent in the past two years. Germany and Japan have fallen from a money growth rate of more than 12 percent each during '1977-78 to less than 2 percent each 1n the past two yea rs. These foreign changes triggered internationa l inflation in 1979-80 and the current international deflation. PUil.iC NOOCE FICTITIOUS BUSIN ESS NAME STATEMENT T "'" l0Uow1no ptr,on '' Oo•no bu\1nt~~.u CONOOR ENGINEERING 10)0 We\t ~.ttf'llA Or•nQf' (jJlilOrn•d ~1161 T"<'oelo<~ 00<1ald Blau '"''" ~ •t lr•bu<O l•~I P 0 Boa )61 lt4bufo C•nyon C•11torn1tl '17&/lf T "'' bu\lnf'\\ f\ tonouc ltd bv ~n 1no 1vtdua1 ,_,. OC>nd•d 81•11 Tl'U\ \l•l4~mtnl WA\ ftt~d w 1U\ Hl«' County Cltrk 01 Oran~ C.ountv on MM(~ 1 19111 FtM2M P\tbh\f'\fd Of-•nq.p-(o.\t D•1ty PUot Marc II 4 11 11 1) 1'181 .,,._,l PUIUC NOOCE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT t ""' t OllOw •no Of'' \On t\ dotnQ DU'\1nr\\ cl\ O"V10 G4R LANO MUS•C 7U 11na Sl<Pel '"''"MP"'! CA tn&7' 04\/10 BE NTO N GARL "NO NO Al Montf'~ll1,.r Nt wPOr1 84'&<1'1 CA ~7~ T nt\ bu'\1n(H. ..... tO'"'U( te-d by "" 1nd1v1du•I Dttvt<J 8 GMl•no T t\I\ \ttttttnfl"n~ wft~ HI~ wnn tht> Countv Cl•rk o, On.H'IQ,_ Counh on r •D n 1'181 FlllMst PuDll\hf'd Ottt~ C.o-t\I O.i1i~ P1101 Mar<11 • 1t 18. 1) 1'181 t/M? with phy::.1r1ans and ma 1nt a1n 1n our presC'rtpUon l:1h11ratory ample 'ilOC'ks uf every po::.s tble med1c1ne Wt' lh 1nk thr' m;i' presC'ribe Tht• lt•alhng pharmact'utie<1I ftrm!'> ha vc• our pcrm1 ss111n to se nd us an \· Ill'\\ d1scoverY' as soon <1s 1t 1s relea::.ed for saf(' ust• B,trbara Al B•v .. 1• 178 OoPI t--------------'--------------\ 8dlb0• l\l•nd C"hforn14' ~)t.&2 So complelt• 1s our stm·k or medi C'lnl'!'>, lhlll the udcb are \\C' r:in fill any presC'nption t•\·en t ho::.t' preseri bt·rl b\ ph) s1c1ans locall'd tn disll.inl cities If wt• t•wr d o nnl ha vt• 11n 1ngrcc!1e nt , if II is available we will )tel Ut quickly, or order 11 dtreet from the manufacturer YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a medicine. Pick up your prescripuon i( shopping nearby. or we w ill deliver promptly without extra charge. A great many people en· trust us with their pre· scriptions. May we com-pound and dispense yours? PARM UDO l'HAllMACY "'" Dell•ery 351 Hotpffal Rood ....,.,. ... h 642-1510 T"t\ ~tnf'\\ ,, COnduCtt!d bt •n •ndtYlduAI ~un41 B"•"" '"'" \latet'fM'tf'lt Wd\ hl~O ••In tN" Counh C•~r• ot Or.tnqtt Counh on Maten l 14$7 Pubh\IWG Or.tn()t' Coa\t 0.ld\t P11ot M M<l>4 1118?\ 1'1!11 q .. 97 REDWOOD 2 X 6-36 LIN FT 775-1491 16808 S. HARBOR DECKING ....... ,~. , .. , .... ,. ' 0 I I I I•~.,,,,.,, r IJ# At~ t c:osu ..... 641-1289 tUt ... ....,,, ., •• MISSIOf< virn,495·0401 1"71 C•l'WNt C•P'•"•"O fS•" °"-'90 ,,... et •••'Y ~,., l Construction money available at Heritage Bank. · Resklenlia l · Commercia l Buildings: Takeoul COmmllment re quil't"d along wirh leases. Conla<"I: ·)(if Johnson SOUlh (lrctngt" COUnl)'/lnoirK' 11.J/8.""..1..a.oriA' EXCHANGE THE 'l'RUST DEEo YOU TOOK TO SELL YOUR HOUSE FOR A SAFE, INSURED SAVINGS CERTIFICATE. ~·· Republic's Trust Deed Exchange Treaaury-Male account can get you out or the unfamiliar mortgage loan business. Inquire today about this high-yielding cettlflcate and current discount rates o n our purchase of residential first or second trust deed loans. 'tbwNvlnfslMw.d \ij.!§ REPUBLIC ~~E.~~-~L SAv1NG'S° ¥ 11111111 ALTAOEM (213) 791-1281 PALM SPRlrtOS (714) 323.2795 .. • .-~ (714) 95&8290 PALM SPRll"fOS (714) 324-9'91 I FS·L=ICJ ARCADIA (213) oM'-2600 PASADEl'tA (213) 793-3463 __ B<JRBANK (213) 843-6300 PASADENA (213) 798-0893 --··--·ft ~EMOrrT (7 14) 621-3939 PICO RIVERA (213) 949-6621 CLARVK>l"fT HE.IOHTS (714) 621-9537 SANTA Al'CA (714) '41·5286 HACIENDA HEIOHT&(213) 968-1487 THO<JSAND OAKS (80') .t92·3'24 t.AGOl"CA l'UO<JEL (714) 495-0850 WESTMlrtSTER (714) 894·'347 LOS NtQ£LES (213) 624· 1404 WOOl>t.ANO HILLS (213) 888.,3553 HNOOlfke:AL'YADt!M n •6N i..~,.,.. a1J17t112811ea1.6611 . ) I I . -~ ........... BAGGED A lab kch niC'ian at Ch('rnplt•x C.:o in Rolling Meadows. 111 , c·m 1<1ucts a trial run of a new plastil' hag m<1nufutturing prot•t·ss The ne" resin. <.J high molctul<.Jr weight lo\.\ density polyethylcnt'. l'ombines t'Xl'cptional s trength and {'lur il ~ fo r s ut h u:-.cs us packaging he1J\'.\' L1•x t 1l1•s ~11ul prod11C·(· Loss $1. 5 million ·General Automation Inc of Anaheim reported revenues for the :.econd quarter ended Jan. 30 of $25.8 million with a net loss or $1.5 m illion, or 60 t'ents a s hure. compared with revenues of $33 million and a net loss of S250,000, or 10 t'ents. for the second quarter of the previous year Revenues for the first SIX months or the t'Urrent year were $51.9 million with a net loss of $660,000 or 25 cents. OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS MUTUAL FUND Tax act aids .. utility buyers The t;conorr11c Hccovery Tax Acl or 1981 includes 8 provision thal oonefits shareholders of m any public utilities. Relween J anuary 1982 and December 3l, 1985. public uUUUes wlll be able to establish tax exempt dividend plans. The (•Ct permits shareholders to exclude dividend!! of up to $750 on an individual tax return and $1.500 on a joint return. The dividends must be reinvested in newly Issued t'Ommon stock of the sume utility through a dividend reinvestment plan You do not pay any ordinary Incom e taxes on the $750 of dividend Income that Is remvest.ed in new shares if these new shares are then held for Lh\! capital gains holding periO<J Cone year). tr you sell the newly issued shares before one year. the $750 would be taxed as ordinary dividend Income If the new shares are sold after one year . your tax would be based on a $750 capital gain Therefore, you are converting ordinary income into capital gains. The utility reinvestment provision was intended to give investors a tax break and also to provide a convenient way for (tua lifying utilities to raise capital The law is directed mainly to electric utilities and some gas utilities • It is very s imple to determinl' how much stock i s n eed ed to t uke full advantage or the income exclus ion The number or s hares ne<·l'ssary is equal to $750 ($1,500 on a joint return1, divided by the annual dividend. The number or sharl's that are needed to yield the full exclusion may change as the d1v1dends paid by a particular utility are raised or lowered. Although ut ihty dividends are relatively stable and earnings generally not as volatile as in the industrial sector, investors should not put all their eggs in one basket. The price of utility stocks can be affected by changes in regulation, shifts in fu el preferences, new economic policies, nuclear problems. and the need to fin ance at the wrong time You may wi sh to diversify holdings by regulatory Jurisd1ct1on . geography and fuel mix Mary Farrelly Mory f 'urrelly 1s an account executive in the Santa Ana 0Jf1ce of Mernll Lynch Pierce Fenner and Smith, Inc 1•\• 11 l.SuD•ru 3J•n JJ~. • IJ~. I•'• ~ur.rEI ~~; ~. UPS ANO DOWNS 3:'; 1 m; Tb;\s ll'-. 11\. 4q H TIME DC I• 1•. "','' so,,, iTa•mp.tm'\ 171' J1\. I ndm , n•. JJt, N EW YORI( tAP> lht fotlow•n9 h~ 11• I Te<umP ff11 •l ~how' ·~ Ovt>r lh• (ount•r 7•', 1&1f• felcmA llll1 111• '9o<ks 4nd w•trdnh that "•"' QOM l#P 1~,•:?~~ ~:~1f:; 1••~ ~''• ltw mo~f 6od down '"* mCKt b.l\ed °"' fl Jr~ =~ cr<r'Utt'~ <t\MMJP r~rOlf~\ of volume ~~~: n:: lrC:::.tor1 1' • 7.. No W<ut1l1n lr.-1•"9 ~·-\1 ••• 1nc.I ','~.·.n,.i.. I rTorycool•Pd ,.,. ,. •• uo.o N•t .no PH<f'nt~ Ch..t"9f\ .,, ,,. I' Ii " n 01flf'r~n(f' bfha;~n t~ Pf'f'YtOU\ ti01.lnq I ·~I f y)OnFO U • • t4 1 b id S>rit• •nd WHJ \ la~t b•O DrtC• 11• 1 19'1 US Enr S )' • 79~. ~ US Sur •8 18', )J ~ I IJf'IM<Gll '° 11 ll'. 311, US frc.. 11 n 1• UPS '!~ 'L I~~::~; l~': 1~~ Mo~;(.'" l•~t,. .c•:t u:"11 J IS'. IS ... UpPenP ll I) • S<otln~ ,.. .... Up ~ 4 J•. • V••tA ct 41 • OMG •'• • 1 Up 11..1 JI• I )1 .... Va1N11 • 11•. II • Flr>Qrm WI 1 ... UP 11 1 ,,.., H "-V•nOu\ 8' • q f S AmPyr•m 1', .. u 71 '3-\.lt 41>.. 'Ytl( ro 1~. I)' J 6 Fl•tr 0 ,... • ._ u: 11: 11 11\.1v1ctr•S1 , • ., 4'41 I M•cronun l'• '>Up 190 17 11"1 VldtoCp .... 4I, • TraME• s Up 116 111. 11 1\/•NB"1 11"' ,, ..... OaYCIMn Q l'• • Vo 167 2S 1)1. WarnE ~ 17' 1 ll 10 Pell NI I • 1 Up 16.1 ,.\, 1 .... WsllEnr lJ l)•. 11 ScolGldA Q )'' • • I.Jo 16.I l\4.. 16 Wel01rn • 4' • 17 A•I.: TO 'I'-• • J', Up u' 10•. 11 WOeep "'· .. , ' u NYAir l ,... • "" UP 1SA ., .... n1., WWHOldc '?t· nl\. , .. CadOSy \ ~'ti. • , •• Up '"·' ""' n-. mor •• I ., IS ISC • 13~. • I\. UP .... IJ IJ• t ww1',"-°1 • 16 ... '•' ~ ,. Ad•C<lmp 1 • '. Up 14,:I, J1"• 33" O •~ u ~ .,. 11 lnCHwt. 1 , ', Up 14 J 1 71 • Wo~t 9\... 101 • II •n•rn ' \' • .. '-Up 13-S ')& )6•.., WOOdlot ~ 1 l1' • 1' S.QIAtc: 1• • • t • Up t3) Jt 111 1 WrlghtW 101 1 1C)*.. 70 5.e•fFlt 1',. , t • UP 1J .. l 1'• 1"' ZIOftUI s ~ 1t•, ll S,f'llCll wl 11• '• VP lJ l n•, ui.. n • Nol •Pe>h<•ble 11 Ar~ Poi "' u0 tl s :U P•Ua wt •1 > • 1, Up 12 S 14 P•tncn )' • ''• Up ll S 7S PrOjp(Un 71 .. t,. Up 11.S N•-1 Artco ' ~ C.1oni<• J Oat~ O•l'Pd un B•n<I...: M•r\l\w Cmo!Aul UnKylM Comh, EIP<thb M tllrfnd Oat< rd StearM• WIHrO' Cmt>Cos VubaA • Am~' Cm<lr•R Com•v• Miu l wl P•me•F CroJTre-PhOlron Roman ' ln1RoDo S..nOil 4' I ... 18 II 9 10 I J•, , ... • ' I& 1'. 1•. 10 , .. 1 .. 1 .... 1\. 18''• l 6 .... .... c ';t. o/c•n l .. Off ,, l t•. Ofr 11 1 '" 0 11 1'1 • OH lt.1 J• • Oft 1s t. f l, Off 14 J ) Olt IJO 1 O H t1 s > Off 11 s .. 011 11S \. 0 11 II t •• 0 0 "1 1 0 11 II I '. ()fl 10 0 '• Oft 100 OH 9 t •• Oft • ' • • Off 1 l '• Ott It> .~ g:: :-: '• 0 11 11 1 J Ott 11 '' Off 1 s .. OH U NEW YORK (AP) Ctlvln Bullock Eq Inc t1 q:i Nl In• ~I .. 11 71 11 11 Mui 8•n 9 11 10 OJ P,,, SIP • O'I •,.. Invest 1 l3 NL T!>t loll-lnQ ~ Bulick IJ.61 "" E•Ch nm Nl Inv !>el 650 ... MI F FU...X Putnam Fund\ Onan SSO Nl l•lloni\ sUl)l)l'-4 D\'. C•ncln 6.S? 1 IJ M•gel II II 1' 17 In• Var I 4t t Of> Fund 7 7• Ill Conv 11 •4 IJ OS St•in Rot FO\ l ... H• iOnal AHOC•· Olvld 1 .. 1 &• Mun 8d S IJ Nl Inv RtSll Jn 3'57 Grw111 S.U S.. Int Eq ll .. tl.. 8alan ti 0. NL lllon pl S.Curlli•• Hilnc • 'Cl 10 •I Fide• ll 11 Nl hie! ,. II NL N•IBd l.:M • 01 G It 7' 11" c Op u :ii> NL 0.•ler,, Inc. are Month 9 Ot 9 tS Gvl SK 9 01 NL Ivy Fd t •S NL Mulu•I ol OnW1<1 G~:;~ • 441 10':16 si':i. 13'" NL IM orlce• •1 whlc!> NI WS I S7 9 37 Hllf'l<o 101 NL JP Grtl'l 11 00 ti '6 Amer IOOI NL HI Yid IJ 16 14 1' SlnSQI 90i Nl ll'leW M<Urlll•• T•Frt '"Ill HI Vld 950 NL JP lnco II• 17• G""''" 4:16 414 lncom Sil. 614 StnTa ... , Nl C°"ld ,,.,.. i..n CepTNT '15 Nl LI Mun 111 NL S sold (t<M1 aswl Ctfllennl•I Gp p 1 Jenus 7 U Nl lncom 1 • I •7 tnnll 1-.J I 11 l••llf'IV UNl .. 11 Olu~I or bouGllll Grtll 1 lS 1 '2 T~~1:r ·~~ HL John H~oc-Ta Frt I n • .. Optn 11 44 11 so Slral Giii ••JS HL fvthlt Plv\ Miles Equll S.llS •.3' Trtncl 2'.14 NL Boncl IUO t) 10 MllOu•I II 01 NL Tu E• •• 1' 1110 SlinGrtll .... •.ti cll•r9el w.d.. Cnl SI\\ tl.•t Nl Fln•ncl•I Proo Nl Grwlll I.SI 9 lJ Mui Sllr 3'. NL lfhl• 12 •S 1113 Tex Moel U., IS.27 -... • 6l us Gvl • I) ... HHUT Jttl NL Vov•o 10 Cit 10 .. TmpGlb 10 11. ... ~~n f ~rn ~t ~~~'l>1~d a:~ 11N°t P.i~~~I t., =t IC::.~~· I~~ ··:~ =:: ~~ ~t~2 ~t 2~r::~ ~n =t ~~:~I Im trn AOV .,. Hl ~:::.,~r.':',,:W: Nl ,,:t"f~~iw~!4 NL Kemper Fundl; H•I S.curllle\ Rt•••• uo NL lrn• C•P l.'5 9.1l Alutur• 12 JS NL Funct •.tO IOIJ Bncl Ap ll.ff 13 SI lncom 7 21 1.13 B•l•n 9.'3 10 • S.feco §Kur Tms In• l.tJJ NL AIM FWICI\ Grwlll l.7S 7• OIKo t ll I '7 Grow 1 '4 911 8oncl l.OI Jn Equll t•I NL Tr•v Eq t • 10.to CvVld 116S tl.46 HI Yid 6.IO 6 '1 Grwtt> 61• 613 HI VICI 1.1' I.. Grwlll 6.70!1.?7 Grw111 11 :IO Nl Tuclr Fd IOM Hl EdlOft IO •• tO 17 Inc om 6..0I 6.M lncom 6.00 6 st lnllfd 10 91 It., Pr-1d s.7S 610 lnco • IJ NL TwnC GI • OI HL HIVlcl 1.U I eJ Opln .... t.2' NtlRtt S Cit s Sl Mun B 6 JI 6 .• 9 lncom S 6S 6 Of Sll"•ul Invest TwnC s.t tt ,_ NL Al1>ll• ~ IS Sl NL ru MQ ll.S7 10 :IO Optn 6.01 • .. Opln 11 3' 11.•s Stoo ... ',. C•P•t IJ.O'I tl., Twnc UI J., l '4 "Blrllll IO Mlt.•lcoluGlh 14.16 NL Tu Ea lot 761 Summ tSOlt64J ruew 6" Ill Grwlll •.n1011USAA GI •U NL Amtrl(IWI Funos '""" AB I 07 t 16 ... WIEQ •. ,. 1 0 Te<h 'IS t0.66 Tolllt• 4 16 S.IJ Spect 14"7 HL USAA In< '., NL A Bal • II • 93 Cwllll co 1.SJ ....... W•ll II 41 NL Tot Rt 10., lt.61 Ftlrlkl s IO.,. Scuelcffr Fund\ Uni Accu Sl NL Amcp s ,. • JO Comp Bel • II I IO Fncl Giii 4.42 • t3 ICeystOM *" NE lift Funo Com SI to" Hl Unll Mui •• , Nl A Mull 10 •S 1t O Comp Fd l.M 9 OI Founders Group Cus Bt IJ 3S tl.'4 Equll 11.17 ".. 0.nl 41,. NL Unil..i Funds Boncl 10 .. 11.00 Concord II.JO Hl Grwlll 6 $2 Nl C111 BJ IS f'1 17 40 Grwtll 13.7• 14 3' lncom IOOS NL Accm 104 1 .. Fd lf'lv 1 )6 I C)4 COtlM<llcut Gefll. Inc om 11 OS Hl Cus e 6 n 1.34 lncom 9.SO 10.JJ lnll FCI IS tO Nl Bono 4" s OI Grwth 9 .. 10 34 Funcl IQ.Cit IQ. Mul•I l.4l 1•14 Cu• IC t 6 9' 1.6' Rel Eq ti.JS II... MMB 6 3' Nl lntGlll IJ 00 tUI lncom t 17 I 93 Inc.om S ~ 6,43 5"(1 16.~ Nl Cus 1(1 SJ.I S.M TUE a S.46 S 71 Spect 40.JI Nl COf'I Inc • OI 9.'2 ICA 1.51 I 12 Mun 8d 6 OI 6 SI Fr•nlllln Gr'OU!> Cut SI 14 ff 1S,9S Neuberqer a.rm . Ta Fr• " Nl Fleluc 7t.9' JUO N Ptrs 6 46 7 Cle C ' ' AGE l.10 Cus SJ •.Cit 6 H Enroy 14.9S NL Security FUl!Cb HI Inc ll ... IU4 Wsl1MI ,·Ill ,·.,con'.!r"o\01·'°s'0·17 DHTC 13i.·ls·,!·l4 Cuss.. •"3 4 .. Gu.,d ,.. .. NL loncl 7.ta l.l) tncom Ill 9.10 A 0-,,,..... .I Nl • 10 tnltrnt J • • 1• llbty J .. J1 HL Equly S.J2 Sii Munl S »• S.SI ~~ 9c1 s•~ u 2 c:~ ~.::: 1t~ IJ~ 8';"~ t: ~-:; T .. F,.. M•nht u a NL 1nves1 1.st a JO S<IEno 1" a.n Entrp 1111 12.'1 ~ ...... ,.. G._. uf11, ,,11 SOii ... 1•12,.1 1•1 .... P•rt11 n.11 Nl VII••· 4.0. ,., lf•no 11.D 11.Jt HI Vici a .. • 10 0.C•I 17.45 IJ" '"'°"' '·" ,.., ...... Schul u.o NL Selected F-: UICI S•U -v•ll Muft 9 14 CM 14.74 O.law IS ti 1•.St US °"" 6.M • M Lulltoft Grp. Ntwt GI 16 22 HL Am Sii~ 6.. HL Velue lint Fd. Vtnlr 19.11 10.9' DtlCll 6.Sl '··· C•P•t •. ., 6.ft Gcp. ,'!:' •,·"61 tO.;. .. l ~'4"' Inc 6.97 Nl SDI SIK 13.4' Nl eono •OM Nl Cmttll ti, 11 11.?2 Tll ,.,.. s.44 uo EQ\111 •·1' s. 16 GHMA 1 11 N''L tllol• 16.,SJ N !otllt Men Group: Fvnel 11,40 Nl EFCI•<!' JO.,!', 10.NSlS Doll• •.•• 10.0t Tt~Fr U2 '17 o-.. 1'1• UL NNll! ,•,,nor', 9.76 NL .... Cl us IO,OI l11eom U7 !'IL ~ • FIH\dl •v ,. 1.45 NL Net lftv S Of S.ft Lf'I Gt 14,71 Nl Gr.,:" tt':n Nl ~:pet J·~ :t Cm~i:C' UI a.11 "'"" 11.n NL NovtFO 11.21 Nl IJ ,., 61' .,, ~Sil tOto Nt. H•rbr t0'01 10 ... Otc1C1 SI 11'60 Nl ~Tr VNWlll l.!;~DI it~ :t a::: t~ 'N'~ s!a.::~ 11 IS VMCt ~· l"ac•,_ U.14 27 Oru llif' l)ll HL ... 7 ~ 7 ... ~·· s.-· 8:'v. t'oo Hl ltlllfl 1.M 111 := t~ ~·o'J Prtv• JM • U Ortyf111 Gnl· G Pet ,._.. NL •~·· ,,,__, ,_..._ •-~ ' A GltlFd 617 'SI • e~ ,,._ Nl Gttt OD 1•• ... c-.n 1'-07 NL ...... m .... NL ........ S..tJ t.. L••• .. U.74 Nl A H•r1'9 l at NL 5,,yr ,; ;; 11.1' GI us !4:1• HL ,...,. 11.G NL ~ ... fNf FCI: CClf'l'I s IUS I .04 CetlE' •N !'IL A l11t&l11e1 tA• s.t6 u.,.. t•M II.It 09 SS 1.4 t.14 NL L~1ftM.11 1,1' Ir«~ 'U1 'J::S =G•-: l::f! '\~ EV~ttl U• ~.• A lf'l•ttl lit HL N NIM ·~ NL Gtfl Ste '·" Ni. Ind. l.M tA H .. 1.\.ll ,,.. rr "'" """ EV u t.• 10,_ A lflv lfl I.ft Nl Sll lllC 6,tl NL O~ll!d 14 ti Nl Otv GI IS 20 tUI 1_~ ICl!l ),41 t '.)t '"°" ft-: DB st 1 f1 '6 .. L An1Me4 '"·,, NL .. •• •.• NL Gtd A .• , ... 1).01 lllCtfll 2.n t.. 9"" 22 .• M.11 ,._ 11 sa 12.t• Dwr I a rs NL A NIO!tl :us i iw. C 4. !I Nl Hem! · lllllltftfl llr'o· lrJ' IA.I) t+ Hl'i'ld IUI 16~1 E•I~ r SI 10 NL A Nllnc , .... 1t J .... Oltl 7,1o UI .. " .,o. I.ti •• 11 Fllfld 10. 11.~ . • ,.,.. .'·· NL. ·~ *.Cllt .. EaFd I 61'.u NL Amway S 1' 5 SS ...... ._..... ,-.tt1 09I •• NL Inc-1A LIS IM 1).CM lf.U MMWI ,a 11 F .. E r Jl.• "'-A~llOvt U7. NL ... "' .. ,. 7.Jl •t1 Le\t 11.n .... Mufti ,_ .. U1 Tlfl>le 7.11 ... NwDlr I .tl u • S<F .. , ...... l "'T.i!""Til tit ~~di .~: 1r2~ ~~"S~ 1~E .=~ M~~ ~i~5 • •1 !fil'~S.CM 't.&: i:~·n ~': 81 J;l!.NNL v=!--~~.» Stock 1'2t 7;; '"'°"' 4.15 UI ISi o .... · . ' MIT "71 1U1 ••WM .. ,. L liefM F\lftflh E•Plr ~ ..... Bl~ 01 ,.· •• ,,·,, ,s10<11 .... 10.45 Gl'Wlll . •• ... MIG t.tO 1061 "' .... ( c..n '· ,,. '""' ,, I.. lfL ,,_ · t>er..-Greup: "' 1111110 1._17 15.JI l"9M M-. J.'S) .. l lfl<O "i GNMA a. .. l 91, Inc 12 ... IUI ~Mfll L• LU IMtfll ..a '" Mel ,_. L l1 .,._.,, 1.ft t. ""' .. 11. It. '""' It.I Nl e.-1nc 1M "l "9111• L• u; .. TntSfl t.111001 _., •n •'1 ~'"°""'' Tnnl a. ' ,.,..,.~ '"t ::S11e'~!-NL , ... ., 11.n 1U7 ...,.,., .~.a NL MF 11:ij 11:.. !""' e.n' •. Ytfl\ J.tt . ,..., ; .. IV.. .... Rllft~t ... .,.... lllC..... ~ , 1.1'0 -'°' '· ~ltttY 11 ... ~ .... .. .. L ... ,,. """ II ua..... • t.U tj ., .. ..,, HIV.. ..,. ... l&G• ;:· Mvlftt 1111. NH/!!'-' 111UI .. 11J·~ ftllJI I 11,1' NL ~M~l:r.Y1411 1, .• H I • I re lt.1' 10... Sto<ll t,0. t. Ill I .S.. ~ ~I.I 1. NL ~ ,,. •I'll ,tS.111 NI. e • =c t+ N NL PlttrlM GrP: lflvt ... , • " I It, l"IL TuP''N 1•1~ ~/o ""1 10 ,It. .. 11• :' t·!{ 6. 'f'fll L~ll: ~II ft4 11.12 11 lfll~ HS Oh• 11 Uo1 f:!!-TAdl\ •• .,. ,...( ,._ .... ~· Hd Al t•1 ~ ttt 10i:, ~C ._,, s fl '!; H "9Co U61 Ht: i:~~ ~ l"*~~ii·l"ff !·~fill!~ ~P.=a1:i~· 1~ 11,: ; '"' ,,c· .. f\~~ ti: =t 01 = .,,. ,,. ' '"" '"" !fL ,. 1 w.i:.\o ul .i-:. ~.Ub r -ii I 'l:l' -=i H . :ti ::: :i. ~~= =' = ·ault hi!& C..:~1: "'-b Ft I ~-t~.f ~ I ' -'"' ~I = "" .E· :h, :t N • .,,,,~ IOI .. trm ~ L I r=.. i! s~ :~-t." =" ~ . .. . It @:SW: ., .. , Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, March 11, 1982 ... C7 s pan Bache Halsey Stuart Shiejds lac. of New York has slrned an agreement ln principle to acquire the Los An1e let1-based brokerage firm of Bate m an Elcbkr, tnU lllchard1 Inc. In a transiicUon valued at sso mllllon. Bac he -which itself merged last summer with Prudential Jns unance Co. of America - would acquire Bate man's 31 branch offi ces. whose staff ot l 100 includes 450 brokers .. C.:rocker Bau lowered its prime home mortgage rate to 161'14 percent from 17~ percent. The rate is what the bank charges in interest on rive.year, rixed-rate mortgage loans for singJe.ramily homes wllh monthly payments amortized over 30 years. c ..... iiliil.,illill, ~~,_ ____ _ Median home prices in Orange County {OSe 0.7 percent to $133,272 in January. according to th e Cali fornia Assoeiation of Realtors Home sales m the cqunly dropped 11 . l percent for the month after fallin~ 21 percent in December .. Bank of America is attempling to seiie 1,979 De Lorean sports cars, which the bank says were used as collateral on a $33 m illion loan. The BorA suit states the bank called in the loan, with $17.6 million in p ri ncipal a nd $380,000 in interest due, a ft er Belrast·based De Lorean Motor Cars Ltd. was put into receivership The Anahe im City CouncU has approved plans for a $150 million Hilton Hotel to be built on a portion or the Anaheim Convention Center parking lot The hotel is scheduled for completion in spring 1984. Fluor Corp.'s board of directors declared a quarterly cash dividend of 20 cents a sha re on the compa ny's common stock, payable April 19 to holders of record March 22 Baker International Corp.'s S225 million public. offering of 6 percent debentures due Ma rc h 15. 2002. al u price of 44 .415 percent to yield 14.66 percent was announced by Goldman. Sachs & Co., Blyth Eastm an Paine Webber Inc. and Lehman Brothers Kuhn Loeb Inc . as joint managers of the underwriting group. UTlll <::::z~---- T he United Auto Workers union, acting at· the request of Genera l Motors Corp., has· tentatively scheduled a meeting for Friday lo discuss emergency contract talks with the nation's top automaker . a union s pokt:sman i.a1d . Meanwhile. UAW officals fail€.'d to reach agreement on a counteroffer to a proposal by American Motors Corp. for an employee investment plan STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW YO~I(. IAPl S.I•?\, WflG P•I<~ •nd net <""'9 of the llllMn ""°'' .cove New Y°" Slo<k E~c,,..._ ,,_, lr•01t1Q Ntl-lfy .IU mo<t lll.., II NEW YOAIC.IAPl l'tNI 0-JonH ••~ Euon • t.411,200 ,. RCA 1164.'°° 1011> ... . \;) ... .... M •rttOll 17t,'100 7H• Mobil ' 7t9,..00 ,,,.., Trtnwm Cp 1?4.100 10 Tendy ' Ml,olOO 11 '" S<t•rsR...o s•s,500 ""' IBM )11,AOO S9 ... Am Alrlln SS•,IOO 13 T•u•lntt Ht,100 11-., • loo \0 Oell•Alrl S s.3,400 lO I( m•rt S14.JOO 11''> • °" -.. An-.r T~T St? SOD S6Y> , ~ UnOtlC•I 509 100 1'1\1. • v, Olst1ev w sos 700 SO'A -.,. AMERICAN LEADERS UPS AND DOWNS H-I Rocklnl pfB 2 AmAlrltl WI JAM lt1ll 4 Clln>-1 p1 S NI~ • P•nnroll I l(ahrSlffl I M.,kCI 12(1pf .~~~~ 11 S<H\11\Mn ., o ... ,_..,. 1] NICOR I _. u Occl J.60p! t3 BankA,,,.. 1• K•ul ti.-II SI04ltVC. Jlf 1t NewprtiR\ 19 ~m Alrlm GOLD COINS Pct Up 100 UP 1S t Up II S Up 11,2 Up II t Up II.I Up 10 • Up 10 I Up IOJ Up •I Up '·' Up •S Up 9 S VP •.4 Up l ,7 Up l.t Up t.2 Up 1.0 UP '' Uo 7 • Pct. Oft IU Off "J Oft to s 011 •.• Off 71 ()ff 1.1 Off 1 s Ott 7 .S Oft 7 1 Off 1 I Oft 10 Oft ., Oft s,• Off 5.t g;: B Off u Oft lA Off S.J 0NEW YORIC IAPI Prl<H lat•,.,._, •• 9otcl co•M. CO~'" •It" M-"' prl(1 . • ,......,..., t 1royol . ""·'S, 110 .... PS. M••'• 1u 1, t trov o• . uo H , "' SA 1$ IM•IWll jO -· l.t !rOy Ol ., "416.00, UO u,r ... ,_ 100 c-n .. .,, troy 01 .• t.m.90, ... ~'"' ~, •. Otoll,.,.._• for Wed ~' 10 STOCKS lO lnO 10 Ttn IS Ull •S S1k ltlclU\ Tr.111 Utlh .S Slk 0... H.... IAw C-Olm 902 SI llS i. Iii tS '°'·" + I.~ 3" .. l1S 03 31' ... 3" 17 0 ti 10116 109 2S 107 n 107.S.-0.?4 JU JS 31111 Jt7 ?i JU It O.OI WHAT STOCKS DID NEW VORI( IAPI M•t 10 Actv•n<.cl O.Cllned u fl< 11•"9'<1 Tol•I IS'Wn New 11'9hS Ntw lo_,, WHAi AME> 0t0 NEW VOAIC IAPI M•r 10 ilct••nc..i Ot cllne<I u ti( ,,.,,9f'l Tol•I 1\S~ ..... 1119~ New lows METALS Wed )41 n1 ?10 , .. ' 311 t .01'.JOO 1.M0.100 1.?Jt.OOI •,'31,olOO Prtv <10 U7 i.s '°' t 1] 4 ... NEW YORK CAP) Soot nonftrrOu\ Tl•" .07• Met••• Wtek comOCKlt• lb lll•m_ l._'7 <..,I>• -.nd N Y M•n:W'f S3'0 00 i»r llHk ll'latl-WI 00 Inly ot , N Y SILVER COLD QUOTATIONS L~. moml1>911«1"9 W1 7S, up '3 SO L•-· •fte.-fl•l"9 UIJ 00, uo p IS ll'arlt: UlS II, up '10.~ "''""ltflwt: ~ 97. up V •s Z•rkll: Yl• 11•1"9 UJ7 00, vo St 00 b10 ms oo •Sl!f!cl H• ... v & H..-,,. .. , fonly d•llv Quoi.1 W J 00, up U 7S 'l ~~· fOtlty O•lly OUOlt) '333 00, up I!~. l0t1tv datly ouotel ••l>rk•'-d U4• &S vou t4 SYMBOLS ' . 1 I • 'ca Orange Coa1t OAILV PILOTIThurlday, M.,ch 11, 1982 TAKEN TO TASK T'h e s l u l c s a y s Boston Mayor Kevin White'!\ birthda y party for hi~ wife, which rais~d $110 .000. r a n af oul uf I t s "c:onOi cl of interest " law. ,, 'RUFFELL ·s UPHOLSTERY :"" ........ -'S... • I '22 HAHOR ILYD. ' ,COSTA MESA -S41-1 IS61 •OFFICE P'°'RTIES • ClAMB .. KES • GR ... NOOPENINGS • WEDClfNOS •SHOWERS· B'°'f MITZVAHS SERVING ALL OF CALIFORNIA AFFAIRS UNLIMITED DAHMARCHIAHO 171 41 Sll-06'1 Consult us before your next atlair Prlv.te Notice INTERIOR DESIGNERS ARCHITECTS & BUILDERS Ctiapman Designer <\tiowroun ~ .l full se,v1<.-~ wr·".>tt•sa•t: Showroom CG1ertng e •c luS•vely lo ltlP 1't\de W& rptirp-,,,,n1 a wide selection or t1np "-•n1t1 tnand ,1,rn1~hmg~ And accPssor1es Once ••ch year we clear out selected Items at cost. near cost and below cost. Sleeper Sof'-t' Matt, ... ,..,p, fit-1 ltrw1 1n1t • < ,, Rooms Seorc•onh I 1pnuf.i;11•r1• ' , 1 , .\ .t '-• t• • Grandfather Cloe kc;. ')ufd.,., L ••..• 11 x.• 1-t ' " • Btac:s Tea Baf Cart\ 011r1m,-l ... 1' f "' .-t ( 'q UM', , t~ Desk SecrP1nr1es f'.rr""u; OP"•' l ihlP~ A,,,..,-;,,,., 1r111 rPttCh much morr THURSDAY March 11 • 10 am to 6 pm SATURDAY March 13•10 am to 6 pm MON.-FRI. March 15 thru 19•10 am to 6 pm CHAPMAN DESIGNER SHOWROOM 17801 East Main Strei'! lrvinP 957-4074 (One block Wl)St )I Mac A•ltiuri EXCLUSIVELY TO THE TRADE NOT OPEN TO THE PUBLIC . L : 17801' , . • , -· "l .• 't ; Annual Clearance ale .Sat1inl(s f 'rom 20-70"1< 'Decorative Hardware By S,wcializing in the coordinatiun of the decoratl•1e hardware for ,t1our projeC'I. Finished hardware for: DOORS, BATH, KITCHEN, BARS, CABINET AND BA TH ACCESSORIES (714) 642-4184 Clowd M ondays 1514 Newport Blvd. Co.ta Mesa. Calif. 92627 DIVORCED? SEPARATED? .. , j1St CG JnP it ... ml TW.P it! llVORCE RECOVERY WORKSHOP Sfx T.nday EY .... Msch I 6-April20 St An*ews Presbyterian Churc~ Newport Baell . St ........ 1&.-1MSt . .,,_ .,_ .._,.,.H~H ... s 15.00 lethlNHM ,_._.. .. .......,._c .. 631·2115 t :oc\.$:00 Maa..fri. Wanna be a cad? Try General Hospitatgame NEW YORK (AP) -Be lhe rlrst one on your block to double·cross lrle ndis. blackmail enemies and cheat on your spouse. ll'is the General Hospital board game. You've seen the show, now play the part. For only $9.99, your favorite cad Is Just a dice-roll away. You, too, can be Luke Spencer. tr Pac-Man Isn't enou1h to keep college kids from their books, here comes Gener.al Hos pital , a Monopoly-like game ready ror retail sale. It's the joint ente rprise of ABC and Ca rdina l Indus tries, a New York-based game company that imports and manufactures backgum mon and chess sets and a twist puzzle called Cleo the Snake . Bu l "this Is the ri rat lime that Cardinal h as gotten Into the television snake business. Bonnie Ber ger, who graduated from Boston University last year, Is Cardinal's marketing director. She told her father. the president of the company, that the hottest craze on campus was ABC's soap opera, "General Hospital." • Cardinal then hired free-lance developer Brent Noseworthy, even though he had never seen the show, the most popular ln daytime TV his tory with a faithful 14 million vie wers in 1981. In leu than three months. • relullv~ly short development time. Nosewo rthy c reated what Miss Berger calls the flnt role·playlng boaard game. It was ready In time ror last month's National Toy Show. Based on the Interest or the retailers, Cardinal plans to produce rrom 300,000 to 500,000 games this year. This is how it works : The players (up to 10 at a time> select the characters they want to be. They move around the board and earn points by starting romances, helping or hurting other players, and acquiring money. The fi rst to reach 100 points wins. If you want to be Luke, h is ALL FIREPLACE STUFF firescreens, Tool Sets, Log Sets, Great Grates ••• Gift wrap not available for fire. e 11/ack ll 0.Cksr. hobbfcraffer I" work 01nter I Yi•• Designed tor llghtwe1ght proiects 8 crafts clamps to almos1 any llat surface tilts to a 45 angle and pivots 360 on its bdse• Swivel g11ps hold ob1ects up to 5 , wide From the people who brougrit you ·workmate 1999 don't be dejected get a deflector The Dellect·O Atr Deflector with dust !titer pro1ects plants hom 149 draf1s, keeps warm air lower #52 Reg 2 19 no-weny llOt water Oepend1ble. efficient gas water hffter(. Glass llned tanks, hot water recovery syslem and hlgh .. tempera· ue thut -off. ......... 11811 40 gsllons ....•..... 124.95 8" wall mount kitchen faucet 8'" wallmount kitchen faucet with 7" to 9" female adjustment from Price 23•• Pfister. #827-260. Reg 41 95 tum for the breeze Casement window operator replaces moat standard crank type casement operators. #21 7. Rlgh~88 hand & left hand. Reg 6 95 .. spred ·the satin Famous latex flat wall pa int from Glidden Beautlful flat l!nlsh scrubs clean, stays color fast. Easv water clean-up Reg. Reg 13 99 1-1111011 flood Insurance Thompson·s Water Seal is great tor quick seal jobs. Also stoos moist ure damage Reg 15 75 II-ft ...... ••Ill,.,, 911 From Black and Decker 118600 Completely porlable, ·hose Is llal like a llrel•ghter"s ~~e 29 99 . 68'' character card aaya he'• from tbt ·•wrong sldo or t'h e tracks.'' but "poverty never crushed his iplrit." In the strategic areas of romance, l:>owe r, material gain and reputaUon, .uke ··has less rear from rumors than c h a ra cte r s like Alan Quartermaine or Amy Vining." Ue pe ndlng on the characters' personality, different points may be awarded for the same act "1hat it "General Hospital" Isn't your afternoon addiction? "No problem . U this game takes off. we could just change the setUngs and characters and do other soap oper as," said Miss Be rger. be glad you got glldden Kid-tested Latex semi· gloss enamel tor a 12'' super touQh. non- yellowlng finish ,.110tt Reg 18 99 get the edge on neater painting Hlgh-Qua!lty hlgh-durablllty paint edger to make all painting chores gc 189 smoothly Ifs the proless!onals secret' Reg 3 39 STANLFV ,,.,,,., rolll; our ll11t #103101 28 to 48 Reg. 11 29 s1 03102 48 lo 84 Reg 17 99 #103104 84 to 156 Reg. 22.79 5•• COSTA MESA HOURS: WEEKDAYS I to I• SATURDAY AND SUNDAY I to 8 . UU PllDll ... 1111 llln 11, 1m • All Sale ltema ate ~ubject to Stock on Hano. Att l'notOgr•IC. Typoorapnicae. Cwteat ano Prlnt1no Eh'ofa ere Su~ to Cofr9Gtlon. 2666 HARBOR BLVD. IN COSTA MESA PHONE (714) 546-7080 l CLASSIFIED INDEX ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Thurad1y, March 11, 1982 Looking for a career in sales? See todfly's Help Wanted ads , classification 7100 . . Y ....... Fot'Wt ...................... r.·.·;;;; .......... 1.002 c;;;;:wM;: .. Yo2·2 ~:;;~""io4o ~;;:.;· ...... io5s ;;:~·;;~;.·· .. ;~·;; ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1--------... -111 S5000 dn lltlaut. lilt 4 br -----------T1PbctY11J&•,Cal 642·5678 HOUSES f OR SAL£ ••tMr•I ...,... .. , ... =~ .. :!~; l,_,_ clol Nu c .... n . llAll ""' tQOI 1111 lltl tllM EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY .... SULA HOMIS Remodeled. decorated 3 bdrm. 3 bath, mstr bdrm with ocean view $425,000. West Bay bayfront. Slips for 2 boats. remodeled 3 bdrm. 3 bath $1 ,200,000. I ~ Wl ~l.!Y \ TAYLOR CO. 10-::\ I .T< >l{S -.111l , I ~HI> FOR SALE BEST BUY IN CORONA DEL MAR hon.! in H B or .3 br in t'.~.JIG2·7!MOagt_ _ PARK PLACE ESTATES 4 Br 212 Ba nook. family 4 Br 21, Ba rm. 3 car garage. pro/ 2174 SQ. Ft lundsca ped, 2 patioi. BETTF.l(TllAN W'l'Overs. wallpapu & MODF.I. rustom paint thru out. llAS EV~:RYTll lNG ABSOLUTE STEAL!! I stake my reputation 11n the f ACT that lh1~ 1:. tht• BF.ST BU'r' m N<'v. vu1 t Reath tr you art a leg1llllliltl' bu) er CALL ME DIRECTLY and you v.111 be impn·s:.t-d GREAT H V' O<:t:AN VU. LRG 4 BDR. PHOf OECORATF:D. pool. spa & bke nu all ror onl) $376.500 A lradl• will Ill' l'ons1dered You v.on t hebe\e 11 un11I you :.e•· 11 Call PATH l <:K TENORE DirH ll} 759 1221 or 760·11702 TODAY '. °""'""'"' El Toro roiiw11A \ tilf'' • ..,.W\lll_ ....... IMM w. .... 11 .. ,~ t..1\jft• thlh Lai\AAI '•cw• ... ~\ .. ,., ~t:'~~- s. .. Jw.11f\( ·~'''""'' S.U.1 AIU Su t f'r¥t. ~·'·••""• ~,,tm1n~h·• '4o1MM-Htlfl'W''•k REAL ESTATE A1 '""'' IOf '•'' AptrtlnrM\ aQt 'Mtt .. ~,p,.,.,,, ...._,,....,,, l ttt•lff) '""' lt)llh l~rntrU•I Prcw.-rh c.._......_.,_."' .. '•I .. ~·o l Atn, .. 1 .. ~tot...\lmtt4 1nconw Pr-utwth INiu§ttal ProV"fl .. lAiibt•'-1• ,..,.k tlnif'l •lt t'r' lrit0t.tnH• r)r,,.,, Wr-\Ltrl Orjftc• t o l'r•~ °"""'.°""',•"••·it ()wt .. "11<11.P ..,,.., RaM~~ term•'•'•"" iu Putili~'s Motict: :: Alr real estate ad :: ~erl1 s ed 111 thi s '"'" m:wspapN 1s subJed to :: the Federal Fair lluu!> 1.-1 mg Act or 1968 .... h1l·h ;: makes 11 11le1111l lo ad· 1m "ertlSt .. any prefercnre. :;: llm1tat1on . or d1!> :: ~~~~.'":~\~1:. b:iW~rn'~'. ~ex. or naliona I or1 j!an. 1.g, or un m1t•nl1on 10 mltkc "'' any ~ur h prderen1 l'. :~ I 1 m 11 a ll n n o r 111 !> :;~ rnminallM " 1. ::z This nev.~pape1 11111 nul •"" knowint:IY an·l'pt an~ ~':: ad1er11)1ng for rt'al '"" estate wh1l'h 1:. m 1 mla ~: lion or lhe law ~--------­,.,.., Mui fAhtt l •• "•"•' ,_a,1 llu• tau""•"'"' w ERRORS: Ad•ertisers RENTALS 11 ...... .-.,...... ,100 should check their ads 1......_l•'•11"'••• A..ll.. _ ... ~rt er· Hobnt.,,.,w Inf ......,., gnu ~=::~~,t:~" = ron itMlfdi ely~ The ~==::~: ::· :~ DAILY PILOT OSSUIMS :=:::t~;· ~. liability for the first A""''"" '"" incorrect insertion I o\ph l •fwrA Jou) Aph t"'"Of I tw ....Au. Ac.em\ \IJl)J Wlll'•J lll01"9t 61 bO•lil ·~J Hul•h \t•MI"' Hui ~lkw'r<r\ ti~ Ocean & jetty views. Marine room. 4 bdrm. 3 bath, 3700 sq.ft . $1 ,385.000. UDO ISU HOMES Prime Lido Nord bayfront. 5 bdrm , 5 bath. Lge L.R. 2 boat slips $1.500.000. Remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bat.h + large rec rm . beam ceilings. $420.000. · LINDA ~SU IA YNONT Lagoon view from 6 bdrm, 5 bath, playroom. dark rm. den. $1.350.000 ! IAY5'DE COVE Spectacular bayfront view 4 bdrm. 4 bath. 2 boat slips Sl.900.000. TIES VISTAs-MIS5'0N VIEJO New French Normand y 4 bdrm. 4 bath. guest house. pool. $795.000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boy\•d•·Dr•vt> NB b75 blbl ~ .... , Hrftl•I uw 1 I \""'""'"'"'·" :'.~"Houses for Sale PltlCEREOUCEO ~:1;..11,:';;;; .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• WALKTOIEACH oo th•~ supt·r ~harp 3 :=:,w. M•;•• :::. GeMrd I 002 3 Bdrm 3 hath hom1· 1n Rdrm holllt' Wel bar· rn11.:7.,:~1 H:':.~~' "'' l"c·ell"nl llunl1n"t 11n rn:arbh.-frpk &· rn Ul·h -·~· :.!:'.: ••••••••••••••••••••••• lkoat h :1rea ,\.;,uni':i hll' mire ·~ orfored bl thl!> :: ;..•·.:;•··• "°"' MESA VERDE loans and 0" ner ..,. 111 owner v. ho •~ mo!it anx BUSINESS, INVEST 5 BEDROOMS further a~ist "'th 15 . 1ous to moH· 01111 MENT, FINANCE \lost popular BUl'l'Ola 5 dov. n S2 IO Clllll r a 11 s129.sc•1 for adtllllllnal ....,,....,,..,,.,,,. ,.,o i Hdrm or 4 + den. 01 l'r Jal·k1e Pennl'} 1nr0 rm a t 111 n r a 1 I I =~~:~;:,,. ~:~I 3.!00sq rt. Formal 111 ing 642.5200 979 5370 ''"" ......... ,.. ;so, nnd dining room l·oun A J ::n:-.i;;;;;. ~ lrj sized klll'hcn "''h LLSTATE ,., .. , •• , .. Tll • ,..,., breakras1 nook u' er _ AJlllOtlNCEMENTS. look~ huge ram1ly ruorn REAL TORS PEISONALS & sparklinl! pool and hot , I LOST' FOUND spa Truly a hu~e ram11} IF\nd whal ... OU wanl 10 home Great finanrang. •-.--------ml Oa I p I C r I t::i:::':""" 11w Pnre only S29S.OOO C:o ll 1• 12'___1_ ot lass1 1er s uul '-.... ~ ~2313 ~f.!;.:m1m .~ rl'!_15a1 ........ 0. ..... .., -,,,,... ~ OlrtOYMOlr& GREAT BUY! PICPUATION Lrg ~ Br w Bonus Rm. ~~~~~::"'""" ~~ Beautifully Del:Oral1-<l. 11,,. ... ,,...,, ... , •~ UkeNEWwithOCl-:,\1\, lllCICHANDISE BAY + city hies. 1·11• ,..6 plus Pool. Spa All for . ..,..,.. ~u.~; )t.V,t•h '•""''•'• tqooprri.M (. .. h , .... t)tt to \fN •• tltthhtlt: G,., .... ~ ... ~ how.M"hiM t,ood, #•tin L.nnc.ot& Jhrflt...,--. '111tttlliMGUl 'f1W'ril~,V.•nl~r1 \l"'.w.ut fW rwmrf\h '"'•or .. ,..• t '1"*' ""' ~1,..,.4rr<lfC•"' St-.1ftl \htlll•"""" ..... Good< 51~ ... RH1•U,f.ll!I "'' ;7'l'.ct~H1t ""'_.... BOATS & MARINE EQUIPMENT f...nwr•I "°"'' .... ~ "" • ftti•I\ ~.nnf' t.t4VI'-' 8o•H r°"'•' ftiNc \ JltM I l\fr\l'I &o.b '411 lbth Sltl" IHlf._, f.liu.llh !'PH'd • '-.Ii t Bolh Mor•ar TIAllSPORTA TION Am·un felfl~f\. ~I• M .. -.1 l ttf1rt' t:aK :...i.Hom-•curCyttft ~'"• Motor Hm\ Mlf' kt"I TUJi;en Tta\tl !:...,.t.~~ .. i.,. .. AUTOMOBILE """"'•I All;qwn '-' .. "'"'' R11 r .... 1.u. \r im Wt W irh R1111• Hid • l*"«IOt·\•• ,, .... \ .,... Avl11 LC'111111n,_ .\\ll(.,.W.tt1tf"n AUTOS, IMromv ~•rfl•t•I \11111 "•nwu , ..... '""'"'It"-'~' ¥11'4 \. . .,,. ov.. ~ ... 04'1•"ft ...... ,.rt ...... •tt...t. J ••••• Jt"l'bll'• t-...rm..11"'·•'"• t.-rll!N 'fl.,.,. "•llt"·k"""~ \It. '4l1h '""' t-..tM114 tktow~n.t t-'Uf',,,. .. Mf'IW"lt ~t•Hutt' ""'"' ,,,,., , ... ,,....,. r.,o1. rr1wm~ \!Mh••K"'" \9h M &ITIS, lfEW l,f'M',.,f AUTOS, USCI '"'"''"' A\I\ -· i ...... ''"''"' '""'' ..... , .. ,....,, ·-' .... MW ... .fl t'hf'\f11 .. ,.,.., ~~-. ''"~""' .. \ .... M••f'fh' Mf'f<t11~ ........ :i:.-"' I'll ... ~ ....... i-.i,, ...... ,,~. .,... ....... •·•· onl}1 $376 .SOO v. 11 h •111 TERMS or Trade. Call •.ai ai:t DIRECTLY ;:: PATRICK TENOHt:: •11) 759 1221. i60·8702 --- MESA WOODS Be autiful cu!>t n m r.ibinelry b) ma~ler craftsman really ~els this 3 8'1rm 2 Ra home apart. (A,,·el} gall•bo and bt'ann11. fruit trt'<'S Lov. rale. nelo\ loan a1 adable Fu II $159.000 751·3191 C:::. SELE( T -f"" PROPER l IE C., 11/J. Ml. TO BEACH 2 Br 2 Ba rondo w only ::~~ $15,000 dwn. SOOS pr mo "'" pays all Bill Kennedy ::: 631 1266 '11'-i 1t?n ti k4 •Ill ~. LUCKY 13 ~· S\3.000 down. $1300 mo ,ioo C-Ozy 3 Br v. pool & spa ~ FUii price SlJ.5.000. (.;a II - 'f1VI liCi ,;.n ,~ .. »ilJ c:::. C.,£ l E (_ I -f"" P~OPE-f~ l 1~ 'i f.H ~~~~~ r~':l~~1t~t~ ~~~~~ !.~ career opportun1lies ·;;~with THE REAL , N EST ATERS. Licensing "'" school rees completely ;~ refundable to school of ;: : your choice F.xlensive • u sales training f or in· :1~ formation, rall 751 6191 ~·•i .... VIEW TOWMHOMES ;;~ Master su1les View of ,,,., Orean & Night lights. ·:'.:! Quiet Arca Parks. open '111 spaces Sl37 .000. X Int ~ f'in. Hal or Pat Agts ~;; 751·.l'OOS~ 673·7~ "1:1 AISOlUTt STEAL ledlcl'd $150.000 MOW $525,000 SPYGLASS IYOWMER OWNER FINANCING ..,.. llbrl41,ba;4100sq n ~ 2S Bodcita Bay E l••a.-1.1o•wn-c•r•.1.s.9 •. 07_37_11 ...... ::i-..................... . '111/W llil& .... : --<>l1ll ""'' .. AYFIOMT• UDUCID 45' bc>11l slip. private bt1ch. lite ' cheery holN. 3 large bedrooms 'den. 2 balbs, flrtpl1 ce J\llt IUl1iq up in 1 bull· and much more! Will ol ~down! INCLUDES ..., your own ! A LAND! Owner·A&UI = ":'1a'°.:1 :-::. ur or tU·1MO. et1t Cl1111fltd ad.111111------• .... ...,.. ~~~~~~- RESIOf;NllAl REAL ESTATE SERVICES ~ OCEAN ROMT $510,000 An extremely good buy with fantastic fin ancing. Ocean(ront duplex with a 3 BR & 2 BR unit. 2 fireplaces. Units in good shape . Fantastic white water & sunset views. This won't last!! IN NEWl!ORT CENTER 644~9060 PRICE REllETION .. BAYFRONT Gnat locaHc. with ,.ac_.c •iew of boding actiYity aad -.. li9'f s froftl .. patio. Spoc.iom 2-shwy "°"" with "9"f Maqity for tllfoylRcJ li•ilt«J Md ............... ""' aad slip for 2 boots. ASSUMAIU LOAM 0 F $900,000. M ~ $1 ,495,000 fu. SUIMrT YOUlt EXCHAMGES. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC REAL EST A Tf. ~.., Rfl'nt11'' l't1("1t1v-M~mer•t SAN JUAN CAPISTIAMO ..._TOP ESTATE Special 5 BR Home On Approx. 5 Acres. Solar Heated Pool, Spa. Room For Tennis Court. Horses, Guest HO\.L5e. Magnificent View Of Sum>unding Valley & Adj. To Miles ex Equestrian Trails. $1,975,000. 759-9100 #2COtp01•fllne Ne..,.tC..ter SHOW PUCI OP T .. YUi Owners extremely motivated ' 'Will comlder any offer 806 Harbor Isle Dr. Promatpru Ba y Cuiitom ('raftsmanshlp thruout Spa('IOU.' Pamlly Home wiUI 50' 8tip for your yacht. wvely 4 Bdrm home. lil!hl ' airy. with lots of glass to r1pt1&te view. Fonnal Dinln~ room. Family llOC)m, 3 F1rept1ce1. 4 Baths. Private OfOt-e. Muter Bdrm Suite with Ubrary ' patio. 100 1•r old ftati1n cabinet coven t wall In Uvln1 "'°"'· Mllll lft, Calf ..-'-tty Per'tt&e °' M1,.at MacKerrow for Immediate~. f75.J7JI or'15.ml -...... ---· N C~ON llOADMOOI S750,000 Beaut. 4 bedrm s . Fam rm w/fireplace, formal din rm. 21h ba. Newly decorated in sort pleasing colors. Beautiful new cplng & drapes. New marble entry. Pool & s pa. Spacious yard. Single Fami~ security system. crown Cul dt'·Sal' :.ireet 2 Bt-d£,On~~th. hv mouldinR M ex1cao Sun&SJ1l II Club paver floor\ng, 2 used 20 min t<> Nl'wpurt britk frpks. bll·in TV Center s I ere o r a b 1 n r l & S?I0.000 w1lh $160,000 mg room with fireplare. dining area. kitl'hcn. servil'e ponh, beam l'e1lmgs thru-0ul. 2 tar garage J\1•11t·ado. fig. frat tret"s, rose gardtn New roof. llome 1n ex· t•ellunl l'ttnd1t1on PRICE $2LS.000 assuma ble Isl Tru~l Deed at bookshelves 111 ram rm at 121, fixed ratt' & fully High assumable. Mast amoruzed He to apprec iate NopoinlllorquJh()tnl: $219.COO. Opl'n Sal Sun 770 0347 714 963·6163 Pr11 ate O~neri/\gent Part) ---------1 WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS 2111 -~HlhRood MEWPORT ClmR, M.I. 644·49 I 0 71 1'. ------llalboalst.d 1006 ILOTALOME IEST DUPLEX ••••••••••••••••••••••• WORTH S200,000l Pnrre C~r~JJ dcl MJr PUii.iC AUCTION OR lo«atton dose to !>hop MANSION For rtf1t f S6t S~ pin~ and lranspor1a1u111. Sel' :id under 1069 I · or mo. Clean 2 bdrm house plus 1----------i ACT QUICICL I bdrm uparlmenl Won't lost 1onCJ ot tllis For Sale Hy Owner ~Tanc•s<·an Fount a ms. s111gle s t ry home . 4bdrm. 2ba . nl'arby sd1001s. parks & hbrar) $173.000. Open !louse Sat1Sun. 12 Spm. 6S72 Jardml' Or . H.R tNr Goldt>nwl.'sl & Slalt•n t7 14 l842 9216 3 bdrm I'. Sll0.000 GI e .ooo 9 5'. 96!H~J ba,. IJ: lot to assume loan owe d h t l 'rrade your T o·~ or pro • ~S;.~00 ri~l~!..a °'~~~r perty in an)' :.tale for pnce. S.-rPoolHOMt v.111 rmam·l' 7:;•, or tht' Balboa bland ProJJl'rt~ Plionc 6021991.7:i.iH Hu-ntln-gton Hcarh Oul v 0 ,,.. menl area l'ror de Newport 8-ach I 069 .....•.....•••......... Canal Front. Nl'wporl Shorl'~. 4 Ur l>en $25.<XXJ down. Ownt'r will l'3rl"}' Mui.I sell' Make offer' Tenn•~. µool. v. alk lC> bei!Ch. A.:cnl 646· IO·M or64S28l6 OPEN SAT /SUH I I ·6 New 3slory ~ath housl' Bay&oct>an 1 lt'"l> lkean side llalhoa Hll'cl 1911 C:ourt AH' nr 19th 67!i 2291 ft( 848 31:13 AmJ>le_parkmg rn rear HeiaM With View S38S.ll00 ... 1\lisu me l!.t T 0 or SISIJ,000 approx at 13 S'. Lrg 3br 2bu !(real po1enl1al Rl'tenl 11 remodeled k1l ('hl'n Own~r mu~t ~tll {.'.;ill Jill ror add1l1onal inro 011 hna11r1og. Mary Lar nl'k 642·6173. fi46·5096 pun·hasl' pnrc al lu•low Iii H••s~, ltltr. ·•r602 27" 59~· door bar and entertain market rates• 67"28 6 & lea'e ITI('Ssardor l'-.---~-----i t'Orated lhru out 3 fir .... E"R I,_ ·--•n.·t·u•m•l•'a•I--• i b.i I "' ,.. •WESTCLIFF• HOAG HOSPIT Al SALE OH TllADE l $129,500 2 Bdrm, 2 bath rondo I flalboJ bland. !I Bdrm. 5 Costa Mesa I 024 ---, Patio. doubll' 1:ara1:1· Ba tJ un1ls 1 •; bl1wk lo ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hr OCC/Costa Mesa I S123.000 ba). lui:e 1'1 Tll C 0 R 11...1 E R 2Ar 21)h6 2 l'ar itar RoyMcCorcle Rltr 121/4% FtMAHCIHG "t.:>n you la ke 01 t'r ex isling loan~ on lh1~ ex e<·ull\ehomc femunni: 4 !Jr. 212 Ba & pool. onl) 5339.~ 2670San Miguel Dr. Newport 8ead1 759-1501or752.7373 • 12' ;', Mc·Nu~h lt1•all.'' "" Like ne" i"1v.·m·i will a' ' · d ;n ~ li-12 IJ~l-1 . l'\1''1 LOCATION 'L~thnanrinl! --•5111148 ... •7 .. 711i2m9--•I f\ Ill\ ''1cin ot I I arbor ln\'l0!>lm1•111 <:11 RB>UCEO TO SELL Dl'lil!hlfol Ill'\\ ~ Udrm v. lrad1Honal des1i:n. Ii bra I) & den. frtrma I drnmi:. bay \'ll'". 1·11rm•r locauon rn Old CoronJ llel M.ar S.\9s.ooo owe Ex1•dlent term~ ur tradl' ·~ .......... 851.111489 I :i Br home "' add on SI 09 900 ramily rm nrw roor It\' • Balboa PeMiwla I 007 ~lorage. ~nl) SI 15.000 675-1771 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 15K dwn. 8111 l\cn PUii.iC AOCTION MANSION See ad under IOW Corona .. Mar 1022 ....................... CdM C"°'1Mr Dpl1 with financinQ 3 Bil 2ba or 2+ j!Ul'~ an own\·~ un1l also 2 hr rl'nt.il rnllal!I' ,\II 111 1 sharp rnnd w t•\rl'l lo1•a Uon OwnN "'" rJ rn IJ:I.' 2nd TU l~:~l hu) 1n town for only 521!0.000 Coll 644-72 { I nedy, al!l 631 -1266 * MESA VERDE * W ITll l'OOL AN 0 SI' A Spal'1ous 3 Bdrm. 2 bu Reauurut an•a SIS.000 dn Ask101: S240.000 SI~ rm pymt PP A1,'l i{jl)i~ Westside Rustic Charm A REAL BARGAIN Im mar 4 Br. n r I h (' Harbour Sho" ~ Ii ke nl"v. ()nl} $128.900 Ilk r 848.0709 BEACllWAl.K S Br l.;1rl!eSl fir plan p,, spa 20'. dn and owe Asking $2110,tlllll llkrt 841W709 LOWESTPlllCE ~ lk'aut1rull) upj!radl'd J ~°" btodroom WestMde horTll' '~~ offt'rs t·nuntrifled al HarilOur 1042 rn>~phere ~uh wnocls) ••••••••••••••••• •••••• ram1I~ room and lari:e EST A TE SALE BIG CANYON Guarded l'ommunll) Beaut 3 Rr 21, ba homl.' v. mirrored v. all~. lob or m..rblc, J l'iH j!ar S600,00o Call 644 0448 ~ Walker 6 Lee S BR J Ba. qwl'l nhrhd. --------• submit all orrerlt Ask mg. S250.000 631·7215 Lowdliort~ Ver)a1lles studw Pen lhou.~e l'ondo Take over 40 FEET high assumable loan j( OF LIDO ISLE 11·1 •" Ov.ner v. ill <·on Jnd you l!l'I 4 bdrm plub sider late model car ii' 3 t·.i r j!aral(e. ha) dov.n pa) m·1 Selll'r beal'h. ten111~ t•1lurt~. desperate Art fast•'' \at•ht rlub and a Im or Onl~ 589.000 Call Jim c>lhl'r arnen1l1e!. Ov. nl'r A!,'l 979·5370 962·9S97 an East and will look a1 l•-------- J11} reasonable oHe r mtheareaforth1:-l1111•l.1 ~ 4 Bdrm horn..· A n•JI I bargain at Sl211,tli.MI Ca II I>Cl'l.EX I vr nt•v.. ~Hr + "?" 979-5370 I :!Br. 709 ilrth1d Ca 11 I n'<I bnl·k rircplare Two IY OWHEl rireplat·e!> an· realurt><l.t L'stm "atl'rfronl on ·--------•I 11lus hril·k rluor p;il io lees1de or lhvl'nporl Isl I 0% CASH DOWN Super \iev. property on lari:t' lot v. ex1s11ng duplex L11 e in one rent the other or bw Id a nev. home -+ guest house A I mos l Io t 1 a I o <' Sl15,<XXJ A II.SI 9135 c '" m•r hk r LLSTATE 0l't'an V1t•w. 4bdrm . RE LTORS mu.~t sell. $375.000 111'. A down or partna!>h1µ Cele i °'.:-~ ~J) Pnm· Onl) 644 16112 DlJl'Lf.X BY OW'llEH MUST SELL! lest Caslt Offer 675 300.1 679·91;67 &75-5511.)d/ I Owner Soys Sell j PlJllC AOC Tl ON ...,_ L--/3 I I MANSION .-..:w nvmr w eve ' Set' under 11~1 for gracious li•MICJ + quest Cftrs & spa. I Modern WI uery woy. 4 ldrm, library & I fCllllily ""· How of· ftred at S591,000 I thretul?h lh1•w l'la:-~1f1t·d l'a~l'!> c~:L~::o"r I BARGAINS! 2StSl.C-t Hwr. B RGAl .... SI Corofl• clel M., I A " 675·5511 Onl'ICf}J><1!:i! • O '90"01'\Qt' litttcw1 o4 the '°"' tero"'blfd wetd\ be low 'O fOl'f"'I fCN1 '°'"pit tlt'O'dS 8 L Y C A H S L E W H The first sign ol old age is l l" l l when you hear snap, crackle ________ and f)OP 1n lhe morning and S I X C E E Ill s nol your ····•· '---,--, ~,--, ~,-:-'"' 0 C~p·et1 •ht c~vc-& ,. qU'O'~ by 1,11'"9 •• •he "''"'"9 "'o<d L.-..1---L---L-.l.-...L-...J yo• do;oloo •·-"•P No l bolo .. 6 ~~~~:N~~~r ltllm I I I I I I I SCUM-lETS AMW~. Claulfic ..... s I 00 STAR GA~EKfl~. i;...,;;..;;;;.;:..:..;.;'-----8r CL\ Y l l'OLL\l"---r----t M v-o.Jr A<•"'1 c;..de J;\ Y •u.,d'"I '' I~• Sto" To dr .. ro~ mt uogr 101 F11do1 1.od '* •d• c0t•c~1ng lo"'"'"°"' ol yO<I' Zod« t.nh S'9" ,,..,.,. ,.,.,.. •1PnH ,,.,.... »~~...... .,...., > ,,._....,, » •n~ ., ii.., •C...." )If...... .. • ..,, ..... •'-" "',_.., ,~... r,::,. ~~ '°'_ .. _ ··-.... _ ·-·-... IO"-"""" 1tr.,..u• .,,.. • n.-... ,,_ .,_ ,. .. ~;:...:;:.=~ """' .,_ ··-UA-ttK.. .. ... ., HJ .... 1\I; ''" lHM ttl .... l .. C--0 ll-t1•N .,..... ntw .. _ .. .,.. II• .. ..._.. .. _ "'- L!!::.~=:;:i JU 110. •• I•-,n.. 110... .. ._ II-ltU.• n...,. uto. ur-.............. "=N =i:' == :.. .... . ...... l!ll::IU.~-1 rnw '""" °"'9 == :::: == .... , .,. •o;:. ~Goel®~ "-I ~urrounded b) pro 4 Br3 Ba. 42· dnl'k 2 ~I'. fr~s111nJI lands1·.iped 2ll00sq ft lfil922 Baruna I "11h fruit tr<·t·~ lcl1·al 57so.ooo ~.tH 7698 .1 IUl·a11on JUSt 5 mrn11tl's 10 846_~ lht• on •Jn Mu~t 't'•' • 1 Sl29.!ll0 \179 2J9U l"ine I 044 TAR BELL ••••••••••••••••••••••• l..t'aM• Oplron l'un·hase l' PAMVOIREWAMIC or partnership 3bdrm. I 2b;1, SISO.CIOO 421 ~: 20th 1~n·1 the univ ouU.land St l'nnt· Onl; 644 4682 I '"~ feature )·uu l!l!t v.1lh S ALE OR TRADF: lhis4bdrm Mac·Ta,1sh : F.astsldl· Costa Ml'~a un I Model in Turtle Rork 1li. v. rth large ft•nl'ed lot. Highlands l.a11sh~) .up m1m fur R\' ~ltNJ~h i:rade<I. PRI\ ATf. SPA ' Hl•all1 davs li4 2 1:134. loeall'd 011 quid rut cle t'H " !!51 !lll89 s:1r Call todJ) for in rorma t 1un un t•x l'l'P I 01.l>F:R 211r. 11111 . II! rnr lion al rmani·rng hl'lnj! I I lll'r lot. frwt lrel'S. '"' offered $385.000 garage SIJ0.000 OWC l'P t7141338·3751 I ,, D.. 1' MESA VERDE (.C" 'W-! Jllr.2Ba.assumeloans fi,,~1~ j 754-6236 art 6PM .,.,«.r, ~·8600 I •523 CAM"" Dt:IR\1111£ ! E'SIDE 3 UNITS ' HARBOR VIEW HOMES MaftocoModel 3 Bdrm 2 balh!> Fee land $224,900 eo..tod John Shea ln*er 955.3454 , H9,000 - "-AO HI RO:'>ll HOMI., Inc. REAL ESTATE 631·1400 • ................•...... Mobile Ho.Res For Sale I I 00 .••..........•......... 2 bdrm. I bath ne" «arpel & dr.ipe ' Reau11ful adull park lo" :.pac-l' rt>nt fi.lli 11612 l ONDO Aalron1 t><:e.an 1 ll'" l?Uardl'd Rjlt•. ~uh le r ran can II ark 1 n ~ Nev.1Xlrt llt'al'h lk i\ n1 ,, l'!fganr d uhhou't' & ha~front P.irk ~lint g~m .Mu ll.in l<l•Jlt1 tond ·i s dbl \\Ide ~02!JliOaskforL11rr · firepla<'l' hnt k palm $1.0uu 63 double "1dl• W"'STCLIFF I c:ornrr l~l S39.000 Rill 1:: I Grund,· 6•!i 6161 S240 000 . • LOlt'I~ 3 Adrm vlu• lad1llac or lhe mobile family room. lot•aled rr homes' S1lverrn•sl Cot pres111nous Wrs tdirr laRl' 2 br. 2 ha. v.el bar \hnull'S 10 lhl' beach I )ard V. (ru1l tree~ Owner anxious and " ii AclulL<;. no pets Cl wner help with lhe ran.1nrm11 972.4566 ('I .. for an appcnntmenl le Owner ;3 12x60 2Br. see.call 540·11SI v. d min :t l!t' SS ~HERITAGE SIHOO ofr 1-6211 11132 R2 Pine walls. OJ.ll'n beams. t·an ed t·abmels. New c·arpel. Helo" ap· praised 1alue . h,J\e doruments Lov. dn w s120K 1s t r P $149 .SOO Ph 645-li2ti6 Ov.ner Agt _ DESPERATE 'I Woodbridge Landing _____ _.iiiiiiiiiiiim Lge 2500 sq ft exr<· 4 br REALTORS Ha'e something ln sell• Class1f1ed ads do 11 "ell COLLEGE PARK Sparious 3 Rd 2 Ba home w high assumable loan. lov. in t rate Only $129.000 Submit terms. C:a ll Rbl M 1lliken. :<e -~· RVM* -- LE~EOPTION IOlc dn. Sl.000 mo. 3 BR. 2 ba t:aslside !'>411 ~. 673-24112 OWMr Ananclltq Culr 3 Br 11 2 Ila Mme. with spa. new topper plumbing & 2 t•ar garage Assume lst & OWC Jrg 2nd. Asking Sl13.COO Tft\DI T 10\, \l RL\l·n 1026 2 eRJ~~·~~o. Gar. Mtblr. pool, j1c. terms, ¥J dn 49'!-§4$$ Pll.E AIETION Price slashed 20.000 $294LS00. ~2· 7322 U,.01.och 1048 ••••••••••••••••••••••• A Lot ForA Little I acre + bldg site, l>!l'nl· ly sloping parcel short d15tance from tennis & beach. Ownr has 1n eluded plans for cu~tom l'1lla s12s.ooo SpH tarular views' MISSION REAi.TY 494·0731 WftMI. to Vidoria btach from this Ol'Can vitw duplex Charming and only S22S.OOO ...,...v1-.1t.E __ 497~761 W~tos.Mt.. Panoramic ocean view IOl in Laguna Bearh. Call Leone for detalls Mol5ffd & Ryltt llvlp --}14/64().2912 PUii: All:TION .~~'J~~009 SIOIDa·•YOWMt' Lase w/optl6n. S yr old 38r. 21,, b1. d1n1n11 rm, fam rm. 2 cu aar. rn,•d 1rd. 0«1n vu $24S.OOCI. 4'!·1•1 , See~Oll OPPOITUMITY I la I• --IHdt I Mt kaotta ofttn whe11 you ....................... 111t m ult·tdtln1 Pally MO DOWN Piiot Cl•lhed Ada t 11'1~ IMlllllT .._. d9e Orin .. COltt 2 Ir. 11t'dfferr1111n imrM&. WI&. Qldf) .. lelllr. ,.._Ml·SITI hll rlu 1101,000. , t PlllJC AOCTION 4500 Sq. Ft Mansion s...far. Mmdl 14, l:OO , .M. 1700 ..... d Dr. AUCTIOHHI llG JIM RIPUIUC, REAL TOIS ,....... 54M»6tl Dii: HMiol llDGI . 4 II + LOFT ~eau.tiful.!y de cor ated . Kens1ngtoh wt view of city lites. Loft ideaJ for study or den Lovely spa in entry. 3 ca~ garage, formal dinln~ & more ! ~~ Darlene Herman 752· 1414 •ACKM 9*1SH con~1 In Eastbluf'f. Owner transferred and ll'llSt sell. Lg liv rm marvelous fandam rm adJoinina kitch w/fpk wall bookcases. Lg matr suite . Two addlliootl BR 11'19,500 Barbara Aune 6'2.mi {llO) , i l ' ' I ,,J t. I I I I I I •• or.,. Coat DAILY PtLOTIThurtday, March 11, 1882 PIC'Tlftout MtllltHI ....... ITAHMa•T Tiie lol.._l"I ,_,..,.. ••• ... N ..,., __ . ltAt.. A Ptftllt,..llill'. fllf ev.i-t C•11I., Otlv•, S11tte 140, ,,.,,,.., C.llttmf• '1111 C. It Alton, Jr IU I.flt M1t1 MrHI. • 4, Cott41 '4 ... C.llftrlll• 91621 c:.;1 •. ---. • .., tlef•• ...... hvlewerf, 5-n Mertn1. C•lllerllle '"°'· tvtlllllH,Nlel-tl6 .. ft ... "9 hlotWMl. ....... , GolHorllla fM61. Per T. "911, 1ttl ,._ ... .._. Hiii, Rlvtf'tl•. c.lltWftle tU0t t --NUllta . ·-------------·--... Pecnnoul euMMaa ..... f&Telll•T Tiit ... _.... ,__. ere Hlllf ....i-.. . HA.ta APPARINt, , .. Twth• A"•11v•, lvll• 1, C••t• M•u, Cellf0rlllle'*7 • __, J .......... Jl40 ~ Ct .. Jell -'-" c.itl•-· C.lltomle tam Lt'llll Oefllel fllOMp•e,,, IJJJI lle Mtll Orlve, G•r<1•11 Ort••• c:.tttw .... ..., Tllll Ml-• It <-IN lly • ...... ...w. ..... .....,J,9otr.lll Tlllt ....__,,. wlll fli.e wllll llMt c-1y Clotrll of Ore11tt C-1' Oii .....,_.. "· '"'· 1.' ' flU1911l l'!nl'rlOUI • .,.. .... "A*tfATU••~ TM 16li.w1119 .,.._, ere "4119 lovtl""' •• VlllONAlt'f M,\aKtTINO CONCl,.lS, 1410 c;.t1ha• A-llt, U111t I , • .._, Celllor ... e .... l.<lw.,<I M90te. ,,._ c.to Clrcll. tOe 8 , Hllflll~ IMcll. t:.olllonM.e ., .... Oone10 MOyen, 111 ,,.....,le• Wey, Cttle Mt-M,CellforftletttV. Tllto l>Uol°'"' h COnclVC-Ill' a ~relNf\~ . 11 .... .,,,...... Tiii• """""*'' ... llleO with ._ Covn1y Cle•• of Ore1191 Ctvntv on M•OCll 1 1"7 ... --rm.IC-11'111 ________ Illa ___ _ J e mH S. l.11, SISl U ConMe eo111ev•rd, u Glnecle. Ce1tfor11I• t1011 . Tlllt bvM-• II COll .... Clell 'Y • .. ,.r•I Ptfllll""lj). -PICT.,IOUS ausn•HS •ICTITIOUI IUtt•IM c .tc:. Allen, Jr. • l'IC'flTIOUl IUllMIM MAMI IT A1UAIM1 floit 101191'119 "''°"' lrt bldlntUff: MAMI STATIMIMT tlAMI STAHMllMT d In Tl\t tollowlnQ IMrtOn Is dolnQ Tiit lollowlnt 1MrSOn Is dOlllt flll 1111( 0 Q bll~lnesus. IMIMIU$: i.-----....... ..-..-~---""!-~ "''• ... .._. ... lllfd "'"" 1111 C.unly Clttll ol Otenee c-ty en ,.,_,., u, , .. '"'*--PvOlllMd or ... Coal Delly PlloC, STA TIMINT Ofl WITMDltAWAf. STATIMllNTOf'A~MT o~ IUCMA NAN -RICCI ' ASSOCIATES. 1020 Qvlll, NtwOOl'l Blecll, Cetlton1te tt660 L•"V H llkcl, f41P I l.eH•rmote. levu11e N'°"'1. C•lllornlf O•n ll•rber1 K llllCN!Mn, 1100 E•llllle 1..e ..... N.._, B .. c11, Cellfomla t~ 1iii1 bvliMn 1, c-11elltd OV en .. nlncorPOr•lt<I u-lellon ottwtr then ejler11*"1111P LA,.,,, H Rkcl 1...-. IC BvclleNln Tlll.t sl ... .._, w .. tiled wllll llMt Covnll' Clerk Of 0••1111* Co;inty on Merell J, Ul2 ., .... P11Dll-Orenoe c .. ,, Dell, Piiot, M•r 4, 11, 11, 2S, 1"2 to1CM7 .. - PICTITIOUS eU511111SS II-IE STATI MIHT Tiit foliowlno ,..,_,, er• dolnv tiu•lrwu•s· PRO LAii. llllOS Slcy Pertl Clrci., $ult• F, trvlM, Cetlfoml• '2114. l.euto J. llltulcs, I 11~ ~Ire A••n11•, ll•lbo• lst•n<I. Cellfornl• ttMt. Thh D<Alneu Is cond..ctecl by en lndlvl<l11•I. l.estlO J luk•o Tlllt st• ......... I WU fll<KI with Ille Co1111ly Clerk of Oranoe countv on Ftbru•rv 1•. 1'1117 ""'" P11bllslle0 Or-CoHI D•llY PllOI. FeO .••• "·Merell 4, II, 1"1 12.,..J. "CTITIOUS •USIMHS 11-IE STATEMENT The lollowlnv peflo" h 001,.9 buSIMU~ SVllMARINE ENGINEERING ASSOCIATES, 504 Jilt Sirwet, N-PO'l BHcll. ce11-• .,~ Lorenzo C Miiie r. 11~ VI• Reve.,.,e, N-1 Be.Kii, Cellfornl• '2~ Tiiis Dldlneu " <ondu<lecl bY .,. lll<llvld ... I GEORGE BECK ENTERPRISE. WP MAINTENANCE, 111 Wtte .... 1300 Adams Avt!lllt, 1a.A, Cmt. llMV. 11tll, Jot, c..ta MIM. C.I~ "'27; fllCTITIOUI IUIHllJ.I '1ant Pllbll-.. Or .. ONill Delly PlloC, F•. U, M41r014, 11, 11. tW MMI. Celllornlt mi. Nwm '-~· ,_,. OtMll Front, MAMa ITATIMIMT Gto<9t P, eec-. 111, IJDD Mem1 IMwpett leecll, C .. lforftlA '*1· ,.,. lollowlftt !Mf'MlllS .,.. dol119--------·-· -------- A••-· ••A. c .. 1e w ... Cetl1911'1e Thll ..,,....... I• c-t.cl by on -lll•U•\: tlUI HMll•iou.I. NEWPORT OOG IHOW$. lfm Tllh ~ineu I• t-..Cle<I llY en Ner....,.J Re~ ~°"""°"·S..lleC,lr•lrw,CA'27U. ~------'"------- lndlvl<h•I Tllla ..__ ... ,...., wl"'.... MOSllOVR CORPORATION. • PICTIT1outeu11 .. 1u O-VOP ll«k C-IY C~ti Of 0.•-C..,ftly °" C•llfornl• corpor•tloft, lttU MAMalTl~"M9MT Tiii• sUI-"' •e• llled wltll .... Mer<ll1t,1•. M<Ollrrnott.S..li.C.lr•llle.CA'2714 Tll• 1•11••1"• per$On .. <lolne County Clerk Of Or•nge COUllly ..., ,,_ Tllll buol~• Is COndllCl•<I Dy • -.isl11ttJti; M•rcllJ, Ul7 P\11111 ..... Or-CM.a o.lly ,.II«, COf"pOfa!IOft, CHAROllEE ,.HOTOGllAPHY, PIMJI Merell II, 11,H,"-'111, 1"2 10,.., MOSeOURCORPORATION Ml Peltl.,,._ i.-, Sun. t<, lr•IM, PvllllsN<I Or-C .. st D•llr PllOt WUllAm Antypel, Jr. CAlllfWl\le '211$, M•••.11.11,JS,ltlG ~ MJCmnc£ PrHicMnl O•"nYD Clle roD••.UOI Tllll '1ete!'*'I •ti flltd with IM P•tllvl•w Lelle , ••·C, lrvl"•· CCM<nh Clerll ol Or-""'"'Y on C...ltotftle"71.S l'ICTITIOUS •USINIESS MAME STATEMENT The followlno P•rson h dolno Duslntuu· D I'~ B P R E C I S I 0 N ENGINEERING. 2So Sherwood, CO\U Mese,CAm77 BRIAN JOSEPH KEADLE. 1SA s ... rwooct. c .. 1e ~.CA 92.•?I Tiii• tiuslllen Is cono..ct•O bY '" lndlvld ... I II J KNOie Tiiis st•l-1 .... llle<I ... 1111 , ... Counly Cler-of Or•nve Count• on Mere.ti l. 1"2 ,., ... PuOllSNd Or-Coall D•ll' PllOI, Merell 11, 1l, 1S. Aprll 1, 1912 122+-f2. NOTICll IMVITINO e1DS Nolle• Ii ller•by e l••n 111•1 the lloar<I of Tr11SIH$ of Ille Hut11"'9ton BH<ll Cit' Sclloot Dlotrkl, In Ille Couflly of Or-. wlll rtc•lv• blch up to, l>vt nae leter lllM 2:00 p.m. on 1"' twenty tlllrd C»rcll <ley Of M.,.cll, 1'92 '°' tlle ,... OI -Cll only 10' • 32' TRAILER, SllyllM Celnor'on lftt•~Kl.cl bicldtr> ,,.., lnSW<I 1M •bove Item. "°"' site" at n•' ''" s1r .. 1, Hunllngton BH<ll, Callfornl• Merell), 1"2 T11t1 --1, c-..c1" bY ... ,., .. ,.. ll\<ll,,ldvel. Publl'""" Or-CoaJI D•lly PllOl. Oefv>y D Che"*" Merell 4, 11. 11, JS, ltlG 100Ul Tiit' Slete/Mftl w• llta<I with - 'ICTITIOUS IUSllllESS NAMa STATllllMNT COVftly Cieri!. of Ore119e Co;ifll' ..., Few ... ry tt, 1112. ,-1Qlll Pv1>11-0renoe c .. st 0.11, Piiot. F•O. II, JS, March 4, 11, ltlG 4'7_., Tiit lollowlno p•rson I\ <lolft9 -------------1>u,lnK1 H : • I ORANGE COAST MEOICAl SYSTEMS, 1.,..._A Wiiton $!reel, Coste I-------------,._. .. , C•llfoml• tlt21. MM1'11 OoMld R. Minter. 1.,..._A Wiison PICTITIOUI eu11111ESS SlrHt, c .. 1e-. C.lllomlat1127. NAMll STATIMEMT Tiii• 111.llolneu '' conclvcte<I bY "" Th• lollowlnQ person• ere dolno ltldl•ldlHI. l>VslnK\el! Doneld R.Mll't•r THE SHOWPUICE SOUTH, lO'lO Tiiis ll•-1 wos filed •1111 .,,. Pullm•n Str••I. Co'h Me••, cevntY Clerk of Or•noe County on Cellfornt• '262' FeDrueryl6,ttl2. SHOWPLACE IN0V$TRIES. l'IUIM INC .. e C.ltfOmla C«-ellon PVDlfihtd 0r.,. Coalt Oelly PllOI, Tiii• l>VJll\KI Is (ol\<luctao Dy • F!_b II, U. Mar<ll 4, II, ltl2 111.ti. <Ofl>Ol'•~~,-L.ACE IN DUST RIES, O aAlllGIE COUllTY SUPIElllOit COURT 7•~C-Dr.w•, S-. AM, C•. '21tl .._. INC. ~Mln.r, Pr-KldWll Tiil• SU.,,_1 wes llle<I wllll -Covnly Clerk of Or•,_ Co;inty on Feo,....ry J, ltlG. .,_, PvOll ...... Or-C<N51 D•lly PllOI, Feb. II, U , Mar. 4, 11, 11192 17._., ""· "· u. Mir, 4, ti,,.., 7'N2 flltOM ~------------------1,A•TMl•SMI, 0,1.ATING UND•• ~ICTITIOUS IUSINHS UME Tlw IOl!owifto llefWft II•• wll1141rewft :~=''-rtort-' •• • o•n•r•I perln•r lrom 111• P,_,CAtlJ11 f1:~1~:'.•:,'"~ • .::::~ ~."'!:' ~1~ Pl.AINTl,-P: WILLIS CLAlllC MAINTENANCE SERVICE al )CIC PLUMetMO, INC. B11e•rw11 R<I CO>l• Me.. C•lllorftl• O•PaMD-T: HAL M>IET'TCHlla t1lli ' ' ... •UTM ecMITICMlla, _..........., Tiie llcllllo11• 01•\lneu fteme e • • II I .. I e I N A N 0 V I a stel.,Mt11 lor Ille part11ershlp w•• lllacl 01V11.0 .. MIMT, ••• DOIEi I on Aprll 12, lt71 In Ille (ovnly ol .,.................... OrellQe CAM =='•Oi>t Fvlt N•m• •110 AOOteu ol 1111 P1tS0<1 WltllOrewlne NOTIC•I Y• -..... -TIM Merlefl Ell,.Detll K•nMdV lOC c-1 _, ~ ... .,. .,.. _.....,. 11..CllMll Ro .. CO\t• ,,.... ce111orn1e .,_ ....,.. .....,. ..... -........... tt•2t ••• • • .,.. •-.,. ....,_... ''' -"•n Ii 1(-0y --· '"""" If you wtll\ lo --,,,. ••Ice Of .., P11bll'""" 0r.,. Coe•t Oelly PllOI 1llorney In IN•,,,.., .. , '°" --oa ·M•r 4 ,, II 2S 1912 07 ti 10 p1omp11, '° tMI your wrltt•• ' · ' • ,. • ._w, 11 eflY. rney lie filed on 11"'* ------------- UH 0' "CTITIOUI IUllNIH NAM« The folfowlnt p~rsont ~•n ellen40n.cl lM vtt of IN fklllloul Dll\lfttU Mme •I llUENA PAltlt COMMUNITY HOSPITAL, HO e..11 11••11 . II-Pel'll, Ce lllornl• '°'21 The flcUttOY• b'"'"•'' fta m• ••fer1t0 le -. wll 111 .. In C-\' on January 14, 1'92 · AMERI C.AN M ED I CAL I NT£ ~NATIONAL, INC • 4U N, C•m<l•11 Orlve, Beverly Hiii•. Celllornle t01IO Tllll -.... w .. <_..., by • (Of pol ••Ion Amer k en M.clk•I ln-1-.t,ll\C /\/ T-• E Oollo""9. Jr • E-Vk • PrKidlflt Tiii\ 11..,,_I w• lllecl wltll -Cov111, Cieri!. ol Or•-c_1, on F•Druery 1'. I~ '"'"". P11Dlhhed 0.-C .. $! Delly Piiot, AVISOI u ....... ---·Iii rnuc •nee t ........ --_ .. <-• "'· •• ------------aoollMMle • -... U4. ,........,. •------------- l'•O. ti, H. Mar 4, II, ltl2 11M2 ... .,. M .... LIN le .............. l'ICTITIOOS eUSINESS PUil.iC llTICl ... s..... MAME STATIEMEMT SI VII ... -• Sal k it.Ir .. , .... 1o do Tiit lollowlnv petlOM .,.. 001n9 , ____________ _ 11n •llOOIOO.., 0111 .. unto, a.i.~I• buslnHsAs. AMMU ll•cerlo lmmt<ll•t•rrwnt•. d• •st• THE NAIL AFFAIR, 4111() Birt h T.L MO. 1197J menere,.., ,_ .. H<rlle, 11 "•' Strut.-Suite IOt, NtwPorl Buen, NOTICE 01' •IQUNI, _.,. ,., reglstr-a tlempo, Celllort1lt '2660 TaUSTE ES' 5ALI 1. TO THE DEFENDANT: A cl•I JemH Morton, 111 lllll SlrHI, On Aprll 2, 1tl2 •I 11:00 1.m. FIRST complelnt hU oeen lllM by tl\4 H11ntln91on Beech, C•lltornlo 91t49 AMER ICAN TITLE INSURANCE pl•lnllfl _1,_1 -. 11 yo;i wl5'1 I< Teri G•rrell. 211 19111 S1•01. COMPANY, 1 C.lllonlle <Ofl)MI Uon Ill -·"I 1 i-•· HuftllnQton BH<ll, Celllorftl1 tl~ as Trustee. or S..CG*.-Tn"'" .., Cletan<I 1 ' i ... ..., ' you ""''' w ..,.. 1.ln<I• c~;ent, 2·11 11111 Stre•I, I I • <1eys ofl•r WI _,_ 1, _...., ··-$uOll t111a<1 Tr""'"· of IMt cert• n on you, file wltll ltll• COMr1 e "''"'"" Hunllntoton BMCll, C•ltt0tnl• ,,..., O•ed of Tr11" .. ecul•<I Dy JOHN ,.._ .. to .... Cornllfetnl. Vnt•u -Tiiis bull .... , " Condll<lecl by ... MICHAEL SIMP50N ......... man 00 to, .,_ <ltfevlt wlll lie onlered on 11nll\Corpoot..i e,_l•llon oilier then •n<I ,.,..,-F•wuary 15, 1WI es -41<etloll of the plalnlltf, •n<I :111.~ • pert""2"..! Cencenl ~:~~':.~. ':f ~f~~·1~~ =.!!":i co;irt mey nar • l..,.,._t ~ft.I Tiii' stet-I wH tiled wolh ,,,. Ore nQ• Co11nly, C•lllornle, eft<I you tor ,,. relief •-n tlle Cov•IY Clerk 01 O••-Cov"'Y on P11f\111111 10 111e1 ctrl•l11 Holk • Of comOl•l111, wlll<ll covl<I rn ull In Merell 3. ltlG oerfthllrrwnt ot ...... l•k1"9 of rrtMm Dete ult a n o Elt<llon to S•t money or pr-r1y « o1"9t ••ll•f Publlllled Or-Co"'I D•llY Piiot lhereunder r.cor-Novemller )0 ,...,..., ... 1n IN <omplelnl. M•• 4, 11. II. H 1"2 .,...., "'' .. IMI•-· no >o511, In -OAT ED Aprll IJ, IWI 14304. P<10t ~. of OHl<let A9'0t<ll of F1M1" P111>illlled 0r'"'9t Coast O•Uir Pllo<. Muell 4, II. 11. is, 111112 9ls.s1 Bid '°'"" end -lfleetlonl mey lie oOh lntd from Ille P11rclle'l"Q Oepertment. •I 1:1S.14111 Str••I, H11"11~ lleacll. Cellfomle. PLAINTIFFS SIDNEY/WEISS, ROBERT C. LV NDEGGER end KAI KOJIMA es Euclllo<"s Of Ille Est.I• Of M. M. MOSELEY. DEFENDANT.} LEASON f'. a...1 ... 1n L Rellltt, .. Id Countv. wlll under •"" .,.._, -.,. •"M Detilll• PllUC •TICE 10 •• ,., o... oi Trvs1 .. 11 .i .....,.k ____ ,._ ____ ,_~-----I JOHii M. MITCMllU.. 1'.0. eox •nt e..cllon lor <till, lewt111 -y Of -vt .. H•, CA UJn. , .. , ,_ MOT ICC 01' ELECTIOM Vftllecl SleltS of A_,tce .• , ""melft l.ortfUD ( , Miiier, O..ner Tiii, s,.,_,,, w•s llltd with ,,,. PllUC •nee County Clerk ol Or•nve C°""'' on 1------------- Stele'CI blti SMll lie recelft<I In Ille P11rc11a,1n9 D•P••lm•M ol 111• H11nllnoton BMc:ll City Sc'-1 Dlllrlcl, 7JS-Utll SI-I. Hun1"'9ton hecll, C•. ,,_, °" °' -· l'OO p.m on -•ell u . 1"2. et Wiik.ii 11,.,. -piece Illa bids wlll lie--· "OMEROY ASS<klATES, INC .. • corporetlon, PETER TI NTVRIN - WELLA TINTVRIN. JACIC A. LONG. MARGARET WOOD HASTINGS, INCOME PROPERTY ASSOCIATES, MARGARET HOWE, llARRY V. W E IN STOCIC, ELMER ,-ox, WIESTHEIMER & COM ,.AN Y, e 9•fteret pertn•rtlllp. F_ llRlll, CALIFORN IA REAL ESTATE INVE$TMENT TRUST, • D11slntu Trutt . VAi.i.EV SOil ENGINEERING CORP .. RETAii. & M EDICAL COl.1.ECTIO N A$SOCIATION, INC .. e cor-••lofl dDa AllST~TE F IN ANCIAi. SERVICES, l TD .. G.C. SERVICES CORPORATION, FIR$T CITIZENS BANK & T R US T COMPANY, BARBARA JUDY, eU llAllBARA I.EE JUDY , DEllORAH H . CATlllCONE. S.J DAVIS, MERIT CON STRUCTION COM PANY. PICTITIOUS aUStNUS MAMIE STATEMEllT PuDll"*' Ortn91 Coett Delly Piiot INDTICIA DE ELIECCIONI t nlroftu lo Fl,.I Arner I<•" Tiiie F•D lS. Merell 4. ~·· "· ,.., !91~ NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE>j ,,, •• e IMU•al\Ce Companr IOUla<I et IU F•Orverv 23, ltsl. ,.1131U PuOllolled Or-COHI Delly PllOI, FeO. U, Mete11 4, It, 11, 1"1 "l·f2 l'ICTITIOUS •UMllESS NAME STATEM«HT Th• lo11owln9 oerson• ••• Oolnv Duslneu .. · 1.ENIC WOOD ASSOCIATES, 2412 Nl.,Q•r• Way, Cosle ~se. C_.lltornle nn•. Tiie 1o11owtne !>*<sons ere oolno !MnlMUo: GARY'S MOllll.E WASH OF AMERICA, S101 Sterdusl Drlvt. Huntl"9\0rl llM<ll, C•lll0tnl• •~1 G••Y l.••••n<• Jenun, not $1er<lusl Ori••· H11ntt,.oton ll•acll. Celltornle '2M1. GeMrel -lpel Ele<:lion wlll De EHi Flllll StrMI. In ,,.. city of sent• ... Id In tt>t City OI lrvlfw on T .... Mle,, AM, C•lllornle, I ll lllal rlQlll, 111 .. e ncl tllt Ith Gey ot J..,.., IW2. •or ,,.. lnterett con .. ,eo to -_ .,..., Oy It 1otlowl"41offlc:en Uftd•r U ld O.eo of Trust In Ille PICTITIOUSeUSllllESS (NOTICIA $E DA POR ESTE prGper1y •llu•ll!d I" wkl County - 11-11 STATllMIEllT MEDIO -una Ge,.trel E••cclon Stet• <IH<r&llld o : Th• 1011owlne PeflOll' ••• dolnQ Munklpal •-• 1._, •n I• ClllO<t<I <le lol I of Tract No. U.O es"' mep DIATH No'lcls W•y~~C:. ';:;:..~~~~ .:_~•• Rlc ..... d M. "'-!. 1422 Nl-r• W•Y, COii• -· C.llfOtftle t2'2'. Tllh l>UslMJt It conducted Dy • ~ ... , •• POr1...-s!>lp. 11.nl lo lie -I• ottered .... h " -"wller• I'"· encl.,,. llolr<I Of Trvstt.s r ... rves IM rlQtll 10 0«..,C Of Alt« •llY or •II Dl<ls, to w•lve a ny l11lorm•IHy °' lr,....terlty, ell<I to sit end act ., 50le I.._ ot u.o ,.....11 end q11•ll•k•lloM of the bl..,.. 11y oro... ol tllt Boer<I ol Tru,1us of t~• H11 ntl "9\0ll llM<ll •'f: • .._GenoN,CIHll of-o--.t ...,_ O'*lct 0r .... c-,.c.........,.. 1Mrc111,1• Linde S.-. Jensen. S101 Ster<1un Drlv•. H""11........ Bee<JI, C•lllOf'lll• .,...,_ Tiiis b11•lneu Is con<1ucl•<I Dy lndl•ld ... ls (Hv~ encl Wlftl Geryl..JtflWn l>VMnH• H : Irvin•. mertH. el Ole I Ot J111110, dor ro<or<led In 800I< *· _. l4 •n<I :IS llAKERSFIELp I NVESTORS. 1'17, para tl•Olr los ollcl•I•• lnc1u1lve Of mhcell•fteo11' Meps n111 u c.cl9N, ~lie *· 1.e9VN1 ,19ui.ntHI record• of Orenve C-Y. Celllomle Hlll,,C.,lfoml•t26&l For two 111 ~mD.,"S 01 Ill• Clly Tiit \lrtol •<l<lreu or otllet J. R. EVAN$ COMPANIE':. IHC .• Coul\Cll common <lftl-tlon Of wl<I P'-MY e C•llfornl• C0t110r•llon, 13111 LA (P•,.a c1o5 121 SoclO\ <le le Junt• I• Pll•PO'l*<I lo O.: JtS S""rlM Clrcle. HUNT TERESA f'. HUNT . res ident or Fountain Valley. Ca Passed away on March 4, 1982. S urvived by her husband Warren , daughter Lo r ea T Wright of Mary land. son Anthony Hunt of Costa Mesa. Ca .. br o ther Jo s eph M Slorestano o f New Vork. g randc hildren Lisa and Joseph Wrtfilht Fune ral services \\ere held on Sunday. M arch 7, 1982 at Harbo r Lawn M e m orial C hapel with Rev Ko~er Walke or the F'irs t Unitarian Church of l rvme officiating. Ser vices under the direction of Harbor Lawn· Mount Olive Mortuary of Costa Mesa. 540·5554. FLICKWIR CHARLES S FLIC KWI R , residen t of Corona del Mar. Ca. Passed away March 8, 19112. Survived by daughter Mrs J oan llaigh. son Do n Fltckwtr, 5 g randchildren and I g reat.granddaug hter Services Thurs day at I 00 PM. Pacific Vie w Memorial Park Chapel In lte u of flowers . contributio n s to Hoag Me morial Hospital, Masonic Children's Home ol' the charity of your ch oice Pac ific Vie w Memonal Park Mortuary, directors McOONELL MA U RI C E FRASER M cDONELL, died on S unday. March 7. 1982 at Whittier. Survived by a large family Services will b e held at Rose Hills . Donation 1n his memory ma y be made t o U C I F o u n d a t i o n', 5 0 2 Adminis tration Building, I r v ine, Ca 92717. L..om11 L-Wooct Tiiis stettment wes flltd wllll llM Couftlv ci.rk Of Ora._ Co;iftly on M•rcll 10, "" ,,,...,, PuDllllll'd 0r • ._ c .. 11 Delly Pllol, Merell II, 11, 2S, Aprll I, IM? 1091.ti. NIUC tine( l'ICTITIOUS eUSINEU N-E STATEMEMT Tiie 10110,.1,.9 per'o" Is dolnQ .,...,Inns••· ROY"L PRESTIGE NEWPORT, 0 21 W CCNSI Hl9hw•Y, Newport B .. ch. CA "'4:1. COlEnA M WANDEL ... 11 W CCNSI H~ay, N ... port BHCll, CA '2~ Tllll OUSlnHS I• ConOllCle<I l>V •n lndo•IO ... I Colen• M W•ndel Tiiis ... ,..._, wu 1119<1 with t,.. C011nly Clerk 01 Or•l'Qt Co;i,.ty on M•rch l, 111112 ,1 .. m PuOll\lled Oranve COllSI DIHI• Piiot, M•rct\41 11,11, JS, 1912 ....., l'ICTITICIUS •USlllEH MAMIE S"TAT•MIENT T ht tollo•ln9 per$0n' are <lolnv busi..-ues: \Al ACCENT ON NAll.S; (Bl ACCENT ON NAILS BY TERI, t7112 ForD•t Ro•d. l•1111n• Nlo11e1, Calllorl'I•. Suite D, 97•17 G revory S •nO Ttrl A . D11Ckwortll, H-•rel Wlfo, 2~11 F•<OIU. Min ion Vle10, C•lllornl• ~ . ., Mary A..otnsleln, SJOI HumOoldl. B..eM Perl!, C•llfornl• Qll Tiits !Mnlrwu IS cond11cla<I D' • o-r•I ~~ ... wor1tl Tiii• SI-I .., .. llled wftfl tM Count, Cler-Of Orenve COUftlY on PuOllslled Or-c .. ,, Oetly Pl)OI, M•rcll 11, II, ltlG tUl.., n ATI MIElllT 01' WITHDllAWAL ,aOM ,-ARTMlaSHI,. C>nR.ATINO UNDER l'ICTITIOUS eUSI II IESS MAME Tiie ••-no I*""'" ,,... "'"""'-n e~ • Qt,..r•I p.,t n•r lrom Ill• P••lfterslllp oper•llnv 11nd•r the llctlllo;is b<dlMu n•m• of SV KO CREA TIVE DESIGNS 11 llOJ Wulclltt Ori ... New-1 e.ac11, CA .,...,, Tiie licllllo11s b11sl"•" 11•m• stetement lor Ille pertnertNp w•• llled on 12·11-CI In IM Couno or Oren91 Ftl.E NO. Fl71664, F11ll Ne,.,. •n<I A<l<lreu of the P•r.on Wltlldr•wl119. GEOAGE W. GAULDING, JR . ltol E t..amoen Roact, • 110, LI -·· CA Q)I ~ w. G<Nldlno Jr. PuOll-Or-Co.ISi 0.lly PtlOI, Ftt>. 2s. -ell 4, II, II, • .., ..., PllUC .nee Tiii• stetement "'*' flied with ,,,. Covnty Cler11 of Orenoe Co;in1, on Merell 10, ltl2. ,., ... PuOll-Orenoe c .. ,, Dolly Piiot, Merell II, II. U , Aorll 1, IM? tOTMl. LLOYD'S BANIC OF CALIFORNIA,• -Ill' -t c orp ore I Ion, G VAR AH T E E ,-_,., ... ,~ COLLECTION COM P ANY. •1--------------COf"por•llon, M & M llEPORTING PICTIT10US IUSI MISS AND REFERRAL SERVICE, INC.. NAMaSTATU,_IEllT db• McCeuley & MANN ING. Tll• fol-1119 PfftOf\I ••• <1oln9 CLIN E -BUCKNER, IMC ., • llvtlrwnes· COf"l)Orellon, COlOWEl.1., 8ANl(ER & TV FACTS, 4000 M•<Ar11111r ~gs::i""o ~te !: ::t. ~1c'H~:o a-ie ... d. 54'"9 JllllO, "..._., e.acJI. Cedefte, S11ltt 303, l.1011n• Hiiis, Mulllclpell Col .. ,.._.,., C•llroml•. Celllornle'2U> IF 111 11 5•1<1 sele will oe maci.·wllllov DSl SERVICE COMPANY, 0 u ermo OU•Ytl'1I coven1nl or werr•nh. eapteH o Ceiltornle c.,,_euon, 1200 Brlflol IPleno Pleto dcH ... tro enoit lmplle<I •• to 1111• poswuton or Sltffl, CCllte Mew. Celtlonll• ~ TM polls "'111 be! -Oetwff" •ht •n<11m..:ence• lo sei111y Ille -Id Tiiis -·~~ ts con<lu<la<I Oy • llovr1 ol 7 00 • m en<1 e 00 Pm o•l•nc• <111• Oft Ille note or Ml• oen<ir•I ~. I Los IUQe•e• at voteclon •st•••n t>ecured DI' sekl Dffd of Trust to wit OSI. SERVICE COMPANY ~i.nos •nl•• IH ...... , Cle 1 00 • m ' is..ns W. plu• t ... foll-lnQ .;11me1ed •·00 P m I costs, ••-•rel .O•ancH •t Ille Tllli E~::... wltll -~;;:~=r~!~n~l.AND ~~r.:~1~1e~':~!1:-:'lcetlon of IN City of Irvine, C• DATED; Fet>Nerv1'. 1"2 COVftlY c .. rti Of Or-c-w on ISecreterlo M11nklpel F IRST AMERICAN TITLE F-...ry 1', ltlG O. le Clu<le<I 0t INSURANCE COMPANY •oY A. LIUOWITI Irvine, C• c 1~ • ,......, II a.-D•la<I Mercn 11. ••2 ~~~,.;:~.._.lion ,...,..........,., CFK"" el Ill• Oe 111110t m•rro Oe AvtllOtlncloftk., :1:.., CellflOrMI fMM 1WJ1 114 E.a Flflll StTWt l'lll 18I ~~c"i!I~.:-COllsl Oelty :•IOI 5en1e AN, Ca tllOt P11bll-Or-c .. ,t Delly Pl~ ' S...f2 11141 S-..nll """ "· "·-· 4, 11. ,.., 711.C PuDllsllt<I Or•"V• Coa.t D•llY ftlltC •Tt£ Piiot Mor II, II. u . 11192 .IOSMt IMAGAWA. ORANGE COUNTY TAX C•ll~~":'° CrllH . .O>-C A...,ve C 0 L L E C T 0 R , S T A T E 0 F St'lllle, L-Hiii,, Olllomle n.SJ. CAI.I FORNIA EMPLOYMENT Joen E Crll•• • .Ol·C A••n"9 DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT, Stvlll•. ~ Hlllt, Celltornlat2.SJ. AN 0 Al.L OTHER PERSONS Tiiis bllllneu I' conouclt<I D' UMl(NO-CLAIMINGANY RIGHT, ln<ll'l~(_,,,_wlf•I P9jC t9l1Cl TITLE, ESTATE , LIEN OR J-A.Crlln MOTIC•Ol'TRUST•IE'SSALIE I H T E R E$ T I H THE RE Al Tiiis __ , ,. .. nHHJ .,1111 91e i.--MIES44KAT PROPERTY DESCR18ED IN THE Covntv Clerk Of 0reft9t Co;iftly on STATIEMEllT o,-WITHDllAWAl T.S. -1-.. CO M Pl.Al NT A DVERSE TO M•r<lllO IC. l'llOM T 0 SEllVICECOMPAN'fH<111ly NS-92029 "1.AINTIFF'$ OWNERSHIP OR • P1""7 ,-ARTNIEllSH"' OPEIUTING e-'ftledTrus-.~t ... follOw1"9 ANY CLOUD UPON PLAINTIFF'S PuOll.-Or._ COMt D•llY Piiot, UllDEll <lncrl--of trvsl WILL SELL NOTICE OF DEATH OF TITl.E THEllETO AND DOES I Merc.1111 II U Aprill IM? 1011.ti. ,.ICTITIOUSeUSINEU NAMIE AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE CH AR LES MILT 0 N THROVGH10, INCLVSIVE. • f • • Tn• lollOWlnQ ~ llH •llfldr•W" HIGHEST lllDDER FOil CASH w A l T E ' R s I a k a SUMMONS -tC -£ • •• • v•"•••I P••lner from the IP<IY•ble at 11me ot ••le In tewtut CHARLES M WALTERS ~ -*'11 rwa ""'"' pertnerthlp operellno 11n<1er Ille moMY of,,,. united Slelftl •II rlQllt, · NOTICE! You MW 11Mn tueel. Tiie llcllllou• 1111\lneu n.,,.,. of M & M tllle encl lntHH! con .. yecl to -"°"" AND OF PET I :r I O N TO court m•y dltclde t9e1nst "°" wttf\oul PtCTITIOUS eUSIMIEH MA INT E NANCE SE RV ICE •I 300 held oy 11 ...., seld °"" of Truit 1,.. A, D M I N I S T ER EST ATE MN-IOl63 your 11efno ,_rd 11111eu yov rHPOnct MAMIESTATl!MllNT BvckMll Ro.>d, Coste,.._.,., Celltort1I• Ille pr-rtv lltrell\etfer deKrlbed NO A 110016 within JO <ley~ R .. d 9le lnform.tlon Tiie followlno person h Oolne 91671 TRVSTOR: KASSEM MESHKAT, ' • NOTICE OF DEATH OF below Du$1rwsus: Tne 11c1111ou• Du•lnu' "•me enunm.,..ledmen T o .a I I h e I r s WILLIAM F . LEWIS aka EIATv,1,~.:__v,~'!.._M~OOldlr.,.c-""'"°,.-vo' COllBLERS SHOE SHOP. 1a.n ••••ementlorlllepertnerslllpwesllled BE NEFIC IAR Y · DAON benefic iaries, c r editors BUD LEWIS AND OF •In e;;;'1':n~ ";"•nos q11• V<I. ~:17t!'::.~~1e .. ro, Cosl• M,se, ~~.~:;11 n , me In th• Cou"'' of CORPORATION ,• De1•wer• and contingent credito r s of P E T I T I 0 N T 0 rHf)Oflde Clltntro o. JO OIH. IA• I• AlpllonM YeMz, 1433 Goroo" Full Nome •n<I AOOreu of tr•• co;::r.:::; 0c1-r JO, 1.., es Instr C h arles Milton Walters, ~gT~o11~4soas1·~R h ees~::E. :::f.o:~~~~rr~D~~~' :r c:~~ ~~~?,..:S":·1~·~=.:!i1°'r.r •n :::.::~~~~~E::.:.n~:1iior!~: ~~~~:~~~~:;3:~ =~~ ~~~~~s w~o ~!~e~ Pl•lftlltt -'ns1 yo;i. IS.. footnole'I A~ Y-r 97U• et tru•I describes the followtne Othe r wise interested in the beneficiaries, Creditors •·II you wlsll lo Clef-!Ills l•-11, Tiiis i!e-1 wa filed wlln -/\/Robert Garo-Ill ICe.-dy ..-rty· will and/Or estate : and contingent c reditors o f you """"· """11'" JO den .... , 1111' covn1y c ..... of Or•nee co;in1y ..., l'onttl ouca 1,.,.1011t A petition has been filed •11 • F l , d wmmons b Mrwd on yov, Ille with FeOni•rv 1', l"2. Publl'lltd Or•._ CCN\I Dally Piiot, PARCEL t: FM slmpl• !Ille 10 WI I am • e w 1 S i!ln !Ills court I written PIH<lll\9 II\ PIUlrl M•r 4, 11, 11, 25, 1"2 ,,.., Condomlnlllm Unit No. 2SO 1111• by Charles Mark W a lters persons who may be rHpo11w 10 ,,,. complelnt. <tt • Pv1111.-0r-.c .. 11DellyPl1ot. "Vnll"). .. ,110 ..,,. 11po" tll• in the Super ior Court of otherwise Interested In the Justk• Cour1. yo;i must 111e •1"',... Feb. 11u.~ll4,11, 111t2 1..i. Pim.JC llTIC( con<1om1n111m Pt•" 1en1111ed Orange Count y reques1ing · t covr1 e wrl11tfl lllHd~ « c-., • ' "Cori<IOmlnk!M PIM\ tw Lot 1 of Traci will and/ores ate: or•• 0,...,.,.. 10.,. •n .. ,.., 1n tlM No.tMl7''1.c-.tvof0r.,....s1.,.oi that Charles Mark Walters ,,,..... A petition has been filed 0oc11e11.un1'""°""°"'·Y°"'<lefau1t PlalC llTICl 110T1C1EOl'Taun1EE'SSALE c.i1tom1e 1t•• "PWt··1, rec..-.,, be appainted as person~I P111111$1\e<1 0r.,. c..st D~1,. Pt1ot, by W 111 i am Gu I 11 er mo •111 09 _.., --1ketlon °' ,,,. -T.s. -1..,.. Jiiiy 11. 1m, es Ooc:.ument No 1s.10, r e p r e s e n t a t i v e t 0 -•chi . 1112. M•rc11n.11 • .ts,.Apr111.1'92 122W2. Lewis ·n the Superior p1e111t1tt.-t111,coun,,,..,•n1•r• JTATaM•MTO, T D.SEAVICECOMPANY •,dllly i .. -1l2».Pl9"7'tot1St11<11111.,., d .. t th t t of -------------I 1 llMlt"'*"' .-1111 "°" lor tM '911ei AMNOC*llilllNTOP -"'tl!d TrvUN -Ille lollowlllq Olllcte l RKor<ll, of Ml<I Oranve a mlOIS er e es a e Court of Orange County d•m•ncled in tlle <omol•'"'· wt1k11 uno••tCTIT•ous .,."''--o1 1ru11 w1LL SEll. c-IY. """'<fl Pleft 119r1.11,,. to_, Charles Milton W alters. requesting that W iiiiam could..-1n_.,.1-... Of._... •UllNHSNAMIE AT PVlll.IC. AUCTION TO THE pr_.-tv~rlbecl In Trec1 .... 1°'91, Costa Mesa. CA (under the ------------·IG I ll 0 Lewi · be lolllne .. _yorpr~----~~ _..___HIGHEST 81DDER FOR CAStt --'"-·~'-.. -· ;;r-J -STATl.M«lllTOP4lUllDONMEllT U erm " r•lltfr~lnlllecomplelfll. ll~~;j";;jk~=.::.~',";",,;;.' (peyellle el llrrw of sele In lewfut MIKell.-""-·In tM offlu of I n U e p e n d e n t Ol'usao,-,.CT1T1ous appointed as personal 11.11y0Uw1i111o-t11e.,,,1ceot TI M'S Fl.OWERS. :ioui So"'" ,.,.,,.,o1111evn11ec1s .. 1n1e11r19111, 111ec_tv._.•otse~c-1v. Administration of Estates •UMNllSSNAMIE re Present at iv e to •n ettomev '".,~ ,,....t ... .,.... 111oV1<1 cout H1e11wo, so11111 l.•eune, 1111e •"" lnttrtt1 <.., .. ,...,to ..... now PARCEL 2: An unc11 .. 1<1ec1 00:111 A c t). The petit ion is set for TllefoflOwlno--llM•be-.t administer the estate of ctosopromptly•tMtyourwr11teft C1lltom1ems1. lleldlly llunde<seldDeedofTruJlln per<Mtt .... rulln-lollMCommon h • i De t N 3 at ,,,.~~~Ei.:;f:1~~1.~';:,s:~= Wiiiiam F. lew is (under '-:::==·::.:-:;.::;,~.:.:,'"°"""'*· ,.~:.:~c~~~~.!.,~:,',~~.!:::: ,,,.r~0:S~Y0":;~1":'!·~~~1~· R. :r: ".,.._, -dltflfl<td..on"" 7~gn~~vi~ Ce~ter 0 orive Ro•d, Suitt D. l•o11n• Hto 11•1, the Ind e pen~ en t LNA.•nMll.C-OflFt0.1) ''"· RUSSELl..•tneNledm•n EXCEP'TTHEREFllOM•lloll ... s. West, Santa Ana, C A 92701 c.11~~:1eF~~1 .... Bu,inm N•m• Administration of E s tates ~~::=·:~ ..._ eftllt1" Soll~·~~ .... ~~~'• ~!;.e::;,1ARY ~ONALDG. lEE, =:1!..::' C:'='t!t"~":.:i~~~ on March 31, 1982 at 9 :30 reterrac1 to•-w.s 111e111 .. or-Act)· The petition Is set for ec:11on <_,..,.,.Md eflectlfte ,..., e.ac11. cetttoml•'2'51. Recorded w..v 1, "'1 ., IMtr. No. r11111 ot wrtec. .,,.,.,, es ,..,.,..,.. In A .M . -------------! Covnly on ~ ...... , 2', 1917. Fl .. hearing In Dept. No. 3 at -r1y dltK......, --~ Tiii• llU9IMu ••• U)nClll<led DY llfl' 670 '" booll 1"1)41 peoe to3 OI OfflCl•I lnJINmeflbof r.cord. IF YOU OBJECT to the No. F..ot2610 700 Civic Cente r Driv e, Oii Dec .......... Ill .. cw .... lndlvkNet: Rtcoros In Ille otflco of the Rt<Otdtr PARCEi. 3: An uctvtlw ,...,, end nrant'ng o f th e petlt•o I I ,. . rtHCl llOTHHS 118.1. llOADWAY MOITUAIY 110 Broadway Cosla Mesa 642·9 150 Tertu P•n1111a , 10 Mortll f S CIHlnly S<;t>erlor CIMlrt .,Y $1.,..y Tlmolllykott Rlc,,.,cbon of Orenve C-ly, teld -of trust Hsement to 11te tM bel(ony .,... "' 1 1 n , "II S•cem-. LOlAllOlle•. C•llloml•. Wes t , In the City 0 anta W•IH. RoMr1 c . u ........ Itel Tll" ltA--1 WM llled wllll , ... <leKrll>tttllefotl-lno pr(lpffty: ...... led •·UO on .... "len u """ you s hould e.tther appear This """,." w .. c-..oed by .., A na, California on April 7 , tc:oJlfM "Em<"'°" of t,. E•-.i ce11<nty c .. ,., 01 Or•nve Co;inty on lot > 01 Tract ..-z. 1n .,,. cltv o1 eppurt-to ,,,. Unit, at the hearing and s1ate 1nc11.1d ... 1. 198aat9:30a.m . 11o1,..•, •. 1~"!~',•.,.••1,n1ta1t.1e i· Fet>ruery11,n12. N•wport&Mo1,111ec-yo1orange, PARCl!L 4:Annctua.,.,..,,,."" your o b jections or flle T ...... Peu11ll• IF YOU OBJECT to the mm•~---·~· • ., .... Stet• of C•llfornl•. u ptr ,.,., ·-"""' 1IO .,.. ,,,. Hr111"9 'PK• i • i i Thi$ Sl.1 ........ 1 ... fllacl wltll .... I i MlllMtflOf' 1IO •II Offtndllfll.S •11<1 --to P11lllllhld Or ... Coast Delly Piiot, r9'0-In llOOI< Ito, PaQH t4 to ,. dffltnelOd .. llM Pl•n .. Pertilne wr tten ob1ect o ns w th the co11n1, c1erk ot O••-Co;inty on granting Of the pet ton, Cl""4 tit'*•• to •II .......,....,, T110 Feb, 11, u , Marcll4, II, 1"2 nwt. 111e111a1 .. ot ""'"•II•-MaiK. "' ~· N•. I'S-•. court before the hearing. M••<ht, 1"2. you should either a p pear ectkNI <onumt ,.., P-1Y stMte<I ti.. o"l<At oi tt1e coun•v Rec0tdtr of •'7 tot SMttJ Ptue, N-rt BH<ll, Your appear ance may be PuDll!INd 0ranoe coest oeoy Piiot, at t h e '--aring a nd "t a te tn orenge covmy, ce111ornl•, a11<1 Pal.I .nc£ wkl c-y. Collfomt• • r '"'" "" .... ,, ...... -~·-·. 2 1 n per son or by you -rc1111,11.U,Aprlll,l"2 tu.-et. bj t i fll ...................... ~ tU BenwoOd Street, Newport t2M:I your o ec o n s or e "l.otl7 Mdllln11100"4of 'Lek• e.ac11,c11 "Ill• 11ree1 -·"..,common attorney. _.,. llnlK written objections with the Trec1, ..._, 8Hcll.' HI tM Cttv.. ,.,CTITlOUI aUSINUS "Ill • t1ree1 -.u °'" common <1ule11ellon h sllown •Dove, n.o I F yo u A R E A ,._ .... IM. court before the hearing. N•wpor1 Bffcll, County Of Oranve, MAM•STATIMl llT <IHl9n•llon Is shown ebo••· no warr1nty ts Ql .. n .. to , .. c R E D I T 0 R a •"'91T1ou1•u··"·ss Your appearance m ay be Sl•I• of C•llfornl• ... "' M•P Tiit follOWl"O persons.,. <lolne ••rr•nty I• QIV tn •• lo tu comple-.«<«'9CINHI .. 0 r e ~..... ... .. r ·· rocorOed tn Booll 4, Peve u . of bullMu .. , compttt•nKs or correctNnl." Tiie The oen.11c1e,., -· seld l>Md of cont ingent creditor of th MAMaSTATl!.Ml!MT i n person or by your ml1e•tt--.1n111eot1k •ot THECORNERSTONE CAl'E.MOO oenellclery ..ncttr,ekll>etdofTr"'t· Tnm ,Dy,....,., ... -,..,-... " deceas ed, you m u st file T ... ._.ltwffle 11euons .,.. <lolnt attor ney tlM CoUftly Recontwof HIGC_,... llrlalol S4twt, CMI• MeM, C.llfornle llY FHIOfl Ole o...a11 Ot Clefevlt In tN In th• oll4l99I~ M<vrff tlM,..Oy, your Claim with the c ourt -'-.. : I F y 0 U A R E A Tiie c--·of Ille ... .,. mn. oDlleallo"' sec11,.d tll•••llY. ,,.,.._,. tDC"'9d.,,.. dlll.,..... te t It t INTERNATlo..AL ACQUISITIOH C R E D 1 T 0 R r -·i-..,..nv la: JIJ-Jl~ 111t-lonet "'*~1..,, t11<., • IMf'ttetore •JteC....., -e11t11-10 u. 110 .. ,...,... • .,tnen o.ier11.., or pres en o the Af•O LtQU•DATtON co.,*....._,, o a Str•t.....,,..,, 8tecl\, c.tlftnll•. Doi••••• <ff1110r•t1 ... uu Noire 111e llll<lenl9Nd • wrm ... o.ci.rau .. et Oof•"" ...-Oenlellll tw 1e1e. - p er son al representative OrMtt,CalttorM...._ contingent c reditor of the, cox.CASTI.aaMteMCM.SOtt o.rrw ..... c.w ~ c:.41fornl• of Det...it -Oemlnd 1or s.to • ..,.. wrtnen fllltko•.._,,_,.,..i.c, ... appointed b y t h e court 0r.!..'*".c...t.:::!:'.,. ...._., deceased, you mus t file a,:.._,_.. flt2'. wr1t1•11M1keoft1r-.ecllencto1e1ec11C111 to,_ ..... .,. ...... '°"_... w ithin four months from 0 r c;la lm w ith the court ,_~ ....._ T,...,.._ o. '*-"-uu "°''• t• cevw "" ~ to Wit Miid P-" to wtltfy MM Mli.ot~ Vt11ce111 Pet•r McGra111, • 1 Y U 1 t th _ ..._ Deme flloocl. CMu ~ OMl!omf• .,_,,., 1o wtltty .. ~ *'9otloftl. _, "'--""".,. ...,.......,.., ~ the date of first Issuance u""" •-· c...,..,., ce. o..y, or p resent to e ... c.lllrY..._•.. m». _, ~,.,._ ...... u ....... u1<1Mtk»ot"-'11-ot•._.... .. of letters as provided in ... -r:~~s I• CClll4ho<;IH ~ e personal representative "'°'·=';;~..., Tiii• llutlNH h c~" "' ......... lcoolbr'Mcllaf'dof•lt<llOllto .. rtCtf'dM ..__ U, 1 .. 1 .. Section 700 of the Probate '""""~ appointed by the court ,..,....,°'" ... OMlll o.11v .. ...._ cor_.,._ :'*~"~~ :O::-;e~,:·,.:1,:. ::ici"~":~'!c~._, ...... ,. Cod e o f Californ ia . The Tiiis ,.:J;.~ rttM wltll ... within tour months from -:;:," "· "'2S. ""'" ': ':! z tnMI. ::~n.i'-1 f'lltllkttloM, ., Of1klel ll«ern. s.1c1 .... •• .. -· --time for filing claims wlll Cwnty ,..,.,. .. Or .... CWflt'( 911 the date of first Issuance • "'--0. lltllllttt, •Ill ......... -wl"-t CtHHfllt t4' werl'etlt'(, .. ~ ... t4' not expire prior to four 1Mrc1110, .-. of letters as provided In 1 ....C tllll v1eo..,.......... c, •• !..!:.!!!'t•tt"'1eY:.!,.""u~ ~ _........,111..,· ~''"*·~·ff months f rom the date of ~--,,,_ t i"" 700 of the Probate Tiii• .......,_ -"'"With tllt .......... _.... ·-.... .,_ ~· -=;. ... N Y .............. """"' .... , -e c OfWllee """"*-'° •Y llW....ffmAl11111t IWIM1-tl -., --~ tM hearlng..noUc~v .. ........ Or .... CMll!DellY~. Code of CalTTorma. Tfi'e .....,., =:;~~.: e-Ytll tl(IM .......... of ........ 11)~ .., .. lclo.MefTNllt,wltlllfM,...u. YOU MAY EXAMINE Merct1n,1t,U,Afw'f•t. 1 "' ••·'time t<W 1 i111no1c1a1rs ,w111 '"='==~ Pteaeo :::,::-~~~.:=-=-~~-=::.;:.:;the file kept by the court. ...X 1111( not exp re pr or 0 our. Tiie tw110w"'9 ,.,_, .,.. ... ,.. "'*""" 0r.,,.. Oee•t o.i.., f'ftet _..,ti. WIM ot..., ~ oi Tr....: ..... <'-"" -n,e111M1 °' tM If you are Interested In the -----------• months from the date of. "'"'"s"1 "•· u , ~·· 11• "· 1• 111•· '"'· c._..1 en11 tQtf\IM oi "'* Trw ... a .... tn1t11a c,....... .., •stat e, you may flle • th• Marino noticed abOve. CAZAOOR, ,,, .... CtiNMI, I ... -1""'" ........ t""'9 ''"'" .., .. ., OMOfT""' r-u-t Ith t ..... '"OU rt .. 0 You MAY Ex"'MINE Set\Cle""'* CellfOtftle .. 71 .... -. .. let.,..., .. T,,,,.. SelCI .... Wlff... .... ................ M .. ,.... ..q "" w ,,., .... .. "' · · ' I 11t1• °",,,...,,Merell"·,.., 91 t :oe A1trtt t, ,.., •t t i .. 111.m .• ,. 1.M r eceiv e ~lat notice to the flle kept by the court. '--~;:c;,,::-c.?~~ l'tCT111oweut1M111 "'"'" •• th• Chome11 ""'•""• CNpmell•-.--w-..c••" the Inventory of est•te lfyouarelnte rested l nthe 1t..,ert w. cen10, 111 we.1 MAMlllTATa•"T efllr•-.totMClvk0111Wllllldl119.·c-•r ""......, • ~-ow.mon assetsandofthepetlUons :::~!:t !r~ ::vcc!!~f t! ~= ;".::"~.:.= ~::.;~=~ .. =.:'":,..:-; =':?~:::;::;:...:;: ~~~.;::..::;:.c::~:;;:: ::s~~r~51n·~ .. ~~~.; rec•lve sPK1•1 notice of ..... .,., '""""" ~ v.,..1,.., •1 1t1rc11 --. ..,... ,, ~ ., t111t 118tlt•, .. wet ...._..." u. " .. ..etc•, .. ~ ~.,. .. of the Callfomla P~te the lnl/entory of estate ,.., McCMllll, ,.,. •-• °"' 1eec11 °'"'""° ..... 4 • •111,.1 .. ,•M• oi ,.,. 0 .. 11 .. 11•11 • ..,. .. "'•lllC• ............ , .. " Code e's.ts Ind Of the ~ltlOns, ~~~~!!:.•U su• c1eme111•, •• ....,. "'...,.. ~ '*" "'._..,.""',,_..,., __....., ....... .._,.._...,., •aTT. •N •atTH -----· Cllllilnlle..... • • • trwtt .. .....,.... ~ ·-""" ............. °""' .. -.. r-"' 5 :L!""' accounts end r•ports Tlllt .....e. 1t c_,. ... •Y • -....~ •t:avo1i.yv._ •"' •""•11cu 11 t•t,s1t.11. T• .... ......, ....... 0 . & SANDrvRD · detcrlbed In Section '2CIO ..., .. ....,.., 1-.... .. ----·· • ~-.. .....-. *·.,.., _., T•......,.. •.,....-..,.. •r:;W:JI..,_. • ·--'•llfor I Pr __ ._ -~ '"' , ___ _,,.., . cellOWI......... _,,, .. 17Ml...... • • ~ of tfte -n a --fllll ....._.. --. ..... tnt!.~~:8 v.t1ey .,.., o.t.: ~'.:"" .,_:....._., ,_ A et Law Code. c.-tv a....,.~~• T11ll ....._. 1, c~"' • T o...-c......., T.O.KINIC•COM~Y W 11111•••• L8ldley & L••H•, ,._,,..,.., ~ -._ ..... ,.,.... ._..,,._ M NW18 CAt1tt6 A.._, 81 uw, mt W. , • ....., • .,._,.::--.:J.._ ::.=:=, ==~--· Ct1,.)Jltfm TlllN ..,_., llllte 114, HHllll ... UW-=~ ::..:-c:-: O.Cllr......... O.Cllf......,_""'9t; Pubtl!Md 9-f...-CMlt Let ~: CA tlll7; =...-=:=.t:. ~ .. .._ ._ =.'itti:-=lie:.-Delly PUot, ~ 11, 1~ ~ar.. c........... ~0.-. c.-......... .._.._.Gt ... a.eaOll"',.... ~Or-.c-.e.......... ~Or-.. Olllllil .......... 11, 1912 • ~••,tt.•• tllNI ~"i ... llilfdl._U,,._ nMI. 1119.11....,.._• f\.a. ... , .......... lt,Mmdle,n,tm ... ,.11, .. ts.,... 1-., 111J.12 -· ti( • --- UUZHIGHOM SMITH & TUTHILL WISTCUff CH.Arlt. 427 E 171h SI Costa M esa 6 46-9371 --- NaCl ..OTMHS SMITMS' MOllTUMY 627 M ain SI t-tJnhngton Beach S31H>S39 --- ,.c..c •• MIMOllAl.PAll Cemetei Mortuary Chapel-rematory 3500 Pec1f1c View Drive Newport Beach 64-i·2700 --- MICOIMIQI MOITUA.llH L19un1 Bea<:l'I 49'-9415 ~ Laguna Htll• 768--0933 S,W, Juan C.J1s1r1no .... 6 --- ,I I Nm ... ---........ , •• U.........-tL.&... .. At...-...1 t.=:"'"'....... ..... ......... d c • I I .............. ....... .._.. ...... .... • r._.. """--· £& ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...................... ...................... ....................... ....................... .......... 3425 .. ll2l ~ .. Su Dlt&o No . Cl". W..l..1-...1 JJ INd U40 Me ,.. ...... ' l26t ................... , ... Corw M• ·--.• ec• ll40 ...,., ._ .. _"' 10 t .__ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• uu~-•~ "• e •••u•u•••••••••••••• •0 •0 ••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••··~···• WTllUff ~ ~ o•kl. "f'O.· Blyfront. beach. z Br 2 SHlUtr 2br. rt'ioodtled N&4H llOAO llOSPITAI, 3 bdrndll bi. (rpr, $$75 ST•S TO HACH 2ss~$·rr:, ~'iir.1~1 biaO~: Beautiful Baby! W~ • 1729 I • Ba l 11r 1p. 123 R. t¥r.k1d -Jlt't,NOW$o400 PURELUXURV rll> e.GllM!I 2 Hdr l Ila rrplr. illr. t·tr lilt rlra . .. Bayrront, 81 I boa ~-RENTALS 750-3314 28r 211Jl/4 Tov.nhouat' SlllS IT1) A kfor Onrl'll Jll751n., ~i~I 111 $J o.llnl hlaod 11200 winter AJ111>:11 ntw SIOOO mo P11,1h, a111~ 1221 l:wh r.. llOO Sl400 annu11I Hnb. da)'a ~-A&tnl1oofee M8 fi~l6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 371oSEASHORt.: l>H MAllNllS WALi( 21314781$77 Hlri1w 3242 ..... ...... 1 d f .__...__ "L':Wl..,•u·ruL'Al'll l.rai&3Brl'ownlloub~ ....................... .wr ... Uil, llO<I , Ill rm "' -Island 3706 ""' v n .,.,, f' I CD D .. w c.... .. M• 3212 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm 1100 t'la) N Cl ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 bdr. llt'rt>li~ rro11'1 IH·h. ~·al"~.·~m:rn. tp•at10 r~~rtd'. M '""" W11ttrfront Broad moor $I~ rro Ail S4I 5032 .nail 1mnwd Ni·" I> ~ ... ,..., .. M IYOWMll ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2bdrm 2b•. frplr. wet ' (.re 3bdrrn. ll\8llablt• lll•1• lndr)• SllOO mo Nt>u uni flair our ~o2Ddrm units ao of Sqf<1arular <><'l'ln & rtly bar, dbl gu, bhf> uvull, D~IGNF.HSTWNllS~ 3 ~tu6 LS 1700 mu 121312fl3 Mll2 <'htldrtn OK ~,~,~ I' C: 11 l' 0 r n er I 0 l flghl.I View from every pa 1 i o S l I O O mo E BluH Nt•" ly dt'rt1r 11$1 3243 ~' 840 fJ/j()7 ~•nllt'istory. dlvtd<-d by room l.11r11e 2 Br frplr. \Jl4J67$-7171. thruoul, »Pllt'. 2 br, z b11, 2 br. 1 bu, yrly I llr f; s1dl', rn111 II hut 1tur•Et'I auulllllblt107 many 1men1 t lcs 2b 1 d , .rormaldm Pnol. vit'w N ~ rot) w lot~ nl n1·:it 11lrpaltO.l'ilrµor1,pool. 1 t T oisioo ooo $1200 mo. Call Anthonz r we {'()ft 0 on "a&oon. Avail 1mlTIC'd to sept 1 oaar&1¢t mu "°'Jd. S.'lOO Adult' only dpa. &t'<'unty, $49$ Uttl ~ , . owner day• "•2 •7•7 "V"S 2 fp gur &: many xtro '82 .R r • o'o . 673-6287 ••1 ,, .. .,., ~1 Av ii 4 7 ""2 67'5 wdl assist rinant·e, fee. knds" '" '"6630" • ~ " SSSOtmo (;all evt.s · l' s .,11 mo .,... · ..-. m, · • .... · " 1mrnH. $29-0 ,000 S:ll <'! 6.'11· -wkndsll40·6309 8312932 lhlrn av111I otra I lalloo , .. Milo 3707 STUNNING lurJ.;t' 2 Rr 2 lrviM ' 3144 L'11rn11llon Ave . CdM LF.ASE OR OPTION 4br --~ Appl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ba lot' rden opl l'oul .. ••••••••••••••••••••• C..'allll73·02Al,tl7S·5142 2ba vu exec hm. $1400 l"iM 3244 213·2'71·39397147603667 UAYF'RONTAGf;brat•h. $4~7~l W lllth llH + loft 1•ondo 63 C mo Ownr1A111 759·8000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~IX W/DOCK pier, 2 Rr f7SO Utll µd • Ur1mg1.11rcc Plun 4. Ten 4 e nter St C M . ... 1'wn.home.new3br.3bu. 1'111 S 27 303 F, ~10 rro 2 H1 1•, llu nL~.pool.adull1>.nop1•ti. Oupleit. 3 Br & I Rr 4 blks to ocean, 3 fir 2 Hu. pnllo. gar Park. pool. alti ront. llr 2 Ba Ell&r"atei 1 871 2861; 1 1ownhou-.1• .i:i 1 a l:l'. SS40. Will <·ons11.Jtor b i· 2600 :iq ft 3 (µ Great frpl . garnge. S895 _,5 833 90 dplx wi~pu h1 m~tr Uu tau11dr) coom. ~111~ II O"' 730 1~ $4 2 7 009 rental & lax shelter 642 5200 J.!lt r--• 'fllQ_ 57 Bil 111 lot. (rpl. dbl 4•11r Dix rurn 3 br. 2 ba apt. vard call ror ap1it rs1. '.l'' • $185,000 C ropper 2 BR. rptc. rnlry kll(•h. 2 RENTALS i:1cr. + 2 Ofr ltl ~Pl.ll'l'S C)('t'Jll & ba} \It'" from Mgmtti42 ltkl3 Mewpon•och )169 621).?3S7,INll0 7 t1 A&t blk.stoB1tcCorunu 5700 lbr,lba SOSO si:m I w:~~':·~~·~l~m~·~r\ fl1tFPLAn: 1'11111 ··"·a·~·N··E·w···PO···R·r···· '-co. Property 200 645-5846 2br +den2ba 5975 J.R. PROP. MGR DJO rro 515 5204 . · · µmatt' patru t. ,1 ,~ rMn •••••••••••••••••••••• ,._ ... U--. 322.. 3br 2ba $850 67~U70 675·6 In ,.__ h"u~hm 111 XTHA 1.c; I couU9•y CLUI APPl '-4n ...., .. 4 br. 212 ba Sl200 ...__ct.I Mor 37 22 & 2 Hr 1umlt'11 UJ>lb u11 "1" E VALLEY ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3br2baCosta Ml'su SllW NewPort llgu 5 Odr 2 bl) ••••••••••••••••• .. ••••• EJ~h•<lt su1u S!>t>O LIVING lu Sliefter 0<.' RENT LS Ll' Raisor Rllr 833 8600 Cape Cod Dl'n, itaml' I Ur ullllltes ind I'\ 1 ~7 2841' Batht'lors, 1&2 bt.><lroom Near new 4ple), 2 ISbri.$200toS2000 --~ r~1.lrgprd,3000hqfl i:ar l'lo~l' 111 ,hup\ JJ>b&to"nhuusl'~ bdrm. 2 bath earh unit 750-3314 7 {Jays * * lf lt'fS \ acant f'rebhl> paint ~ll 7447 I llr 1tar:i1tt> 1 ..rd \o from s.s.io SIOOO 644 1900 Wllh fireplace. ent'losed IW ed Ma) go leaSl' opuon )Jl'l:-l\icb 01\ $-ISO mo. patio. Karalle 9'•" 1st OnlyS400rents this 38rrondo. Wdbll $900 Diano (',1 ppl'I Jl(I Costa Mesa 3724 &11071>3 NO FEE' Apt & Condo Pos cash flo" ow 2brw gar.pauokid 3BrHse. Wdbg $900 6311~ !••••••••••••••••••••••• rl'ntaJs \'1lla RcntJb Sl59,500 8111 Grund). oc RENTALS 750 3314 II others to <'hoose from • ? tt DE 0 ~ICC z Hr 1 HJ ro11.1gp 675 1912 Broker Rllr.675-6161 • We'rcthe oncslol'allfor \\alktulx·iwh JHr • 11·1 ASA RO Wit> lii!I ('i•nll'I 03 or Lo.1rii1· JIJR Llrlµd Spot UGUHAIEACH Comm'I 1ndu~ 14 un1l~ 9 3 ll~s l(ro:..i, O" ner fin Askin~ S.SS0.000 B1 owner 645 3477 2 Corrnl(ton 4 pb(. xlnt lerms A~k S290K t'a Pnn only 1\gt 549 136-0 Curlsbad 11 unll heac11 motel $329.00(1 Al~o oct'an & la~uon fll I r t p I l' x S I !I Ii . 0 0 tl I 729 01114 IEONfOF leases I .:o.1rJl(l' " hook up, A .l.l'TILITIEST'AID 54«11411 Jiit> ll'l>~ Qwl'I 5425 2,121 f: THE LUCKY nw (UIJ r,,,11 cbh"~'" ~a,a1h· J b1 SJM 1110 J~~ '11 h Rent in Costa Mesas \\\l\\Cfbrldljl' Wildt-& t'o ti75 HHOli ('urn part' bdur.· \ ou tuna \ihrlh 11., lll'h t6l St 645 471" ~EW EST gated 2U 11•111 l'u~lt>rn d1·~1gn 5 1.1 Si>a1· lor:lhro1v1~.1 m1 Townhom1• \'11.LAGf Really PRIVATEPARK; feJ1ur1'' Pool. BHl' 1'111 i; frum bt•arh ~o µeh l'OMM UN IT\' 2 &3Br 551·'!0011 3Ur2'.1Lu,k11"iili Pt•l, rn1 rd .:urJJ:t'. ~ur t~\22357 2, 0 •• 16001800 sq fl cit · rn<Hbt• i;:11 2:!1:! .John ruund"d \\1th plu•l1 We!it:fiield 1 °" 19:!0Rarrann l'k"•.ln1111· i\•~· ,. ~ St I I h ·• ll I' ~urc luxur) Gara!{<'~. o' l.111d.~r11p1111( No pet:, • l'IJ!. " 1t·a1 "' r. · d "· I f r •• BJ frpll' lmmand.rlt• y ro tu.,,. 1n ma~ter WESTCLIFF I Ir urn rom ,,..1;5 APilTMEHTS rnncl """ li7J 2~07 ""' 'Ulll', d1n1ni: roomi.. :!Br furn fromS540 I Ht•;rntiful . l!Jrilt'n ••l>l~ I 'f""" .,. wood burn111g fireplat•t•s LOCJllMI ~ach 3248 & POOL ~ W Welson, fi42· l!l71 l'atui:-dt•tk' S1i.1. ht'.tt \'II.I.A 111\l.llOA m 11· ro "ave o 1 l' n s . ••••••••••• ••• •• ••••• • • Lr)! enoul!h for u f ;1111111 L •-h 3748 µ;ucl ."fo pt'l:- 1 l hr. 2 ha frph'. rn 1rru, pnvule patios & ) ants 2Bd+large loft l'ountr) hut 11ot 10o lari:t.'for urw OCJ'l'G-oc 2 HR 2 l\,\ s.'12f1 a 1• Ot'l'llll & h.11 11t'"" GardenH pro' 1ded S<'llmg. yard. ti\atl now fl d 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~\\' \\'11,un Ci31 ~~M:I $1j(A)&t:! liM!l Elegant h1•111~ onl) I~ 343 C'anyon Al're~ .\sis 't•i::int t•t·iir. ''"'1'. ·I l.uxu11 st11d111. bPll. T\', I minult's from fashion S6UJ + ulll Sl4tJO slarl Hd, .:ardtoner & µuol '11 ll'Ul1t1 ~en·11·e phullt"•. l llr E.1,h11k. i:uru1:1• l'llff lla11·n 2 hr I hJ. Mobile Hon Park lslund. 7 minute~ to Sc ('hi" k 99 "" 111"' Ai •111 "ash cir) t't Sll5 wk 1!1!1220 Sli5 11v1 1 w1· Ill'" <'r111 fn·"'h PJlltl. 83 I) II urn pclo ~ ·ci;llli refr1g SltlOO mo \1!1 li15 1,iw7 fr,•lr, t•JI in kn Nu pt•h spai·es. nr a as Plaza or OCA1rporl Un~631t26j1 1 •SIGllT&SOl' 'llOf "' •• .:'.1 1~1:•·.•1:1-1 S400.000 "rth $150,0tJO Ju~l t'ast of Ne" port Larl(e I bdrm ct11lex I SL'\ 1 ll r I ~..:.i,t•1•l" ., llr I llJ I 'ot ''"'" , -(·ash down Nop vm nl Al d f S 'tt"' frp•·S?OO• .. •r l"'l "ll . ., b· t II · r.. r rp l'. j!;ir. ~ ' a, l' ' &: so u . an D1eRo ft • ... 'ft ~ r. ' ' "· Jm r 111 c 11 114 l!J.l 51/l<I 3J7 2'"''1 1.1)(1· Sl~5 Ilk• 211:!~ Iii\ f \.\Jl1•rfrnn1 tllx 2 fi r j on debt Sl'n lt't' & m fr") StartinR JI $900 u 552 5698 rm fnnt puol \' .11 I . i -· Elcfc·n liJ II i.55 c1w1•l pm alt· S7!1.5 nM• terrst for 1 " Will l'On month 631 5439. 2413 1 --Hi·-1 3252 lkl" .\1:1 !l5S llKC~l I !tr • ch·n fl lut k lo l'l111·k J\ .111 lii3 1;331i & I ~Ider Orang°t-C:oa~t 11ro l) \ (' _,..... y--111:· 1 h Frpl( d t k $550 ('i,.,1,, \J.•,,1' 11111•,t IJlllt Pert\ rn trJde C· II ,,rani:e '« "''ii ••••••••••••••••••••••• Btn 2hr 211.1 •lt•11 dhl 11'1•'J I • .• ~:·1"'5 h tn11111h :! 1111 ~1 '.. lu ••l2'1ti1~· I · ii •' t".a (''"'an\ 1n" JBr. d1•n. ·.11.c. 11Jr fn1l1 ''II.. lo ht h 1 u ~ <-\l'~ "' '"" I h I 714 720 )OJ6 Or 752 2213 lh 'ft Vu r-'I s.')IMI 11111 \1•" I Jll' ,\ \t'"J>Urt I t•I!: I' 11101 ll :l B~o\\nt'r ll\RH\'3hr.2ba Jlt Shore~ homt' C.llt· S!l 5o mu iJll :\!ll .l He-rtleach 3769 1tr1,.. 1hrl1lr1·11"1·k1o1111• l~l 10-.11h11u"· :! l1.11h -Jppl purovt $195 )(u;rrd ~t'arpuul. ht•J1h i5;!.ll11 ••• ~·;.:·••••••••••••••• 110 1, .. " t u r11o·1 tf l'""•I\ r r m f1 pl1 Walk lo bt'Jt·h hl'JUl1ful O(.' RENTALS 750 33141 S81111 ll'ao;t' 0" n1•r lll.l FFS \\Jrrl ,om1·1h1n)( \tr;i f,llf\1<·v. ,\. \1!,1111' •1, tllllllll 1.111111 S1K1t1 rnu lnplex 22 Rr I ;1 llr ~Jl'llor4939261! J 1 ,. 1 'P••t·i.il 10 •·· _, ur \I ..: 1 ... ,.... !'Jffl,1 :-i 1%Sorhl5 lll:JI Pa110. fq1l1 S4!1!1.0IHJ 2bdrm. E "dl' SS75 mu -· >r ~ , 1.1 1ir1 i:r l'l'll u n • "" "" ·'·" 1,..., Owner "'II ht'llJ f111ann• ~ $350 'l'l tii3 41199 P\\ i·umm Sea 1'rrrJll l.1t•ll nr \1°101 l.l!t' ft•nc <'rl T11\\nhou'l' tumplt•ld~ t llr I II.; l'IXI \1.q1!t t. \.'i flll I n :,11;1110115 I AgcnL Hrdd;ifi-lb lllH 6.152971 Plan J 4 HR 211.J fJm llJl111 "''" trpt tlq" fum~S895 :\lo 7609117 \\• I J"IJll> tf lll<'l 110 fir pml •twt•I µlt·J,Jlll F 1 rm. t'omm pool JJt )Jot mncl Slcl.'\41 1'11 h.1111> l•'h ~ Jk•r""" ..,r1.r, 11,., Jf<'J '\u lll'h $.51NI '"" 9'1i ASSUMAILE! ' .Ji.I ~H e 3 R r ~ Ha teruirs. "Jlk 111 J>\I ht h Ill 213 i!'>,~, lhili S • •· r r .1 \I ' 111' c " \\ Jtl I I •rl4 fltii (~·nor "rll t·"rr' 211d S750mo l~l.ld\l&<,1•c .''o pt·t.· I ~· I•." I '"" ' u ·• t (' 11 • 10 I''"" ·' ·' " \~ \f( Bl'll lhr u1111 Gil 13:!1 ..., I I ( Ql.,\LITY "~11 kt•pl ... ·post J .. 0 JOn il4 K5i l:!UO l1i5 loK!l2 I .. iUll """ \ ' •. ,,., mm Tn Pie\ ne;ir S (· f>l:11<1 J(l 5 ~ !1142 (Jt. ~tf.~~i ~:rlpcl~~"I~ 1 j :'\ t' J r .., I I' I .; / .1 1 ..... ,. 'h :!hi :!h;i ( '.1 II for TWO l'NITS ne" I) rle SSl5 rm ~Br :! fl,1 ;-.1." . . . • ' ' .:-. "11 ;: 11 111. .. 111111111 11.11 k hk1 l'I ,1)'P t lii5111:!4 J'k fur i:oraled Built 1n,,. l'.irpt'I~. v.asht•r drn:r M1u1onV1e10 3267 IJd11 3 htlrm :! h.1 flull I 1111)! 1011 'l'J 1.11 I"''' l\.1t1·11rJ,1rk11· I ft'Ol'M \.trd & t•nc·lo,t•d I hook UIJ. all huill in~ ··········:·····:·.~···· 1hn 2,1, s1:10111110 \1!1 I 1111 ~m. i,11;cN,111. I llr :1:1rrt !'II 2 hl11t·k~ gar:tgi.'; Prlt'!'tl ht•lo" I d<>:.t• lu shoppin.:. ~mall llOMEfOH HF.;'\ r Wt'Od) l>lt 111% I lJkt· Ill'" I hr ·•l'l' l)11_11·I lll•OI l)(•,lf'h. !!..CJ~l' '" c·omparJblt•s al $249.5011 I ~;irt1 Call for f\ppt TSI. 4 Bdl r&m s7oo ~Kl'n1t'l'&d ''Cl"l"l 11 ... ·1 ltr "', ,... I t •1 1 11<'1 r•~1 St ·rr 1 \lnmt ()prnTrll"RS thru'\~'N I •llilOll &121603 ia[c wel~~1rai:t• 545'~~10 '"r. µ• '.; ,,071· 111 " .. r:,.,;~ 1 I '.~¥1~~:j',~111~~11 :!~'.~11'11.·:,li'. ! lo ~.11'i:12i' • " ~\'.J!~~1er Lane· t M 3 Rr l Bu 11nrlscl1!ara)!t' ~:nt.norl'7 ~HI ,\t,'l.fii3!JOlill ~~214; .\clul\' ~ ll r '! BJ • ' nl.'" ('af1lt'I~ & c·u:-tnm Hewport~ach 3269 SanC!emrnte 3276 Spec1ous slud1os one ~~:WHHEELl 1\l 'TS \'t>"•11llt'' l'l'pt dr;1p1•, COSTA MESA 4-PLEX clrupe:.. lar.:1• ~ ard & dnd rwo t>eclroom aoan· I llU & 11 .H 'll I r11m l:Jr p11ol S7511 mo ) rl) 21', down. ll(t' un11. f1m· pallo "rlh pla~ hm1,1•. no •••••••••• •••• •• •• •••• • •••;:•1 •··~:·• • ;." • •1 '• • • ment~ FURNISHED s:t6.~ f'rpl•'. ll'C' 1110111 ~ !1:~11 l~lli 211<111 rond Full pme $2251\ pet~ No "aterbt•d SS50 SEA VIEW LEASE ? '11 .~11~'"'1' '1111111 and UNFURNISHED & (. II 972 !131111 k r t dt•po~1• 54H 544 2. 4 Rdrm3 R;r r R D fl ~.br • h.1 Afh'r \11111 I Q;kWOOd a1so ofle1s 11111,11 J•ll'tll/~I l11J ' 1·1·i1 \\':ilk Iii tw.11·h 2 fir I Ila " · a~ or ;70 5629 1.11v + 1.K'ea~ , u (;udrti l ~t' uf l'luhhou'" ·" 110111 Q V.J t·i IMI• . 11 ~1· ' · · · tr p It 1 c J 1 ca r WILLIAM l.l'H>)l;Ef! I gate Pool~ lenn1~ \\alktoli:<:.1r~ .""lll'h 'AllU111t11esP11<1 llam1ll11n ( M tol~l ll l S.'t15m1 l'lrl 1111'1 hl&. I Agt I 3 hr l\\lll\.'c 2•, b;J, rrplt-. $1700 rno Bob or UO\lt' SS80 rm lilil h332 "Immediate I II H s:ic;o 111 " I' 1J I J'l I S:!llU 'l't' tit-)> ~EWPOHTllt:H:JITS' 11001. et t· S825 mu Occupancy 1.1ri~•rt "u 111·1\ :111;1 \\ l11n..H5'1~7t 2& den hsl' + l llr & lflr ~ 5128, 963 30111 Koo..e, agt 759.1221 S. Jumi 1 • $1 Mrlhon 10 l!.i,' ~ !ISlh 1 •• r~i· :1111 ~HJ lluplt•\, 9'<'• as:.umJble \nl\ Nr So Coa~I Plaza ne°" c.estrano 3278 Rec:reatlOO frplt 1:.trJ)!t' l)uH•l Wh1 spend a fortune lor a doll when you can sew one eas11yr lh1s lovable. about I Oh" doll has such a pretty face. Iona e)elashes and a beaut1lul outr11 Shes lun lo make Pattern 7525 transfer pattern pieces for doll dress bib coal and bOflnet incl $2.25 lor each pa11e1n Add soc each pallern for Poslaae and handli ng Send to: Alice Broob Needlecraft Dept. 105 Dilly Piiot lloJ ,.163, Old Chelsu Sll., llew York, llY 10113. l'rint ll1111e, Add1m , Zip, Pattern llumbet. -1912 lletclltcnft Callloc; 3 free patterns 1ns1de 170 best 1ackets dolls quills more• Knit Crochet [mbro•der SI 50 AU CllAFT BOOllS .. S2.00 uch All Boob and Calllot-acld SOC uch IOf PQS1lr1e 111cl h1ndlin1. 135-0olls & Clothes On l'arldt 134-14 Quick Machine Quilti 13J.fnhton Home Quiltinc 132-Quill O!icinlls lll·Add I 810a Quilts 129-Quick 'n' Easy Transfeii 121-EnN!ope l'atchwon Quilts 12'-Thrifty Cutty Flowtii 121·1'illow Show-Offs 111-Crochet will! Squ11es 117-[Jsy Art of lletcllf90int 114-tomplete Alsllans 11 z.l'riit Altllans 1 ou b 10 ~ l'l I R' l" dlx t'Olldo PENTH I DG F. IAYFRONT ••••••••••••• •••• •• •• • • 1 :\c·"1'' :! Hr "ilh .:.•r.•C•· .1r1•J llrnl..1·1 Iii$ 4'112 &15·2251 C()\'F. 8 28 f 1 ., 3 br. 211 ba ram rm ... pJ Ario Mucn Mo•e s.tJu rlWI · 2 r a· rp r · 2 .story, 4 .,.. bdrm~ • ~c'tarular O<"t'l!n , rt•v.• For a monrn or a 1,1p t..15 ~~i • \ 11l.1 11.J lh<i.; l't•nlhou"' 2 Dix Co1 rnl(lon 4 pfl', lnp F \' IOl' Great d~~umJ ble loan OWC Pren 11n I) Bk r 979 4383 "'hr dr}r !e,olor~ baths . firepla cl' .'.\o Pl'l' S!li5 mu 1,,,,. MOl1e•~ooenua ~ I{. ,iur. ·•tiilrrn ,.,, 11111 _..·111 :!ll.t r,1m rm frplt ll'llHO"a\e 2 t·ar i:ar gor"eous \It'\\ Prer ant1 6611 • .,.,.1 .. 1 II·'". I \ " I ""1 "" .~ C\lm ro!icm No pets 11111111.• S < l'l.11.1 l11t '"'' 11ih1' 11111 ro It'" v. OtJOr pool Jar Sl\5() sbp S3(XX)permo 1\\:.111 \\'.ili•flJll:-,111.,101• 11r h,I\ fiom hJlron' mo + $600 '"' dt•p Feb I s..ta Ano 3 280 'PJ """' )Hllll mu l'n1I 'llJ wt lil.t~ &. iS9 9141 d'' i 2tJ ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• OakWOOd 1111;;:1-.11•1 i.;;,11·,111 pJrk1111: I hlot k 111 111 ·Easy Alt of Hairpin Crod1tl 110-16 Jiffy llwp • l Ol-1 llStM!t Mac11me 107-htsbnt Sewi111 1~lnslall1 Fasllioll lfU.lnslallt Monty IOJ.15 Qlilts for T*' I UMITS/H.I . 4Jt ~~l'\e~ 4bdrm 2h.i Ire.! hum1• r1· G ht•Jih $!1~1 1;;~ IOlliS ur ;>;ewpurt Rd{ f'et' ldntl I 1 1 .. 1 ht arden Apartments 1 11 1 111 Onr BkrJ Shea 955 34,1 3Br 2Ra den fem·ed )ti. mu1 e '" 1•,1r 11n1•, r 1•111 \!,11 .11 ' 110 1151111~1 " "11hr di"\. r hook up $700 SOO!'i mu + IJ'l • S.:l.>o New""" Beach/No IJt'I' I 111: 1'11•1 r .ir1 • 6·3 """ •14 ''I' ""'' ...,., ., .... l !'lmJll ~ Hr ·• h.tlh m•.u lncomr p,......rty 2000 mo ind \\all'r !l4il 3092 't't' " ..,.,..1 ,, · ~" ·• f18L hvint> ,.,.,.., f>I. •r.,.,• · -,..-I 1h1· 1 ..... 11 51;.w1 lll'f m11 •••••••••••••••••••••••Costa Mtta 3224 Nwpt Hts J Hr. 2 11.i South LOCJUna 3286j a•,,,, ~llr 'h.i .. 1111111 I II p.11111 \t-.1rl\ 1 1;;·15;1711 I lluntrngton Rrac·h 9 unrh. •••••••••••••••••••••··· S82S mo Isl. I.isl ,. dl'p ••••••••••••••••••••••• [714) 64!'>-1104 !. •• u ~ 11 \1 111 tr ..,.,,,11 ~~6rJ01~1d p/~~1,. 211n~~. llou.e. horsi· ok . l Hr Avail no_" &IS i400 1 Oldtor :1 hr. 1 h.1 fl11•:11q NewPOrt Beach/So. l'.1111 1;1.1 ~1:11 1 ;~~·a~ ~~;~0, ~ 1,1; 11 ;, 11~5~ ...,U\ rm "')202 B1r1·h SI I \ u SK!iU mu ;\llH3 l., 1700 16111 S1 I l !Ir It 1h.1 I" llh" JH •11I "'" . 6 31"" Hkr 5:16 0123 '"'""' "'' 'I I I • 1111 nw1 b44. tiu,.1 or ti4 "~ ·· Santa ,\n<1 ll l!t ~ Ciinal front. :-.le\\pnrl .. ;myn >r "•11 · °""'1•••€rr h lt11.-~.>11 11 \l f'I Lots for Sale 2 200 5.~l m31 Shores. 4 Hr + L<'altl' or w ... a-.:....st•r 3298 (714) 642-5113 I 1·12 tm~ 111'~10 :ii••·· I South LOCJU!la 38861 b $1~0( .. ~,,,... • • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rt•rl~t' T"o hd•m .•• , option to II) .. I mo •••••••••••"•••••••••• lle,11111ful :1 111 ' 11.1 ~ I •f.! I~ 1•·111 \'1r" P'' J HAHBOH RllH;f: n•l it•nl lol' Ea,hr<lt· Tenn1!'. pool. \\,tlk In 1111\IFl·Oll llF'\T S.'\f,c111~1 I .11111•1• "'' ·l~·J1'i1 I ltcl~m + '"'" '!'1'1~~1r1~:~ J~~nJ.~intun• Qwrt li46 11178 ~~~lJ?r•nl l\4t) 11111 111 I .1 Hc 1 t;.m· Sti;1u t···r 1 111·!I South LOC)Una 37 86 h\\ '"h"' \ 1 .111 .I l.1 grm lrp1· S.'il~l l!l!J ~Jl~I .. "" "' 'an "' l(ar.1i:1• "II ' ,. •••••• • •••• • • • • • ••• •• • • 1iic11"'M· W ......:_ I E\e1· I Hr t•u•lom hnmt•. BIG C •HYOH LSE i~·h "'•ll·iirTu· .,1, •cMHt l..icttn.r u .. :11 h 11 .. Jul t!Smwnster 3898 C ONTRACTORS/ 3 fn,lc· pr1,·11c• •lr"t'I " ' l1r I h.1 d111tl1' .1111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BUILD"'. RS ·,, '"1 · 1 ' ·' 1' 2RH MC'l.arn. <'11nd1• \gt'nl . rr11ll'1· fetrn ,11111· ~ 1111 ~p.1 c H'n ur t•ase op 1un SIJ"• (' 11 c· 11 .1., " ~i;I • .11 i.:.11 '\;11H1 1'1•1-'i2!•1 lbth 111 IA>I~. l\\11 25' loh or llnt'I Sll75 roo cll05HiSI !132:?. 7!~.': mo • a •t•;n r Condomini11rns I '·•Una '·11'' 11 " t'illl~llh•rt•tl ;'1~!' "'"" \r 'hilt"' t•ll SO' lot-.10n~d H 2 Ott•:.rn 1il4 l!l97 ll611(1 ask for 613 "61 or 160 t:l!1. Fumi..,ed 3400] ~7i1 ~;~J ;~;\ ~·1011 '1 ~ Tuwt• II-Ii :lliliO nt'arb) O"nt>r~ trrl.'d nf P;rt 2 Br 1 Ba :'-t'" 111•1 l ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEWPORT I \I k r II ht \' t •·1 '' AP•RTME..,TS Apartmrnts Furnished paying axi•s . ii l' II t: .. de Li: I Hr un111ue er,R s t'r) prl\at• J\l~lr.ICl\'ll '1 fir ro1m11 ... l11f.111h orU..funtished 3900 fer Carol. a.in li73 iJOO c·abin likn fuaturt''" )l<I l(ar.igc. near ll C1JI: S39S mo ~1·rn1 turn Apcrtmrnts .... 3216 , • ""'"""' tud I • t •L.L~·-L .. d """no')"" ,····s·v·e·,·AL··i!··A··,~···~······I ,,,.,. ut1llltl'~ $525 mo .,..., . ....,..., ' 111 " >a1~1.1rc nr ""'1lnllan ... -S (' PL.\7 \ Tt•nnr, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~S0:\1·"p<111111"1 rimr 5'tclre{lftt~nat 6'15 6266 Heritor Ri4cx Lease pool-. Jat t. m111 h murc· 11otboa Pf'ftinsula 3807 l 00'1 ·1 '11''•1 C>wMrWp 2450 PETS KIDS OK ~Br 3ba. frmltlinin..: f I ' 5.'ii 78.ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• :-.m.r ll 1 Hr I ""r"111 011h ••••••••••••••••••••••• We~ti.rde 2 Br I Ba stud~. beaut dt'1. li:i• -.;u:?&.3HH :?R\ ,1.,11 (\ n11 1•1·1· ,3:!~ 11111 '"" 1&2 hdrm lu\un 5if, mt rn C'ustom moun 5475 mo 556 6516 derks . fab """ P\I CondominiWM f'r 1 1 k 1tiS/Cllil 5;!i 711111 I Jl'h 10 11 µ1Jr1' I Hdrm tam holllt' Belov. ap guarded gale. µoul lt·n ,......__,•L-d 3425 P 1 '11 11" l(<tr 1i.ir hum "~I. :> .... rm from • 2 B T I s10• & fl· I ~·-101: <:Jo,e 11,1 "·•' " .... • "" I pralSCd \aluc ;>;r fore:.I. I"' r ra1 cr11 "" rus S2900 mo ·\gt "'' ·~··••••••••••••••••••• •~l'Jn Rrkrfii.'; I'll;( 2 llr tv.nh1111;,1• 111111 s.srn To"nhou-.!' frum sknng. izolr Lo" dn. no u~ + $150 se1· No orOo11eKoop i59·1221 \\ooclhnll1tt' 511SC1 2bdrm ;.umlc·d, l!Jr '"'" J1.11n1 s...iu • J><lllls lt'nnis qua! IA\\ pymts 1500sq r lldren or !Ing, NEWPORTHt::IGllTS + tll•n Zba j 1 . <l.'t'Jn.front pnm1: .ir1·.1 l &. 111·~ 1.1q1t•t l>.'1~.~ mo "Jlt•rf.tll~ ponch' c;J, rt. 3 br, 1 1 1 ha, i:ar &t2919J Aie32&Jrm.Tba $625 '"Tillt'rll\\J lt' fri>lt . 38r ;!Ba frplr '\11p1'h ~.:w20 I for llJOklOR &. ht•Jtrni: Terry 955.3395 2 Br. ent'I )a rd. pel~ kids per rm. no pets I fnrrrol din rm frl( rn1 II I ) l' Jr' .• It· J .... J_ l E.Nsrdt' :! Hr I BJ '·" "'' IJ:lld Frorn S'!n l>1eg11 I ""'Estate ok A'arl Mar 14 2215 645 114.li )rd :?1·ar1:.ir t·l11'l'l1• Sl~lrm "•J lllltfldfl.> ~untle1k !!Jr,q•1• h"~ drr'r ;>;orth un i & .. ...__ 2800 Pomona S550 mo Bluffs 3 Br 11. I Po o I I•' n n r' 3Ji2"1J4 rtJ~' .. laundn ,\dulh nu Ht•.1<h lo '11·Fncldt•n •••••:-:::!:•••••••••••• 6466238 To\\nh nu~r . ~ r~r 12J3 tll3711.1:1!l h•arhbJthl'lu1 •·hlkt11 1 pe1,s.s2o·i~22SSo l 1h1•11 W1• .. 1on \lt;F:1ddt·n i lit• J l' h $2 711 Ill' I fTll I '" s I' J" r n rl \ 111 u I( I' WANT ED. House on Lido •WTSIDE HOMES• gar<ige w opener ,\, :irl I Huntiftcl.ot1 lch l>IG 9131 (t , l'\I J)('luw :! llH. fam r m I •714 ll!!.13 51!1R Isle for mt'omr proper Clean. pretty, no dn~s M ay I st S9110 mu 2 bdrm ('nnilo ~o :1 m1 ' ' 11 " pat111 bltn~ St!ICI hi R 4000 ly_~n_n onl)'. 642-0369 •I Br $395 all ulrls p11id. 642 95!!9 from II B 556 oJti:I or/ St·ll "11 h J-: \S ~" la~I + 't'•' Ht.>f~ ti 1.s 11~12 ooms 1 HecrPallftSprinqs forqwetsmi:ll· Undermarket rondo 5493481 11\JllH~:Et:~: I & :! 1111 i:11r1k•n ·•Pt'. NH0i.~:.·;;,;;&·f:iii,~~h~ Will trade $4,tK>O equity •2 Br. SS75one rhtld ltG CANYON Sell idle lll'ms 642 51i78 rl1M1frl'tl \1l~lil2 m.; " !•IOI. quiet v.c•ll kl'l•l ~~P & f'\l entrnnre in 5 acres parcel. small ISICSanla Isabel. On4th. green2br2ba tciO \\' Wil~nn CM \"1c" of ba\' & open cabin. FUii pnce Sl3.500 near Elden. 960 39s9 Sec. Pool Spa Tennis t'12 7Ji31145 4i!iH I 1w1·~n Nnn ~mokrr S.1!\0. Take over low Pll.Y· O..Point 3226 S92StmoDys957-3046 \i l..,.J~ Spa<1uu~ 1 fir 1;,11111•11 fi46~S.~ ments. Trade for mobile ••••••••••••••••••••••• ____ Ev!~4·~9 N~1on1 10 Apt l'ool & 1P1 ,\II utrl, l'\1 honk' no ~mok111~ or home .Campertruck. P Beaut 4 Br. 2 Ba, Fmly 3 Br.1'2 Ba. 2·story con 1>:r11t No1><'I' dnnk111R qwl'I :\1 cl\'l'r p Call Answer Ad • 631. rm. gar. pauo. fen red. d 0 \' 1 s I a H 11 g a r ~;11•11c•r1 a \h•sJ I l) sm rm 556 0637 642·!:nl24hr~ ~1ew S72S mo 9622194. {750tmo.640-5274 ;,1,,~ftOV 1959~1Jplt•i\11• .\pl !t 2 Fu rni~hl'cl r ms Classic Treasure Real Estate Fo.t• Vale.y 3234 Exec 1 Br. :I Ra. fpl ().t't" Costa Mesa 38 241 " liJthroorn pm Nr J WClllhd 2900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• dshwshcr. nc" ctr,.or 11.!.1.,,r CJ L t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~. C\t Plata & 111:; ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOMEfOHRENT .:rdnr. wr ,11·l1lr U\r'G-~ llR.2BR.3 1R. I f\t.) N!ln\ml.r s.55 "k I L-rrT "f1TI 3 Bdrm Cundo. S650 St .325 mo li46 12so. ~e"I~ rlc1·or ,;d, pt1 S.'ill 1737 v 7 m w.i ..... lllt..\T ..... CU'H fQR feneed yard & garage 752.~ ~ e'll'I ~!llr d "'"h..r Working person. P\I IW Krds & pets welcome llG CANYOH ~--~..I poul. bhq Adult. nu holTll'. rlo5c to hus & a12.ooosqft omcebu1ld· ~2000 Agent,no fee CONDO lflN~ tffl et>ts 6425073 shopping tenter. non mg or land lo build on rn ......... °" •och 3240 3 Br. rull golf rourse ti.I/ ntwvf .i.. IMMED OCCPHCY! smkr. no alcohol. Chns the Orange Co. airport ••••••••••••••••••••••• view. tennis. pool. spa 1 lJt7rv• '1 -w s.ioo mo 2 Br 1 Ha llan ram11} S22S &: rds area tFast rtsponsel 5 Blks lo ocean. Elegant 2 Lease St200 Avail now ~O'" ~-' Pool bt•1tmrd t'crlrni: 5-111 3365 CaU Howard at 540·0SOO. Br Famtlfi Rm & Den _Pnme loc. 644-7424 Bk_r _ W ct\ la··~ ..... mom 1 No l>l'I~. o~ r bd .,. ._,, M p h "'l 21 wiu. • Dd} root Master rm ext.... _..,' 0 us c.,. 5 • 7 No last mo rtnt with bath. Pool and ten Ba Cedar & glass. sun· Near ocean and tennis 3 TSL MGMT 642 1603 Pri vate Party seeking 3br 2ba home, W. side C.M Have S25K for down payment . No Bralteu-or ....a.tailors~ Contact Connie or Bill. 842-ml aft.er Spm. Prer. ~assum. derk, dbl ra r prv bdrm. 2ba, S7SO mo A.~. Ad msp5084<18087 garage, fu lly maint Waterhomes lo t' Use lffN~,, se rvice Roomy 3 Rr To"•nhouse Nice large rum refrige., yard. No veu. lnquirt al 631-1400 ,_ ~ in qwet adult rom hot-plate. TV Employed 52718lhSt.960-6331. S dassHfl Wh en placing your ad ... a f.~x. Newly decorated, .Mole.Pvtent Nrbcach HOMES~N .._ct~eao ti • n.,.t ad number Will cpkil't',~d patio ocean.536-llSIS. "I"" 11v garaae. Sorey. no P"'5 u:......:L. 3 Bdrms . S6so-s100. a+ ramily. formal din appear ,·n your classified ad ss1s Mo. 64$·3381 en-.._,Mot.fl 4100 F enced ya rds & ing, pool/spa, S2000 675·58'9. ••••••••••••••••••••••• garages. Kids & pets 7a)..9333a . • we take your messages O..P.W 3u 6 ~~om1 . 545.2000 Newi>orti<gt.ssBd.Cape 24 hours a day ... you call ...................... . ~.no ee. COO. den, game room , 3 2 Br. ocea n v I e w. :::::·;. 0 :.•.;;;; 00 • DUPLEX 119 Hunt· car gar., 3000+ sq rt, in at your COnvenieflC,e b#loony, faraie. eltan. ~" .. _.. inttonAve.Oceanvlew, walktohi·school. May d · ff" hours and get atc "A' Cordova Or ...................... volleyba ll c rt, I Br go lease option. Call unng 0 ICe 213/402•!">$7 (collect) SIA&.Aall MOT& ~· rentab now avail SlOS &•up Color TV. Phones in room. 2274 Newport Blvd. CM 6'6·744$ L9f-•-' ll ~/111>: 2 Br '600/mo: Diana a 631·1266 the responses to your ad ... c.·;;·;;0 t .. 8;~0;;~·;. rirro~:~1.re~:f11e~~0' OCEANV1Ew this service i s only $5.00 ~!!~.~.~~ ~~tff'?ti:1~s Bt1Uliful view on beath, Meyer .3$00. ofc or Newport Crett condo, week . For more lnforma-Wlfftetne Allh KllchtntttfS Pholln pool, stc 1atf1 Cal MM8Z2home tenn11/r.>l1Jar., Walk Unlum. iMfm lpl. All "Z''Ch•nntl Mov1n ..::~~a==r::.!.:11~10::.._ __ 11 BR z1-, hi ·upsradfd. ~tie:" J.ot. 2"' Ba tion and to place ' your ad util Pd. All amenititt ~per.1917Ntw~rt t..a.. l.n Beachwallc. cafl 642·5678 . MS-Oil9. -81~.J!:!!ll. Rt.l tbe tl&Nllltd ad• Comm pool, Jat, ~ mi lo S.awW &.... ~ 1 Id ~ tbe beadl hot•I roomt. tw the best dul• an btll ~o r hildrtn, no 3 bclrm llo-u.e.-'Spec· ,!..!!' brpoo • • xlra k1ttlltn 4r bath, I* I t lar view t n's ~.... ..,..,. 2 • 2 ba. bhnt, +m .__It a. w 1par1 mut ren11 l1. pet•. 1 yr • e . •tu • en ' • rml dawbr, I~ aules beach Oteaai;l, 'Ne•po" tQ.5171 71 ... 57·1200 17S·Ht2; pool. 11150 mo 760.STOI Adalll. llO peta ISOOmD ... _-....... __ _ atlU llldl75-Zl44 -.,_,.,. Arnone Ille most treasured cllutcs. count 1h1s shmm1n1 p11ncess slurtd1ess. Step into 11 and sash softly-no waist seam f« SltfSUCMf, kn its. poplin. P11111td Pattern 9326. Half Sries 10~. t 2'it. mt t6~. 1s~. 20\i. mt Sile JO~ (bust 37) tahts J J/8 Jlfds 4!Mncfl ftbf~ ._$U5t._.,...... AMltl•_.,..... .. ...... .............. llMWl-.n• ~•nemo.pt.442 Deify"°' ru ..... sa., ... ,.., ., • •••. ,.. ... ll!llDS. DP, sm .. mu-.. Mee .i1 I wt111 rifld t1!t 1MW1 Ill Ollf NEW SPRlllC. SUMMEll l'ATT£1111 CATALOG . ..... ~ ........ of (,.; Plftlrn C.00.. 0-. 100 .... Clblll. $1.50. M.L9'..-.. -.. ... c.::r ·911 I YMll-r.:J ·:.yc~SO. .... ,_ ...... 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8. D A I L y p I L 0 T c L· .A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 • DI 'ICTITICIUt ~•IN lllAN tTATl .... •T I lie r .. lowlnt M"H h ... ,., illlltlMUtt eAllOA '"A"MACY, "• l! .. tr •·11~ ........ .,o ... _ c.11'91'111• ., .. , Ml<-lteM -..1,., 1111.tl-lllOV-. l111IM, Ollfotnle t171S fllh Cl\IOIMU It <-..CIMI I>\' 9" lflOl•l•u.ti Ml•••-.... llllt \IOI--· llllOCI Wllll lllt Co.u11y er.,• of °"'"" Cow11, "" '•ll•u.ry "· 1"7 ,1U7M Publl\IWd Or~ eo..1 Delly PllOI, Fob 1S. Mtf(l\ 4, II, t•. 1"2 ~1 NIUC ~( "CTITIOUS aUllNIH NAMf STATIMINT r ,., rollowlno person ,, doing bU\l...,Ht\ OR AN G£ JU.Lii Cl-IAR BURGER '100 Htr1>01 Boult .. 10. CO>I• Me\t, Cthlern1• .,.,, J-P A .. I. 401 N1f1" H•ndV Ort-C•lllornte tU.1 Trtll D•nrnt1n h Cond<KIN Dy '"' 1no1vt0u., )~Atel T '"' \l•t•rnl'ftt ••\ ''''° ••ti\ ttw Count; Cttrk or Ort nQ* c .... ntv ..,, Merell) l'lt? F1'4U1 PuDh~ Or•noe C.,.>1 Delly Pilol. M•rc" •.II II JS, t"2 1001 .. ? "ICTITIOUS IUSINEU NAMISTATIMI NT T II• tollow1119 Ptr\on I• doing 1>U1•ne\1 ., PHOENICIAN FAIRE llOl W B•lboe Bl•d. No '· NtwP0<1 e ...... Ctlllornl• 916'3 l(emtl G "•••"· llOJ w B•IDoe Blvd , No •. Newport 8e•c". Ctlllornl• '26'.l lhl' bu\•neu '' conducted b~ •n lndl•IOut l K•mel G Fer th I hi\ SltCtrt-1 WtS llted ...... '"" Coun1v Clerk ot O••noe C°"ntv ..,, February I•, 1911 "'--PuDlt\lltd Or•noe , ..... Dally Piiot, Fob II. ?S. Mtr c, 11. t'lt? llM2 f'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATEMENT '" .. fOllO•lnQ P•r\on IS dOtnq t>v\•nf'\\ a\ THE WQOD DOCTOR 19&c Mon10••• Co.It -w CA 9?t17 GREG ALl.4N FRV t91c Monro••• Ca.It-.... CA 971>21 Tru\ bv\IM\\ " conouctf'd Oy an 1no1v~u.-Greq 4 Fry ',,,, tl•I•""'"' Wt\ fllPd '""" Ille Counly C1u~ or Oranoe (o.;nty on Mt•Ch) I'll? ,, .. ,., Publtshe<I Ortnoe (OHi D•··· Pilot. Mt1c h • 11 11 JS, 1"2 9SH1 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT Th• lot10 .. 1r10 P•rson 11 OolnQ bU\•nts1o •s CRITTERS. 1613 lrvtM AVMU.. Suit• C Co.Ct Mttt, Calilorn1a 4?621 Sharon Elon• S•ymour ?OS)I M onl•ull. C+rclt> Hun,1n91on B~•<h c.t111o•n•• 9?1>46 Th1\ t>ll\1nt\\ '' co"°utttd by •" 1nd1v1(1vfll ~"°" fl•yN ~vmour ""' \'•temf't'lt w.t\ t11ro with IM Count r ''"'' 01 Oranoe County on M•rch J 1Q91 PyOh\""'<S Or•.nQP Coa"'t Oall1t P1fof M•r • 11 11 1S 1912 931-81 NIUC MO~£ f'ICTITIOUS •USINESS I0.11#1 STATEMEN~ Tnt foltow1n9 perso"\ I\ dolno bU\lr\f'S\ ., AEOMAN INDUSTRIES tlSS f>oull\ Ht!htw•y Srrul, S.nl• An.. Ct111orn1e t77~ (11110<0 G RttOIOQ, Jti.. Wnl Ntnt Drl"f. l-Nl9u.1. C•lllOfnla 9'2U7 TM\ buSln~· I\ COndu<led by •II 11'101vldu•I Cllllora G Re.OloO Th1\ \lt..,,_t w•• llled wllll Ille County Clerk of Orenoe '°""'Y' "" Mer ell 10, t'9? .. ,.,...,. Publl•hPd 0r•"91t co .. 1 Deily Pl101, M•rch 11 11. 1S, April I, 19'2 1°'3-81 PVIUC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS IUSrNESS IOAME STATEMENT T "" f0Uow1n9 oer\on '' do1n; t>u"""'' .u CUDDL E CA RE REFERRA L SERVICE, 1933 l.,,,_1 Drive, Coste Mt\4 Cellfomla 9?626 Denis. 8 ltlor, 19JJ L•iw11 Drive Co.i• -.... Ctllfon"• 97626 ' fh1\ bu'6nf"\\ t\ Condu<tt<S by •n 1~1v10u•I o-iw B LI 1or This •Catement .. ., rneo ,.,.., 111e Councv Cler' ot Or•"91t COUflly on F •bruary 1•. ,.., ,.tat• Pubh•he<I 0.•"91 CIWU D•lly Pilot Ftb ti, 15, Mere"• 11, 1'111 •tO-t7 NOTICE OF 'ElllDINO 'E ltMIT A Ptrmll •PPllC •11011 tor doe1op,._1 ot thl• '''• I• PtftdloO btlort Cl\• Ctlllornl• Co•sltl Commlulon Prop<twcl .-velOPmtnl: Erection •nd removal ol Pr.i•b At11ll Dl9'11•Y c>enell for 1"2 ... _.. loo llon: 6'11 IA9UN C.,,y0n R<t.O, legune &Mc11, C.lllomfa Appllc•nt : Festival of Arh of La9un• 8Hch/Clty of l.99<1ne Bff<ll, 6SO L•ouno Canyon RotO, L•OUftl 8Ncll, Cellfornle '2ftll APPCIU!lon Number· S .. MS4 Publllhed ClrltlQlt C.0.•I D•llY PllOI. M•r t , 10, 11, 1"2 IOI.a N~flt'Jl "CTITIOUS IUSUllSS NAMa STATWMl"T , Tll• lollowlnt P9rto111 II Oolng bvslness os NCI COPY SYSTE MS, #100 Airway A-. s..n,, 116, CCllJ\t --. ... Celllorlllol~. l F Sims, Inc., • O.I•••,.. corpor•t1011. )100 Arnor•y Avenw , S11lle I 16, CCllJ\t Meso, Collfonli. 'Ha. Tiii$ llUSIMU Is CO'*<t .. lly • corooretlon LF Sims,'"' L F Sll'llt, Prw!WM Tttlt ...,._, w• tli.ci wltll .,. ,_,, , ....... 0r.,... CoWlty • Fellrvary t, Htt, "'-Pullll"'" °""""' CMM D .. ly Plle>I, F941, It, U, MeKIU, 11, ltll 7''4l. .I I ..... ~ ........................... ct/ c.,.., . CJ t .......... , ..... ,'p. .. • .,_ H1•tcle.... Mm l ,.,..... Id I*• s.r.lct ...................................................................................................................................................................................... . WW Yltf ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wood Codeclla, G uebo1. COMM'L/Rfo:SID Jnsie'• Gndenlna epitry, um rpra, drwl, WE MAJO YOUR DAV 1 BIUCK WORK Sma II Farthln& lnttnor l>Hl&n J 0 HornkRC'fu\lsbh1nal nlft .> YAC:llT Pillo vers, Rm 1ddit . Rem>d. Add'ns-Repiirs Clean ups. tree tnm pn ln&, rot 1 r x up , lllJl'IOlt II reb1ble cle1n Jobi. Ntwport, Coitil llANCINCi $10 nna,r. Anliq\18. 1t o ine s. r•c1A.L MAINTF.NANCE ~J>enny9e0.·ll0l3 Vtr)'rtu Lit 390250 &m11lnlserv ~QjOJS yrdwrk, reas Jerry , Ina 1erv1ce Apt1. Meu. !nine Rtfi. (,lwlbly Uc/1n1 Slnp flnej>lltltill& 64J·Oll64 M"t l2Yl1l'XP M06822 r~•-tce JackH &-nnett,Jr 9MD!i home~. condo~. Reas 8'7S.3l7s pinic OtHounta on •....A.. (1167 p., 0 _,.., _..... <~ (:onlr $$29142 ~•IM t~Mr rate S4ll 9011 {Pt:W) ~r V1u Mt' St·ott _....., '1:;t'g AU~ a7 .. ~ .. w~·~;.;-c:r,·tcie·.·;;;.·· .. es!,_ en ·54W Cmer11I M1111ttnaore l GUARANTEE you'll be MW... 9-125 ••.t·~PA .. RS·,.;;;;i.£ss·· ror /Ou P >' •u~••••;;;-.;•,••;0.:••• Slram <'lean & upholit C.... WoocfworklltcJ GARDEN ING _!~~~A>:;~~~~~~. 511lililit'<I F1ex hrs. low ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• UC. PAPF.R JIANG F.R Shln1_lrs, rial 30 Y" JOd .. ~ 11., 1..__::'f'sln""' l"f'7 Truck mount unit ••••••••••••••••••••••• & LANDSCAPING rateii 842 6447 Prof droned 111 our llondt'd & iuar No jub t'Xl> Frtte t 770-2'72S '" u \K'"' "'"' .,. Work 6453716 CU~'TOMllAROWOOO Ju~nese ... Ceo M5·7Q.72 JACKO~'ALLTKAUES pl11nt All IY!X!H frt•t• toosm11llortoolaq(t' Int e Add1Uo.u Remodelin& ~ · lnterio111. bars. mantle11. MOWING C" L'AN UPS ""lld 1 1 t:xp'd llouwcclcunri pkuptdel f.45 fl616 ror f'reel-st Ton' 119112728 Huber ttooflnlC all types D"llY Ooonl,w1ndow1,p11t10 Shampoolc stenmclean. libraries, cubineu. '""' ""' ayorngit, Mature&Rellublt: t ' NewM~ovcrderk6 .:'LOT l'Overs. •'ree est. Reas c.olor briahtcners, wht book c ases1 s ky 11 t e & • Uoullnf ·Landscaping •Jul'! .. 675·3014 • Mi·~/600·0416 l'!j · 1-:Xpert w11llc'Uvc11111( 1n L.ac #411802. '48·9134 '"' Lu;.•31*2 549-2170 rrpts . 10 min. bluch. cust. mololng. Ret11. 1-'l'ee•~ .. , ... ~2·9007 Ho~Maintenance 16·1Pml Mo•lstg ~t11llutao11. Hru s pril'l'H lt()()Jo'l,fo:AK~?"?" s&YICI FIN E llOMt,: flail, liv/dln. rms SIS: ~0092 l-\111 ll'tlllnt & clean-ups . Yard work & tree trim Quality . Dependable •••••••••••••••••• ••••• Q.in•ulttint Assi1<11rr1cnt Courtright & Son DIHCTOIY IM PROVEMENTS avg TOOm $7.~; couch Dryw.. Spec tn comm. & shop· ~11'.8· Gene~2 0458 Qill Pam& llob 1>w111ht, -AIC MOVIMG-. s.111·~)0 Roofing 0011'NOW! Aclltitlona & Remodeling $10, chr SS. Guar. ellm. l!IJ!K..ctrB Ton1646·7556 JOJINTHEllANDYMAN 673·7012 ~ck-cart•ful S52·0410 WAUf'APl<:RJN(; Free ~l Sllti 52!12 ... ,_. S... • pet odor Crpt repair ••••••••••••••••••••••• I i-:xp 'd bonded 1,11· Yourr>ailyPnoT -11•· lS yrs exp. Do work DRYWALL/ACOu~·nc; UAROKNING WANT.F:o Plumbing·elet'. odd Jobs Hol•ttffti:MJ •A·I MOVIMG• c.a1m..3 Dlsrnunti> on Oran1<eC:o111>t Hoofing Service Directory -_welt. Re[s. 53.!.:0101 14 yraexp f\ally tit· d & Mowing, L'<l~in11. ruk111g, f'rec~tlmates 6311 4068 ...... :................ Top Qua Illy Sped a I wallrov~n11ii~ frl'e e11t Re·roof1n1t , Kepoar' R•presentativt C:O. No Steam/No Shampoo insured. S32·SS49 5 w. e e 11 1 n g · r r e e. MO " w1te 11v111I ror hlle 1•11rc m handhnl(. 2S yrs Rodl ?a§ 5800 fleas rate!! 548 1733 642-5671 td322 --&L~ StainSpecialist. Fust a.ctrical =rs &45·5737 or Hm6lcJ s6182ttlng,~r}/lrty~t1Cr11'"1nna1nng, exopo .. c:.e·ort11n~1i7l:J.e13r•a3te' P-1--.,...1 5-dWa"-"" -•iliiiiillil'liiiiiiiiiml Lie •349892 77().6554 .c~. •'reeest 839_ ·1~2 -••••••••••••••••••••••• S,....(,,.li • ""' "" " ~· ..,_ ., ''"'J "'!l. -·u··:.·cr···R·1·c·1··N······~··d· EXPERTt:ARDENING DU MP J OBS 1·ompleted 7 83 (.'al S'l'A"VJNGCOl I F,('f' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·:.·u~··.;~~:,~H··,,· .• ~~.~s·,·1.·1:~d·· "' A pnce Reasonable Clean·upi.. &Small Moving Jobi. 52£.~ ·s.,,.,'~D•'N'rs· .. ,·,v· 1·N•G· u vvc. " • n~hl, free estimate on 1'n T 63 78111 C llMIKL'"•6 3" u v r.. "' •BRYANT'S• Lowman SrnlJubsOK lflr~ or sma II JOb~ mman~ om 1 -· 11 r."'" 1 ~ 1 hteelft9 T Clll CO I .1(' =TllM 436 Wullcovennic Remo \'Ill t-'rec e:.l In!> 641 7581 Matt.Alf COHSTI. c:.-.t/Cotte,..._ Custom liomes. fram ••••••••••••••••••••••• Acca...ti:MJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• P/R Qtrbes Fm Stmh Compl Set-up & Scrv ReasoriabJe 540·5834 ang, remodel. Frenrh Hl'SIO. CONCRETE+ doon, skyhghts & polio Sport ('()Urts. Lie 374067 CO\ers 848 3652 Bob851·1966/~7·7078 L.i_r 1~1 573.0359 Rest Yard Care·mO\lo , llAUUNG&OUMI' ••••••••••••••••••••••• lnsure<l 641~127 t\JIT_y~ 642 L34:S -edge, clean up R1rh JOBS. ask Cor Randy 1-:XPER PREPARER WA1't'll liSGROW' TrH Stnlct TOPQUAl.ITY 640-4776evt's 6418427 Jo:nrollrd lo 11ral·tu·c ~,,.tpOlr ••••••••••••••••••••••• Have calculator. wall travel' All arc1g sen · Call for~!.. 760 7122 ROBTSTEINBRONt:R, Pahos, decks. wood or CEN'LCONTRA<.'TOR alum rovers Concrete ELECTRICAi. WORK . bdurc the lllS ()uaht> Pm..tincJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• • EXJ>l'r1 Tret> Prunmic • Reas rates 531 5055 G...tral Stnlce1 CLE.AH UP YOUR ACT al rt'al> ttlllt S4!124111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Neat pah:hes & texlort•\ Commrrc1JI l,c1ndw.1pe I.Jr •J99.163 645·6456 Lic~478 631 ·5832 ~ID COMM'L INO ••••••••••••••••••••••• TCJOAY' Yard garu\" FAST ACCURATJo: ~1ne paanltnl( bt ll1d1ard frttttl. '')·l4Jf St'r\ll'C~ 957 83811 20yrs Do my own work Rototalhnl(. deanup, cln·uP. ell' 1 ton trut· lnl'Om.' taxsi•nact' yuur Senor Lw. ms 13 )ri. or ('urnplt'trTrccSt-nicc l~r 271k>4I Al 646 8l26 hauhn_t. ~ .. ,i:1eneral re-P> 63H993 t24 hrs I hom.• by appt 003 lill21 Thhap~ 1&1<·al ruslumer~ PIA.<ITF.R PATC'lllNC: c,· .. n I i·ln U" • ltn•• -na1rs ~""'...,.. ~ C d a vou t'31 1110 llc•stuc·n" Int C)(l 311 ~ ,. "' " RESID1COMM'L ...-~rrollt1on ra mg l'ersonal & lluMnl':.!> In .,,, • Y"' N1·,11 Paul~52'J77 l.awnn•nm 5360911 ...... S..Cl.eist CWld c. ... Custom CliPe ntry . ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• decks & pa lloi. J S Child Care 20 mo's to 5 AUSl'A'fE PAVING Const Co Top quality yrs. 5.30am·5 30pm Sealroatm~ Stnping work L1r no 380801 Prt>st'hool al'l1v1l1es & Repairs.Comm Rt'i.1d. ~'reeest 5595511 outings Nutritious Lrc ll~362 64~ 818! _ rn-als. Reasonable, re. Driveways, Parkang Lot C.,.nttt re re n c es , Ad ams. Repairs "~ I· t ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brookhurst 9Gll·2993 ,..xa ton iog CHAR RENOVATING - - . I S &SAsphalt Co Ch Id r II ,, T L_a_c 631.41!19 mpl ml ext & boat 1 care. u ur 1n docks.25yrs. 645·3749 our home. Baker & lobyslttiftg FINE FINISH WO RK J::!l!.r~ area. ~6'6620 •••••••••••••. ••• ••. •• • Rerrodrhng Doors hung eo..tradors, Gflteral L ic'd Chi Ide· are, loving Randy 720 1260 Cd_M_ ••••••••••••• •• •• ••• ••• care & rompanao11sh1p. C:us tom s pa dH·ks . ADD'NSIR.E~ODELIN<; fencedtard 556·3098 palaos. Fr doors Lir"d Plans Lil' d George Babys1lt1ng m our c M John or R1rk979·3218 eii~&Son§J.557-6932 homes \Yr & up Any Bob 's Carpentry rcmod, All construrllon. large & lime 642·84821646·5759 repair No JOb 100 sma II. small Disl' to Sr adults -Rer F'reen•t 839·6297 Wal'.fle539·7112 Lov111g Mother \lo dl "'~ babysat t' '1' Costa Ml'~a BOB'S CARPENTRY REMODEL ADD'NS Area Nr 1-'air"ae\lo and All types No JOb 100 All &anytypes Wl'"Orrer Baker 546-8653 lge sml Refi. 839·6297 romplete sen ll'e de ••••••••••••••••••••••• t-'or all you need to k no\lo about bankrupt<'}'. c·all __ 71!_835-9162 sign, bluepnnl. l'arpen l1'~'TOM CARPENTRY lr) elec , plumb . l'On BY ••JAY •• I l'rt>lt', masonry. tile 642 8809 aft Spm rabinetry L1r 337169 We know ho" lo do at Want Ms Call 642·5618 ri_g_h~<jc_631·2345 Jo:Xp Clean. dependabll• Hai.dpla1t Transport Asphalt, l'On ,,0 ml' Tax He 1 urn "'·-•--f1...L.t1-~ '""c•k& reasonable. ••••••••••••••••••••••• nete & lree remu,·al 1, /\ 1 r .,,, ._.....,... 1-~ 1 MH 1':1> S l'l.A.\'ft-:Hl'-:li Li"' •337168 631 2345 Sotl prep & plan11nie reparat11111 vJ1 or ..., }rs t'Xp ,lt , I /\ll'I' I 1: l t' _ Carpentry. remodel., re Operated eqwp t'omm'I Evc•nmi:b & Wt•(>k,•n11 Of l~nded In!> fld~ ('111111 ti45 J.!k" /I~./:~,. :.~1 ~ lefiftlshlet9 111m1 patios, pa1n t1ryg, & 1tesid'I 642 ?6J8 fate ur llonw Appo111t c1<~n. 963 091 t 1>1r~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• wanuows, drs, quahly ~nil\ Jumo I. 7.11n l'AINT~:H NE~:os J & J "otttri11q Hand strapping, repair work ~5·2901 HAULING student ha~ 1nmna11 t'l'A G45 121:! WOHK' 30yrH~P. mt Ltithk f'l."11·1' mg Antiques. ra,llu!l.' HOME IMPROV~:M~:N'I' ~o~put:~a}J;~g~~7Gal1• Ft:UJ.:HATt-:11 ext Al'l1u~flr11·!11111•, ~;1nllhl1"t1n11 new rurn11 ure Cha 1r REPAIR Pl UM RINC' k lm·ome Tax S1•1 'll'l' Duv1~ P;11nl111i; K1'/ .011, m:, 7:,u. fi;JI Zll:>fl ,. an 111 I(' r us h an g , ' ' 1}lan }'OU, Juhn 63 4H7 I SPECIAL 11 ny ehJ&r llC'al1ng. l'arp\•ntry , , I any (llJlor, hand strapiH·d l'le<·. lllc f'rt:t' est No HAULING/CLEANUP Lmtekcopin(j ('olh•1:1· ~twlc-111 7 \f\ ,., PlllftlbitMJ J•·t Int ,.>.t . n·f, 11,1t1., •••••••••••••••••••• ••• ur re).(lued, Sl9 75 /\ Job too small 645 281 l Const..'frl.'l.' Yd Ga1't1).(l' ••••••••••••••••••••••• TouehufClasslnteraor~. Ray 's ll andymun •Rcnlalrcp:m tl31ll322 V/\NIH:N11~:1tc: li11i llflll I k l'f'JI 11} 1111'. t f 11,1111" lf•a 11•111111111 S Ill 711 W. 17th St /\~. (.' M Servll'l' roor rcpims. 1.ANl>SCAl'INC: 1.nclM•p 642·7712 HofM eo .... W¥1Ct flllllnl, \'Omnl 11''111, lr'C'I' pamtmg & rarpentry IS •••••••••••••••••••••••111nmmrng. dt•:ul u11 6-dlllMcj yr.;exper 646·4336 llOM EllE1\LTllCAHE ln,·11 bond1•d IH· cl •••••••••••• ••• •• • • •• •• LOVE TO WORK Avail by l'erl nur't' ' 979 S1<1G Lan<bl'apml( Yd Clnups j l'reetnm Expert matnl Carpentry. pa111t111g. a1de.£xp'd 5~ HIW l.a1on ... en 11.1., mo1o lh~hnp & ~111 h1111lll1!' :1t1 \r!o l'Afl Ill l\1•.11'11 .1rt·a ~'r1·(· ,.,, !i111 111:!'1 PETSl'S PAINTING 10 VI\ t'lllJl'f 111t 11r t•)ll 55:! 1)'1i>I\ J1mll5t 0129 trees & i:rdns. ~1·11 • l'llic1·. tnmmanie "h"'" matnt. ll hauhn).( fret• HauMc~lltcJ I up .... planlan).( clt·,ii:n 1'.11n11n11 . "alk11q•111111 Res1d l'Omm 111clu:.. est ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9637:.imRi 1 \lom1d rl'f1111,h1111? Ii> Maml. l'lt•an op), lre1• • Want a R~:ALL \' r1.t:AN I I C:1·rman lr;,ttn\•tl IJlh\•( tnm ~Tee est 641 1096 Professional !IOUSE' ('all <:mi:ham Masonry I & "'>!' :10 .\ r~ l'X!~ H1•r, I Pete • I C11rl t-'l'et'l'.'ol li4~512:1 1···•••••••••••••••••••• l..1c ,15-1251, 11:119ti1K Clean upi.. Trt•t•Tnm T•h Service Co. KOBIN'SCLF.ANl~C: r~tom Hmk Slone. 1,.amllnl( mt \•XI 111mm Ma ml Re~1d Comm'I I c21Jl 592·3537 or c714 I Servare a thorou.:hl} Ul&l(•k. t'om·n.•k S1U1·1·u & r~ F'rce <"'ii qu:shl' Amit'~ 8414 I 84().8618 dean housc S4U 0857 Ref~ 1-"ret.• fat S49·!1·1!12 UL'ured 631 5507 l'h1111t11111( 111·11111" h1·1·1•\t M&\11,1~ !!11:1:1 Pr.tty Mon~'"' ltt .•.............•.•...•. PRO PH TY MANAGEMENT <If ani:1• ('o un•J J ', ~" 1•x111•n1•na 1· ( Jll for 1nl11 .111cl rail'' 96).1182 PROF.MGMT lly t>Cll' 1 llranl!l' c 11 Im Prop 1 t-.d 53-1 W lff T nast DHds ••••••••••••••••••••••• llJo:LINQl ' f::-."T' Jud1\•1a I Jo'11r1·1• 1&1~11 r\•S llarold r ~!&'<:ralh i-::,ti 1151 1771 Typiftcj Servict ....................... 'lv111111: re~ume~ ll'llll paper~ cl11o~erta1111111o wur1I llf1K'l'1o)llll: Ht•a.., 1 at c•:. I. I' CH f 11• t' Joit-Hl\'l!!I 5111 7135 Window Cltonift9 ····················~·· 'l.c.1 th\• Sun:.h1111• 1n· Call Sun~htrll' W1ndo" ( ·1ean111ie. Ltd 548 1!853 20'. Month!) 1>1~rnunl • 1ti-:s11n::-;T1At.• ,\,i: I \l~ $:111 c1\J: 2 'l' ~15 l'hns !IS7 11381! Wl:'\l)OW l'l.t-:A:-.'f'I;(; i H\ in are:.. (.'a r ".o. ing t>t2 ~.i!I 1145 rnn lost & Fo.d S300 PtnelftClts 5350 I ·······················1······················· He4p Want.ct 71 00 Help WC111ttd 7100 Help WC111ttd 7 100 Coed' ~ouh1111\\' tu 11Jrl} \lo 1th 1·11u Ll·'lil· or FOUND ADS ~6~ ~~·· " 111 1 1 m <' Real Estate-the Complete Orange Coast Market Place S......r Refttols 4200IRefttak to Share 4300 Offke Rlfttol 4loo Office Retwtol 4400 ..... ,..... ARE FREE l' da & v· k'' ••••••••••••••• •• •• • •• • •••••••••••••••• ••••••• •••••••••••••••••••• ••• ............. •••••• ••• •• ~-ity soi s &all·. 1n IC I S 4 BR home nr OCC and Will share my 2 bdrm, ; --....... '"':" PHOTO ~DELS SC Pl aza Non smkr. ba tuwnhome, nr br~ KOLLCENTEI MEDICAL SUITE ••••••••••••:•••••••••: 642-5678 ESCORTS $185 + 1111111955·0809 S250 rrn + 1, 1.'lect non .... wRT 21.85 sq. ft rront s:round LO A N s 11 A R " --------• llA<.:K & BF:rrt-:H smoker .'\ v a 1 I 4 1 "''"" .. .., rtuor, garden sel1111g , WANT~D. net>d $8.000 ...............••......•••.....••...•...•••••.••••••••••••......•••.• ACCTS PAY .AILE CLERK S8.S(J lo $ro0, at lrasl I 'r l'Xper Balilnt·e rt·pori~ batt·h & t·ode for 1·um puler, 10 ke} b) luu1·h 1\ppl11·allon~ no" hl•1111: taken 8 5PM ill l'S H1•n tals Corp orl1\'l' 17K71 M1tthcll. Ir\' 111 11 556-41100 HAHYSl'JTt:ll nd \lo k<I" !15 2 ) r old l!d hm ... z"' (.' M 646 4348 l'\ c' l~1by~1lter ~nr 1nra11t ti d JI a )' \ p p I .1 111 µer:..on 313 l';ihrill11 :(' n1 Candv Retail Stort Kltihl-h help ne\•1frd Full ur p lirne A11phca lions ~Ion thru Fri !I to I lam bland ~\lo eel Shop l' M .i.io E 17th !)l (.' ~I 645·2883 CAS lllEll P T 1 Marine hJrd\lo11rc Wknds nN· Exµ prd &15 1713_ Pnrre Ol'eanfront LOl' 3 tl48 53661,,es Elegant Exer swles 111 professmnal hldl( m lop 714 892·2254 Mas~ Polll'r. --------TllJ\N t-:Vt-:H' 24 llHS AP ART MEN T ,\ S Br+fomrm Weeki) or prestigious fol' Ind areaorNcwvort Beac•h yourterrru. 669 0207 SIS'fANT ~1A~A<:EH CASHIER& rmnthly Avail 4 I 82 I-' t'u1e&a1ry.2br Iba secretarial, rercp xlnl acce,s lo lloaic INVESTORSW/\NTt-:1> REWARDFORINFO a O~tr:ill i Couple for 1;5 un11 ,\pt BABYSITTER ll OVSEWARE SALES HAHYSITTt-:H Mon Wed & Fri t·vr~ 1 t'\·erv olhl'r Sal lor l girb;, 3 & 6 ~ r~ 5411 Ol l!i Pl~_Realty 6731900 CrlM apt w frpk $29< llOOISl. telephone ans & ll~p SI 25 :.(j " Loni( ror lax "rll1• urr lead111ie lo lht> r!'l'O\l'r~ 1 _________ , complex In II n WANTED I I "Piii) Ill persun Crown VoccutioftRttttals 4250 + Cmdy760·11233 rrore ores from $436 term least> :nail Also Se\·urft1\lo1lhreal\·~l:1le ~ uf P\•wcrhtenl\'IOJ,t.,lkt'I 213592·1573 Part llml' cfu I .. th• llarrlwa:t' 1614 San •••••••••••••••••••• ••• Pror male to share 1tme1 ~ 0!j:!13~ }[<'~ AS~~ ~5 sq,frt prcsst1i:;ou' I ~ropt>n1es 536·8080 I t1~~ra~~m& t•ol\~~.':;;pn~1~~ PtnelftClt Servicts 5360 APT M/\NAG ER eta' 011 Monda' rth1(u t-'ra1 Miguel, Ni·wport Bt·ach OCEANFRONT 2 & 4 Br 2 Br l Bu house. 2 blk~ Q u ARTER s co M ft ~il~1art>a lfN l\q I ' II B Chrome rramt·. n•d I••••••••'•••••••••••••• Sem1·rellred t'Ouplr for I da0 ) Would II kt• 1 e I tl1ild \'are lran>pcirlalmn A\'atl now Weekly thru rrom brh. CdM $300 P" """:S·. A prof".ssional OPPORTUNITY handlebars. \lo hrl'IS & 18 urul AdulLs. m ;'\\loJll •1 fl'n·n1 t'.'o pll'aw ('a II nl.'rd ed ~I u n Wed Call Sc 67• 8836 ru-u ,., ~ Will sell par1 Ince rest 111 r '1 l I) 1 ? "'J c ''" \rt 6 •56 ,..,,,. summe!: 673·7873 otl e' es .,. environment n t 4 1 500 sq rt of oHit·e.spat·e & I waterfront proper\) JI brak~. blal'k L'na:.eat Pro \lo Oman ... uh /\A/\ " am enanC'e exp n'CJ :ma ;i , .. ,,. " ,,,, r " uu.J<) PaJmSpnngs area \Mon Roommale\loanted. Dana ~1-0681 rerpl dre~ Set·uraly d1srnunl lu raise i·ash Pleascrall'\36-9832 rer:. t'Xl)l.'r an deamnie. 646·180J l 548-7827 Clmral Ci1·n OH1\'t> terey CCI rondo 3 BR 2 Point. 2 br. 2 ba . $250, Isl SS systems \\et bar Op I fast 1714 l iS2·2'747 :.hoppinJ!. II i·uulo. in.:. ARCHITKTURAL \lust be good \lo uh num Ba. rurn \lo atrium &last + 1, u11b Apr 1 IUSINESSADDRE uonal \lo arehou:.t spart' h.st•:.11tmi:. hoJll\tllml(. No\lo harinl( Arrhlll'l IAMOS-MUSICIAHS bers. pleasant oHite en Coif. tennis ()all>. 4930987 Answering &r mail S565rm L'lllancl Ol'IMolleytoL 5025 Loshi·! Bla(k·k Cot·kahpou raooµtmma&·bnaali:11,1nieox:.•~heakn1~~ lural Drafl l>man SenousProsOnh \1ronment t)Ptnlt op u·-klr & monthl_ .. ral"S serv1l'e. con erenre Airport area 545 0636 OGR \lo le mar ani: on l' l'\l h , , ..... Kno 1... r 11 AJIT \llS 1• l.Jon"I •'all -71 •• .,, """' • 8 0• Mosll) absentl>eeks, rem room AdJ OC Airport •••••••••••••••••••••••!Herbie. rl'm \(I 6 ror ~amt• Call & let u~I wt"\Jgco ma "ork ~pe,,; I) l'l\ u '-' ~· ... av a• 714 S511 o I rmmate. part rurn Park $100 rm it4 1151 1342 972 sq fl. rHcpl1on1st 'Pvt rroney SIO 000 & up 546-21~ Re\loJrd ' da~c·u.,s yuur saluallon. (5'arobu1nndel inworreks1au"raa1n·kl' Immediate U11t'ntn!?l> Coffff ~/f. TiRW S.SPM, ~sk for ~l ark Nwpl ~pt Pool, spa sac . area. 4 offare~ & )Ugph I C· II J . T I I 11 ., THE JOI SOURC... II h I v u ... N B h s· a eanne or om L· us f' on) s_ani:crt• \'J ' -1rabln •'al.I ror uru '" II( \0 u e ,,prox l.rg Big Bear caban. pool S.S75 You pay $395 L\·e e\loporl eat" near rm nr Newµort 171 -t I 64288S2 rO ' U ema le \lo lrl' 1 plcJSC Sandrab42 6149 an"L.,e~·aew~ &.._appl ,. ' 600 07i1 llA~I 7P~1 duphralanR Ex pr on tbl. color l'. 2 (pis ms_gSall) 644·4276 Ho:'! .. HJ5P IW° sq rt . lJtal pd RC> per .,q fl ·1 ha1r1ed· Ternler tn ib·1:~1& R'A "vcAL DE". IC.!\ B) Ai>j>01ntment Onl~ 9~00 and 9500 \Hie~ slee .... _14.545-0016 set'vtiu ooro ll'es,am ~4884 ~laespame m1>., " E S 'O er..l'allGre"at = Roommate Wanted Nun pie park in~. well ma in wht. rna le Beagl!' mix SWED I Sii MA.'iSt\G E ASSOCIATES ll At:TY 1\SSI T 1 1'1 · ... Harbor View Knollb smkr.2 Br.1'2 Ba .xln1 LamedhldR \'1i:kydays PrHtiaicMnOffice Apartwltts: blk&tanmaleLahm1x f ur men & \lo Oml•n . Inane.CA LlneqwredSol!ll'1·>.pr il4 &108100 Cape Cod condo 2 Br, 10(' $200+ '• uld 714 645-4800 !00 s( 1tl N\lopl Bea<'h I 'detK blk & wht. Lah mix ~et·all~ Hohi•r1 66171120 '71416418700 r1et· 4 da} \lol't'k \\\·d l'ompan1on matur1• v.ba Inter del'Orated 631·3272 -. -Phones. Xrrox. Furn & I "'· . H female pup\1~ blk & 19 Kl thru!:>al (:45 0212 person for l'ldcrl~ !Jrl~ &fully eqwpped Avail Prof remtu shrw saml',9!,.~~;tf~~i.n!)j1~l~: & More Lo\lo 1werhC'ad l Offictluildift9s \lohl , rema (. m1xt·d Hc>auty.h"en~t>d&e1<per Rm. bo;,rrl. '>JIJI\ April /Ma y, also Au~ 2Br 2ba apt al Park( A 1 kg Ideal ror w1lhl(rl'al loc.:S9'lO mo Rttttofs; \Yhippet tan, ~1 1:<l'1t Tn1Vtl 5450·,· ATTENTION: makeup 3111~1 "antt'd 636·1609 :.hru No' $1000 mo t Newport. SJ50 mo ' la~P ea!!tc.· enganeer 851·0068 . Office luildinqs sa,. rmlyed fbcmTa 11•, wh1tl' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ambitious boys and ror F 11 mt· po~ In elec. Call 760 3905 or Wkdys 731 0776, wknds' etc ·Nr405 Fwy & Bearh llaiMt Refttol 4450 Loans to S25~.<H'IO lerms l'ITlll e La t>rn.cr m1'< Rict.rto Alaska girls 10 13 years nld, to Newport Salon Cull ComDCll'lion/ Aid~ 673-~h 640·9019 213 7119.3445 Allison Blvd 847 7727 M I" 8 s 5 to 3 years Call 111 sec 1f blk & wht t ID 1 Nl'wpnrl Lale Mar 0.11 159~ work one or two \'\ l'n 2IJ 274 IJ575 Nl'l'd fl>ma le• l'1{rnµan11111 \lilrnds 714 ,644.6248 · · !•• .... =•••••••••••••••• we han• the hesl rail's An 1mJI Sh.l·ll1·r. 125 1ngs a week getun.: rur 1•lderlv aclult ~~~!:.~~~ .. ~~~~ Gfo..Tetwt 4350 -I Primr L9(atlo11 t1\';11lahll' for your loan Mesa l>r . l osll1 Me'a Jobs Wanted, 7 075 newspaper subsC'rl p ll>al Sale~ Firm 'l'l'k1111: S2110 rnu ~ -room + Custom exerutave orfit•e I Reta1l oroU1respa&:t'.on Call Mr ;"l/!'lson 1it4 1 644.3656 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t1ons Transportal111n lll'rson for full 111111•. lx1ard ~lu:.1ht•1·xpr a" Shr lrg lux home w pror ••••••••••••• ••••• •• ••• person. Isl, last & dep ll' long dble dm·e ar1·css, ~J!lO 966-8479 dl)·wall int. Hunt. Brh 846 9501 !10,5 l 400sqrt Pvtbathw11h the watcd ron t an 966075~ l.'umbrnli:c l Foumlblkhr"n&flurh Youn!( marrtt•d m:in and rons t anl adull romm1,,,1on111g \lo11rk nurSt-s:11dt•11r ,1m1lar shower Balboa Penm :'llewvort llcal'h H 11(h Cap 1 la I Ur o u µ a Sile hard 'rl'm·&li· u \. "oulrt hke odrl Jobs eH':.. supuvasaun pr11\ldrd ~lust he ('\()l•m•111·1·&1 1n I l'all art 6 11.5; I05i UXJ rm 642·4623 '1s1b1ht) loeat ion on 1 Cahforma real c'lale I 8,s7 ~4 ' 11 PP & \lo kl'nd~ Can do a (.'all J to s JOPM , a~k ror all areas Ll·.1dl'r,h11J & I ' 0-,f-ic-e -sp_a_rA avail Pal' Cst 11~) 1.1100 lo broker.alsoal·tmga~a · 'ani:-l) or hand)man Andrea. 642 4321, i•xt i:ood J\1tudl' a rnu'l U>SMETOLOtilST,~lust ~ J""" q (I I d f'ound Sota II "lk • hi JOl>s 972 9<"< 1•vcs .. ~k ., • ., ·1.96 •l.933 haH' kno\lo ledge o SI\ I lnpludes desk. phone ·""''~ en er • · v "' " · • .,..., • • w . ,,..., ROOMMATE SINGLE GAR.AGE ' 714 645 7100 do!! \lo l\PQll\ 1•n hod) for Fllll 1-------• 1ng, blo\lo&nR. t·uu1n11 Costa Mesa $70. 968·1452 ~'!R 64l ·076J. St.ore ror lea.se 15 ... ,. .. 696 ba, rk lcgs ~ral! \'1l· IOOt<KEEPER tnrnmtn~ & Pt'rm1n11 uf Rs ~uv \\ ner & Sp angd I Exp'dlllesclfer:.i•eks ap \lrJ'OMOTIVE ' SeU m;Jl1vnteif.' F (.'bk hair Kno.,. lcdge ul flt-4DE S75 'rro llunt B. 20xt8 dbl HUNTIMGTOM W 19th St. CM lnt\uare Mort~s Trvst iwt,~16 r a \' ~~!1.~esh1p. a\·a1I nn\lo , • DRIVER I kpr needed b) Carden Far..1 Langual(l' is rt'q Oldest &largestagene)' garage. nr Beat'h RI IUCH 686W 19thSt.orl'al 8111 DeidS ' 5035 '""""" ~I d hd bl Gro,·e ro f.1<pr an all Sl .IXXlperm.i ~lustha\t· Allcllentsscreenedw1lh 833-3307.._64~·1339 650.78Sor 2,llls r su1tes 00-3250 •••••••••••••••••••••••Lost 35. :-;wpt Oune~. k 'ature. epe a e , areasofbkkpi:thrulraal Calif Cosme1ol11g1~1 he photos& references Offic• R......... 4400 for immed 0('(' Fu II g.rayash blk tan Terrier ~~latl~I~~ r:r~~.clta~e ot I ~rsonu st nerdh a~~ •• ful,I ~lml l('d I balance Musi be ab.le tu I Take ad tu lhl' StJll' Cred. C I t "" '"" Service gross lease from eo....rciol Sattler Mt;t Co. ~ngrel <'cm w .. nd• M • 0 t 60 ... E I )( Its OSmopo ian 4475 All r I~ ... ., r ' .• (A 10."r'. AXP lh"a'.' Cal1rorn1a dr1•er s ype \lopm .-on ,mpO)'ml.'nt c (' In •••••••••••••••••• ••••• <J:i Mam & f1onda nr Rffthlh I types o a estate 640-2246 67 2923 • • ~ ~ , • • • GoodMommgAmerica. 1617WestchfC. NB. Want Pacafara Hosp. Ownr ••••••••••••••••••••••• '"''eslmenlss1nre 1949 . _, _5 on insurance> Wrilli' hrrnse & oulstandang srrokerprer I Garden qro\l'. 9i311 'TheTormrrowShow rmancaal inst. 7000s(. p T & s Found Mesa dcl Mar. Oa1l~P11ot.Adll941.Box dnvmgrerord Satan·& 7148910253 I Carden Gr~\t' Bhd *~; orf• lo all new \st floor AoentS4.1:50 BobJarrard Crle1me t u~!n~ offan Specialis.iltcJin brn poodle & blk.1Ah1 I· 1560.CM !J2j)26 benefi ts /\pplvin"""son Nonet'dtolra,·elallo\l'r DOT 332 211 Oto ,\d rlientswhoneedaplace -.D --mn•~n,-mene-r=a• or 2IMITDs -t ••"5790 1 · · ,... pa1dCorb\'emplo~c1 _ui:ua:nt:.ol...LLL .¥Cl' 730-1470 831 8699 "" em_er pup """" Comp an 1 on nu rs c at Service Dept town to look for garage • • NEWPORT 64I·1199 EXECUTIVE 144 sr pror orrace + · '-' 64k1.IJJ 1-4.5.!0ill Found RelnHer. Mesa mature lady w exp & I ROY CARVEi IMW sales }Ou'll fmd them Counter cltr k for dr~ 2500 sq fl <'Ondo to shr. lg rms on beautiful Creenbll & view of the bay. w,pools. 557 7883 or SUITES sttretary spa<'e A\·aal. hldmtrial Refttol 4500 •f1XED RATE 2nd TD del Mar area. on 3 II local rers wall 1(1\'e TLC 5 & ROUS ROYCE I ni:ht here 1n C:lass1f1l'<I deaners. J d\s pr \lo k IN ~LS. $325 + $175. Orange ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Fully Amortized !>57·3529 dysprwk 8311·9766 1540Jamboree Road To plnre vour icara,:e Mature lad) prerern•d Coast Fmancial Center N.B, 3975 B1rrh. 8860 sq • F\Jlly Assumable NEWPORT BEACH sale ad, call f.42 5678 t all 646 7621 HSllTAGE ll6CM9S7·14l4. n.orless.MIAtone.SC)r •No Pre Payment f ound I male I remale1Sttk 111strurtor po:.1t1on . PL.AU per sq Ct Agent Penalty Coldrn Retrievers. e1<trns1vebal0kl(round1n New luxury oHice space LOW COST S41·S032. ;\skforSkin.S4G·O~ taken to 0 C DO!? all types or exerc•ase ~ an Irvine's busiest 1620sqrt.idea1Cor :i:-Pound,Call540·0583 Walhng to train lo vour Ea F designers. artists. Mesa Industrial Park. 711 2nd·3rd·4th TO 's -needs Or sub an e'x1st Roommate F'preferred.2 center! sy rwy ac· . A 11 w 17th. St.1Pacir1r Jud'. IF 1 F ound Bluepoint T 8330423 BR house. 2 car gar. cess. Avail. now ! Cali engme('rs. va ·now. BluHs lndustnal Park, aeaa orec osures Siamese Cat. v1r Santa .egrm. ma, · WID. 2 blks to Main bch ror details. 1001W.17th, CM Wh' . Harold F. McGrath, H Co I d uns 1ll1er Ave 1500, Attv aJ_l,.~-w. __ ~l-·l7JI Ma _gt,§,,_516_:3206 mpan on nurses a1 e S365 includ utilities 55J,!.llJ1 6~10.. 979-1533 t000.3700 sqftunats.or ' ---· -pos11iondesiredbyexp'd 497·2621 Campus or. offiee. 90< sq fire-warehouse space loon Dut? ~0't't ~ 2 Germa~ ~her. man. U <'ookmJl, hskpg. Roommat" M1F' H.B. 11d •DB.UXEOFftCES• ft. Lse or Mo/mo. w1carpets. drapes, wet u __ .... ,._sh? 2 Beus y.approd~ w. 5 etc Please ph. 9!i73"6:1 " " From I room up lo 2000 b 642 44631642 7604 ~ -at at•h & In 1anpohs. X2'Jj $4().6B22 lot sq, fl. From $1.16 a sq. Mu1JanRealty540·2960 ar._· . Real Estate money HB.~-8035 . , S225 + 1·1 fl No lease required. WANTED BY New Busi· BEAT HIGH RENT available 2nd or 3rd TD --I Responsible womun will ~7·41.Sl ·Duma Adj. Airporter Inn. 2172 ness ofc. reas, w/12 Free move·in t ime Loans on residenllal or Found Small male 101 be COMPANION eves Large3Br Condo on The Dupont Ca ll AM . phones. Wtll assume lse Plenty or park'g, Cncd income properties. We ten. blark & white I 7pm to 7am Best re' Bluffs. bayv1ew. to shr SJJ.3223 536-~~yl_ yard, nr rails & Crwys. handle a full range or NewlandiSlater. 11 8 I fercnces Nonsmoker. w 'prof Woman who «lO to 800 amp, truck rrortgage Coverage at ~1:8548 nondnnker 642 3153 travels Beaut rurn BAYFROMT 704 sq ft proressional drs New. 13.500 & 6750 very competitive rates. Found Sml gray max W..t.d 7100 U<;l\/rro 760-8056. Pn-orr.P•, 673·1003 bldg Costa Mesak Nr (~to 23' gross) Rancho Courtesy to Brokers. dog Brown collar w red Http e"' "~ "' Harbor & Ba er Cuc a mo n g a 714 760·l551 ask for yarn Brookhurst ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 BR home nr OCC and Co6ta M~a~ 250 sq.fl. 714-494>4797 (7 14 )985 5810. eves St~i:_~an~--Hamilton area. 11 8 .Acca.HIMICi.rtl SC Plan Non·smkr 511te sm mo Ulils an· WlSTMIMSTEI ~~. __ l6K Znd T.D .. 5 yr note at 963-7139 exper'd-wltli" excellent _!I~+ ~utll 955-0809 cld 779 W 19th. St. 120050.fT. Fenced l ndus 'l lot, IS':< int. Will discount Found·'B;senJI Club lypcngskillsCo~an El~c I or 2 mature M to sht 85I-142115 Beach-Blvd. Btwn 87x123, ideal ror contrac· 20"r. Call 631-7370. Ask wishes to place yg, bark trlcal Const . farm. Ex my lrg apt. Emr.loyed 520 & 572 sq fl Sl.00 per 2 f'rwys, Civic Center tor or storage. $600/fn!>. for Jim less dog that yodels ~ll~t. benefits. Contact non·smkr. quiet. tbtral sq. n .. 3975 Birch .. N. B. Shopping Ceo~r. Prime $tt at 20S7 Placentt11 53126 Virginia 540-9570 IA a Bs~..497·3896 A ent~l S032. location. 979·8889 or v. C.M.Call55l·ll49 • amc.,.llh/ follld 3/tO· orange/wht --------•! Fem. roommate to sh1 645-1260. l.000~.F mo. 1100 Pen••/ M cat, recent surgery, w/same. 2 Br 2 Ba a~ I Low cost office suite. Ap· S.F .. S38S • Ofc whsc. lOlt & F-.. LI . Beh. 830-4141 __ ~arr~~~3u 9X9CU an· prox lOOOsq ft. Pvt bath. J close S.62SI •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• Found . Fem Golden Lab 6'!·~11!ms.£. .~oto mo. S4~. liiWIWiiiiltcr 4HI 6•1•c-..ts 5100 type,whtrhest spot. Vic "A.Hewe~·· Wtst l7lh/Placenha, .............................................. Indianapolis & Bushard. Emp Female over 35 Co• Full service/cusfOm CM.6'5--2937 Butiness lady seeks up· ACTOIS/ACTllHIS H.8.963-5136 __ 2br.2hll. Park Nt wport office &dtsk apace. c.M. 345 ft + bath. ptrlbdrmapl MovkMdustriaffl'ilm . "'"•• 5350 ~ .. 640-81113 Nr. O.C. Airport Storage avail. $250/mo. 642·93981646·7886 Union Roommate 10 iihr 2 81 "SettoA)>preclalt!" 5'9-3345,494-3803 I Non-UnlonWalvtr ..................... .. rondo. ~·em pref. 1240+ 7S9-8f78 <Xllre space, 750 sq ft. nr llilllllta/l••"t/ Compute. Rererral Club. Aflmlh.MnlOQt 1 2ut.tl.~·3S82evci14• Harbor & Baker, C.M. ....C. THIJOISOUICI Oi)en34hru daf Net M/f' Pm( lo ahr 2R1 um. 6'1·8200 ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• eil0-01'7?1-llAlt:'fJ>lf. (;7 days a week " r So.C11t r11111,over2s ..-nc--... 1 ...... B.t,M1po1ntmentOnly, 89 oraeous &Iris to ,...""" _.,_ Daill> to suite execul ve e-mper you. Jacuul, ~1 '200191e.2077 llC 1 t OHlct olflces with ucretarfal 0,f • 1ultr IOOI $C1Hll(J$ SaW'la. Locals as well u Shire llkt MW Santa 1'n•1 •• 11ttVict..1. ~Ible llvln& ....................... ! --""" tou r I 1 ta . 8 a n k A.CCOUKTS PAYAILIQ.HIC Rapidly growing In· ternallonal Company seek.s enthusl•sUc self· starting Individual for poelllon In our A/P dept. Good typing " 10 k~y capabilities required. A/P e•peritnce help(ul. Xlnt opportunlly for ad· vancement. Outstanding C'Ompensttlon It btneflts In 1 pleuanl workln1 tnvlrocunenl. Contact: { { ) ) WANTED ( (--~(05~--) ) ·Newspaper Carriers tor routes in Huntington Beach, Fo.untain Valley & Newport Beach CALL CIRCULATION home . rull kllc her ._ S..:t A II am. \iOOO location In lilllY I aMNIOs Amtrlcard, Mu ter prhlltlts. Male. pro ;::..~ n. va I · Camtty VllJaae. 8ro1&1r Smlt•fln_tM.mlddle oC I NWftU Oiar11, Ameriun Ex· ffMional. nOft·ltnOlctr CallWm.F.Cot. f7Ml12 Balboa. 41 rra umt l Cymbel -Enipt -preu, Dlntra all Pat MU~1 AMF' Sdtn· Ufic Drilun1 IU., tlOl l Mite.MU So , lrvllle SST·•t • Good Eanincp Super Trips • &reatPrilh • , Q~PART~~NT ......... &•2-4321 l • mo lecl. atllltitt far11Drtlillor•UO. IM St. c.M. locatloft. Good lute., Wellll -Excise welcome. 714/.U.MU. ~~wk--!!! ~ ..,.. 161 room iitftces. A/C GnM foal tramc uchn CEREAL Z112Hlrtlor Bl. CM M N!'P4,..,.... to tlu tC.-lealtJ lllllllohirU. uui. i.d: =-~.1' Por 111· ::,:: ~:11* •P ...., _. ..w.a •t 1 • •IJllff ,.,...., tftllll 111...,,.... AntLn.CiU lla.nka erlSle _. ::Ii n•••'* '""·~•t'• 'hntetDdaJ'ulU1lftecl ' !::..:111 •••ltitt · ... .,,,,-"q, Pea mft PAVIU<ffllALTOI -~·1 Ht mt tl•IRM ii 1U fer''• '"t hJI. 8iit •TIMM '· WlllM .... T --mM -~ ........ ---------i EOE M/F • • -. • 1 ' f • Ofanot COllt DAILY PILOT/Thutlday, Mll'Ch 11, 1982 DI ............... ,.................. ........ ... • ........................ ,............. • ................................................................. c;.::;·i).::i.ii.dbi·;.:d;d ...................... , .. .... IAMCmY&lt • HOWIXllPlJl/coot( Wee 06ttewQpric.I Oakof· Tc.. aood llome. Ihle Hammoad or11n1 mdl Oil ~Utr "Staodla" If' 1Z vw Rai.blt N11 t ilk .., ~...... .,... maa drirt. ,... ~-tlpenfktd t 0. HM.t.f!ll· lmpln •lctalld'" Ndt love, !VerJ SuacliY.-t•m· aieuoa l /H 1Pll. Coll• Wkndl. IO-OI03 ~.-.~ :lllQO , -"""'"°"· Lln·l•..i. '·" o14tr . Allllttt•.w nc. 11rivel tU!r, •· a.11.tl, t yn , xlat $WU.mt Ai-., w/IMJie •J>af, At 11:, $2HO. Eve ' rltH, lhl~. 1100 ~ llp.Olij,A .. 1),.. .. • .,...._ Nwpt ktl l'll'ltr mlftded wiocnu *-'· 111111. Oall Uine .... !P_m, Oruu Coaat M111 Cornm. Center --Ma~whetll ' tlrtt• tor for oor(.'ar' TMl Jm lemcl area. llt f1 rtll. Top IOt' rtlall. taltl • 111ll· tlodl, •· Old pint e• • 11 IOIO ~. hirvtew •Ari· IN P~ Ave,. Min. bid ~ # t 3672 Del Yn Piclfup $JOO J0HMS0M & SO" W:ml.l rAli=-ff1Tr. ...,., ... ,.. ( .. lam tJrt menapr ~IUon. Jelly cabtnet, MOO. Coun· ,. •.Zt lllaoi. C.O.la Meta. Ad· l ·SSU ~ 830 ~ .. &-i-. · n.1.:. lllatt bave lood ttllll try llore couattr 1• ', ....................... mr..AoG '"" lo bu.yttra. • •SMt Liie+ Mtrc.ry ·"" ~9'• ~ ........ .._..,. Salarv + tllOO. Oak roltt .... detk, * *J.!UY * Se 11 e r R es'"' r v 1 . .,,...,...... "19 DowMuler •.fully -VW-'"'"IJ-,-• ..-..-f "fwlu a12J1 Hirb0r Blvd 'DIMal AN,, on.. n p. ,,... rW =~.;;'i; aad 'com· $1*. Ou r~llop file * tkm/l.nfo " 12 > ro11 n'dTrlp t o '°:ldfd w/farrley J ib, .... ll111 ·-"' v CMta M~a 5405630 • IOA "*' 4 fy wk. 'a OU fiV o ll K . PUl' benefit• Ont tablnet, 14 dwrt, t lSOO. Good Furniture • ~ AU1trali1, JS'.' dlacou11t. Bim Mar 1uto pilot. Xlnt rtbU ~MtL _ ~nuum plict• ~_,c~o rt le acll. !toeomy veh icle re quaHtled people nee~ Bo ok c11e , French Applltncn-OR I wlll Call rhardl80·2751 rond. Owner pYrchued ~ &!!II qUlrtd ~Ps>ly . Apropot, 29 walnut, all &lt11 doort, aell orSELLfor You -a•&n~s ComP11ltr TRS<IO level new boat. tM,000. 1714) AlllolferW. ~rrn:~~~-~i~~ __ 2 75 hlhlOn l1le .. N. 8. or 9' tall, 12700. Hn 1·5. MASTllS AUCTION _,... ' .~b one. tK RAM, w /basic 628-&dl, <7t4 > 498·6246 ••••••••••••••• •••• •••• bl &oOd condition rail: ·772 uLU*"'~llM621 biciiueewe nt av n11• OOW"le t me1$$00. m41499·•7sc~ .. --IMPORTANT SttU1f1rst' 0..UI U.AI. SIC'Y ·2'.U f'RF.NCH DAYBED ~-..______ driveway 11Je In Hunte 12 fl\ttrprise 13 6 Racing • NOTICE TO AlOWT ONICI Sml~ewporf l:tr law Wlth llltriute INHI de· 4W) aot11 New ... Lov-Bdl. On Crater Circle. cqlil>Ped w/splnnalter' READE.RS AND r.iiii1C1li'ecfplialut firm d tair u 0 r, I SaJft · 50 1932 eaeall SU. Sleepers, Sll/&n on · Buacbud Mllul••-lflr.·Xlnt ~ond. Mahog ADVERTlSt:RS ~pratdeuOfttinutt .. ,..,.. peraan for c vi .._" .... ,.... · .!!!'· FACJ'OflY957·57 1111• 3715 w-... IOlt ply S800 I bst orr · The price or items lo sJ'ow. Now need ta• lltlcatlon. Gentrolla n encb loveat1t, MSO. KING INNitRSPRING ..,..ISFAMILY ....................... 113/441·•955 v 1. advertised by vohacft ptl1tnced ptl'tOft for If· aalary. full beneflll. C.11 ut about the out· Victorian pl tilt 1t1nd, E.XTRA FIRM mattreti WANTED • Boo ll e y Sho" k ( End ea v 0 r 1 dellert In the veh icle cowu lrol ' Dent I ?a.UICI standlnf u r eer op· n rble . 963·1932 Mt t UHd orth GAIAf H 8o1rd In &ood rood. • ' I Ill d d ti 1 g IN. b~ntopportunt -=-aa=""'AL--SIC--'Y--~i f.0 r t un t let 11 a n »111. Gothir.style over s.U> ~:~. k 48del. Never ~\·1 c5:~ ~I -.<'a11::! ~· Ulna. Ns.9901 ~l~e~g~a.ss 11\0/0~· t~ ~o~~~,; d~sv':o11 I~ :st for the rwt In Newr:rt Center real DIW'•rre Afeyt. Train. mantle W/3 mirrors. ust<I queen u , worth Verdt) CM. Lwn mwrs. Offke,. ...... ' Marinebea . &Hp rlude any appllr1blc ..1111811.iit .... llhd vldual. Call : 1122. ttta e lltl11tion fir~ ~fthw ~o~~ P~l!~':~~ . 96.l.1132 ~Wl~Y;:~~el. din Id. car sut, baby ..,,_., IOIS Jo!Noof OB. tea~ tr&i:is. }~· ,,~c.~, rt~=~!~~~ l'o~t .. "'''" >W OJ.Ml ---------i nu da very ea per em"""yment. Plal!orm R()(ktr, ~ Bed, Y • • rum. dra~s, men sult.s, ••••••••••••••••••••••• radio~.: ull rover "' equip. , e Wlft~~ '--al/Exe<. Sec'v. Xlnt ...., ••R b I •· t Call u ..... 213 627 1214 or 1ee for lltr pollution con Dental RD A 2 yrs exp ._ I # & Drafting Table, Love v • • r a "' pa n 5 • C:Wnce fitrnlture for sale ,~ . ' lrOI device certlricuUons lJSF.DCA RUC KS !'fq'd, bici office order: ~\~~ftia~~tafh~n:sl __ __.983-""""""45_,l .... 8 ___ 1 Seat. D.R. Table. De11k. MUST SILL books, toys, paint, trikes at discount p rl cu. 714·847~11 or dealer documentary COME IN OH ~",'e'neetltltcs,e 1 p 1 r·a!t1a .. ye ~Sal~:!lJ!!!D~.J!MO~·-tHO!!@![l. __ j---------! Chi.irera.: .. .!-87138mp Table & Mahoaany <fouT>le bed 'many misc. 641-0783. Omega 14, sails. klr•}!~· preparation rharaes un CALL 1-'0H .. b ' • ..!: tm ,,,_. with mattreaa. Moon Sat. only. Collection Hon1e /Orrire roll top needs some wor _..,., less otherwise sper lf1l'd Fllf ~PP-AISAL Oriented.M6.Jtll LMA&.SICllTAIY SAUS ...._Slaow/s.M shaped mirror on head· Dolls. HO Train, Toys, deskl S2SO. very good. 831·3549. __ b theadvertiser COrm1c-r Oclnlo DIMTAL AS$fST. NeWport-Beacli-Dover lMlltY>TATE Toaayl lirouih M1r 14th. board. Collectables. eoo1 Bane ~c ous 968·7260. lcNlh. SI'-/ CHIYIOUT LFNYEWOUPO. RT BEACH area Attorney, needs OPENINCS f}"_:eona~!f'n~srlonM alHl.u!'0t5· SSOOOBO 631·779htt 6 Clrcle, H.B. 1198-~. Sat ,..a.. - 1017 "--...&.-.,.. 9070 ·~~f1 9520 111211 B~ACJt BLVD [4al SecC°dlD' Some For P/T ruder.ad Ul .. vcr ....-.. Carai&e saJe Fri and ..,. _.. ~ llUNTINGTONRF.ACH • Are an experienced eap. re9uired. Good representatives for in· FWy and Beach Blvd, Pt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• dent.al ualstanl. typist using dlctaphone side sales position. App· KB t IUY FURMITUll 966 ost Rd, Costa Meu, M & F rockatiels w t lrg loot sip for r... MODB. "A "a! 147-6017 or •Aneaaer to work in a eq~pmenl needed. SIH ly In person · Pe n· .... me" 1010 ~ 957·8133 mlsrltems cage & masc. Allergic' Prl!'fll!loe.neKtloRusty Shay repITcas; pickups _S49·JlJl rut-pared progressive not required. Salary nysaver, 166() Placenti11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Yu.st sell butcher block onn 1060 . 91i'·S303~ Pelican. 71!-~4il!_ & roupe 5 4 to l'hOO~e clfice. commensurate with ex· Ave .. C.M. HARBOR AREA look dinette w/r hrs $65 ........................ &Mys ·Small Dutch. On· Lido Slip ror so·+ Power from I 10067681 tStk Alltoa, IMportH •Have a friel\dly outgo-perimce. i--------•I APPUANCESE~VICE Pine bunkbeds w/mall. Gr ay t hor oug h b r ed ly & left. $5.00 from Cub Boat. Sl0.00 per ft PP. A.ml) Pnres s tarting ••••••••••••••••••••••• inApersMaUty &t2·14C8. Saleslady, lighting fix-We~ used apphances & chest 2 mos. old $195. mare. 16.t, gentle & pre-Scout Mike 675·!!074 or f>iS.8U74or 527 7408 ut Gt.rd 970 I ~t~.e a mature at Male or female ~or r~st ture showroom, 40 hrs. W~sellrecond .. guar Oak g0ss1p bench $50. tt 63S-S291 527.7Q Ne-wp;,;-l sland. pvt OMLY$9,995! ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Rave good ver bal foods .. The Rot1sser1 e, C.M. No exp. ner all21iances. 549·3077 Aotq. table .w/pop·up Jtwttry 1070 "-ot&n-1090 ooi:k,easyacces1> New & Uset.1. Fore1jln &- . 2&0Bnstol,C.M. u a ...... 1 ·-I ... Ct S leaf $100. M1sr. Items. • .... .,.... 675 1906 DomesllC' CarSale~man skills, -=-"""=-="""'--=------1 IUY "'.-.-... An ..,.,.. ...,.,., •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• --•Ananon·smolt.er. Les 957-8133 .....,.......,, ---adies' hearl·s haped BeautiUul ouk upright wilh yearsofopcrienct• W Id · M•l,ltMM f'll(S 6' Gotham Pool Table. -id "And diaroond nn°, Evere·lt ~ano ~/"'arv :.>ft isailboat shp avail. will t'Ome to )Our home • 0 u e n J 0 Y 1 Corporal Executive .ML WASHER . DRYER lik 11 k & 11"' .,. di d 0 2$ ct .. • Newport Beach. Get the most for your challengin& career. needs hefr in wholesale. •-Ling ror ex-lienred DISHW~HER e new wtwa rac center amon · J!!B....POOt torr 645-5798 _7_14-645·7100 trade & 0 e1 the h('st Pleuerall644-0595. b · I.AIU& "' custom rove r SI.SO w/(4).5 rt diamonds ---.. m.11 dis ribuhon USI· saleslady. Coif shop ~each. 646·58tll l.ar~ me tal desk for of· Cost $1500. Sell $800 Sdvertone 1 keyboard or Newport Beach i.hore pnl'e on your t'ar Small o..tal Assis._. ness. Personal interview saJes & some knowledge Oas stove, Sears 30" drop r1 ce or ho me S3 5. firm. 548...alO, 548·2561 gan, good rond, $350. mooring, with 9' Skiff. r~ ~1164~ filt.'9 Exper. with X·Ray lir. -=~· 7:..:.14:..:.1.::.:964:...:...=·5059=---1 ol golf. Salary t rom m In. Avocado. $!50. 646-11239. .fil!l.!!4 Balboa Penan_ 7.~H440 Not a replicar. Orig .ua .... ROftlto 9705 Part lime, full time if Med' I Newport Beach golf u7267 Diamond , 1.75 ct .. 1958PackardHawk DIS _.... necessary. Carma n ica course. Contact. J ohn --""~·~4 Sofa S225, brand new Emerald rut. E VSI. Hammond organ, mdl BOAT SLIPS AVAIL tress sale S2l,500IOBO ••••••••••••••••••••••• 661.2290 IKlioffkt ~11J1t..t U!onard Wash. Frigidr lg tub, Teakwood wall unH $75 USGSI a p praised AlOO. wf~li~:f~ Al Nwpt Beh 20', 25', 26', Sincere anq only AlfatGOO t\llJ time, sa ary open. 751·4653 Whrlpl dryer. S150ea. with matching set . of $34,000; need rash. aurtJon 3114 I osta l l'. 33'. 34'. 40', SO'. 67' 857·~-veoc.Con•enion? Dental/Secy Are you Send resume to P.O. Box ---:..:.;..~=----Freezer. Colds pot. 20d, drawel'? S40 matching $13,900. Oya 642 5640 , Mesa Comm Center 642 ~. 9.5p~ All parts to <·unH·r t 101 searching for a pro· 2932, Mission Viejo, Ca. SALESPERSON-FIT .548.7510. lingerie chest $40 : evea/wltnds. 642 6421. Ul45 Park Ave Mm bid 'al Flreb1rdl clean, ong 1600 to \'l•lol·c i·xr gressive, quality ofr _,91211111=.:;.;l ____ Marine hardware exp. -rarpet misc items 1!!71!'ash lnfo642·S583 Huntington Harbour Hay ownr, 6 cy, OH. Cam, $ 1400 97 !1 ZNI! ... t · -. ~f. N t Brh. 645-1713 RE FRIGERATOR 842-4US3afier 6 PM 4 0 C o I o m b t a n . --& Racquet Club l:loat rare ti~. 536-8079 piston&. Wno:re your ou going MODELS . Interview Late tmdel clean auto -----EMERAl.OS Yo ur Ellpey Piaoo. t Jr old Slips available Call ~ ~n~r~111 0r\\kn1b petsonaUI)' & dental U · Wednesday. March 17, SALES -PITI• defl"061 l.SS.893·ooGo BRASS CHEST 3·dwr choice $20 per stone Showroom con Cost 846·7766, 846 7767 . '31 Chevy 4 dr. xlnt ong IMW 9712 pertise • 0 handlin~ 6:00PM.3rd rtoor at Mature womh needed --brassrlad r hest. Best of· 64G-8688 ~__cnake<l!r ~36 f493 213i592·1JS9 l'Olld S2950firm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• telephone, appoinlmen Tiffany's. N.B. al Pbotomat. Flexibility ~S.:hebor tS9Sh -.. ,Dearyne. r.wograks1 fer.2Q·ll275 aft 6P_M 1010 ~Goods 1094 ,...poriaffoft 642-0452 scheduling & pa tient a must. Call Cindy _, , ~T-J ·- contact is appreciated & ~DeLS g_ood. 548-4485 5 pr. mple bdrm set. $500. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '55 whl Conv T-81rd. blk rewarded. We are a &dy b1.1klers. athletes 499•3650 G -R--,-0 G (! Mple dining set w 16 LOSING LEA.ca;, q u11· Discount sporting goods ~. S./ top. Sl 3,500 675 1300. highly motivated, eu -or surfers wanted by Secretary. lnt'I t rading ,as fbge d ven. 113. · chrs S16S. & misc. Sun· tmgbusiness selhngout Top names ; m any llei.t 9120 ~I in.gteam whois halpy to amateur pboto~rapher co .. Irvine. Mm. 3 )'.rs. er\ r3f0 .~ew,~t1 1 m1 days , M F . Eves . l\LL supplies and fix· s pecials. 0 .C Swap ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 WMelDrh,~s 9550 oll er top salary xlnt for physique posing. NO e~p .. accurate typist . ~~ftd:r ·s 1 iquadat\o~ 642_·~79-t~es including. , ~-~ C72. S_/S_. Tent Trailer. sips 6. ••••••••••••••••••••••• benefits meld medical commercial use. tnex. diet .. some TLX exp. .,2$ ea. Costa Mesa. 1 S:. 9C ........... •-..a......--Display hr~es. 8 wa1l1ng Infinity Surfboard. 7 · S250. a___ ............. ,, insurance to a dedic1ted 1 p'd ok. 12().80/day. Tom Fu ll t ame. 8:30·4 .40 ~2937 SET;-~181 room c ~ars. eauty dean. llght blueiorange 548-8063 1979 CJ~J~eep orr road professional. $1 600 if·1 (213>317·2131. SlOOOJ~t.,·~0rma ~~'-'-------Salon hairdryers and 644-6178 CUSTOM BUILT ~ 000 qualified . Newpo rt ,,_..,,,, Refng FF. iremaker,1 Medit. style dining set. hydraulic chairs. mir · · llres I owner 39, mt Beach. 631·2490 ....... ~Mow xlnt S2SO. Stove Ht·low trestle t.able w/leaf ~ 4 rors,shelves and plants. TV, Rocio, Mu~:~foc:P~:'e~~te. ~649-2907 Dental Assist a nt -lmmed1ate~nings 53~~llt~1~ oven. clean. xlnt. Sl65. hi-back carved chairs. Also.n:iake-up.shampoo tlA,Shno 1091 1700 Mi range Cost rucb 9560 registered.Are you look· Mu~,~~'Wea~P$~ols work for wholesale 548.44115 $425 or bes•t offer a11dha1r produrlS. ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• $18 000 Bargai n al ••••••••••••••••••••••• ingforrewardingcareer j lHIJOISOUICE furniture salesman Admiral upnght freezer. 645-0039,~l-1066 ;f~!l/t,1~~ BEAUTIFUL 25" RCA ll2.0oo67S.1358 •"-ctH.-.'ll opportunities with ex· 8fJH1777 11AM-7PM ~ xlnt cond. 1200. Lgewalnut dm. table --roloSr ,!Y ..taled. 21.Yr wrn· ~____. 11a.-~ 9 1 .. 0 at.n WV '5dum• rellenl potential for I 646-3349 L 11 d i e s . h a v e a ty. 1 .... .., ee e 1very ._..._ -. "" t; ~Yo b . < 8 aj-r · 1 personal growth & re· Br Appointment Only SECUT Aly ~/T & 8 ch11rs, $200 N A U G HT y L A Dy __!Y.lohn 's 646-1786 ••••••••••••••••• • ••• •• Pr1' "e. "'"'98. GM r e. cognition. We seek your • Heavy ·phones & Kenmore stove. dean, 64Z·3Ul8 Home Party. Lingerie, GE TV 21" blk & '81 Puch, blue, xlnt ' llV\I rarin1 chairs Ide ex· MUISllY telephone sales, typing works well, Sl.50 Dinette Solabed, blue noral, good lot.ions, potions and lots whi~~/stand. $100 or cond. $395. bale:S500. sale price is pertise to compliment SPICIAUST 60 wpm (accurate>. set .64l·8378 cond. $75. Loveseat, roore fun. Ca ll Alison beslofrer.6•2'-2377 675-3479 OHlY $5591 our highly skilled team. Greenhouse usistant s bort han d or di c · Sears '81 sis Ref. Al md. gotd,F5. ~6200 968·0178. Sales Reps Purh M ax.i mo ped . HOW.AIR C~noltt ~~:~e :t'.eaes::et11!~i ~~ti:~ ~!';:fe";: ~~ehe~p~~rl~g~0i: $S25, 115 rnge ·S2J5. dryr 10'elt drwrs s.'IS.5'Sofa· needed "'~t: ... ~·F';!~::O~Xs~~~r yeltow.tooksnew s.165. N~~'A~a~~~CH bene fit pack a g e . 111CorooadelMar.Must week . Nw pl Brh 7S.646-2S90. aold/wht S75. 2 d rwrCompute r C RT camera & Panasoni<' -~6278 N e w Port Be a r h have exper,. wudo~lling 58&-4179. lkydft I020 eskh S25 lbo2 I s,tud i&o TS6e:,,min1oa1l~1 AMDDSd512tho, CR 4400 U port re· Purh Malll, 2 spd. xlnt CJH U .S_l_"Ad 631·2490. with plants inrl mg a •••••••••••••••••• ••••• cour es w s ers ..... J ere · corder + extras. $5000 cond, must see to ap· "78 Ford ouner utr . .,., knowled ge of soils, SECRETAIY Schwinn Varsity 10.Spd romer tbl SIOO. Refng HB.962-6022 1?13>592·1022 2..,rel.'iale,$475 640·6851 & ladder rack, 40K mt DanlST fertilizers. test control & National company needs red SIOO. 080. Call. aft. $75. Twn mattress set Swl;mlng Pool. 20· rnd, Large portable Color TV '7SGITANE-ORANGE ~~04_64 wanted. busy practice, propaaatlon. call: Alex. expe?rienred secretary 4 PM. 76CH050 ~·0305 br•ncJ new tnever used>. 19inch Quaser. GOOOCONO. 1250 . '!Kl Datsun PU. AC. lo mt. Newport Bearb Area. Moo-Fri. 8 :30AM-4PM to w ork In a o n e 25 .. 10 spd Motobecane RATIAN Dining Set. ta· pump & ntte.r system. 110 __ 548-4!38 557~ xJntcond ~ ~-5733 Excellent pay with onlr.873-22168. serreury office In Hunt· "Mirage", new rond, ble & 4 s wivel chairs Needs new liner. With 1980 PUCH -,;;,ped fa. aft6PM __ benefits.&46--4868 NW'll.ng ~onex~~f!tG~e~rl. eqwpped,$165.675-5194 .Cost 1100.548-5048 slide.$250.557-0338 -INh&MariM rellent cond. '37!». call '78 Datsun, s b. 18K LUii Hours 8-4:30, 5 days a 3 Wheel biryrltt, used Oak dlnmg rm table, 2 5 TIHanys (pvt r lubl-~..... Palriria714~0838 miles. ong. tires. air. DISHWASHll/ tn week.C.11893-2032. twice, orig price S22S, leafs. 6 chrs & buffet backga mmon tables. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '"""Vespa~-to-r :;--cooter . .M!!:eo~ 125.646·2389 DIET AIY All> Conv. Hosp. N.ewport sell 125. 545-3479 ~7-1568 chn. dire cups & chips GeMnlt 90 I 0 ,_, .. .., ,, Rateigl\Kilb Hosp1t.al in Beach. Pos. attitude & ~ P /T. -for sale. Call aft 2pm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 200eng with extras 1976 F-100, 61.000 ma, an N~rt Beach has an s milea needed. Xlnt Exec-sec -With strong Men's tO sP.<tMotobe.cane Wal fimshed,/iame tble & 675-6000 9'SevylorPVCraft 1200714·847·3870 clds air. s hell, tape. immediate orning for benefits. call: 642·8044 typing, SH skills needed louring bike. xlnt cond. 4. black a ug ah yd e . I w sat la & pump. $12$ radio. CB Cobra. $3495 . d' 'd t .. arternoons. Interesting 150. 832-4224 I chairs 1~. S49·0022 Sale. 3 totl~ts. 4 round 493--0987 Moliorcydtt/ <f92,5466or7t6-7186, Joe an 10 1v1 ua o wor .. NW'ling -d bathroom sinks wt mar· --Scoot.I 1 9 150 --Ftr. relief shift. Hours worlt, xlnl Nwpt Center EX ERCY. CLE 8 1KE 1 -"• t<apt bed1 redar 5 wrs~ .. ,_~·I 8' •-or 12· slid· 14 ~ lo_. -9570 ~udlle~a~fshw~:hT:,'°.; IWR.JLl ~ti P on·s~44;{ pre . <MtWl, Uke new $75 hr. sso. Di~ett~. 6 ~g g ~s door Jenny very g cond. S250 '66 Suzuki 150, Nds wk. ~··•••••••••••••.,~··••• D . ...Hrf' AIDE l N Oki r I S200 Wooa di t .. Ute' ex "' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' Ex-r all sbif\5. Conv am&44 536-2684 ~hrss. 17• Sofabe'd Un<l rnb. 1 surfboard 673-1950 SIOO/O B O 10151 77 Ford E~. window assisting rook. Com-,... SENIOR CITI ZENS • ~ · .,....., I t ~ny k Hos p. Nwpt Br h. . Ma.&...Mahrial11025 yellow piaid S95 494-.-.. -• Meredith,HB.962·6022 van, ow m1 es. m .. ==~1;>:1:'~ifr bC:c't ~~~· r:::.1~11~~din~~ P~f-Tsl~~·e'~ yocu ;~~ ... :':':!............... ·7341 · Orig. J ~panese wood s....:. tn•c~20 '81 KL2SO Kawasaki, 1500 ~';uf i S4 200 · Ca 11 ground. For interview program .. call642·8044 {,~4)~. MOW25•/FT. New6prCharttonsofa.ll blork pn~~ ....................... , ml,newcond. S800firm. '"2COIV"ll call: Barbara Duran, Service Station Allen· Redwood 2X6 &erkang gn!ens, retail 11800, sell · --Marine Electrician .::63::.:.l...o-4794=.::.._____ v "'Dl 714 /645-5 7 07. EOE M/.F. OfACI MAM.AaH/ dant-J.llP M Apply 4-20' loog. also redw~ Simor trade for play~n ~iling fan·rasabella, 52 Oesign/1natall1repa1r . '78 Honda 7so..F. 4 10 1 WIOdow van. romp etely fast Food Cle rk at ACCOUNT AMT Shell Sta lion.' 17th & fencing. ~owest pnre set. 661-7341 111! Ught inrl'd was 1240, I. work 549·2520 Keriter bdr, 8.000 orig ~. rustoi;.~ts. ask· Orange County's most Excellent career .OP· Irvine NB. ll ua.r J 1 m or Ken King Site Bed, w. Sim· will. take $100 Cash . .__..._ Mn. miles. tclnt rond. S2.000 · 54 · unique hot dog stand. portwiil,1 ror the Rl,hl anytime, 775·1491. irons custom made mat· 552·0796 -.. or trade for 1968·72 El Alfol W.t.d 9 5'0 Part·t ime nights & Person m aProiress1ve SBVICESTATIOH Glass building bricks. tress very clean SIOO.SACRI FICE·Perrert ~,..... 9030 Camino SS. 4 speed ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.645-4007 ~~d!r~6°ouJJ ~ss~~~ A""'d•t S4.00ea. 645-m r on d . Nor 1 take ~~·E:i~•r•u•;;;·:;·;~;· S47-184S WIMHD YOUR Fast growing company stron( Arrtg. & Ad· Pttime eves. 4pm Lo 548-8063 Twin fl o atat ion stoneware (Desert overcost 75HP S7"9.99 i8 HONDOMATIC. GOODUSB>Cil! needs cle.rk typist/ re· mlniatrative s k ills 9pm.32-3Shrweek. Must Cott 1035 wat.erbed, bkt> new. was Flowers) Coordinated 4.S HP $599 95 2HP Cl?trry rond. Only 700 Anythingronsidered, ceptionast. Ca ll Jay: Pleasa nt worka'ng en· beexpr'd67.~227M6area $800. se lli n g $300. serv f~r 8. Dishes. ruci.99.&more 673-1434 miles. 5/ofr 759·1877 -~rul980, ' 754-al83. ,,.. •••••• •••• • •• • • • • • • • • • • 1147 ~ c er a m 1 r fl a l w a r e , -= vironment. Send resume Persians! 2 adult fem. sso · glassware & serving loGh, Power 9040 78 Yamaha 500, perferl FOODsa"ICI t o : P e rforma n ce S~ltcei•&... & S75. Per sona lity Chest or drawers. din . 640-7891 cond .. must sell. S950. " Sail"raft Corp. 785 W. ...., b . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-1052aft5PM HllP ' J.M CA 111K• Drhtr +mate, $150. 546·9965 rm/game ta le w. 4 28' Cns·Cran . Express. &Jbstitute-100d service 17th Sl., llF. 1... • • F TIME. Must have n-. 10 .. 0 chairs, bumper pool ta· MUSTSB.L !966. Clean • F ast ! '79 K.X 250, Xlnl cond .. , ..... , ----'ed b ff t 9212'7 good driving record ""-r "" ble& lam . 759.0754 Beaulllul white wedding N SI ll ' xt ldtn d '"'" p •ic= y un . . 646-8llMI It.for Burk ••••••••••••••••••••••• dress. never used. ewport ip, as mg ramp;.. ras. s r n. . ~on Beech City School P a r t t i m e , u . KEESHOND Pups. AKC. King Siu H20 Bedl Ugbt· Unaltered. Siu 5. $180. Sl0.500. Trades, Finanr· [!SO/vBO. 833-0983. I #1 liit Or_,. C....., DiStrict. S4.Z4 per hour. Ware bousema n. non-Oiamp sire. M/F. Pet & ed book rase headooard, •S1110a1ter 6 m. · avail P.P. 673·5200 '74 Ya maha R02SO. Ru ns 292S HarbOr Blvd • Apply 735 14 th Sl .. H.B. srmlttt for small Costa St·'""-n·t ,...... s h ow . P vt p I y . ood b "th Well"'rart 26' Nova of· well SSOO. 1 COSTA MESA 53Ml851 """ """ w ase wi . rup-Raogedy Ann & Andy ' Mesa clothing ro. 20hrs. HIY! 2.13/897·134Saft6pm. boarGI, $400. 7x8 Sofa1 •b . fs hore. twn 188 HP. 631·2126 979-2500 ~:tJ!~~~11ft~~!:i:~: ~m ~9s~~:~~e·t>?w~ &w~!i'd ~t•Ue to ~~e:-8~o::v~ '::o':: ~ e!r'Be'.~s.':Mi.ulon, ~;~·~~~i~ H~: ~=~i~~'t:ai~r~~~k~~t~i ~=r.~:~o WE PAY perienre nee. Ellimal· .JAl(-4.PJL _ h *Cl\ 00 So h ta S30/ofr 8 h bill bl 42" factory fighting rhrs. 752-HOOX2848/5S2·8569 11\C helpful. Min 8 years earn as muc as _,, a me s o . . utc er ta e. ~ bimlni. rovers, stereo 8 TOP DOLLAR . ll.231 Yt week? Do you like drive-t9'7-liMI md, SlSO •. 4 entry ladder Ready to go! New 2 chan-lrk. trim tabs. Im mar Motor Ho.1, s.M/ 1fi~~~~t. Foun~'!':: PAITTitiiet in ~vies, pirnirs. Pi;zu 2Yellow Labrador Rtvrs, back rhaar-5, 1200. Engl. nel radio-controlled 33" rood. Sl l.90010 80. ..../Sfonltt f 160 FOR USED CARS Valley. 6·9pm. riP&Ddmg youth parties, beach pa:'1le.s• 9 wits. shots . AKC oak buffet. $400. Xlnt. Coast Guard MODEL Dl·822tor839·7203 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ALANMAaMOM 557·3380,aakforMarlt counseling firm has pl115many otherthings . champ lines. $250/ofr. N.8 . 2 13 ·271 ·3939 • BOAT. Must see to ap. R e nl · 22 · 1 u x . ,-....C~SUl~U FIYJioo. • openlnp for S:5 sh1rp 'lbenyouwouJdprobaby t96-04.'i8 714-700.3667 prec.$!!00.$8SO.S51·3360 SIAIAY _,_...__,st-6. self· _..""' -"-i'"' t I probably enjoy working ---1978221\~n-frond Low "'"'""'"'"""' ,.., Z41>Har r Blv Part or r J time . Open ~tfv:: ~':ielif!u: forus. Fantastic German Shep. 3pr.wbite Haitiancotton S tem p Col lect ions hours.· co mplet ely cont. 1295/wll + IO<tmi. COSTA MESA 22hrs. Newport Grinder 1~13 yr olds. Call 2·5pm. QUAIJFlCA'flONS: P14JS. AKC, see parents. sofa. Best offer Call evaluated. Reu. fees. eq\Ap'd, including S3SO IM0-8S85. Sff.4100 Ut.1457 &t2·8881 .__... ...... A .. , t 0ver l2yearsorai e. Xfnt tempera ment. 49'7·3&58. Dave 894·9507 F.eztUft trlr bitch. Ask· RENT 26 n motor home. --i.u t. ...... s .. or d B I s12• s2c:o WE IUY General Office: Ca reer Andrea. 2. Nu~ honest an e· ~ ~-~ ea· MOVIMG SALE SrmU camper shell SJS. · 14 OOOSS2·t43'1 Slps 8. full,y loaded ~rtunity ror an in· r.::.ic i rter school and Exceptlonal cus tom wort bench SSO, 2 long 1981 Seaswirl 15~·. open 645-8616 CLE.AH CARS dividual with good ac-DOBERMAN PUPS rum. Sora &i loveseat cablnet.s ea. 556·0998 bow. EZ loader t rlr . T,..,... Trfttl 9170 TIUCICS counting ~~ltgro;ndf & ~8t19IST Sal"f=~lf:TODAY ! AKC, 8 w~blaclt/rust, $!!00, 2 et.egeres $65/ea, King size bed good cond . NS.3360 •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• AND typindg a e s'a·lncreeexr Good~-rson•Ut:v 537·5831or531·S2.57 .,,,....,,... S . rorrebel tal~ble SlOtobl' w/frame ind head · 23'Terry,seltront .. slps wor proc · .,.""""" ,..... • 1 · 8AMlolOPM ..,..._,. mate ng 1 rery . board. JUO. black and 6 xtntcond 1 $3800. perience. Will consider FToat ofc appe1ranre. S Yorkshire Terrier Pup· ~10, desli $210, vanous whltl' TV $35. misc ·79 21i,;n BAY LIN ER 642.IB · c ean, · trainin& penon with re-9001111. Eltttutive Row, py, Male, AKC Champ rtems SSZ..6210 "Victoria". Fly bridge, quired a ll.ills. Non· JIOl lfacArthur, Ste 211 lines hots S400S46-3624 · · ~9970 VHF radio, bait tank. i i Yellowstone trailer, s mo ker preferred . N.B.7S2-7170 s ' Like new comer !rour., UttonRoyalTypewriter depth finder,outriggers, 2Sl\ .. sleeps4,fullyself· S1lary romensurate RECEPTIONIST For T..._. ~ Corgeous rem. Hus ky ~~ red, wht Sb u ~ · 35 amp. gen .. AM/FM 8 contained, great condl· with e xpe r ien ce. -Leam-aslt:lllancfgitex· pup, pure bred, wt o UU13ler'5 +covers. l8S. · 675-4.505 trackatereowlthtrailer. tion.&U-5157 Be ne fits. App ly in Baytront Yacht Sales perience In the Army papen,ballditmasll.S&S TwnbedS30.2 goldvinyl · Call 646-:2843. Will sell ..=::.::..:=.;==-----...,, w l"' .. St <H ee Weekends only. Reserve. After trelning .Jf ,.,.Sl"" n 4 win& chairs $35 ea. MOVING SALE! misc ,Jloa liltlloSenlq,P.ts ~-Me,.·. M ode i T y pi'nr requi r e d . serveoneweeltend eada oruo er.--"" · · 96.U3'18 hlehold flaS':~:ls ai bal11tre"' n. &Acctuerlet 9400 Builder 11:&:· For m.1'711 lll>nth ph• two weeks 5 c.ocker puppies M/F, 6 Girls' 9 pc Dreu l de· otbttltema. .. ................... .. appt. call btwn Re.caarant e.dl year. Earn extra :to:'' color. SIOO/ea. c o r a t o r B R • et • IBM conectlnJ &electric 40' Owens Tahitlao\ live· M. Alk fot D wn. BUI Boys n~eded for ::?.ti P~11~e,,nt 1 $400/080. fM0.8082 aft. ~II black, Ex. cond., aboard sUp avail. Call. ATTMIOM GENERALOFFICE l-=tl «dinner, App()' · ay or 'Spr1nler Spaniel tup· m. . 6"-t m . Between JudyorHervey842-t&44, M6 Admia Allt lo wort la A.T. Leo'1 Rettaurant =°!:'ec~~.8821 ~~ .1Jl:id:.d~r~~:: a>ys dresser, detlt and 5. ttwn .. tAM UPM. OWMmS shelter.'42·2331 71t-1154. s.taAnaHZ=3173 541-'IOIZ chair Sl25, Bentwood Ktomore washer, MS . IMh, W 9060 TONNEA\fOOVER IPR.Al. O.CtJC..M. ......... tocter •• 1J 3S, comb wlJle Sbatio couch w/trundle, ~-.. ••••••••••••••••• F\ta MG'a, 11 .• 81 liilttlype40 m. Jol1uvallfotllnecoobl Dullie PllpPf, m male. rack.. n t landS30,&la11 .Otbermiac.llNOU '79hanoaotKetcb Nt¥erlllfd S'lS CallS. 6 tkcMa prepe. Cal ~ He•Ceco Champ '"~~ow litbl t ixt11re, SU . 2 Color TV'•·*' SlZS. lmmac; yacbt , full~ MlrilGl·771'7 'tve mac ' 1St ·HH A.T. Leo's Senllet quaJ!ty,po. •31$4 Varuum complete szo equ i p d . I ta i ls , MAPHICAITIS _ ..._. moc·s..::.-~A'I: LIVE· he.Y• I041 z Shelve Bar w/faddtd Al!xlllt.14'-15ZS · ~uto/lwrvJ~~P~0f· . Experience r eqafrtd. INS. worll cloae t o ••-••• .. ••• .. • .. ••••• eltlowaavertw/ atoots Gi ltar HO H I FI r:J>, 'el t ro r n 6 TneMUIDI !MIDful. Call SALIS home. Plat)' ol palltnt ftw .. pd..._ e ,.., p . 56Hl54 • R bb. 1 • • e c a COMMRL CHEVROLET ~~' ~ I , '• I• ' " I ' ,, ~ . I S46-1200 Top T.r'5"J!rl\ports Cars. 8q1, Campera. 914 '1, Audi's AlklorU/C MGR MMMAllMO TM~~ti~ HU?mNGTON BEACH Wltm> YOUIUOTIC llllTISH CAIS lftJllii~. ,....,_.. ..... __ ,al, xlnt coal1c:t. COm petltlve old Gl'lll Dane female ..___. T ....... a. IC .. _, ~J.{~·.J!O~-ad it t~~~'· K~u1!atf~~I ---........... PIJ. Call befGi't 3/lt ----· ..... _ a--...,,.., ·-.,,,,-·--.,, 'cwt-· ... ':r.11"'1!rio~:~: :nf*t:.i~~llitN":'ex~~ ,._, t:Ol/11·'· . .._., a tWhl Persian ~~.:.:'~!ditetlr~~ .!f>_ ... 1'9 .=; ~ ~~b >UA ROMEO PARTS ., ~-• Wiit. ?!~rt •ach. ~. 'TJOa ... ut ........ n it to &d hm. w , •Int cond. I pltctt LOftlAU.OOMS ~ lb Nortllllll1 ~ ~.r:;;~~~~ HOOw. Coel\Hw7. 11H*~· farhel. WAITRISSES/WA~R 11M=Hlhft,f MO . .,.._, ~=-~:J •1~ OiC toel Newpon ..._ SHOO Dtonla ~•uh UTE BObY WORK ' ~to WAI oft your lboD!!t.5!tlm MAii iii••• ~ ~for '1~. _: ~ •· old Ille. Sprta1er Waiau~. onl dr l a bit , ~ Je--. a,.... r'~· ria A~ ~·,': ti'f.IHI ant; l pm o; .. - ...... mOf. '"'"'· -~=: ;;:'~i>ia llie-aii -...m -. .-, =:.;,:.'='.11! !!d,1'11\l!H!!t ·.,~,...,.,:,..,, W~MTED! -- C1ll 1~fri.sfM·· :r-.;:~ ti •· ftb. llHt M •Hl, !l!!!*l!l ..... ffH"7, ti •atrl=lltl I ............ ,_. t .P/P.'JWlllMIU or ..... IM/411 ...... 1.-.,...__. -!!!!!-a .,. l'W '11 • ~ ~PwlllaClt. I ._ .... h6·r.trt1. HIM ••--,•orotr. Vohu. C-1 lf u 'MM'lrllll r: "' .,...,., aft , ... for ~n.c. New rau.,1 ... ,, .... , ••toM _.._ Wl ll '11 b ..., TOIMY!!I lijiilflj~ II "' M i .............. ~~:r,~1l•a-.:1t11, 'f a'i'ii"i Yultll~ 'DYW.Tlna.llt.-.. ,--.--.... • WAITllU f•ll u .. ~•lrAllH l lt•••trt r'.a: * _. " . sa.• .,... • •· -· ..._,In&. 1111.; .... ~--~ .. ~,·-•111 1 ..... ," ..... _.., ·--~ ... ,..: .......... ....... .. -~.... .-. ..... -. •. ... . --··~,:,: lt:ri· ll!.• .. ~ .... ... ... '-· . "•'':: .... ~ .... ,._ ..-,... Ltlllllllll!ll!tl~~"I • ' I • l CREVIER BMW ne &citinq '12 IMW's •~Hett! A -rew remaining '81 Models & Demoi; are still 3\'atlable ' We Spe<'lahie to European delivery and fl:iwltss prt'-O"A'lled BMW's Where Customer Serv1l'e Comes Ls t ! Sales·Sef\ 1re·Leasmg ~ W. Isl. Santo /\na (714) SJS-3171 Closed Sund a ' MOOB.S IN STOCK MO~!. C !lull o.r 9oocl ••lnffM of DEM01 ••cl QUA LI T Y l'tl-0~ IMWa • well oa oth r fl•• ~-U L Cal or COIN lt1 TODAY! S~ • SlltVICE l.IA5'HG SADPLEIACK IMW 21402 M.U'MIRITt ,_WY, MISSfOM YIUO Avery Pkwy otr 1·5 131-3MO ~5~949 Open Sundays TM Most &citillCJ Pert Of Yow IMW hrchos. Or LeawCo.ldS. Mclaren IMW!! a.., or Lene ., 0.. fthoM "°"' I 141522·.5~13 OUHGE COUNTY'S • ~T Sales·Serv1ce·Leas1ng ({)f' Q\RVFJ{ IOJ.510CE·IMW '75 BMW 2002. AM /FM. AC, very cleen' '5795 !714) 553-0252 1971UlCSl·A coupe, whiteirecl all op lions . l o w mile ~ EXCELL ENT CON D I T I ON • .M US1 SEE~~! (220XJ( I> SADDUIACI IMW,SUIAIU 111.204 4'5-..ttil . IMWDIMOSAU Bi1S1ving•!'' SAIOUIACI IMW 111·2040 DHttt '73 Ba u n e 3.0. 4·spd, A/C. ~ firm. Oys tl).9517, eves ~.mz_ l .. •• Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, March H. 1982 ' ....... '• ..._.,..,1rtM ...... ..,,rW ..._,l1111rW .._,1a,1rtt4' MIM,l•111rW AMtot,l_,ort.d ...... UM4 .... Uttd iMw ............. ,rii o.;.;; ........... ,;i·o ~ .............. t7io ;;:;•:1;;· .. ;;41 ;;:; .......... ,,ii ;~·:;; ........... t7.6i ¥•~ ...... ,11·1 ¥;;;; ............ ,.,,% ~ .......... ;;'ii :::= .......... ;;;·~ ••••••• • •••• • • ••• ••••••••••••••••••••ttt •tttttttttttttttttttt ee ttttttttttotoo I..._._, ••••• ••''' ''''''''''' '' ''''''' '' '''' '' '''' ''' ''''''' '' •' •••• ''' ••••''''' '' 1'' '' '•••••' ''' '''''' ''''''' •••• '''''''''''''' ' iu VW R +; rf t !2S I '' '' '4 '' ••••••• '' '' '''' ''' ''' '' l'tllll turbo 'lpma '722401 XJ 8 82 •I\ '"' ruu~ Ht'll~I 1rllln1 '67 l'OR MEISTER ..,, SU11r1a. A c. lltt'ri'tl, l'UI rtbtt l~un~ "::' ('~ Ill'~ ·11~n~'0·,r~: f,m; THI LAIGIST ·11 Mmury Marqu1• • l'QUlllPt'd. niun) "'tro. Auturnu!l~. um rm lo11d•<I . mui.l u·IJ · \'t'rtlblf~Y..11$K or• .. S.•Pd.,1dnt t•ond .Nu xl111~1md.ll~ORO Likc11P~1u1LiwU th1Nwk ua-..o~ doo1 .h11rdlop,dnn &II Sil 995 ur olfor ~hut 1 t11lllu. uh 1 und $3$00. e.ot~ l>u)'lt, 006 12il2. WIS ~Obr673 70llJ ~ I u t t h . b r o k t ~ Ml 61411 641 D)t ( 1 ~'' llrt'll f150 r~1s 3.~ ~t·ll.t>40lltllll SHI H'lO xlnlt•ond~IOlS2 ~:\•t••· 720 1322. Mr ,2 MB~2tll.ISFI 0 t>· k PORSCME/A.UDI f1.-w1 OflO 64SWl•I o alt R}O <lt•. low · ' • '?I I> 1 1.~ ut nl' 11 fA·ht•1n ,,1 • d ,• •bl .., 13631 IT1irf)(> f\h d .111• 11 2 d to WANTt:D VW VAN 'i.J Volvo til,t;, 20.000 ml. m1h.·111u· <;odlllao In .._,J'-9 HU llObXI Wh1h• tan, :..'11000 ll~Un. u 0 II,. uUl' ". ~r .. Ut• II Ganll'nGro1t• Ort) II r .IU .all . OOOY.l'A''lll'TO ~lvr llll·ll. l•\41() CAtr11 South<·ml'111lfornh1 ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ml. l't>rfroml Tllkl' 11, l'I trun~rn"slon Am t'm QXl<t: CJ>t· n1r111•ond ulb41luh ~onwou~ t·Jt S...Ser-fic..&.t••'--rWll> 11rtt111. 11l'* p111111. ~ bill 13.H S>o.700 1 " or buy l>>' MAIERS 611 ron~!!rl 211!1 uulo h,f f632 11~ <&94 ~~ t·a~t.t.•11 I' derk llOUd .OUll l'Onlllll•ld) lo11dl•d -.., f! .!,~~" SI 3UO ol r !1~7 11133 t:\ t'~ wj.. nd\ Pwr lop. fZ800 li:.t ofr llrl"\ r\lr,1 1purr. runb 4!14 47911or 497 11111 e.''t't) Ihm.: $7!!(10 ph 714 636·23 l l ... .., ..... i1J 8L'C t'un1t•r1tlih· tn~ rnn l'P CADILLAC l 1K lltudl'nl. lllu.~t Nl'll ~IOll $13.'oO 6:11 2~~J o1 CRIF CE no llOI , To> 'T7 Sit ~ lon.ibcud Whl on 11ht u1r. ~tt·n·o 260011'iir1Jor Olvrt Call Mlkt!002·11149 c:.,.-4 9715 1"17356 'Tl x~t tnin1'1·on1I r(' '77 2lkJ st: Sunrf l'Olll '7u 1114• nl'" l'lut r h. $4 ,1100 Xlnt l'llll\I Wlllfl('libr•ury.,rl'I( l:;~~. Autos,U•td ('OSTAMJo:RA • .. ••••••••••••••••••••• '7112(10 ~·a~tbai·k. 2 door. b 1 plt•ll' "'" n·t•urd~ l.irukrs. rt'll & bl1u•k, 71~ 7~1 ~IKli mint 1·ond S820il Lill ••••••••••••••••••••••• 540_ 1860 Math I. fair 1oud1twn. '12 CA.P'll 5700 4 ~IJl'l'd Hu Il l> Sil 15 H~l~b ":~~~ ... 1:r,11 f.~'.::::u SI\ I blu Ill'\\ llrt'S Mui.I ~hurp' '3000 t.'73 M78 ufl ri. 5411 •IX\17 Well 9910 J~ •• ~~00 Thuri. Mon 0110 848~ tllti llt!lll &U7~711 G7SJ68.l Nill $12.000 IHOOOll 611 .,.,nchl' 912 ni'w l~~~d•1r0~11~,l.ilth.ll·I. '11 \'W l'op'l'o111 •. 1mPt•1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 99SS 73 lilpn \'Ii t'lt'un n· Rat 97 25 Mada 9 731 711-l~ISL. "" l'I. " bltn·k 1wnt. ~.OOU ~ 41~ '-'tW 4~ ~ 01 197' IUICK C...ro 9917 OWIMDbM ~ul•r 1111~ I o\\n('r h P I' I 4!M4198or 4971011 9~17~6 a!U!. LCOU•it. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• """ -,, ... 13'>" •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• up ll\t.llt:• Jr) T . ..._.. 971.7 11,SWA ,.-s 72''JIA"ro l)nu11u·o~r 't«J()tt\., l'uthu~~ Lo Ma """"10lil' 4.,., 1 ·" <i1•t Rc:id} Al"1ftl 213 5921573 ·~ • ·mSquan•b111·k Vii. aut111nal1l' iron,, Jll " ·-" -~ < • __ _.. 97SS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sil.It"' Sl700 11all L', .. , ... "k11d• >.1111 •·ond L'·ll 1'11r & ·~c.11n O!.H. i:ootl l'IJIHI. r\1rS11r1ng' . ~ ...... ' -"' l'Olltl , AM FM ~ll'll'O. '" r . ,, " 0 \, <U l"'"Hl'I "n". "''" lir1·•. 1970Fl"T WE'VE ... ,. '76450SEL •••••••••••••••••••\••• '77TH7 H11sair&~lcn•11 11.\l IOOOi\~kfor llul ~lt'l•lhdlt•llt1rc~l:.!nl·"' 6161700 l-:qw11 $7(i75 830!JK91. "" • ' " " .,. SilH•r nun sonruol '-llE"T " ~unroof $4400 H4H '''171 1 11 1 7•1,L'W 644 21177 braki•s & hall ~uii·k 150 SP'IDER ,\ M t' M t' u !> ~ l' 111· .. "" 1 1142 :10111 •· '69 C0tturtlbl• u '111> tov ltJ ".r 1 Che•r*t 9920 ~~l~OOur nt'ar uffrr COHVERTllU MAfEDI t~ad\'ll I'\\ l't\ msoo SB.ECTIOMI VcAs -9770 ~ OIIO i;1~. mm 1:~.1~11t',,l'f:.1;. Sl!5~'\'1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~~~.rt~:~"rn~ut~'1:'·~',1,'' 0:-\1.\' :IS OOll mt l'l>tUll l' ,... 9$7 OJJO • REH~ULT I ti'• •-r.. 7 7 ...... n •J"I 51:.11:: us FIRST• l I k • ., •••• I ft....t..._ 9720 • ... Sedans and waeoiu with ~··•••••••••••••••••••• II! \' W Jl'l'll (hit' of J 1 111 iO W.... J l'r., " s;a;; • 1 u.; r.on '· .... .,.,., 1111 C) --hurll l'lll:lnl'. ,\ "' t m n• If & ftsn • .. MG 9742 man)' options to choose Gii Bus, xlnt rond. l'lt•un l\mrl Sl~!lll . 711 t:,tJtt· ".111011 ti""'" Wt• h:ave a flood ,t'Jt'l'ltun bro1111 S590fl I' I' .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ~~l'!''b·1Jil.:'t'<:11~i.11~l~ll· ~CAlf[J •••••••••••••••••••••••1 from are av111la bh.> now & dt'l't'ndahll'. $17110 J t.i5 51t l all IJll"'''· tun~ 110011 C~tivNro~e~' & l'~ EU <tfl'J3ot5 GIANT DATSUN tlr<!i; l'rl\ ate part~ us ••t fi6l ll2t~ ·7~ \'W Hu~ fa1·tu11 air :1 $11Xl IWl1 1:~11 '79 Ohl\ futlas~ l>••'"'I Sllil~ l>l' .. l oflt•f M\IST y~~= ATTa.TIOM ORANGE COAST ·75 riecll\'. llrii.:ht .vcllo11 I wat~. I adtab. 1\ I S:l 1~111 lllllll lhut k lh-i:otl 1.Tll ~Int 1i1111l . low 1111lt•;1~·1· CLEARANCE SAL[ SELL' l'11ll ltuh JI lotA~DA I MG AMC/JEEP' ~~1als.~lnll'Oll<l S2 t~ll li3332311 loJih>tl <.\ tmniatulult· !t~l~~ 7S l21Mll J fl h ~:e:~:f:t·r 51: ~'J ~ MJ Z'IJ , T~~~!1E~~'·!;u ~t~:~~rt~rL11:~~mo ~;\~·,,~:;nrt.~/'~,~ :l'~~~~~s6~~!(~~~,,~,k Ill ~L~,~J"'t" .~2'~~·s·~··:~~ ~~:!~,'/~;~Jr~: ,~ •. 1:,.~: • ~ lla11hh.1t l. ~oml 1·1111(1 1mW£Ul CflUllUH•!lll4 Nl'\t•rust•rl.S75 c:u·h Wl'sLl•rn st\lt• 11hl 631 ~!l!f.I iriSk\11allk arr .Jffi Im • 'I 1 ~unrour 1:111111 10111! --Ill'" tirn. Jiil fm i\fona 6.'l17797 ln•ni~~ RofkR 9756 nm:. for Svpt•r 0 lk•t•llt'I '"'will'. ,unrool. tilt !llCapnce( u~~l!'.IS,100 SMIAI •\flt.1'~1~!111 541\J 1·a~H·ll t'. 1011 milt·~ Maserati 9739 ....... ~!~~............ S20l'a 5411.9744 '6! ~ llha•t·I Sh.irp 194 Hll:JI! :'x.,'~~~",~;., 1110~1 ~l·ll Pinto 9951 -S23UI 1>75 9\161 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .• ., \'"' lll"S"I l.t•.·1·t· 1 (;ti t•ontl Sll.S<I I ~~ "'"' ""'' °"'" " '!;" ~ .~ Coclll 991 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2~1S llurbor 111\tl Ho..da 9727 ORANGE ·75 Mtdi:t·t rnmvlell• Ull "'l DEALER IN U.S.A. Goud 1nd11 Ju..,t m,rkl· 631 4!l!f4 oc 1!1 ~IJlihu rlJ"ll St.J 19 \\a)?on 'of''' rout.I C'osta ~11.'~J ··········S·E·E···········1 COULITY'S ~~., "::1,!~''t':.. • .i:.·~1(1~ .~~'!.~:d IO' CARVER pu~ llll'llh All Sa\l'r\ 72 \'W ~)Odrt·h.11 k 11111'1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• W1:n \Int 1 untl mu't mw.t '4'1' t 'P' ~Ol)ti i::i' ""'! ...,..,. ''"-'""'' ,,. "" 63-1 0189 I \Int i.:111KI 1111111 11111111 COHTEMPLA TIMG ,t•ll ~I Jkl• of r I' I' 1111 JOI fm ,terl'o , J" EXCLUSIVE 0pe4 9746 m1lt><1J:t' rn1111 ~l.11 1 CADILLAC? !#~1t;.13ti \fu ,t '1·11 r I' HONDA MAS ERA Tl . ••••••••••••••••••••••• IO.l.5-rocE . . vw PARTS ~ b195 Wt• 'IK'l'l:I Ill' HI lt·:l'l'' ~ 9935 SJf,11(/ (Ill() !l!'>6 :1:1ti5 '"~I (,'T '7" X'l11t l'\111(1 I ......... ~l • "'""'" ·~·· 73 Bui.: fcllllt'r~. rront Volwo 9772 lur I tit' hu""'''~ I'\ ..,__,.. DEALERSHIP• ''1~ ' .,,,....,.'"A" .,. ""' ..... hood. bumpt>rs. runnmi: • •u007•••···~··•••••••• Ptymouth 9960 SANTA ANA w.:''ll dell\ er JO)" ti,•rt• c: oud a JI JI r l't· 1<1111111 ClOsto WNDAn board. St-II or trad1• or •••••••••••••••••• • •••• l~·utl\ i· & 11n1rc·,:.11111.1I 73 "••l!On lll'.111. i:uod ••••••••••••••• •••• • •• • S VEI IO thl' 11orld' St'c u' Jl $29)0 John 5-111 5982 I . d<'ul 1\l(V)l!Ol\°:l:v(~. o,.~t~~I~\" LorCJf S•ledlon hucl~ & Ill l'lhJOll'J I. i ll l'h muulh 1101111111 AMD A . BEACH IMPORTS P~o 9747 SMbaru 9762 49-124117 •• or. Of Mew 1982 ~ISll OHO 5t5 \115'• JOlll J l 48 1/1111 1111 GREAT SELECTIOM l!*ll llarbor HI\ d r ~1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••··~·· 1 Sqbk part' part1t1i.: 1101 Codillocs Ford 9940 S?i«•• I~ i-151 CIVICS 6317170 '71Pantff'o I ORAMGECOUMTYS I ·57 11 nt·11 eni:. l11 t'~ SA.LES.SERVICE MowlnStock! ••••••••••••••••••••••• •69 P!lWo,on ACCORDS !llKDml'Stn·l'l.7' II Co!llt•t1nr'~. !2th"'·'~ MEW~ST scat~.~s:iso 64f)4JIJI on~1"sf. .• ~E1t~1l.Ml\~·.11r ~\BER~ '79Pinto auto. po111•r. u1 . ,.1,.,111 1S&N 1~1111 Ston•d h' r' Authm·11l•d I ''" .I. I ... • \ k ~·3 •1•11·-• 1·t1u-111•11 rr1a1nt·,11nt•1J r11n' PRELUDES 752·0900 S.\CHlfll'E tt.·~I 11fl .. 1 I Sl'l\,\Hl'lH:.\U:ll EXHHTS (' \1)111 \-' ~mg ... ~"''·''"' goiM1$riO(l 11465iili ~e ...... S.na 9740 oH·~ Sl:!.51. •• lh ~ ]5 K\~• I J The Bluert Mlrltttplact ,, ~ ~1 • i 11 t; ll I J' 1" i: 1111 d 540 7430 _., II -, I ' "1 • 1111 , , _1 ·+<t_ on, .... n..-"--~ """'LE IKE lr Jll.,port 0t•11 hrakl·~ ill l'h nM1uth S.ill'lllr,· i!I :!Ill llatthhtu·I. 5 'IHI ,1111 rnnll SJStNI OHll 1;.c ~!/ afl l . •••••••••••••••••••••••1 bi~~" " ' +~ ~ I ,,.~-•·\,QD\ VOLVO nw1 h ).:oud )550 Si51111, ... 1ufft-1 Jiii Wf ",·a,rnt-r hlk •Ml, ~f•r a + DAILY PILOT 1!11~. 11,rrbor Ill\ ii I 5111 h1111! •.JI 131 I "":.t 11 ~ •• 1111 ~ M de P'NgtOt 9748 1 '70 Datsun 510 -. • 11 1 t erct s !••••••••••••••••••••••• I CLASSIFIED COSTA ~1 ~:S,\ -.. S 1 11 \' 11 1 1 711 Fw~ta 'nrf 111•11 llll'' Pantioc 9965 ,.., ,, 3 J h cti ( 111r 11111 a \11111 0 anew t9112 MODELS 641.. 9,03 11:40 9467 "' . •·1 1111 ,. 1 •'. 'n po•rft·c·t :.h:iait• s~~m· !••••••••••••••••••••••• s~w.1;.,1 t ti ,, II '\l•t•tb lwo.111 ~a,1.t•I ? "i5 51~1 lhl, I ~pd \lllt llEHl-:NO\\'"' ADS .,. ,, ,, . I 1·11ntl s:ir,1111 Ill olfllll ~1!11!13.552 ll.lli3 ' i H :!llOZ . In 1111 mint StHUll 11,1 1146 ~ut;~ 11111!"ina.tst. lhruoul S-1t•k1 J Sall''St•r111·t•l.t•o."1ni: I 7ti \'oho :nll>I .. air 11•101i:!:!IM F Ll'll Jorwll ·711 Tr;11" Am T ltoJI I h t "u""'li l'ompa r Hli'li'l' 111 Im 19ttilliS r•di" la•w• 111 nii ,1.,,1,\\ '' 1 •'.I> -, .. ,,, •1,1 illl.TllStJtHHl WJ•'lln lo<tll\'(f 300IKI m1 s.i:.1N1 ~!!'1'~.;._," aqi, 1111 lfl'' ...... ...,. c port, D1rel'l ll'U,t• .in<l l)o SADDLEIA.CI< You Cons.cc II Find II d v '" v r n .. t:.42163.1 ~IJ 927 :1511 "' ''"1 ·1141 \1·t·nrrl 4 dr. auto nw.1' ~l'n)lbl<' IJ\ rnh ·;~ l't•ui:l'•ll 511-1 1 lt·.1n SUIA.RU fr~ u Wilh 0 Wont Ad 'l'll. bt~l n~h·:. S.•\111•· 11 111 1111 '·"" I , . S650 'Ill .:!Ill. hl.t• 111•\\ t ,1111 , l'r\ tin .iir \ :'11 F\1 fl 1 a I 2 I 3 11 r sunroof 11111 m1 :'11 u~l 284112 )far~ot•nt•• 115111.H•I I" I pl~ .11111 ll 11 It~ t UI ~ Ill Punt IJ< h: ".1).:11n Jm fm t·.i.,, 11>.!llHI 1111 las' Sli51Jll 552 ~11!121 ii t \I ER<:t-:U~:~ " 213, .;ell 'Jl nfttt· Sli!I!'> 111 l'k11' [6642 •5678...J" i!.I ai4(;f. auto .ur 'un -.•.t "· t•\ ill•• I In\ I 11111 Mo•trick 9947 l(OOCI ~•Hl•!_ ~511 ••I I '""I ""I f 1'31 tif<." f ' ti\~ 111~ l1tht'\t•' ~NI l!Si 091!1 t''C' 11r714 6.Ti 2333 "" 11 r ' 1..... :'111~'1on \'1c/n I ronL llm m •11•11•111 ·"' hiu1111 1111•1 1,111 lt-,othi·r ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 · I · "r l \I II l979 ""'SJ)•· . ..,., •.JI" ('lu', mini s.·t .. rl 1 \H·n Pk11\ 11 f I ~, OM(oll S#rvu allm 11hb . Ill'\\ 111·1·' M'o.11:-. loadi•d SU 111111 l!li l Ford Muit•rwk 111 l.1'.\IJll> ''" ")!II. :~"~·~.~ ~~~(Ki°k horf\ . ~~tl;~~~·;)~·Hl~~\r~;~t.~,, ,.~'.~1~~~ 1·ond "'"' . r.~ h<1gl(t111i: ~al S6000 Nu 831 -2040 495.4949 1 fo\I (otdol Appto•ol ll•athl'r. uni~ w '""' 111 I I (),, \ ~ 5-1 :! j :!11 I l' \ I'' sxr•1 ()BC) IUll' 11 t·l I i.:0t1d '""'' R1l'k5Slll8.'>5l'\l') , \'l'Q dn S225u 9621523 7606285 tlreall'll.'rs 12131832·4367 • OpenSu111luy' SSIOO 640tl611 l!li~oli.li !>4ti!~}5!i Si:~1 Call"42 19ll!I MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES • ATLAS CHRYSLER-Pl YMOUTH 2929 Haroor Blvo Costa Mesa Tel 546-1934 3 blocks soul h ol San Diego Freeway oft Harbor Blvd Complete ,body shop Sales Service Parts Service Dept open Monday thru Friday 7 30 AM to 5 30 P M and 8 A.M to 5 P M on Salurday IEACH IMPORTS 8.48 Dove Street Newport Beach Tel 752-0900 Call us. we re the spec1a11sts for Alla Romeo Peugeot Saall & Maser at 1 THEODORE ROllNS FORD ..J Modern sales. service. parts. body, paint & f.rt1 depts Competitive rates on tease & daily rentals. 2060 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa 642-0010 or 54().8211 G) JOHNSON & SON UMCOLH MHCURY 2626 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa Tel ~5630 57 Years ol friendly family service -Orange County's oldes1 Un· coin-Mercury dealership 0 SOUTH COAST DODGE 2888 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa Tel, 540-0330. RV service r.pee1alists, custom van conversions. NIWrORT IMPOtn'S 3100 W Coast Highway, Newport Beach Tel, 642·9405,5•0· 1764 The Ferrari Hel(jquarters. NEWrou DATSUN - 888 Dove Street. Newpart Beach Tel 833-1300 Al the triangle ol Jamboree. MacArthur & Bristol behind V1c- tona Station Sales. Service.Leasing & Parts. Fleet d1s- coun1s to the public • MAIERS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa Tel 540-9100 Orange County s Largest Cadillac dealer Sales. Service. Leas· ing • DAVID J . PHILLIPS IUICl<-POMTIAC-MA1DA Sales • Service • Leasing 24888 Alicia Parkway Laguna Hills 837·2400 • CHICK IVERSON rORSCHE-AUDl-VW 415 E. Coast Hwy . Newport Beach. 673-0900. Tile only dealership 1n Orange County with these three great makes under one roott • ALAN MAG NON rOMTIAC·SUIARU 2480 Harbor Blvd . Cos1a Mesa. Tel 549-4300. Sales, Service. Leasing 'Mr Goodwrench." 0 HOUSI OF IMPOITS NllCmlWINZ S•••5rlce •~ 6862 Manchester Blvd,. Bu.na Park (on Santa An1 Freeway) Take Beach BIVd offramp -sharp right on Manchester. DIAL MER-CEDES (213 or 714) 831·2333 I 01 LOMG PRE rOHTIAC 13600 Beach Blvd Westminster Tel 892·6651 Orange County s oldest and largest Pontiac dealership Sales Service. Parts • SAIL CHEVROLET 900 Soulh Coast Highway Laguna Beach MCM.y't pt It .. , •. for yOt1!" SALES HOURS Mon ·Fri 9-7. Sat 9-5. Sun 10·4 •94·1131 546·9967 • SAHT A AHA DATSUN 2001 E 17th Street. Santa Ana Tel 558-7811 Your Original Dedicated Datsun Dealer • MIRACLE MAZDA We've moved! Our new locallon rs 1•2s Baker Slreet. r.os1a Mesa. Tel. 545-3334. Stop by & visit our brand new showroom and see why we're the #1 Mazda dealer in Southern California. Sates. SeN1ce, Parts and Le1S1ng . • AMAHllM MAZDA "o.tyo.c..,...~ wllti fr.e Serrlce Le. c: ..... 601 S. An1heim Blvd . Anaheim 956-1820. Just north ot Sa.nta Ana Frwy. on Anaheim BIVd. Call us lirstl "WE ARE HARD TO FINO-eUT WORTH ITI' • SADOLllACI IMW /SUIAaU 28402 Marguerue Pkwy., Avery PkWy. exit We offer whit no bank or lease company can: 1 Expertly stiffed. most modern service & parts dept • 2. Ont ol lhe Southltnd's mo11 experi enced Siies & leasing s19'1. 3 Ellmlnation Of the middleman by lllllng c:te.ier drrec1 831 •2040 Mission Yl8 o 4'5-41M9 . COSTA MESA DATSUN • 2845 Harbor Blvd . Cosca Mesa Tel 540·6410 Serving Orange County tor 16 years 1 Mile So 405 SUNSET FORD, INC. (Home ol W1lhe the Whale) 5440 Garden Grove Blvd . Westmrns1e• Tel 636·4010 DGM LEASING, IMC. 730 w 19th St Costa Mesa 642·1944 You re in lor a surprise al OGM Leasing 0 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd .• Costa Mesa. CNtf 20 years serving Orange Countyl Sales. leasing, wvloe. Call 546·1200: spec11I parts line: 5..S·9400: body shop ltnt: 754--0400. ROY CARVER ROUS ROYCMMW 1540 Jamboree Road, Newport Beach. S.0-6«4. Sales. Service. Parts And Leasing CONSIDER IT SOLD! Used cars are in demand 1nd sell quickly When advefllsed In clllSlfled. To place your private perty ad, call Sally Let 11&42-6678- FOR FURTHER l~_FORMATION, OR TO BE PLACED ON THIS AD, CONTACT YOUR DAILY. PILOT REP. 642-56Z8 I \ -. 111111m11m111111111111U11 THURSDAY. MARC H 11. 1982 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS HBman accused of racism in appointment SACRAMENTO <A P ) -A confirmation hearing for Youth Authority Director Antonio Amador, a resident of Huntington Beach, is being postJM>ned because of allegations he treated blacks uofairly as a Los Angeles policeman. But Amador's former boss, state Sen. Ed Davis, calls the allegations "dirty pool," adding that they are "a wretched attempt to de s troy the Bitterman slayer arrested? The reported arres t of a guerrilla who may have killed American Bible t ranslator Chester A. Bitterman III in Colombia last year has prompted no celebration among m embers of Bitterman 's organization. Bitterman was associated with the Summer Institute of Lin guistic s. an academic affiliate of Huntington Beach-based Wycliffe Bible Translators. He was kidnapped and later slain by terrorists who claimed the mjssionary group is a CIA front. Wycliffe has denied any' CIA connection. reputation or a good man." Richard Sterren , Gov . Edmund Brown Jr.'s press secretary, said Wednesday the governor's office asked the Senate Rules Committee to delay the hearing because Amador "did not have the votes" for confirmation. Steffen said, ·'With all these last-minute accusations flying, we thought another two weeks would be appropriate." He said the governor's a.ides and the Rules Committee's staff were "c he cking into the allegations." but Brown was "still behind Tony." (Amador. 38, was unavailable f or comment today . He previou s ly served on a Huntington Beach fact -finding committee that received complaints from citizens about city government. C He also served on the city's trans portation comm ission before reslgnlne last month becaisse ot added duUes with the Youth Authority.) A apokesman for Amador, Art German, said the director would not have any comment: "He doesn't see any point or dealing with the issue until it comes up. He denies mi streating anyone." Amador, who spent 13 years with the Los Angeles Police Department, was appointed by On Tuesday, the newspaper El Tiempo quoted the Colombian army chief as saying that Hugo Oswaldo Chavez, accused of slaying Bitterman, was one of 17 guerrillas arrested this week. BLOODHOUNDS -Huntington Beach police officers Jay Mark (left> and Jeff Thompson scan the parking lot near Beach Boulevard and Slate r Avenue looking for clues to the escape of a prisone r . Police s aid the escapee mig ht have been shot. :'llo other details were available today Those arrested were members of the M-19 rebel group, which initially took credit for the abduction of Bitterman . Wycliffe spokeswoman Betty Blair pointed out that during the past years, several other people have been arrested as the alleged killer of Bitterman. State to mull trash plant? She said her organization is not interested in vengeance in connection with the translator's death. "Yes, it's important that the Jaw is kept and justice is carried out," Ms. Blair explained. "But what we want to know is did it make a difference that Chet talked to these people?" Bitterman was held captive for seven weeks and is believed to have discussed religion and Marxism with his abductors. Bv PATRICK KENNEDY cJt .... Deity "'*" '""' . The developer or a proposed trash incinerating power plant in Huntington Beach says he may bypass the City Council and apply to the State Energy Com mission for building permits. "We're evaluating one-stop p~rmltting (through the State Energy Commission) but we'd much rather work with the City Council and the community." said developer Dan Ryan of New'port Beach. Mayor Ruth Finley says she's asked city s taff officials to investigate state requirements for permjts which could allow the developer to receive full approval from the e n e r gy commission. .. I would be very· upset if the state usurped local control on this issue because there's so much community opposition to it," Mrs. Finley said. Hundreds of local residents have expressed fears that the proposed trash and s ewage sludge incinerator al Magnolia One jolt followed another Som-e were less traumatic durin g county's 93 years By DAVID KUTZMANN Ot -o.ity l"llel Slaff 0:-ange County quietly marked its 93rd birthday today in a way that surprised some people. The place was still standmg. You may recall that star -gazing doomsayers had predicted that a unique alignment of planets on one side of the s un Wednesday would unleash a conv ulsive wave of earthquake s a nd volcanic eruptions. Such occurrences would certainl y have s p oiled today 's anniversary , which ma rks the signing of state legislation which led to incorporation of the county of Orange on March 11, 1889. Historians will note that. other than the usual political, social LECIL SLABACK and emotional upheavals of the day, Wednesday .. was about as uneventful a 24-hour period as they come. But, there was some historical precedent for believing that March 10 could possibly have been more calamitous. That's because on March 10, 1933, Orange County and the rest of Southern California was jolted by an earthquake that virtually wiped out parts of Long Beach and Compton. Long-time Orange County residents who remember the quake, which meas ured 6.3 on the Richter scale, say its aftershocks still reverberate in their minds 49 years later. Though injuries were few, property damage was extensive in places. It was because of this quake -and another which followed four days later -that county officials decided to remove a tower on the old two-stor y sandstone courthouse in Santa Ana. But even in those days, much like Wednesday. reports of Orange County's demise were somewhat exaggerated. LecU J . Staback, a life-long county resident who now li ves In Silverado Canyon. said he <See DOOMSA YERS, Page AZ) Street and Hamilton Avenue" would cause increased truck traffic, noise and air pollution. Ry a:l says the so-called "cogeneration" technology is non -polluting and that all incine ration would be done indoors. Ryan ha s hired tbe Irvine-based Fluor Corp. to s tudy construction of a SO-megawatt power plant on a 38-acre mud dump. H e says the Steverson Brothers' dump, also known as the As-Con Landfill. is the best location in the county for the plant because of its proxjmily to the Southern California Edison power plant on Pacific Coast Hi ghway and t he county's sewage processing plant and its trash transfer station. <See TRASH, Page A2) A new look for TV Log Your Pilot TV log will have a new look and a few new features this Friday. The new. more attractive format, will feature a complete rolling log that will make it easier to fi nd your favorite s how . The 36-page weekly magazine also will feature a new column. Orange Coast TV Antenna, written by Phil Sneiderman. Gone will be the program grids which some have found inadequate. but remaining Will be the popular features such as Jeff P arker's "Inside TV." "Daytime Drama," Sports Highlights and the TV Puzzle. WORLD STATE __ Outside in surgency? WASHINGTON -A bipartisan group of former high-level officials believe that the Salvadoran in1ur1ency is under the control of Nicaragaua and CUba. Page A3. NATION Soap opera a game NJ!:W YORK -For those soap opera addicts who can't •et e~h of ·'Gener al Hoepital, .. a board game let.a them play tbe cbaractera' part.a. Pace Cl. Sen. Williama r eeigna WASHINGTON CAP) -Harrlloa A. WtWam1 Jr.1 D·N.J ., "9llned from tbt Senate today la U. faft or almolt ~ expulaloa bJ hll C!OU..,... for ••.u.aca111 repupmt" ~ ln Ute P'Bl'I ~~am tnyeat11....,... · Network d emise seen LOS ANGELES -A former network executive has written a scathing novel forecasting the rapid death of network television. P age BS . . Econ o m ic s h ift asked A Stanford University economist believes there's a responsible way out or a "Global Depression." Pa1e CS. COUNTY Voten Aigning up SANTA ANA -Voter re"*atloa in polltlcalb """ Oranse County ii beadtnc for an ~·~me M1h. 8Cor)', It. Brown to tbe Youthful Offender P arole Board in 1979 and was numed board chairman In Ul80. The governor rppolnted him last December to succeed Pearl West as head of the Youth Authority, the prison system for young criminals. Senate President Pro Tern David Roberti's press secretary, Me l Assagai, said the Senate Rules Committee had received 78 letters opposing Amador's appointment . He s aid some letters "call lnt.o question his fairness in dealing with blacks In particular." Assagai said he dldn 't know e xactly how many critical letters d e alt with racial allegations. Thjrty-three letters supported the appointment, he said. Davis, R-Chatsworth, who was Amador's chief for s everal <See CONFIRM, Page A2) Convict suspected of rape elµdes HB police dragnet • By PIDL SNEIDERMAN Of U.. o.lly ,.. ... Slaff The search continued today for an escaped convict who allegedly raped a Huntington Beach woman Wednesday while eluding police dragnet. Investigators said the convict, Kenneth F . Troyer. 36, is believed to have stolen the rape victim 's auto . ma king his escape after the dragnet was dispersed. Huntington Beach police Lt. John Foster said Troyer, who escaped Jan. 30 from the medium-security California Me n 's Colony at San Luis Obispo, was being sought by several Orange Co unty police agencies in conne<:_tion with local crimes. Foster s aid plainc lothes offi cers from Westminster and Anaheim were in Huntington Beach Wednesday morning, following up information that Troyer was Jiving locally in a Beach Boulevard home. Westminster police detective Michael Proctor approached a man who resembled the lJUSpeet near the intersection or Beach Boulevard and Slater Avenue, police said. Proctor gave chase when the m a n fled, and the two began scuming in a parking lot at 17301 Beach Boulevard. Foster said the fugitive drew a r e volver which discharged during the struggle . injuring neither man. Troyer then jumped over a wall and vanis he d into a residential area, Foster said. About 40 offic e rs were s ummoned to cordon off an area bounded by Beach Boulevard. Warner Avenue, Nichols Street and Slater Avenue. A police helicopter and dogs assisted as off i c ers began s earching backyards and homes for the fugitive. Foster said police now believe Troyer broke into an Ash Street home to hide from officers . When ttie young woman who resides there arrived home. the fugitive allegedly tied her up, raped her and fl ed in her auto. The stolen car was a 1977 orange Mercury Bobcat with a white roof. Troyer. who was serving a four-year sentence for armed burglary, was d escribed as Caucasian, S feet 8 inches tall, weighing about 170 pounds, with. brown hair and brown eyes. Daffy ,. ... ~..,a-.~ SEABE£ QUEEN -Ci ndy Bruyn, 17, a senior at Edison High School in Huntington Beach, served as 1982 Queen at the recent Seabee Ba ll, held in the officers· club at the Marine Corps Helicopter Base in Tustin. The Seabees are the U.S. Navy's construction battalion. SPORTS The view from Florida What ls~ Doc11en' secret to success? It might have something to do with discipline. Manager Tommy Luorda says be doesn't believe in rules or fines. Pase Cl. INDEX Ann Landen 12 At Your Service A4 Movlee BM Erma '°mbeck 82 Mutual Funda C6 L.M. Boyd Al National News .u 8u1lneu CS-T Public Not.tees D2~ Callfonda M Spo..U Cl-4 Cla11lfted Dl,DH Dr. Stetnerohn • Co ml ca Cl Stock Manet1 er cro.1wont cs TtleriaklD • Deatb Notkei' DI fteaten IM &dltoNI A .. T Weather Al Satertalnment BM Worl4Newl u Jloroec:ope • • Orang• Cout OAILV PJLOT/Tl\Urlday, Match 11, 1882 , ---------------------------------------------- remembered hearln& radio eporta that S•nta Ana Hi&h School had been destroyed. Thia as news to him because ·SI aback, then 22, sat In his car .looking at a relaUvely unscarred ·hl1b school campus. Slaback, who became a court reporter like h is fatber , remembers the day tor other reasons. Before the gu1&ke hit, he was aetting ready to go out on a double date with a woplan who eventually became his wife. "I was shaving," he s aid, "when the mil'ror began to move around a little bit." Slaback said after his family heard a rumbling sound at about 6 p. m. they Oed the house. On his way out, Slaback said he saw cupboard doors fl y open and dishes come Oying out. Renecting on that March 10, L he s aid it was a "fortunate •\hin·g " that the e arthquake ,occurred after people got home ,from work and before dinner and theater patrons went back downtown. "In those days," Slaback observed, "(people) needed to go downtown more often than they do now." Other memories which he still carries with him of the quake CONFIRM •.. jyears, said two civil suits were ,Oled against Amador but were later dis.missed. He did not say what prompted the s uits. "Anyone who did not wind up ·with a civil suit as a police , officer was probably not doing b is job," Davis said, contending the suits were used to "harass" :Pffi cers. 1, "When he worked in Watts (a rhea vily black section of Los . ~ngeles>. he was not Little Lord Fauntleroy. No policeman on the streets at that time was Little !Lord }'.'auntleroy." Davis said. .. 'TRASH ... Ry an says he won't decide whether to build the plant until 'Fluor com pletes preliminary studies this summer. Ryan says the proposed plant would bum 2,400 tons of rubbish and sewage sludge daily and generate electricity for 250,000 homes. The rubbish and s ludge would be tr.ucked in from the county trash and sewage facilities and the electricity would 'be sold to Edison, Ryan said. · A spokesman for the Energy Co mmi ssro n s ay s the commissioners have authority to 1approve pro posed solar , geothermal or cogeneration storl .. • • • and its aftermath, include seein1 court proceed1n1s t.akln1 place on the front la•n of a Methodist church next to the courthouse; of seein1 buildlnt which looked Uke doll houses <no walls), and of flinching each time a new aftersh<><:k rumbled. Not since 1933, Slaback and others say, has Orange County endured s uch a tumultuous birthday eve. , Though voters decided on June 5, 1889 to secede from Los Ange les County and-create Orange County, the anniversary is officially celebrated on March 11. That's the dale that G'ov. Robe rt Waterman s igned legislation which allowed new counties to form in California. The vote in Orange County in the June referendum was 2,509 people in favor of splitting from Los Angeles County and 500 people opposed. No special observances are planned to today's anniversary. Previously, special celebrations m arked the county's 85th and · 90th birthdays. It is e xpect e d that the county's tooth birthday will lead to observances of a special but not too earth·s haking - nature. By that, Davis said he meant that Amador did not hesitate to make an arrest when he thought it was necessary. But Da9is said he had never heard ·'one criticism against him within the department." If there had been serious problems with Amador, Davis s aid, he would have heard about them fr om black officers in the community relations unit. The state Senate can veto Amador's appointment. Jn that case, he must leave office within 60 days. p owe r plants that would generate at least SO megawatts of power. If a developer applies for the streamlined "one-stop" process, the Ene rgy Commission has authority over city plficials and the other state agencies that are usually involved in power plant permitting, the spokesman said. ··one reason tor creation of (tbe Energy Commission> was to prevent parochial interests from stopping or delaying development of needed power plants." the spokesman said. H e s a i d t h...e .• e n e r g y commission ensures t hat proposed plants meet environmental standards . lsol~t@ t:uba,~ Schmitz says By JEFF ADLEll °' ... Deity """ ·-S t• te Sen. John Schmitz's aides enticin1ly said the Corona del Mar Republican would be (llscusslng "El Salvador, the Milltary Coup and the J ews" before the Los Angeles World Affairs Council Wednesday evening. The World Affairs Council bad billed il as Schmitz discussing "What's wrong with our foreign policy." As it turned out, what's wrong with the nation's foreign policy is the Jewish community's innuence in lilting U.S. foreigil policy toward Israel as well as Council OKs ban on teens n~ar drinki~ Huntington Beach officials have approved an ordinance banning people under 21 from sections of restaurants that f e atur e a l c ohol and entertainment. Police officials say state Alcoholic Beverage Control <ABC> laws allow people under 21 in restaurants that serve drinks, but that the loosely worded r egulations spawned several so-called "teen-age nightclubs" that bent the rules. "Several nightclubs began offering very minimal menus so . that minors could be admitted," said police Lt. Merle Schneblin. "But the main activity wasn't eating; it was music, dancing and drinking." • Although people under 21 aren't allowed to drink, Schneblin says police had trouble with drunken and rowdy behavior by teen.agers inside the establishments and In the parking lots . He says customers pay an entrance fee a t most of the establishments. The City Council tentatively a pproved the ordinance last month and officially endorsed it Monday night. It becomes law 30 days from Monday. Hearing planned on coast park A public hearing on the new Crystal Cove State Park south of Corona del Mar will be held at 9 a.m . Friday in Santa Ana. The state department of Parks and Recreation will listen to comments from the public on a draft environmenta l i mpact report for t he beach-area parkland. The hearing will be h e ld in the police a nnex auditorium, 23 Civic Center Plaza. thls nation's failure to conlront the Sovlet Union and Cuba, according to Schmitz. The c andi date t o r th e Republican nomination' for U.S. Senate faulted U.S. forelen policy "for being for Israel and not for America.'' Schmitz s aid foreign policy has been influenced by the news m e dia throu g h Soviet misinformation and "overeager, very ambitious politicians who succumb too much to the Jewish community in this country, which has been bulldozed and bedazzled by the Zionists so.that almo~t the e ntire J e wish community in the United States now feels obligated to support the Zionis t movepienl and s upport Israel." I To underscor e his point, Sc hmitz s aid so many pro-Israe li r esolutions come before the state Senate that "you'd think we were the Israeli Knesset.'' "" Schmitz charged' that the news media and educators in this country, especially those in high e r education, are the "stronghold of the left." He added the "media is running foreign policy.·· Turning his attention to the Soviet Union, Schmitz said the problem is not in El Salvador, it's in C uba. Ang9la . Mozambique and the othe r Soviet client states which export revolution. "My answer to El Salvador a nd Poland is Cuba ... said Schmitz. "My answer is to sever Cuba and Nicarauga from the Soviet orbit." He advocated going on the otfensive and unde rtaking "whatever is necessary" to free C uba a nd other Soviet-dominated countries. "Th ey talk a b o ut de-stabilizing Nicaragua . They ought to be talking about de-stabilizing Cuba," Schmitz said. "If you sever Cuba from the Soviet Union there wiU be no more problems. It's intolerable to have a Soviet satellite 90 miles from our s hores." Questioned more closely about the situation in El Salvador, Schmitz fired back, "Whal if we just clobber ed t hem right away?" He added he pe r sonally doesn't believe an invasion is necessary to drive the rebels out of El Salvador or any of the other South American countries facing rebel opposition . Emergency meet set at HB church An emergency preparedness sem inar and potluck dinner will be held Friday at the Church of J esus Chris t o f Latte r-Day Saints . 5402 H ei l Ave .. Huntington Beach. Slwwers due today The dinner. which is open to the public, begins at 6:30 Q.m. The program, which starts at 7:30 p.m., will focus on natural d isaste r s, food s torage g u idelines a nd paramedic procedures. valley\, S... F .. -.oo.s...te Clerl18 v•llOl. Rlvff•lde·~ll 8erner41no ••••• 111911 --0.-S.rts. 1-0r •111• County •IWI 111e conlel, ~\ -Wrong numbers can wreak havoc MA BELL STRIKES AGAIN: Only yesterd ay in lh1s s pace I was talking about our new Pilot TV Log that comes out this Friday and I listed a telephone number for our We,.e Listening ser vice. By doing that. t broke u basic tenet or newsp'!pering. We paid. too The number, of course. was w rong. One of our We're Listening custorpers called some baple ss so ul al midnight a s a result. He wasn't lis tening. He ~ l"o-'\ TOM MURPHllf .G4~ was sleeping . . . All this reminds you or some years back when this s terling journal a t Christmas time went along with a J aycee program to have a telephone num ber where the kiddies could call up Santa Claus OF COURSE WHEN. it was printed. t he numbe r youngste rs were advised to call for SL Nick was wrong Fortunately. the hapless citizen out there whom we had just volWlteered to be the jolly old elf himself. turned out to be a nice guy. He went along with the gag. Throughout t he long n ight. he heard so many Christmas wishes from boys and girls tha t he was coming down with a case of te rminal la r yngitis. That ·s when his wife took Gver t he phones. She became Mrs. Claus . So muc h for printing tele phone numbers in the newspapers . SOME OTHER CALLERS did get the right number last night to tell us that they weren't so worried about being able to read the new television log as they we re about how complete the li stings will bt'. We think on Friday you'll find a complete log and wt still solicit your comments. But as to the number to call . check it in our ··we ·rc Listening" box on Page A4. I sure hope it's on A4. We won't try to repeat the number here I'm s ure you can understand why. Jet engine flames; 62 evacuated safely LONG BEACH CAP> -An engine on a J et America DC·9 airplane caught fire while the plane prepared to leave for Irvine's Sills enters state Assembly race · Irvine Mayor David Sills formally announced h is candidacy today to cha lleg,ge Assemblyman Nolan Frizze1Je. R-Huntington Beac h tor the Republican nomination in the newly apportioned 69th Assembly District. · Sills claimed that Frizzelle, who has been in offi ce in the 73rd Assembly District for 15 months "has shown a complete disregard ~or local communities needs ... And Sills said that Frizzelle's record on transportation issues ''h as b ee n both co unter produ c tiv e and confusing." Chicago, but a Federal Aviation Administration spokes m an sai<j all 62 pa ssengers were evacuated safely. The fire broke out about 6:35 p m. Wednesday as Flight 122 was preparing for take-off from Long Beac h Airport. fire dis patcher Michael Robideaux said. "They pulled out to take off, started the engine, there was a backfire and the engine n ashed over," he said. "It did destroy the engine completely. but the company won't let us release the dollar damage estimate." Four Long Beac h fire department companies fought the blaze with help from two f ire fi g hti n g un its from Mc Donnell Do uglas Corp .• whose pla nt is next to the • airport, Battalion CtSQf J ack Martin said. The FAA spokesman said the cause of the fire was under investigation. P assengers we re evacuated via stairs and chutes. Robideaux said. They departed for Chicago on another Jet America plane ._ 1 Coastal metropollt•"· 11 •1111 111 0 , Heme1·EIS!nore -819 llMr LAke ....... AOMO r•ll1111• e re •• follows: Mostly cloudy 111rouq11 Frld•Y. fOOd, 0.1•; -IUWul tor MnSltlft IHcoml111 fair wl111 9u1ly wllld\ peopl•. 101.JOO; unlleellllful tor P'rld•y ._..,.. A 10 pef<ent ,11-.ce effry-. 291·M . elld l\eHrdoul, ol rein tOCl•y, decree1l119 lo 10 .,.,., ~.,.,.,Friday Hlql>s in mid* ----------'°low l'OI. H""'llllllon-Newport .,.. Short But Sweet t9"'11ereturn reftQlnt lrom SS to 6'. T l!I_..,., !<om Polnl Conception empe,-,atures ta Ille MHken ---out to m lies: L'9hl n rle4Me wlncb 11 ftlM •lld • _,,,1119 "°""· llK...,lnQ ~t 18 •HI et 12 lo 20 ""°" In 111e ~~ after-Frlday. W"lffly s-11 of 1 te J feet. Mo1lly cloudy w llt Amerlllo O<CHioNI llQlll relft lonlQlrt. P..,h AtMVll .. c_., Frl(S8y Alle1118 Atlante Cty 8•ltlm0tt lllrmlfllllWn U.S. summary ::..-:·~" eos-11r-11sv11e 8utf•lo Cl\erlstnSC Cl\erlltnWV CMYtllM Cllk- Clnclnnetl ~..,. tt!uftdtrstorm• _...i ... ._. tlM fNd..Mlsslsslppl V•llo .... .,. wNM ,. -~' fell '" much o1 tlM ....,,,..,,, Rein -fell •lon9 the nonhem Pa<lll< CNst -111 perts Of ttw __ , .. Ple1te<I. I.At« today, rein we eJtpecttcl IO 14ff'9M ecron tN Peclfk CN st to tM Rec•les. es ,...I •• -the MrtMm Allentk Cont.8111.te'-The foracesl e110 celled tor 1<ettered JllOW lho• .. .., over ,,,. u-r Greet LAkn. Ttmper•l\orn wore ••si-t led to remain ..._ frftllllO only In t,.. UPP•• Ort•I Leko ..... Hl9ll e.tn,.r•!Wft -y wtll lie In 111t 4'I Md ,_ from Hew E.....,.. Ulrouefl -Ofllo V•lley end 1M ~ Plalftl tD tM Peclfk NOttWeA, 8ftlll In -.--10I kl"OU -Cffltrel ......... -... the ScMll. Tem,.retwn •l'CMlllCI the nation • .,ly tod8y r8119'd from 1 In Fer90, N.D ., -Gr-Forll1, N.O .. to 7' In w.tC P .. m IMCll, Fie., -v...,, •• Atta. Extended c ..... i.nc1 Colum- Oel·Ftwtll o.nnr OHMolnn Oetrol1 Oulutl\ El P HO Hertford Helene -.. H°"*"' ......... Jec.l<M- K-City u.v ... Little RK" Loulsvllle Me~• 1111-• . ...... -... , •• P ... ...., .... Newon.-.... v- Ml Le~ H :m .04 n •1 11 11 ., ,, 70 .. .. ,. ... )7 Norfolll 70 lS • 1 S1 45 . ,, .. " .... . a <>Ille City AS Omel\e Orl•llCIO Piii ..... -..-1. ·•• PlttJllurtll ., . U Sl st 11 .... .01 SJ 50 .02 S4 ts .01 so '5 .01 7S " ptlelld, IN Ptl•lld,Ore Reno Seit Lelle s..n ... St Louis SIP·T•,,_ SISlellllene '' n S3 n 02 S.-•-:u TYCIOll .. . >O 12 uu 41 l2 01 Tulw . WHlllP\Qtn u 2' .02 11 10 .01 7S '2 n o ,. 41 14 J7 1S " ... 57 S4 .. ., J1 1S .. •• • )4 ff • n S1 ,. . Wlcllll• so ., ,. u ., n ,. u UJ6 . .. S4 0 u n .. ., 46 ., " ., n ,. 71 u 11 M H 27 u 44 11 st 7S 57 ., ,, 12 41 lllf llPIRT Sen Olt90 !Min Francisco $Ml8118l'tler• Senle-le .oss __ _ Thermal Ulll•h ll•n1ow .16819 ..... .•111.tllOp C•t.llne .50 LOftt llMCll Monrovia Mt. Wit"'" ... Newport 8eecll .16 Ontario Palm Sprlfl9" Peseci.ne Sen llernercllno SenJose Sent•Ane Sent• en.oz T-V•l'-Y IO ... " u ... ., Sol .. .. S1 11 s• " " st 11 70 ., 11 M 11 u ,. S3 st a .. S4 ,. n 11 " 16 M " '' 61 fl .It n S.5 62 .. .» S4 4t PMl ... IUCA" Ace,.,lco ..,..~ ---a..ot• C,U,ec:N F,...,, o-.. ... ... 011••··-,tJH••-.It 01e1 .... Moftta ..... c .... ,., IE._._ Mofttrffl ott.w• ........ TweMe V...c- Wll!ft .... CANADA .. • t4 ,. ., 10 .II 12 ., .. 4S .. n .ti 11 .. .. 45 " .. . .. .. IS 75 .07 " n M .16 n ' H IJ "* ti tJ ,. 4 • ,, tt !J A ,.,.. t/ttlt of!m /IN'"""'*""' ~Jot"'*"• womm tmd bop . • Storekeeper Gina Garrett is wearing a pair from a great selection in our Ladies Department ... )_ Summer is just a few short months away. ' ! mrou~mm P"Mrnmarn Belushi 'not a junkie' Widow claims 'weird happenings' in drug overdose LOS ANGELES <AP> - • Comedian and actor John Be lu11hl, who died of an overdose of Injected heroin and cocaine. had been us ing the drugs for years, thr e e asociates reportedly sa y. But his widow says the actor "was n't a 'junkie." Both drugs were' discovered ln the Sunset Strip bunjtalow where Belushi was found dead, Los Angeles County Coroner Thomas Noguchi said Wednesday. T._.re e unid entified show business colleaauea who said they knew Beluahl well were quoted by The Los Angeles Times today as saying be had been injecting himself with heroin for the past two years. "He was shooting heroin and that was all he was s hooting. He was snorting cocaine.'· one of the producers, who requested anonymity, told the Times. But the three. a studio executive and two producers, sajd he did not normally mix the two drugs ln Injections . California schQols pleading poverty SACRAMENTO <AP > - Pleading poverty, California's schools and local governments are seeking more state money. Representatives o f the schools, on one hand. and local governments on the other , held back-to-back news conferences Wednesday. At the s ame time, legislative leaders were meeting elsewhere in the Capitol on an emergency $500 million package of program cuts and revenue shifts. At the news conference for s chools, s lat e sc hool s Superintendent Wilson Riles and r e presentatives of nume rous school boards a nd teac her organizations ca lled for $540 million more in state aid than Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. is proposing. And at the news conference for local government, city and county officials lamented cuts in state aid. For example, Oakland Vice-Mayor Mary Moore said that her c ity has reduced its employees from 5,000 to 4,000, cut street-cleaning drastically, and is repairing loca l roads on a schedule of "only once every 200 years." Presiding over tha t news conference was s tale Sen. Milton Marks. chairman of the Senate Local Government Committee. Among the participants was Placer County Supervisor Terry Cook. president of the County S upervis ors Association of California. Back to the schools : Riles said , "There is no more waste .... We have been cut lo the bone." Ril es and the o ther participants endorsed new bills by Senate Education Committee Chairman Alan Sieroty, D-Los Ange l es. t o boos t sc hool financing. One bill, SB1750, would res tore $300 million for mainte nance and construction that Brown is proposing to cut in 1982·83, and aid $240 million for educatton programs. SB1751 wo uld guarantee schools an annual increase of at least JO percent, s tarting in 1983-84 when the additional s tate cos t would be at leas t $308 m illion. Some or the money would let schools restore sixth periods to their class days and reinstate programs th.at have been cut s ince Propos ition 13. Some would offset federal c uts, and $1 51 million in SB1750 would meet defi cits in this year's general school funding, and a program for the handicapped that has been plagued by cost overruns. The three also sa id they urged Belushi, whom they described as .. alert and dependable" while working, to get off heroin. The actor had promised them he wo uld "straighten out," the Times reported. One producer said Belushi's w i fe, Judith Jacklin, was ins trumental In keeping him away from he roin. and ''If s he had been with him. he'd sllll be alive today " In an inte r vie w with the Chica go Sun-Times, Ms. Jacklin said Belushi "had troubles, but he wasn't a junkie," and didn't like needles. "People who knew him always said he wouldn't shoot up," she sa id . "Som e th in g w e ird happened. People who knew him kne w he was n't a j unkie . I don't know what happened ." Belushi, whose popula rity on TV's "Saturday Night Live" launched a movie career that included "Animal House," died Friday at the age of 33, and police initially said he appeared lo have died of natura l causes. But an autopsy Saturday failed to s how the cause of death, and more tests on blood and tissue samples were conducted. Meanwrule, a doctor who had treated Belus hi said the portly comic had been wa rned that an alle r gy h e s uffe red would inc r ease th e c h a n ce o f respiratory failure if he used cocaine. In a statement read by rus secrelary Wednesday, Noguchi said: ''The deceased died of an overdose due to intravenous injections of heroin and cocaine. Both the cocaine and heroin were found on the premises." The Los Ange les Herald Examine r quoted Noguchi as s aying he could have released pre l i mina r y toxi c ological reports as early a s Sunday - avoiding speculation about how Belusru died -if it hadn't been fo r a gag orde r imposed by the county Board of Supervisors "I would have been able to make such an announce ment in a preliminary way a few days after Belushi 's death if J had not had the new constraints placed upon me,.. Noguchi s aid. Battle seen on abortion bill Amendment faces tough sledding on Senate floor WASHINGTON <AP) -A tough battle is predicted on the Senate floor following approval by the Judiciary Committee of a propos e d co n s titutional amend m e nt that would let Congress and the states prohibit or restrict abortion. The committee 's 10·7 vote on Wednesday in favor of the amenClme nt, s ponsor e d b y Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah, m a rks the first t ime anti-abortion forces have gotten legislation through the panel. Libe rals who oppose the amendment have vowed to u.se all parliamentary tactics they can. including a filibuster, to block passage by the full Senate. Biulget proposal in legislature SACRAMENTO (AP> -A $520 million compromise to pre vent an unconstitutional budget deficit goes before the Legis lature today with both parties and both houses still gingerly cooperating. The author of the SS20 million package, Assemblyrpan John Vasconcellos, D-San Jose, said of it We dnes day : ·'It re- establishes the fact that we can all work together when put to the fire." Federal deficit overestimated? WASHJNGTON <APl -The Reagan administration, eager to seize upon any good economic news, sees what may be a glimmer of hope in new figures that suggest this year's federal bud1et deficit might have been overestimated -perhaps by $10 billion. Administration o ffi cial• caution that the fi g ures may prove t.o be nothing more than a temporary Ouke. But they are encouraaed enough to have formed an lnvestigative group to determine whether the latest p rojection of a $98.8 billion deficit for fiscal 1982 is too hJgh. Coup reporte d in Surinam PARAMARIBO, ~am (AP > -Rebel troopa firtnc automauc wea.pom toM OYet the mWtary bar,acu outalde Paramaribo before dun> today and fired 1ubm1chtne suns lnt.o tbe air to clear lbe •treeU of tbe capital in what wf ts;tHtel called •n NIWB BRllfS atte mpt t o overthrow the military government of Maj. Desi Bouterse. There was no official word on casualties. and the whereabouts of Bouterse, who was to name a president of this tiny former Dutc h colony of 400.000 people or. the northeast shoulder or South America Monday, also was not known. Clwrch linancial dealings probe d PASADENA CAP > Allegations of financial wrongdoing with.in the Worldwide ChurchofGodhavebeenrenewed, this time by a former church a ccountant who maintained' silence during a failed state probe intoc hurchaffairs . · A 14-page letter of complaint by Jack Kess ler, who was ex c ommunicated Crom the church last fall after serving as its accountant for 10 years, c omes three y ears afte r WARNING -Michigan Gov . William MUlikan, staling that a fiscal crlsis could "cripple this state for yean and years· lo come .... proposed a $610 million package of budget cuts and tax increases \Vedn esday night. a ll ega ti on s o f finan c ial mi scondu ct firs t s urfaced. Several for;.mer church members maintamea at the time that the church's 89-year-old founder and leader Herbert W. Armstrong, treasurer Stanley Rader and other top offi cials spent millions of church dollars on personal expenses. Co nnie Francis' life threatened PLAITEVlLLE. Wis. IAPI - Singer Connie Francis, who was lu appear here in support of a group seeking to recall a judge, received death threats and has decided to cancel the visit, her agent says. A citizen's group is seeking to r ecall Grant County Circuit Judge Willia m R e ine cke because of state ment he made in a sexual a ssault cas e. In sentencing a 24 -ye ar-old man last December, Reinecke said the 5-year -old victim was a "promiscuous young lady." Due to an error the Daily Pilot reported Tues day that the vi ctim's age was 25. Bombings hit Colombia, P e ru BOGOTA, Colombia CAP> At least eight bombs exploded today in the capital, a nd· one• person was reported killed and four othe r s injured in an explosion a t the pres idential palace, police said. In neighboring P e ru, terrorists tossed dynamite at the presidential palace in Lima on Wednesday night, there were two other attacks in Peru, and a right-wing death squad in Colombia claimed responsibility for the murder of a lawyer. Airline denies pre88ure charge DALLAS CAP) -American Airlines has angrily denied allegations it tried t.o force a tare-s lashing tlval , Braniff Airways, into bankrup\cy by using questionable t•ctlca to create an artirlclal cash·fiow crisis. The CivU Aeronaullcs Board will investigate a lleaatlona American released $9 mllllon worth of the BranUt ticket.a at once for reimbunement at an induatry cJearitaCboule to ~ to create trouble for Branilr. CAB aeneral counselWUUam H. Weata .. aid WedneldQ in Wu~ Orang• Cqut DAIL.Y PILOT/Thur•dey. Maroh 11, 1882 H/F t\I --------------Nlc1r1gu1n Mlllt.ry Ma;or Military Base ~Armored Battahon ln1tallatlon1 1: Fighter A1rf1eld *Under Construction T Under Construction *German Pomares M1~tary HeldQUatters HONDURAS 1t Puert T Cab:z Somttit t NICARAGUA •c ndega Source .............. NICARAGUAN BUILDUP This map of the Nicaraguan milita ry \ns lalla tions. purporting to pinpo int a buildup of the Ni car aguan a rmed.force~. was used at a briefing of Stal<.' Departm e nt officials . Most ofric ials be lie ve that lhe SC:1 lvadoran ins urgency is unde r Nicarnguan and Cuban con trol. El Salvador war 'manipulated' Evidence supports belief Nicaragua, Cu ba involved •.: WASHINGTON <APJ The R e a g an adminis trat ion 's pr esentation of evrdence lo s upports its a llegations o r ou tside involve m e nt in the insurgency in El Salvador has won a ringing endorsement from a bipartisan group of former high· level offi cials. ·'It is important fo r the American people to r ealize their government is te lling the truth." said Willia m P . Roger s, sec r etar y of s t ale und e r President Nixon. Rogers was among 24 former senior government officia ls who received a private intelligence briefin g We dnesd ay from Secretary of State Alexander M. llaig Jr and CIA Dir ect or William Casey Ro bert St r a uss, a senio r member of the admfoistration of Preside nt Carte r . s aid 'the b r i e fin g was "a r a th e r impressive bit of evidence indicating in a persuasive way the outside involvem ent" in El Salvador. Zbigruew Brzezinski. national security adviser to Carte r , said t h e i nf or m a ti o n ·•w as disturbing.·· However . the administration a pparently didn't completely satisfy all the forme r officials tha t the Salvadoran ins urgency is under Nicaragua n and Cuban control. Rogers, for one, said he didn't want to "take a position" on that. The brie ring was part of a public relations offensive by the R eagan ad m i n ist ra tio n to ge nerate broader public a nd cong ressional support for its Central Ame rican poli cies, inc luding Jl S backing of the Salvadoran government in its war against leftist gue rrillas. H a i g t o ld a Se nate s ub committee s epa r ately Wednesday that U.S. military aid i s essenti al for the Sa l v ado r an gove rnm e nt 's struggle to beat back the leftists. Withholding aid . he s aid, probably would strike "a fatal blow to the governme nt's ability lo sustain itself. .. While the administration's next step in El Salvador isn't c lear. Haig said t he role of Ame rican m ilitary ad visers , n ow nu mberi n g a bout 50 co nfined t o n o n -co mb~ s ituations, might have to be r e .eva luated if the fighting worsens a rte r the Ma r ch 28 election. The re was a hint they m ight be allowed into combat situations But in response to a question on whether the administration would continue military aid if a f a r r ight pa rty heade d by f o rm er M aJ R obe rt o D'/\ubuisson wins the balloting for a constituent assembly in El Salvador. Haig sa id, "It is loo early to say " Th e a <J m 1n1 s tration 's campaign for public support has included both public and private int e ll igence brie fings and testimony before congressional com millees by Haig and other senior administr:ation offi cials. Re p. Michael Barnes, D-Md., a critic of the administration's Central Ame ri can policie~. accused it of "whipping up a war hysteria... ' "It's a lmos t a s if th1? administration wants a war in Ce n l r a I A me r i c a . " he s a I'd Wednesday in a speech on the House floor The admi ni s trat ion had planned lo unveil information Friday to support its contentioll that Nicaragua a nd Cuba are d irecting t he S al vadoran insurgency. However, sources said the information might not be released until early neitt week CBS io introduce late night news NEW YORK (AP> -CBS will introduce a lale ·mght television ne wscast from 2 a.m. lo 5 a.m. five nights a week beginning in September. CBS News President Van Gordon Sauter said today "We 're very e xcited about expanding our news presence," Sauter said in an interview. "It will be a better utilization of our ne ws gather ing sources. We s us pect the re's an audie nce available at that lime for news and information." B e twee n 2 and 5 a .m .. nationwide viewing of tele vision drops to between 3 percent and 9 pe rcent of the 81.5 million television·owning households. Sauter said CBS ptans to hire about 100 editorial e mployees. The reported cost is a bout $10 m illion. C BS currently offers movies at 11 :~ p.m. EST and wouJd co ntinue w i th t hat prog r a mmin g . "But th e la t e -n ight movie wo uld be standardized to end a t 2 each morning,·· Sauter sa id. The network begins a one-hour feed or future programming m a t erial to its affiliates at 4 a .m. EST. That's followed by h a lf-hour programs "Sunris e Sem e s t e r " and "Captai 9 Kangaroo." The "CBS Morrrint News" starts at 7 a.m. 1 It would be an unprecedenteA n e w s ex pan s ion for ~ comme r cia l ne two rk . Ted Turner 's Cable News Network wa s intr o du c erl A ,; A ro und-the-block news ser vice for cable TV in 1980, and~ second 24-hour service call Satellite News Channels, also~ cable TV. is scheduled to begi' distribution June 21. , In addition. Turne r has a 24-hour headline news service - CNN2 -available to cablt syst e ms Last week, Turne announced that he was makini portions of CNN2 available to commercial stations, includina network affiliates · or furniture spedacnlar ends March 30 Save 20% during this SALE . I ;p A most 1mtrnditional collectio11 of lmdilional furniture from NCHOl.S f'STONE. H IF Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Thur8d•y. March 11, 1982 ,~~\ ~,,,. • FDA recalls infant food DEAR H~A O~HS The ft'ood and Dru~ Administration and Wy.-th t,uborutories Inc., Phlladelphlu, unnounccd u public warning and recall or <'l'rtam lots of 13 ounce c ans of Nursoy Concent111l1•tl liquid and 32·ounce cans of Nunmy Ri!u dy lo l''eed bec ause the products do not contain vita min B 6 The single lirw codes on the ends of the cans being recalled ur <· A2GM. B2M and B9M for Nursoy <:oncl•nlratcd Liquid and A28M and BllM for Nur ... oy Rt:ady to Feed The codu-may bt' 1.11•t.·t·t•rl rd or followed hy a number such as I. 2 or 3, whic h can be ignore d . E xample of code Nursoy Concentrate 2A26M. The FDA warns parents to return all cans of the recalled codes to t he place of purchase for refund or replat•e ment The product has been d1~trrbuted nat1onw1de and may have been ;nail a b k fo r sale in retail s tores since Feb l The FDA said th<.' total absence of vita m in 8-6. an essential nutrient 1n the die t of a n infant, for more than a few weeks may ca u s~ serious ht-alth t:ffel'ts s u ch a s irritability and rn mon• serious inst ances, convulsions Parents or an funts who haVl' consumed the recalled tndes or Nursoy as· their only s ource of v1tam1ns ... 110uld contact the ir pediatricians for .1d\ 1c·t' Both re called products arc soy trnst•d formulas sold over the counter for t hP fet'd1ng or infants who m a y be a llc·r g1t· to mrlk hast'd formulas Wyeth and FU/\ ha\ 1· rt•(·erved no reports of injuries. Mail order problenu DEAR PAT Dl'NN : I noticed that several of your rt>ader'S have had problems recently with 1\1 ail Order Marketing. I've also been waiting month~ ror merchandise I order ed and paid for. The $16.97 price was charged to my bank card and I've paid it. C'an you belp mt' get a refuad1 -E.S., Costa Mesa The $16.97 will be credited to your bank l'ard, according lo Mall Order Marketing's custo mer service department. Incid entally, th e m e r c handise yo u ord ered In mid-November is s till "out of stock." Contact unit set DEA R READERS : The stal e De partment of fnsurance has installed a cons umer telephone Jlne fQr Southern Ca lifornia residents . Officially named the "Consumer Contact Unit," its purpose is to answer general ins urance inquiries. Insurance Comm issioner Robert C. Quinn said the three-person unit will respond to questions concerning claim payments by insurance companies, rating questions and inquiries regarding po s si bl e misrepresentation by agents and brokers. Calls will be accepted Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m . The number is 1213> 736-3852. . It is believed that the majority of te lephone calls re ceived by the department can be answered by the Consumer Contact Unit. The program ~ill be evaluated after six months to determine its effectiveness • "Cot a problem'> TMn wnte to Pat '-.,. Dunn Pat unll cut red tape. getting • ...L the answers and action you need lo • solve mequ111es in government and ~ business. Mail your questions to Pat I I Dunn. At Your Sennce, Orange Coast Daily Ptwt. P 0. Boz 156(), Costa Me$0 , CA 92626 As many letters as posslble will be answered. but phoned 1nqurnes or letters not including the reader's full 11ame. address and business hours· phone number cannot be coruv:lered. This column appears /foe days a week ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Classllled advertising 71 4/642-5678 All other departments 642-4321 Firebomb strike survivors .gather Thomas P Haley P~Al'O Cn 9'f E•e~v' .,,.()ft , Robert N. Weed ,,_,. Thomas A Murph1nt:: Eotot L. Kay Schultz v.._p_,,, ..io ()190t(JI Of Oofit•I ,,,_, Michael P Harvey Mllnwttf'\Q Oi'KIOf Kenneth N Godd;Hd Jr Charles H. Loos D.ity Not D.il .. r hGo_ ....... Monoly·F,-,01'( If t'C\1J .J· ' I ,.,.., 'f'OUJ ~ Oy .-, )() O "" • "'"'°'~• 0 m Ind 'r'OU' Ct.oOy #Jllj b .. lt• .~t·1 S.1uro1r and &"nd•'r 11 '"'• ...,. " 1 rec»tve Y'OV' cop., c.-I J m ., oeb e tO • m .,..,, ., ... , r, # r. 094'•.,..ed Clrul..._ T ,..,..._.. Moll Oranv• Covniv A, .. ~, •U·O J • Mot11'1-..et:t ~ntm9tO,. 8.-. r 1noWes:1m1ntff'• S40.tJJO Lmgun• N19ue1 4'._6100 MAIN OFFICE lJO W~•I 8Ay St (0\1• Me••. CA Maol add,...u Bo• 1\60 C°''" M~w. CA 91•1• COl>Yrl9hl 1"1 Of-C°"" Pul>l,.1111>9 C_.,y No new \ \lone\, 1tlU\traH0t1\, ~dttM1~1 matter or ao- ¥f'r1t\.e,.,,,.nt\ he-rein may bee reprodu<.ecl wf1hoU't \Ot"<••I ~fmt:HKM"I Of cooyr19ht O•f'W< 5'cono <•••• posl"9" Pot•d al CO\la Me•• C~tfOf'nl• (UPS 1 ~ IOO) S.Vb'\CrtpftOt'I o., tarr1f'r '4 1S rT'IOl1thty by ma11 '6 50 mont"'• l M Or .tnQP Co.\t D•lly Piiot w1tf"I wPlk h ~ c.orn. o,n_.,o the ,........., Pr"""' ., pu~l\hed by the 0r.,.. C ob'1 Publt\n1n9 Comp;ony ~P•'ble edition• re pubt1\f'W'd l+AotYJ~y thrc>t.H)n t:r1o•v 'or Coit• Mew, Newpt>rt 8...cn Hunltn91on 8H<ll, Fount•ln V•lley, Ir Y Inf' l ~"" 8M< n Soulll C o.11•1 A "n9i. ~I Wl•t ,on • .., put>41\IW'd Sttturdiay\ and s,,mct•~ The 011n< •P•• pubh\1'1n9 ol•')t fS at 3lO w~st B•v Strwt. P 0 80• 1°'00 Co.lo M~•a, Calllorntd ~2'1• VOL. 75, NO. 70 TOKYO CAP) -Survivors of t he most devastating firebomb strike on Tokyo during World War II a tte nde d m emorial services Wednes day a nd erected a statue to mark the day 37 years ago when a s many as 80,000 people perished . An arm ada of 300 U .S . w a r plane s hit Tokyo with fir e bombs for 2'h hours on March 10. 1945, wiping out 40 perce nt of central Tokyo. The air strike also wounded more than 50,000 people a nd razed more th;m 180,000 homes . We're Listening ••• Whal <lo ~ou li ke about the Oarl y Pilot? What don't you like? Lrll thl' numbt•r below a nd your message will be recorded. tni nsrribt'<i and d1,l1 \'cred lo the appropriate editor The 'amt· 24 hour answenng service may be used, to record let ll·r-. to tht· l'dllor on an} topic Mailbox contributors must include thl·1 r namt' and telt•phonc number for verific'at1on. No circulation "a I ls. plt·a~c Tt·ll 11~ l.\hal's nn ~our mrnd 642·6086 .. NEW DEAL! ERA supporter lu.is iroman deity Sunla Johnson, the ERA su~porter expelled from the Mormon Church, says she now addresses her P.rayers to a fe male deity, a · mother In heaven." "With her on m y side, how c an I helJ> not to l>e victorious?" Ms. J ohnson told the 20(J women who were gathered in Provo, Utah , by the newly-founde d Provo c hapter of the National Or ganization for Women. M s . John s on wa s excommunicated from the Church of Jes us Christ of Latter·d1:ty Saints in 19J9 after criticizing the churc'h's opposition to the p roposed Equal Rights Amendment. whi c h woul d ba n discrimination based on s ex Mov e o ver. Minnesota Fats. Step aside, Amarillo Slim. At 104 years old, J ennJe 8 . Guntn is play ing the ponies. Mrs. Gunter le ft Garland Convalescent Center in Hot Springs, Ark , for a trip to Oa klawn Park racetrack , and got rnyal treatment -a box scat , a gold horseshoe p resent ed b y Oak lawn 'G en e ral Ma nager W.T . Bishop, and a race named after her Oakla wn officials calle d t he fourth race "The J enny." S h e didn 't go h o m e e mpty ha nded e ither She won every race she bet on for $65 in take home cash and picked up the daily double of $22.60 in t he second r ace. C ap ta in C arrol 's mother-in-law is having a fruitrul tim e at Harrah's T ahoe, cashing in on three $10,000 J&ckpots in fou r months Alma J ean Clrco, 59, whose son-in -la w 1s S acra m ento health food advocate Cary Nosier, said sht• had a hunch she would be a winner again before she lined up the three sulta ns on the l'enter line of a dollar m achine. She had been play ing the m achine about four hours whe n s he hit the jackpot. She said she planned to use the money lo pa y laxes. C harle s J . Haughey, chosen the new Irish prime ministe r, 1s expected to have lunch at the White House on S t Pat ric k 's D ay with Preside nt Rea gan, a White House spokesman s aid A personal weight ma.nagement progra1n thal really works! • • • Save~ during our spring wardrobe offer: llMrsoflO managementl fb•hovior rnodilkationl I weight /nutrition stress management I ''and it's your choice'' Our program encourages you to choose which foods to eat and to decide which behavior you would like to change! You're in charge. 'IT S YOUR CHOICE." $1400 $450 $4500 TO JOIN PER WK. 10 WK. SAVINGS PLAN For the class nearest you call (213) 929-4211 / (714) 964-3488 "it's your choice" · £L~~~0P~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ··COUPON COUFONI Join With A S A ''1S4' $1h00 • rrlend' And "w ~ 61' orr 1 R~OISTRATIOl'f • Here's a great way to build a wardrobe and save at the same time. Choose any wardrobe combination from our new spring collection of men's clothing and receive an automatic $80.00 discount. Select from our most prestigious labels : Hart Schaffner & Marx. Hickey -Freeman, Pierre Cardin, Bill Blass. Au stin Reed of Regent Street, Christian Dior and many more. ~I Wardrobe Value: 1 Suit, regularly ............. 210.00 or more 1 Sportcoat, regularly ........ 135.00 or more 1 Pair of slacks, regularly . . . . . . 42 .50 or more Total Value ........... : ..... 387.SOormore Siiverwood• then deducts 80.0Q_off 1ht_ tot•I. silverwoods NEWPORT FASHION ISLAND ............ HELLO THERE Ed McMuhon. Tonight show co-host, and ha~ wifl'. Victo ria. gre et a leaping dolphin at Marine Wo rld-Africa USA in Redwood Cit y durin g a visit to cl'lt.'br:..itt· their sixth wedding anniversary Mor e than 19,000 people watched as Mormon Church Pr es ide nt S p e nc e r W . Kimball, living in relative se c lusion s rnce undergoing skull surgery last year, m ade his first public appeara nae in seven months S t i ll w e ak from complications that followed his operation. Kimball was Prince Edward, the third son and youngest of Queen E lizabeth ll's four children, celebrated his 18th birthday and the que en sent him a birthday cake . Edward spent Wednesday at Go rdons toun School ifl Sco tland , wh e re he i s pre paring lo take exams in There are me mbers of Cong ress who read about Frank.tin 0 . Roosevelt's 100 days in their grade s chool texts, a nd then the re is Sen. J e nnings Randolph who he lped shape the New Deal legis lation Th e We s t Vi r gi ni a De mocr at. who t urne d 80 Tuesday, is the only me mber he lped onto a pla tform al Brigh am Young University durin g ce r e m o n i e s dedi c ating the 12 -s tory Spe ncer W. Kimball tower . Ki mball, who will be 87 this month, is the le ader of th e 4.9 mi ll1 o n m e mber Church of Jesus Ch rist of Latter-day Saints advanced Engli s h . history and politics Reports on his progress say he is acade mically bright and is expected to go on to a university. A Buckingham Palace spokesman said t he queen had the cake baked in the palace kitchens. o f Con,;ress wh o serve d during the first days of the Rooseve lt administration. Two m embers are older, Re p. Claude Pepper, 0 -Fla ., who is 81. and Sen. John C. Stennis, 0 -Miss., who turned 80 las t August. But Pepper a rrtved in 1936, a n d R an d o l ph h a s 15 years seniority on Stennis ~ ~ lfor1 g~~~:CQUAINnD 1, ... ___________ ........................... ~-----.... ----.... ~lll!'lllllmll!l ... 1!11111 ... !ll. ~ Ol't"tR 0000 TNRU MARCH '82 • .............................. ' ' WF Orange Cout DAILY PILOTmured•y. March 11, 1882 Parks pleasam, but maintena11ee costly Huntington Be ach om c1als s ay they're running short or money to cut grass and trim bushes ln the city's 50 pa rks. Four new parks r ecently were developed in Huntington Harbour and 15 more are planned in other parts of the city. The more than 400 acres of developed park land cost $1.1 million annually to maintain. But since Propositio n 13 r educed revenue, tt\e park maintenance budget has been squeezed tighter each year. .One solution would be to stop developing pa rks. but m a ny residents were pro mised parks and recreation areas when they purchased their homes. Land developers donated cash and land specifically for community parks . Last year, city offi cials e xperiment e d with "low maintenance" parks that ha d ··natural groundcover '' and bark groundcover to reduce mowing costs. But m a n y r es id e nt s complaine d tha t t h e n atura l gro undco v c r loo k ed lik e overgrown weeds and the bark was dry and unsightly. City omcials cu rrently have asked private landscapers to bid on maintaining eight city parks. including the four ne w sites, in hope that they can do it for less money. There's also the possibility that assessment districts may be recommended in future years to p ay f o r d eve l o pin g a n d maintaining parks . Ideally. city officia ls should plan parks that have reduced m aintena n ce cost s but s till p r o v i de scen ic, rel ax in g recreation areas. For the time being, perhaps it is worthwhile finding out if private landscapers can do the job for less money. Police station si.te The Founta in Vall ey City Council. which has been mulling over several sites for a new police s tation, appa r ently has settled al last on a location. The council has agreed to pay Safeco Insura nce a bout $620,000 for a vacant lot adjacent to City Hall, targeting this la nd for the new station. A cons ultant hired by the council had s-u ggested three city-owned sites for the new station. One wa s a n a r e a• i m · mediately behind City Hall. close to a hous in g tract. Residents of that neighborhood complained they didn't want the new police s t a tion in t hei r backyard. The consultant also said the existing station could be razed and the new l~rger facility built on its location . This o ption, how e ver , w o uld r e quire re -loc ation o f th e p o l ice departm e nt durin g the construction period. A third alternative was the City Yard property. located near the San Di ego Freeway at Ward Street. According to Mayor Ben Nielsen. the council wa nted a location with higher visibility So the council opted for the Safeco lot. whi ch will become pa rt of the Civic Center complex on Slater Avenue . No one would arg ue tha t this is a poor location. Some might question whether a financially ailing city should have purchased additiona l property fo r the s t a tio n . <Th e l o t is be in g purchased wit h money loaned fr o m th e c i ty to i t s r edevelopme nt agency. which will repay it from increased tax r evenues generated by other r edevelopment projects. city officials say.) The council has a n even g r e ater finan cial d ecis ion to make in the coming weeks. The council must decide just how extensive -and expensive a new police station the city s hould build. Learning plan scrapped The go-at-your-own-pace system of learning at Ocean View High School in Huntington Beach is being eliminate d n e xt September after six years of controversy. School o ffic ials say the "variable credit" syst e m is being scrapped because most of the original teachers committed to the program have been laid off in recent years because of declining enrollment and budget cuts. Their replacements from other district schools are teachers who ravor traditional grading. When Ocean View opened in 1976, proponents of va riable credit hailed the concept as requiring s tudents t o b e "accowttable" to learn all course material. School officials s a y the self-paced philosophy hasn 't failed, but that it currently lacks necessary teacher support. However, the s ystem has had numerous foes over the years. • including some pare nts, teachers and dissenting sch ool board members. They've compla ined t hat many students fall behind in the system and are denied proper guidance and education. Basically. the var iable credit system mandates that students , a t their own pace. must pass every classroom test. If they fail a test, they must reta ke it when the y are ready . This requires teachers to monitor a nd guide individual students at different paces. In a traditional classroom. a ll s tudents take test s at the same tjme. A student can fail a test or two and make up for it by doing well on othe r e xams. The grades are a veraged at the end of the t erm. The intention of varia ble credit was to improve learning, but after s ix years of mixed reviews it has f alien victim to funding cutbacks and declining enrollment. ~inl~ !XPressed In the 'Jpace al>Ove are t~ of~ Oally_~llot. Ot~r ~f~w~ ex· pressed oo lllis-paQe ar e tllose M Uieir a ufhors and ar11sts. Reader comffi~nf 1s invlf· _ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa M esa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 'f>42«1321 . L.M. Boyd/ Bandit chaser What la most likely to scare off a bank robber? Tbe American Bankers Association checked police record.I to find out. ID those cases wbere would·be bandtta turned tail to nee wit.bout seWnC the money, they did 10 after women screamed. Dan1erou1, this. No authorities adYlH female victims to scream. Not all 1ereamen survive. But lt 19 a fact that tbe seream ls ao far tbe moet elfectl'fe alarm. WbaWYer It,, you want to aay ll you _1a1 lt to enou•h people, .omeDOCIY 11 So1na (o be offended, • OR.ANGE COAST llllJ~lat evidenUy. Remember that song ''I Saw Mommy KiasiDI Sant.a Claus?" Numerous irate cillsens thought it so damaging lo children that they organized an effort to have it banned from the air. Only TV show ever to go olf the air while sWl No. l in the ratings was "I Love Lucy." Q. Why ls the Emerald lale of Ireland reputedly so much trMner than other countries? A. Umestone under the sod, raJn over it . Thomas P. H•l•Y Pub II sher Ti.om.. KMaii;lllni{ Edifor B•rlNr• Krelbid• Editorial Page Editor • ~ ~ ~----c;;:. ... -·-~ --=--~ --~ --.. ~E SENATE VOTES ON SENAiOR WIL.LIAMS • 'Superagencies' inflate Costs It isn't surprising that a legislativt: co mmittee h as found the s tatt: government 's superstructure of agency secret a ries supe rfluo us. The only s urprise Is that the legislators have identified the problem so soon. The idea for the superagencies was born during the administration of Gov. "Pat " Brown . He complained that the increasing numbe r s of department heads reporting directly to him was overreaching his s pa n or control Actually, his executive secretary and another known as his "governmental sec r etary " r o d e h e rd o n the departments. But Brown created a "Resources Secretary" in charge of the Departments of Water Resources, Forest ry a nd Parks , and planned further reorganizations of that type to create a Cive-man cabinet supervisinl! all of the departments. THE PLAN was implemented by Ronald Reagan as governor and has been maintained by J erry Brown. In the less than two decades which has followed the introduction of the "superagencies" they have expanded into ··super bureaucracies" and now cost the state more than $12 million annually. Reviewing their work an Assembly committee has found that, "Instead of serving pri marily as a policymaking and coord inati n g age nt of t he governor's office, the agencies have taken on an operating role of their own" interfering with the operations of the departments. Of course the intent was to provide lieutenants for the governor who could r, r-:, ;; EARL WATERS ~, advise departmental heads and keep them in li ne wit h the governor's policies. But when those li eutenants build themselves staffs which now total more than 140 persons it is inevitable that the staff people quickly involve them in the operations of the departments. Such is human nature. The result is the director beco mes no thin g mor e than a messenger carrying out the dictates of the superhead on a day to day basis and is no longe r essential to the operation. The answer then is to either eli minate the directors or the supersecretaries. The comm1u ee has recommended the I alter , suggesting that whatever work now bein g done b y t he agency secretaries that is necessary be given back to the depart ments and the overseeing or the directors be done by some "highly qua lified" members of the governor's office. Directors are paid high salaries to run the departments If they can't be trusted to admini ster them without constant supervision the governor sho.uldn'l appoint them OF COURSE lhe public as well as the employees should h ave someone to appeal to when a director seems to have gone off the trolley The governor can 't be expected to enter into every breach. B,ut his executive secretary and a departmental secretary should be a dequate to ha ndle most or the problems. And you can be sure the governor will step in post haste whenever it becom es more than a problem. T h e whole sc h eme fo r th e superagencies was a bad idea from the beginning. Now th at it has been recognized it will be interesting to see how long it will take the Legislature to rid the state or thjs wasteful method of management. Lunch hour not long enough at DMV To the Editor T his afternoon I returned to work after spending my lunch hour standing in the line for registration at our local OM V o{[ice on 19th Street in Costa Mesa. U anyone has not been to the OMV lately they s hould know that nothing has changed except the addition of chairs ln t.be long and winding path MAILBOX Crom front door to the window area. I would guess there to be about 36 chairs, and I say guess because I never got up close enough to the m lo see them all at once around the corner to count. I will say that upon entering the door I ~as probably 20th in line to the chairs and when I left at the end of my lunch hour I was loth in line to the chairs with nine behind me to the door. That means another approximate 36 were in front of the 10 in front of me. During the whole time there were never more than three windows open and yet there is room to a ccommodate approximately eight employees. AS I WALKED to my car at 1:1..5 p.m . I spoke with a lady also getting in her car and she had made it up to the window. It had taken her 3 hours. It is about time something was done to correct this situation as in t.be six years I have been using this office it has never been any better. U this is an office for the public then ll is about time the public do something about il. If that means me, then I will be the first to start the movement to correct the situation. As if this is not maddening enough, I would like to also mention the young people posing as youth of Orange County taking donations out.side the door of the OMV and have been doing this for over a year that I am aware of. They are nothing more than brainwashed American youth beggin1 for the Hare Krishna movement pretending to be social, active youth of Orange County. They prey on non-English speaking people, older senior citizens and anyone who enters or leaves the bWlding. They are as un-American as any institution t.bJlt I have ever known about and are as un-Orange County.youth 111 any teen·aaer can tet. Slnce When bave we raised our children lo bet. and for what? U th1a ls public property then let me be the nrat to say that I am part of the public and' this offends me to the core. MARV JANltSANBORN Boon or bane? To tbe Editor: How would tbe cable tel...._= lllle to receive tb• klad lll tn they dllb out! •. SP«iftcally, without advuee llOtlae, tbelr street di11ln1 repruentatlna rant doorbells ln Eutblutr et .......... hours to state tbelr lnteatloM lo .dla wp near curbside areas to install cables. Besides arousing every barking dog in the area they required personal and guest cars to be moved out of the path or the diggers . This meant, in our instance, moving four cars promptly several blocks from the house. THIS PRESUMABLE benefit for the ci tize nr y b e~a n la s t y e a r in November/December. Slnce that time slit trenches have been dug, about four inches wide and six inches deep - finally installing cable two months later without "completing the trench openings which were partly filled with cement but not finished or leveled with the street. This is now the t.hird or fourth month since they, the television cable people, began the ir nuisance. noisy, and nonsensical maneuvers in the name of neighborhood benefit. It's too bad they couldn't have begun their last-minute ale rts, noisy inconvenient drilling, m essy, badly lit, s pace hogging m aneuvers in front of each of the city offi cials' residences meaning the homes of those who gave city approval without lime limitations, courtesy notices and penally conditions for delays. When it comes to "improvement" such as cable television, it should be remembered that It is perhaps more bane than boon. -ART WEis.5MAN Kindly cat curb To the Editor : Keeping cats off your flower beds does not necessitate drastic dangerous and cruel measures that threaten lives or children and animals. Just simply sprinkle a few moth crystals on the area, or get something s imilar fro m the neighborhood veter inarian. Another word or advice, this one for pet owners: If you love your dogs and cats 'do not travel with them in the car or truck without safety measures. Leash them and attach the leash to the vehicle. And if you park, don't shut them up in a hot, airless vehicle, and don't leave a valuable, beloved animal in a car that is unloc ked. The h e a r tache is unbearable J . ROGERS Price prediction To the Editor: Many letters reach the o~ Pates, citing the need for lower hilereat rat.es lo stimulate a near-dead real estate market. No. Properties are overpriced. • l.~ttn1 Jrom rtadera art ~lcome. Tht1 right to c°"'""H t.tter1 to /U spoct or elimiriotf llbc'l 11 rcttrtJtd. wttera o/ 300 wordf or ltas wUl bt fittn prt/n"fftCt. AU lette,, ,...,, IJlcludc .dgftGturt' Clftd "'4ilmg oddrna ht name• '"GJI bt auatlalwld on rt· queit •I 1utJ1citnt rt o1on 11 apporcnr. Pot t'll au not be publl1Md Lttr.n mow be trl~ 10 fa•"*· Name o-d pllOnc number of th# Conlrlhtor m"'1 bt Qhlfll IOr om/Ital•,.,,._. I Worlting on a related paper I found s taggering data 1 Over the next 12 months , prime coast al residential properties will probably take a bath Crom 12 to 40 percent of a ppraised values! The only saving grace would be a smoking inflation r ate of say 13 to 20 percent per year . No one wishes to ma ke a predict.ion or projection as this Perhaps this is the reason no one has done so earlier. But the numbers work. While they might realize m~ findings only instinctively, the largest group of sell ers unloading their properties now are real estate agents a nd othe r professional investors. KEN PO RTER Test of progress To t he Editor. President Reagan. while trying to turn back the clock, would do well to ponder words by FDR. spoken al his second inaugural in 1937. "The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much, it is wh ether we provide enough for those who have liUle." H Reagan has his way, it will again be the haves and the have nots with nothing in the middle. ERNA ROSE Arcade mis placed To the Editor : Reference is made to your recent ed itoria l en titled ·'Set Rules for Games." While we as Hunti ngton Beach residents were happy to learn that there i s a n ordinance governing the placement or arcades in our city and have requested a copy of it, please don't think for one minute that it goes that far toward alleviating the problem. ~be arcade, located near the intersection or Brookhurst and Hamilton, is a pe{fect example of where not to locate a game ar cade. Close lo several residential areas, it Is a virtual magnet for kids Crom all over the area who are there until late at night and then go loo.king for trouble . If th is location conforms lo Huntington Beach's ordinance, tbeo Huntington Beach needs to go .,_ck to the d.rawtng boards I • BURR ALLEGAERT llllll• Are tbe ~ten _proteedftl tbe rtM lD tbelr s11 bll11 tb• n.re oeea wbo protested tbe produdlDn al natural •u Uaal caUMd the rlle? Q.J. ......, .. __.._ ...................... . _._.., ............. __ I ....... ,...; ..................... ,...... t Onange Coul DAIL y PILOT/Thureday, March.11. 1982 Grant wants a hand from Utah backers • f'r~m AP dtapatcbes LOGAN, 'Utah -This smalJ m northern Utah clty may be unfamiliar territory for eastern • basketball powerhouses like Georgetown and West Virginia, but Coach Boyd Grant says his Fresno State team should feel rieht at home. No. 6 Georgetown. 22-6, and nth-ranked Fresno State, 2612, drew firat·round byes in tbe sub-re1lonal at the Spectrum at Utah State University that begins toni1bt. The tournament opens at 6:08 p.m. with 14th-ranked West Virginla, 26-3, meeting North Carolina A&T, 19·9. Western Athletic Conference champion Wyoming, 22·6, and USC, 19·8, play in the second game at 8:40 p.m . The winner of the West Virginia-North Carolina A&T game plays Fresno Sta.le Saturday, while the Wyoming-Southern Cal winner meets Georgetown. Fresno State, the champion of the Pacific Coast Athletic Association, already has played in the Spectrum this year against PCAA foe Utah State. Quote of the day Allan Bristow, 30-year-old forward of the Dallas Mavericks, on the future of the young franchise: "This team is a few years away from being a top contender and I know I may not be here when it happens. But I look at it as a war. The first wave usually dies off, but makes it possible for the second wave to win the war I feel like I'm on the first wave." Baseball Hall adds two rrembers A.B. "Happy'' Chandler, who a served the game as commissioner for six years, and Travis Jackson, a slick-fielding shortstop for the New York Giants, were elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame Wednesday. Chandler and Jackson were chosen by the Veterans Committee, whose function it is to add oldtimers to the Coooerstown shrine . . Mark Brouhard hit a pair of home runs and Ned Yost added a three-run blast to lead the Milwaukee Brewers Lo a 6·5 victory over San Francisco in exhibition play Wedne s - day ... Elsewhere, Mike Tyson's bases-loaded triple helped the Cubs outlast Oakland, 9-6 , .. Mike Laga homered in the lop or the 11th CMA1to1.u inning, leading Detroit to a 9-8 victory over Minnesota . . . Four unearned runs in the seventh inning helped Cincinnati top Pitts burgh, 4· 1 . . . Rick Manning and Andre Thornton clouted two-run ddubles to pace Cleveland to a 5·1 victory over a split Cubs' squad ... Greg Lulinski's broken-bat single with the bases loaded capped a three-run second inning, leading the White Sox to a 5-2 win over Kansas City. · 'Oetrott opts fore coaching change W•JH ••••er waa fired Iii Wednesday u coach of tM Dett0lt ' Red Wln11. The move mat'ked the Ulh coachtnr cban1e ln Detroit ln 14 yea,..: Mun~r. 38, will be succeeded for the ~malnder of the 11eason by aHlltant 8Wy De._ • • • On the Ice, Clark GWle1 tallied twice aa the New York lalanders fouaht back from a two·1oal deflclt to Ue Minnesota, 4·4 . . . Detenseman Do.as WllJoll and center Tom Lyalak scored twlce apiece as Chlcaao nippped Toronto, 7·6 ... Pie.rre Larouclae scored two of tbrff Hartford eoala in the aecond period in the Whalers' 8·2 win over Wlnnlpe1 .. aoa Floekbart'1 power-play goal with l : l7 remalnin1 lifted Philadelphia into a ~·5 lie with the Rangers ... Rookie Mike B•llard and veteran Aadre St. Laareat scored twice apiece In ~i sburgh 's 7 -2 romp over Was n . . Robert MoacraJa and GUlea Ham each scored twice as Buffalo stopped Vancouver, 7·4. Bucks drop fourth straight Ricky Soben scored 13 of his 17 polnts ln the fourth quarter W ednesdaf night and teammates Artis GUmore and David Greenwood combined for 43 to lead Chi~go to a 101·98 NBA victory over Milwaukee. It was the Bucks' fourth successive defeat, their worst losing streak ln three seas<>ns . . . Veteran center Daa l1ael scored 35 points while IUkl Vudewepe had 30 and A.tell EngU.b 21 as Denver routed Detroit, 124-113 . . . Maurice Cheeu and Lionel BoUJ.u led a third-quarter surge that broke open a close game and sent Philadelphia to a 134-114 win over Golden State . . . Ray Williams poured in 25 points and Darwin Cook keyed two third-quarter rallies, leading New Jersey to a 113-105 victory over Phoenix . . . Larry Bird returned from a five-game layotr to score 21 points to lead Boston to a 121-100 triumph over Indiana ... Rookie guard Rolando Blackman scored 16 points in the fourth quarter to rally Dallas to a 104·102 victory over Portland. longhorns sour on Lemons The University of Texas, saying Ill simply it needed a new directjon for Its basketball program, fired colorful Coach Abe Lemons Wednesday. Lemons had taken the Longhorns to a 14·0 record and No. 5 national ranking before the team collapsed and finished 16-10 and eighth in the Southwest Conference .. Sally Little, who collected $22,500 a year ago for playing just 36 holes of golf in the LPGA tournament at Industry Hills, was scheduled to open defense of that title today. Television. radio Following are the top SPOrts events on TV tonight. Ratings are: / 1 1 ., excellent; ' 1 1 worth watching; / 1 fair ; / forget it. [-) 8:30 p.m., Channel 2 ./ ./ ./ ./ COLLEGE BASKETBALL : use vs. Wyoming. Announcers: Garv Bender and Billy Packer. Dwight Anderson, the miracle shot worker. leads the Trojans In Logan. Utah tonight. Wayne Carlander, a graduate of Ocean View High, is also a star<er for USC. Wyoming has a tall front line of Bill Garnett (6-8), Chris Engler <7-0) and Greg Thesenvitz (6-tO) that the Trojans will have to overcome to advance to Saturday's second round game against Georgetown. RADIO Basketball -USC vs. Wyoming, 8:30 p.m., KDAY (1580). FRIDAY'S RADIO Baseball -Detroit vs. Dodgers at Vero Beach, to: 10 a.m .. KABC (790>; San Diego vs. An~els at Palm Springs, 12:SS p.m .. KMPC (710). Washington advances in NIT Bio la stays unbeaten with victory in N Al A playoffs From AP dispatches PROVO, Utah -Guards Alvin Vaughn and Steve BuT"ks combined for all but 11 of Was hington ·s second half points. igniting the Huskies to a 66-63 comeback victory over Brigham Young Wednesday night in the first round of the National Invitational Tournament. Vaughn scored 15 of his game-high 23 points and Burks scored 12 of his 16 in the second half as Washington overcame a 40-28 halftime deficit. The two Husky guards combined ror six steals and made several foul shots in the waning minutes 8S BYU tried to gain possession. , 'urdue 72, Western Kentuc;ky 85 WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. -Keith Edmonson s'cored 29 points as Purdue held off a late rally and beat Western.Kentucky 72-65 in the NIT. , The victory put the Boilermakers, 15·13 for the •ason, into next Monday's second round against t be winner of tonight's matchup between Iona and autgers. • , Purdue, third-place finisher in the NIT last year, runner-up in 1979 and champion in 1974, took t~e lead midway through the first half. Led by f $t. Patrick's Day tegattas slated B; ALMON LOCKABEY Deity .......... ~ : All ya<:htsmen go Irish on St. Patrick's Day -ot so it would seem from a glance at the Southern C'alifornia Yachting Association weekend c•lendar. • Three yacht clubs in Orange County are •fweartn' the green" with St. Patrick's Day regattas. scheduled by Bahia Corinthian Yacht' dub, Saturday and Sunday; Newport Harbor ~cht Club (Lehman-Us) on Sunday, and Capistrano Bay Yacht Club ror Performance ... ndicap Racin1 Fleet < PHRF) yachtl on Sunday. ~ The BCVC re1atta will feature small boats on Ide course· Saturday and J.arcer boats aailln1 ean courses Sunday. In other SCY A areu: 1L-. I QI u.e-..11 t.11 p-.. Y9CM CIM -T,..... .Wll ..... ell YMlll Chi• -<f,_., .. _llOfOS...Wy. ~°! ...... • ._.,. Se11tllWHler11 Ye Clll Cl11ll -11-•---·11111•-•••9-J S111•rlHf Reel ••u C"Mlt~> ...,., ..,_.. c•-._,.... ....,..,. (tllC._..).......,., h11 0 .... MaftflU' ltlHI - llley YlltM C .... -c;,lla!IM IMIM 1.ltN •-· ~. al rec. 18trt•• Serini ~YlldltC,..-Wefl~ 1 .._,.Nyl f'rHl•lll .-MIClH ......... I~._..,. r• . ......, ...... ..,..,_,.ciw -..,.... ... OMllt'I._ ..... _ ....... ~·~· .... ,[11111 .. ,.,.. ....... ,..... ... ........ ... .... -...... T9dlt 0. -A-... TecM C ... -'-'1ftt "'*t:::'• ....... c::=·=n..--=..-~ ·Cftt YM!lt C~-................ ._.............. llretll••• VUlllA Cl•ll -. ..,.,,.. ~-·· -·~~ .. v~• , .. ,. -''· ._ .. ....., ..... ,.. C1ll8 ._ .......... a.mu ( -· .....,; ....... """ ........... .. ....... BASKETBALL Texas A&M 60, Lamar 58 COLLEGE STATION. Texas -Claude Riley converted a three-point play with 35 seconds left to give Texas A&M a rour -point lead and the Aggies held on to beat Lamar 60·58 in the NIT. The Aggies, who finished third in the Southwest Conference, led by as many as nine points against the Cardinals and were ahead 31·30 at halftime. The score was tied five limes in the second hair and the lead changed hands 12 times. A&M took the lead for good at SS·S4 with 2:33 remaining when Gary Lewis hit a pair of free throws. llllnofa 126, L0"9 Island 78 CHAMPAIGN, m. -Perry Range scored a career-high 28 points as Illinois demolished Long Island 126-78 in an opening-round game of the NIT. Six other Illinois players were in double figures as the Illini set new school and NIT records for scoring. Illinois hell a 65-29 lead at halftime on 56 percent shooting from the noor. The Illini, 18·10, held a 40-point lead at one point in the half. LIU entered the game scoring an average of 87. points per contest -highest in the nation -but was held to 30 percent shooting in the first half. The rout continued in the second half, during which Illinois led at one time by Sl points -120-69. Dayton 76, Connecticut 75 DAYTON, Ohio -Sean McNally's basket with 48 seconds left in overtime 1ave the Dayton Flyers a 76-75 victory over the Connecticut Huskies In the first-round of the NIT. With CoMecticut leading 67-75 and one minute left ln regulation, Husky guard Karl Hobbs was ejected for hitting Dayton guard Kevin Conrad and a two-shot technical foul was aueued. Roosevelt Chapman h.lt both free throws for Da>;ton to send the ome into ove~lme. Chapman finished with 21 pc)ints to lead au scorers. Connecticut held the ball the final 41 seconds or overtime but could not score after McNally'a final basket. Btoa. 821 Quincy H KANSAS CITY -Top-aeeded and unbeaten Biota of lA Mlrada, led by eecoad·baU heroics from Wade Klrchm•yer and Pat McDou.1aU • defe.ted Quincy of Illinois 12-58 Wectn.day In the aeeoad round ol the NAlA tournament. Bkala, n.o, will meet Sqlaew Valley State of lllcblaan ID a quaNr-ftnal 1ame today. W-c:Do•c•ll 1c:ored elsbt points, and Klrdamelw 8dcled lb dartnl • H..a Rrae &bat 1avt 86ala a~ lad.,.._ l :a left lat.be ..... lt.W. Doq)aa .. ftalaW 'wllb • 1•m • JICllDl,a, ;c;;;d to c:lcllle tbl S8P to 55-M Ma'I &&cit o.1111 t'CID..ned I three ,11111 fl«Jt.Ul m• ...... .. Estancia tops Monarchs CdM explodes early; Laguna Beach, Marina.also win Estancia tot past Mat.er De! wbJle Corona del Mar hJt.ters had a big day ln a win over Tustin ln area prep bueball acUon Wedntlday. ElHwbere, Laguna Beach btat Woodbndse whlle Marina defeated Paramount and University and Irvine both su/f ertd setbaek.J. Here's how ll went: E1tancla 8, Meter Del 3 Jim Mccahill plcked up hla first win with a complete.game effort ror the Eagles. striking out seven while issuing only two walks. Estancia made the moat or its six hits as shortstop Jeff Gardner went 2 for 3 with a double and a triple and one RBI while Eric Riggs belted a solo home run to left field in the second inning. Mater Oei used five different pitchers in the non·league game. Mike KeUy wati 2 for 3 with a double for the Monarchs wblle shortstop Mike Llnsten had a 2-for-4 performance. The win Improved Esta,pcla 's overall record to a-3. ) Corona del Mar 11, Tuatln 5 The Sea Kings scored nine times ln the bottom of the first ·inning and coasted to victory with sophomore pitcher John Burns on the mound. "We've had so many of our pitchers sick this past week, we had to bring Bums up from the JV's," Coach Tom Trager said., "He went rour innings and did a good job for us with the others out. He oruy had one strikeout and that was the first batter he fa<:ed ." The Sea Kings scored nine runs on six walks, an error and three base hits in the opening frame. Gordon Moss got the only extra base hit for the Sea Kings as the leadoff batter in the first. In the flfth inning Burns ran into trouble when the Tillers put together a double and home run to score twice. He was pulled from the game at this ' point but recorded the victory. The win gives CdM a 5· l record with Woodbridge the final non-league foe Friday. The Sea Kings open Sea View League play next Wednesday against visiting Irvine. Laguna Beach 5, Woodbt1dge 2 Evan Chalmers went 3 for 3 for lhe Artists and scored the go-ahead run as Laguna Beach came up Kroyer paces Pirates Kris Kroye r led all scorers with 24 points and two or her Orange Coast College teammates finished in double figures as the Pirates remained unbeaten (2-0> in South Coast Conference play with an 82·51 win over Santa Ana in women's basketball action Wednesday night Cyyndi Ca rroll and Tammi Parker had 21 and 15 points, respectively, but it was Kroyer, a 6·2 sophomore center and All·State selection last year, who led the way for the Pirates. The win puts Or ange Coast al 10· l overall going into Friday's non-conference meeting with Mira Costa at 3:30 in the Pirates gym. BASEBALL with threo runa in the bottom of the sixth to break a 2·2 tie. Woodbrid&e bad ju11t three hitl, but two of those went for extru base1. RJck Lee doubled for the Warriors while Kevin Burke bad •triple . The loss dropped Woodbridge to 0·8. including one lou by forfeit due to an academically ineligible player. "We're gonna have to regroup.'' Warrior Coach Dave Cowen said . "Friday ~ 10 against Corona del Mar so we're gonna have to play our best baseball and hope they have an orr day just to be competitive." . Merine 7, Paramount 1 Shane Flores had a double and a triple to drive in two runs to pace Marina's lO·hit attack as the Vikings upped their overall record to 3-1. John Berry s tarted on the mound for Marina, striking out four and allowing five hits over rour innings. Terry McClure ume in in relier, holding Paramount scoreless while yielding just two hits. Kevin Elster drove In two runs for the Vikings with his fourth-inning single. Marina (3·1) opens Sunset League play Saturday at Edison at noon. St. Anthony 10, University 3 The visiting Saints put together two good innings to win going away. Phil Alvers and Leo Nelmes hit back-to·back home runs in the fourth to give St. Anthony a 6-0 lead. University countered with three runs in the bottom of the fourth but the Trojans committed three errors in the top of the fifth, opening the door for rour unearned runs. Brad Guess had an RBI single while Mike Miller contributed a run.scoring double for the Trojans . Catcher Mike Frei had two hjts on the game. Troy Larsen suffered the loss as University dropped lo 4·2-1 overall. Artesia 15, lrvlne 7 Artesia's Pioneers used a big second inning to stop Irvine's Vaqueros. Nine ot.t.he second inning 11 runs were unearned on four errors, two passed balls. a hit batter and two walks among other things. John Scott was one or the few bright spots for the Vaqueros as he went 3 for 4 at the plate and scored twice. Irvine took the lead in the opening inning. l ·O, but it was short-lived and the Vaqueros were never again able to catch up despite scoring three limes in the fifth and seventh frames. Artesia added four runs in the fifth for its final total or 15. The loss brings Irvine's record to 3·3 for the pre-Sea View League season. • Bonar puts clamps on Gretzky ... Scoring sensation held to two assists in Kings' win INGLEWOOD (AP> -Dan Bonar didn't have any goals or assists, but as far as Los Angeles Coach Don Perry is concerned, Bonar was the maln reason that the Kings were able to beat the powerful Edmonton Oilers. "I can't say enough about Dan Bonar, who shut out (Wayne> Gretzky," said Perry after the Kings nipped the Oilers 3·2 Wednesday night. "Gretzky gets a lot of ice time and this shows Sonar's stamina to do s uch a job on him." Gretzk y, Edmonton 's 21-year-old superstar who has ecl ipsed numerous National Hockey League scoring records, assisted on the qilers' two goals, but both came while Bonar was on the sidelines. Gretzky had four goals and one assist the last time the Oilers faced the Kings. Gretzky. who has 2 goals and 105 assists with 10 games remaining in the regular season, has riow gone four games without scoring a goal. Last month, he broke the NFL's set by Phil Esposito in the 1970-71 season. "It was nice to be able to shut Wayne down,'· said Bonar. "He's such a talent and hard to s tay with because hi s anticipation and knowledge of the game are so great. He knows what to do every minute." The victory was the second in a row ror the Kings, 20·34·14, who blanked Colorado Tuesday night. 2-0. The Oilers, who are winless in their last four games. fell to 42-16·12. "We mlght have been a little weary tonight, but that's not an excuse," said Gretzky. "We're paid good money to play, but being on the road for 21 days is ridiculous. We all have wives and families and whether you're a doctor or whatever, you miss them if you're gone that long." Wednes day night's game completed an eight-game. three-week road trip for the Oilers. who play t heir next five games at home. "We can win the Stanley Cup but we're not playing like we were during the first half oC the season," added Gretzky. "We're going to have to get back to fundamentals." The Kings took a 3-0 lead on a first -period goal bv Marcel Dionne. his 42nd of the season. and second-period goals by Dave Taylor and Greg Terrion. .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Basketball S(X)res CoUev- M•tleMl I••......., T-m ... 1 ,. .... , .. _ Wa~ll\flOn M. 8rf9"8m You~ '3 TtaH UM tO. &.~,.,.., SI 111111ol• n•. L-Island u . 11 Dot°""· Conneclkul 7S (OI) Pu~dw 72, Westem l(entuov 65 MAIAT_.. __ Catlt-•C"'' __ ,....,.. 810te '2. Quincy 1111.) S4 Souttl CMollna-Sc>M1-"9 .,, SI Mery•a CTa.) SJ Hempton lnllltute 63. c enlrel WHftlntlWI\ .. H_.._ St. 70, MoomMc1 $1, •• Wlt.-Eeu Cl•lrt 91, St, Tllom .. Aqul11as 71 Wtalem Ort90n U , Brier Cllfl Clowal SS ICH,.,,.., St. 77, Henov•r 7• Se11INtw V <lllty St 61. Soulfttrn Tecll•t (Oil High school STATa •••tottAL "'-"YOl'l'I CatL-.--. ............. 111 L.Altl ...... 6', Cle...i-II.Al .. ••11nln11 (Wllmln91on) 17, 8ellertfletdn SI. a.._...,, H......,, 44 c ...... n.•~ .. Moore quits at Long Beach LONG BEACH CAP) -Perry Moore, the director of sports, athleUcs and recreation at Long Beach State alnce 1974, baa asked to be reanlped and hla requeat b aa b een accepted by John W. Sbal.illne, the vice pr11ideat for student servic:ea at the school, it w11 anaounc:ed Wedllt9daJ . Moon's reualpmnt will be effffl.ive next JulJ l. Shetnltne Hkl. A unlnnit.y 1pokt1man laid ......... •eareb tor ...,.., ••eeeaaor wll!~'!*U1· Learn how you can earn $25,000 to $50,000 and more annualb a• a prolc11ional photo1raph•r -beginninr with little or. no expcrienc• and only a ba•ic 35 mm camera. Eam $I 0,000 part.time alter ichool or your pretent job. David Ross, nationally known profas· sional photographer with 32 years of e><per· 1ence in advertising, commercial, industrial and architectural photography. will show you how to break into the exciting and well paying field of professional photography . This is a no-nonsense seminar. Ross, who has years of e><perlence counseling novice photographers, will Ind you step-by·step through all of the inside moves necessary to become • profeasional photographer. You will learn the faitest, most direct way of striking out on your own. This Seminar can save you thousands of dollars in time and effort, wasted money, false starts, and dis· cou~lng dead ends . DDN'T Ill•• HI• ••MtNRlll \ I ~ I Orange Cout DAILY PIL_OT/Thurlday, March 11, 1Q82 H /fl 7 ~I-' ... , Ultt "'•I ..... , Mtl $<!If' H•I hln H•I I" fl 1111\ CIOcM (flt I> E Mo CIOM (flt l"-E -C.IOV C"9 Pf 114• CloM Ch@ jl>.[ 1W11 CIOM C"4< ""JI .. H• '::: ~ :~J"" ,..ii ,.: ~". = e ·· I •"" :f•" ~ .. , = L l::t' .., ~.fil g:: " tt ....... , INACJ > • H tt11 ~Yt+ jj, ~JI ~ 1 ·+i'' Rfi ~ t It M.... f,-flij,I •• 1; +t~ .. ..... . .. . l"lllJ! I.ft " ,. '"" "' " t • '.... hl•"Y' 71 ... , ,,.... I . .... . "' s.1" • N ..... U '"' 1 to 4 II ttV.-Yo jllt... .. Ioli •• .,_. It-ltO s -Yo 1 tU »1,1o+ 411 I' L ~•h CIQ.. 1Af S !tlf+ ~ l..,_.1" l. .. 1 14 tlllll.. • 11 •• 1 • ,,.. R•mtK 1 •I} : tt... . f > i! «M+ "" ~I t7 > .. It • M tt tJO ~· " , ... , 1.7' S .. I= .... j I H + 4' ltM<f 1'" ''"• ' fl .. ~ mt: 1.6 !:= • ut ,._ •. . :.J ·1•i ~·~ '!1S:tf~~A ~; ':i ~~·~ ~ ~·~ !·=·~~· ,: '! J !L! 1~ r.l:i. ~i '~ m ~ .,: :::i~~I ·~ '; ti ~-l.M rr_: " t • It , .. t • '4 It h J It'll l; + " ~ • M aiJ U + " RI.• e, ·ft 144 11 O ,,, j •· tl4.."1: II , •• 14 ~ .. t ~ 4 .• + )t Rd et pf2 !) . 4 U t Ill t. 1 t tW, . "' flt 4' t~ .. ,~0 •• -II.._•• ~ ) .. t .. R"Rtl I.Ole 7 I ) \\ i II ... ~· \\ .... If\ N•I -~ t. 0 1 11 II n , I lWt. .. . . ~ t.7ft '. .,.. ~ \; & : ~ 141-+ \It R nl• 70 '"-" • I It ti -~ • , .. <•-"'er.:. ·" .i ... :: ll~ . • " ... ~ ., ,JI -• I ~ .=.. .. .. ... .. -• ' I t 1 .. , " .... -• -c Pl ', al la 1 s " ... " ,,_.._llf!u .: , 1• ~it: {; R""'• ,,,, t '.,"• ~ ;• 111 11 » , ~ s ru j .:,m: ti~\~··~:~:~ ?1~·>· 1·" 0.J76 ·:i. ~:: :,=.~r1! .,. ,.; ~·~ = '4! •t ~ :·~ =~1 .: • n.:t~-~ e;;-i-: .,~:: ~!Vt li'1lo lftll ,, 14\-~ C•Hld I JJ 7 )II,, ..... V. l • 11 1\/i -•II I .9' m:• " = t • ll It "-""' UO 10 I UV.+ V. =" U I• Ill ~ .: ·~ i ~\\~.~· fil~:.;: ~ ::: ~.,~J! ~; ; 12.::= ~ I ... ~ .. ~ i:a, ·~ =··-=::· 13 ' 1 ~ :::r.. ::£. '· :1. c:: 5 s= ?J ,tr 21 fa::: .... .., .» • r,:." ~ ,.: : 1~ r:-llm'll ,1'iJ' • U •Ioli.... r '1'11 4 I •'"'=I .• , g ..--Rephllft.12 .. • ~ ,.. S S. 11-. All'--1 .n 1' 417 21-.+ -er I li!lllMt ' M S 4 16 -~ 111 t t I ,0 JI ... -~ = i..,·! 1 -·.••.V.1 Rll!Cet .JJ S II 11-Yo ID 1 J) 11.. \\ lotlN( 1,«I• I • ~· ~ •""" I n I n,s ,, ..... " =~ ,., . . ~ .. . . . ... let ,. 1 ,. 1) .... -.... .... .. Re¥(9. ,. 10 ,,. Ullo. v. , • 6 " t?h. v. ~ tW 6 aD 4\11+ \\ •f1H r 1 0 U\11 + -M I 10 IT~ 14 ttt""8"1 6 ... M \\ 1P R-• 1 11 1114 .. n.t'lll >tt 711) • ~ ..W.0-t tie .• U IM+ " ~~G I ~ '~ =~: ~ m I'° 4 .. ""• .a lttlRl'11" 60 ) 1M ttv. • 11' ,_..,._. IA4 'l 10e + ~ ltevlOft ':U 1 m1 Jt\4-\'\ Tl:::lJ 1 I• J! '4'11-\lo ~ ... ,.: ,m: ~~ .... o .. 17 ... :z _..,,,I~ ~~ :di: = ~ 1=. Jt'.:: • 1: li~··~a....,,,. ... ·1 ,, ,..,. ... ~ :::..~ , ... : ,!! ~ _: F .. ~ : '° ~;""., MlnU 2S2. 14 .,.... •lrpf 2.10 Ml"""•.... • ,. 'J,a· ~ IMH" 1,1$, s """-" ,,. ll .s m~ ..... f'eylllft UD 1 tt1 •"-• ......... I •• ti'ht '• AIWMI I 20 , l '°"+ t<~ ': : 2? a: l4 tr la •• + i. IWtrflLI t.10 1 101 1114-'-~ 4 tl2 tm ... ,, •n111 ltf4,IO .• • JMa ..•.. l~ ,5' 6 • 11~ V. "''"" 10 &t::·· IMO •• 1 ,,~. ~ • '..!.,. • "' '"''"' uo • II 1t • \\ ~, • I ~·: R•yMtl , •• s 67 ""'• "" ·=Id: u. 6 ID 17 5 !:in :t't "''-~,·u :,c: U11. .... = 'J~i~~ !~~:v ~:i,rii === ~·-+1!. -;;;:-. :=r.~l\f.Lt ~"!~ W,lt ~ J 11~:.: ~,. "''k" . ~ ~ ~ :m.~ t: : rs :;v. y; ,_ . ,, , '~.~ 1::~r; ~,. .. J~ Im-;~ If" aa , .~ ~ ~ ::.a: r ::: le ~ ~ : ~ to.. .• :, ~. ~ N•P dPI ll II 4 _ \'o ttll.IJll U2., 11000 II 14 .....aw ,a a 11' I~ .,_ lnlMlll UO 4 di 17 • It t. .P'I t ~I' R ...... w IA e • 1~-" TOMI 4' 1 U 1'\'t t .... Al•P pf '. ll20 SM+ \'t 9flll s 144 1 42t ''" •• ~uo .• II 27.._\\ tntMutt 1.41. u 2>'-• 14 :. s ~~ RIMlllll:: s SJ J7-14 tovRu' 1t '%!·=:-"' Ale11K,_• 1~ s .. •, ',·,~· " Ill.,_, n' = : ': ::::: :: ,,..... . M • tf 1ftt+· w; '"'""~ 2M ' ,., '4\.io .. ". ... .~·, t J ~I\\ ~~""~· 1.~ 's ,•,1, ,','-\\. 11e"'" ~~= . 1:U , ti 21V.: ~ Ailklnl ·-4 ... -·.... 11$oye ... 11 Ill I~ ... ' ~ " *"4>-·~ '"'""'' .*2 76 ' 11--.. ... ~ 1A • ~ " ...... ........ • T c 0 • ·~ • ~~ ·'°1 19 162 !t...:+· ;,: tt1hl 2 20 I 12• JO • l'ellCt 1 JO jj 1 • .., lntTT U • I 40llt U loli-1'-llKh I t. • ,. . . . . . W P IS I h 1 ..... , .. Ak'.M' UO • Mt • ~ VtPS n l.lt S S 11"'-~ 1J1017 ~·" tn ~ S .. > 41111-Yt 9 i'.: ' 11'-~ !!:~-~ i::: ~ .a; r -t: TW wt 114 1.a' Vt N<G6t '1.0I 1 ,. ~+ Vt 9fltr0t 13' 11'1 ... FclMla In 7 4 lt•4-14 lftlT r US , 1 Jlvt-U• s iii 11 .S -'6i AOftrln S 1• 11 .. .": ••• ~=S:: 1 J :: n~ •"" AllM! nl ... 10 41 .\'\-14 ftll"'tTI 71 6 '" 7 ..... ~ 16 II e\4 tntHf1 1.11 S 2tO U -It t ,M 11 11 ~.... "°"' l"f 1.11 t Ufti• I.II TW~ pl 266 ,, 2•1'1-.... .,_,.. ,. It\+ \'o lfl•lll • S t 7714 • ,,..,.. 1'.20 i t •v. 'i ·" l~~· ::: : !~ ;~ :.: ·it. N • I 4 11 •••• , Rotllnu ,. 1 u t•V. • l'I TreMm t.40 • 12n """-.,_ NIGC» 'Cll 13 ., ,,.,_ ISO$ " I "· ~ • 10 M " ... '"''.r' 10 .IO ~ I'll ~ ... IO 2 .--. v. AolmCp 10 " JO\oli-"' Tran Ill( 2." • ISl'I l'I Al91fll HO 4 7 il'h·; ill euAlr IO S "2 " -llo f'..o5t 1.tO t m 41 -l'I lnllt!'W l ... • 21 1,_.. ~ ......... UO I t 16¥1, .•• ROfttorl I 1 2\tt, .... Tr8111(0 1 IO • 1l 11.. V. .-,111_ptc;ii.2:5 .. 10 ~.. . 11mr1n u110x111s1'Yt. =n uo 1 .. a '!..... ··v..· , ... •£• 1 n 1 41 1,""-._ NltCllll 1 a tt '"'· .... lltot11r ., • 1 1~+ " Trn1c 111311 1 ~ 111 NIQl'W 2.16 6 "" .. ~ " .,,,, pl '·: :: ~~ ~ J ID • :D-: \It ...... G 2.» • ,. IM . . • NOw9t -• a ,, -.,. Rorer .. 10 Ut 11 ..... Tt•nKn .cm l 4.\>., .. Nltn(; ' 7 " ·~ ltt ""''pl "., • ' '"". ~ ~ • ,~ ... IOW•PS 2.40 1 11 11111 ••.• ·r: uo ' IGIJ f' ........ Rowen .OI s 760 tov. .• frGP pf l IO ' I ''"" AlldQI L40 • IS.SI CID -"' llemSp • "' -~ •• I A J.M 7 J 2 ~ ... I.DI • F: .... llowen 1112.4' • 10 J2 . TAAnv 10 • d 7" " =pft.Jt • • 15 '7~11+ l'I f\erteo I Ill t'M •~ Fl,.,,..., ' 76 4~ \to -:c s ~ 10 ,; 4 • "-Nit t.tO S , •... "C COi 1.IW I 16 1~ ~ Trenwy 1111 6 t? 21v., v. t 1 l 22 ller1wt '" tiw. Awypl " 11 l -It •oc P •Ito ..... ""°fl UO .. 110 ti.._+~ RoytO 1.41t 51111 2t~+lllo fre¥trs 31e • •7•" • v. I.ID 1 '°' ....... et ... ,, pt' •S . )I • • ~ s ... 25 In&. 14 lrvo•i. J • )t .Slit. 14 • ,... • • ... + .. A11br'm 1.2A 11 • ;II -v. T~CIWI 3.17e ,, II • "" •~• 11 -6 71 100..+ ~ huFd I ts. n U\l.o FftSller lit "'~ ~ I I e a C P l O r l$ .,,_ A T 1 S 1 It"' T C t 2 -I --Ntt;c;. ·-.. -,j;;. i; ~'tiv !:: ! I~ ll~ "" FllllF«I 11 ,;;;:: ~ 17 ,. 1'V.-V.-ll6V.-\lo ... j .. ~·v; .. ~!..:t I.JO II ,. 12t;: "' Tr1S:1~ -• ., w: .... "'''°' OIS.• " u lS . ' f\HY ... 1.., • 231\io-"' R,.tn 60 ·,o 1t'1 ~ " JWT I ,-.. "I' , ,,__ "" .... ,. "'4-Ioli RydtrS , .. 1 "' ,. .... Trleln(I .., 11 10 11 .,., NlrAu • 41 IS ... • • " ~v."'1.0I • '' ,. __ ... AAl!tt • .• ' 4 I~.. J F '~ 10 -•1v. = .Jt 22 14 ~ v. -...... -Trl•Pc 110 ' 12~ v. Alpl!Pr 4 I~ V. ~· ·-"" Raw\ ID 101 7V. ""' -.. • · •·• t.'59 S J 1"4++ ~ & .D 11as ""'• " Trlco • " • n , •i, Al<Oe 1.10 ... ,.. + v. -Pft 1.n 10 11• "3V. "" RIO'li< 1:2.0 • '" ltv.-·v; JJ~·· •, s! • ·~ !~, -\lo ......_ " ,,, ......_... 1 ' 23 211'11 Trlr1ty '° • 2l 10..,, AITWS&;t s s 21 ~+ ~ ~~lnw »' ~~ !!:;;• ~ RBh >120 4 MO 11'AI• v. "~'f ·-.. • • Yt ... · l'ISlll" IA 6 '1 l4 + ~ t.ol •ta It •' ruoEP 191 • nsu11°'11• v. ,,,,,... l .«I • 510 ~. -... .,,"' ... 'ff ·' 7 ··v.-'• Rlllc.p 20t s 1U ~ .... J:rin l.J7• .• )I t6 ......... ,._ 1.)4.. I 131/o+ ... .n • 21 .. ' TwlnO• I 10 s J •• Amlx pf J . • • • "' lllPn • 2 " s ,.,.. • i.. RMu 't• I ,.,. ' l't J IPllt '·" • 7t VI. ... ~· 2 • ... ~· Yt Cl It " ,,.. TyCoL ' 10 s u Ill,\. "' /ot'rttJt 1.l2 • I " ..... ChkFull ~II 10 IOV. FslNBo 2 .•• 141 o~.... ~··~ pptl ).~ .. '::ii~"".'"" ~ 1.«I 4110I 16¥1• 14 ""'*. :. ll 17 ,...: . TyterCp 60 1 ., I-. '• ~ 1.10 6 960 I~+ V. CllrhCI 1 S211• 11 D"-. FN5t8" 2 lOb 4 1 %JV>.-V. tr 1 "'" •m pf • .• 16 JI + -E 111 D IS'h-"" Tymt/lr I) Ut 17~ • l'I ~ pf l.SO 4 '* -iv. •'f1 pt I -v 1 ,, •. • ·~ FslPll . •• a ~ "' J ere pt , II . s 12h ........, 2... 6 ,... '11""-14 "" • ~ , -V-tl -~ 10 2t 1~ 3•-·-'"--• -., FstPll "" 17 1·l2-t_.,. J ... ti'C >.J4 • 11.44 32Yt • -, '-llP pf I tS t 1,,._ 14 • -'7' u --. UAL ••• 11•-, v. Nn/Ur ' ., Yr-... Cllrltln 17 • ·"'-.... RUnA •1.0I ·, 11 IO•+ Yt JewlC pf • . 12 ,. • \lo NtWllS ". ·; • ~ ..... i ·-; 1 ; n":.:. .. UGI 1 OI s IU ~ N>Jr ~ li51:J '!::! ~ Cllrom• 'Cl s m 1'\I> V. RV.Bii 60 s J 7\<t-"' Jtwkr • 3 >'-+ Newel t.ID 1 ID 1714+ \lo 1'.l4 s 1 u-\\ UMC 60 s n 1~-'• NloJr pf 2.11 "" JI lM .... ~~:Vy'!:, ~~ ~~· AK,. 1 s 2 ~ JllnJrl. .• "JIOt ,. • 14 HVao t ' 116 ltYf, ".. . '20 ' I ""' ' UMET !lit • 2~ ....., 10 » 11\'t• \\ Cllry• pt ,. '"" f .. f\~O 70 1 ~ """. ..,, J ..... EF 20 171 70Yt-\It ~1S " ,. M\4-\\ _,. i2A s n 111v.:. 'v. UHCA•s • " '"' A8md •UO 6 1'9 ..OV.+ \It ChurCn ... 1' 2/YI. v; FIMIEn 'nn ll 12'11. .. 1:i:~"p,1·~ 7 1{ ~::!! ~ .......... } n' 4 •' ~ ~ fMt. , • 7'h-V. UNA 1 16 J~ Vt "'"' "'us . J 2.0V.+ l't c1nis-e11 in • 111'1+ "' F••m"il 1.l• • 6 n ._ JIWIL 60 . IS •2\\ -• 10 -· , ... • ns t:Mro-~ uusnl~Gvcf,t!O s' !", 60'"~ "' =12.'1 . . 1 40.a+ Yo lftGE 110 1 eJ 16._,, Vt Flu lv ID '4 1)\0 • -on • .._ IA09 10 171 ...... -.Gt N , ~ .. • -"' UO • WI ""'.-"° ClftG pl • r220 UYt-ll'I Flul pf 1'1 11 ~ ~:r.: 1' .! : ~ n~ ~ ~ .16 t IMdl~ ~ ~ 14.Mc.. 2 1 .. : ' UUCn~"!'rP l 3, ! _!? ~~, \<o = J~ ~ J ~:....._:·;,,. ClnGf.t uo mo 60"1•1Yt ~l:!\5~~ ·'";~ l.~0~~ .. ~ JoyMft 1.40 • ti a -v. =~ l: ~J:: ~·.ij, ~ ,;: 'l ~ ~ !: unCo~r i010 'ii il;; '' ACM\ pf 2:1D •• 2 20 .... gr:,~ d! !1U: n~~ ~ Fl•EC t 10 ll S 17 • VI KOi n -"S-tl 4 , v. Ult .• 1J 14'11• l't =· ' 1 S 1'21 i. • 1,1, UnlOftC 1'11 I 11 4'!f Aehlt'y Jiit 17 10 IV.-V. CIUS•< 1 60 ?Ito 'l5 Flel>L 1 0. 1 ISi ~ " KOT t2 J S 113 ""· •· • 1.10 1 11 25\4-'h UnEtec U1 6 )II Ill/•• l'I ~ .. ::B n: ~: ~:~~~ .. ~ 1·~ • ·~ ll -1t ~::r.f. '·~; .,~ :~ ~ ~i:." .. ~..!! ::_1~ ::=..· i~ 1 ~~ m::: ~= i": ·• ~ 1r : ~~~: ~..:~ ·~ r...: ~~ 4E!Pw L'.116 I 21S2 11'4 •.. , Cleblr S .41b 6 10 S'I• • l'I FIWG<tn fl lit .. .__ ~ KeltrAI I 40 S 1tO 1'~+ Yt Nllrtl" 2 It lj\I,+ \\ $e¥lft , " 6'-+ V. UUnEEI rlplf • llt ''°°7 s,!~,' ;L """""° 2.2D I l16.S ~ '-ClukE 7 20 11 IS ,,._, ""' Ft11or ID 7 615 I~' "" Kel>C• 1'40 6 IOI 17V. • l'I ,..,,., n UO S 1 U-.. ·· ·' SIMn Of I.to ·• • I~ ~ • •• "' .\F..,,1 60 1 5' ~+ l'I FooteC 720 7 l 29._,, lo! ' Nm1illl .GI ' 5' 1?14>-Y. 5-1 ,Q5e t 43 4\4... UEI ptH I I SJ 1 I AGnQI 1:20 6 '' CM<\ ••••• ~~~~. t~ ! 2!~ ?6V• FO<dM tSI to.,._ l'I l(al>rSI ,. : 1oc:; Jt"-ll'o ~ .n 11S ..... -SdrPlo .... • Mt 11V.... UOllC•I I t1cn. 2t ... AQIBd 2.IOo .. '6 U">-1'1 (t.¥pll 60 1 u ';~. Yt Fo.MIC 224 62 ~ ~::::I lb 6 ltO a._·.·i<i ......... 1.70 •ll270~" Sdllltz ,ISie •• l56 1214+ I,\ UnPec llO I "2 ~· '" ltGnCV 11De . .. 11\'t• V. Clorox .. 1..., ""'•.,.FM~ pf 1.a . l 5'V.-Vt KC~PL '·" s 12 ~I.II ~ ftl .... 1 25 14""-.,. ScNrrm >.ID 1011• "1,.._" uUnnllrroT'... '" S n,101 ..!_~ 41Hett1 n • 7 '~ Cl ti> 7 • ~ ......... FtOeer In . . " .... KC s •• 1 10 27 NaitstUI ••• I ID '°"'·".. SclAll .12 10 ,... ~-• • ~ ... J~ AHols1 I 12 • 1' .. ~· ·;,. uel .• v -.. ~ FtH-a 1OI11 1n ,.... ... E 2 NQISl. .. 12' ""• .,. Sc.-I .... I 17 17 " UnllO" • ll 10 .......... 4'Hofnl , 2 11 "1 ~ V. CCoeluect,.Pml I IS .,1s 1~ ..,. ICenG 12 6 114 161'1 HllllPS I.JD I IJ9 Ill.lo .. . Sc.otl.M S 1 •V. Un8r"41 40 .0 11 a Ill> " " '"'. "' FostWf\ ... 7 JJI 11\lo ..... K•nNb I. 7 ),) 22 . """""" 2.'6 7 QI ,, -"' $itoCFtt '·· 7 5 i.~-.· ~ UBrd pf I 20 • '" ~ 1.0I 11 SO Jt~ '-Coe>IAI ~ IJ:Jt 20~ .. fotomt ' t2 •\\ · · KettPLI 1-40 6 IS JOv..... 16 .... pl•.10 •• OIO 2tV.+ ~ ScoltA 1 S 207 1~ .,_ UCbTV n I•" 16 ~, "' AM I S2 11 S2t It · .. · Cstl pl 1 Ill S 1l , FoxStP .. 6 6 9-, , Ke PL pn,n .. 1 IW. .... Nw11 t 1 .S ll7' a • I,\ ~ ,7t I S 16,~.. UnEnrn 211 4 US ,...., ~A n• .... 1"n ~l1~·-·;..: CouCI 2.41 I llll:I 31"'• v; FrptMc .60 7 46e 1'Yt• " Ke tytn 3 31 9\4 .••• $ _ .,~ .., w ,. -• • • -,. Cl>t.H 72 11 l II~. FrlQlrn 40 I 7' 16 "-Ketw pt t 46 3 l 4Yt \'I 0 •• -•n ... · Sc""1 I I 52 • t1 I~• V. Utllurn 7 9'1 S l4 20"" .. ~Fie . 14 Wo+ .... ColKO' II 1' '°" fruthl '.., 10 IS 17-l't • Br .2'10 2 • ,.., IJ ., ~ ... 5c:l.cll9tr 11 m 11111.. UlllU pt 3.'1 s 7••1,. 'lo =' 111» S • ~... Colemr1 1.20 1 '7 71"'• ~ F11<1ue .60 · :n •t ··· ~:Ir.,' .JO • : =~-·"-~_; ,·: ': 1;: :Z:.:·~ ~~·r! · ~ :~ .' · ~~111~:.l 1~ 10 ~ ~v. '"' 451e,.ft ·: .~ r, 12v.! :;; co:r,P•I 1,2.0 7 .,, mu ·~ F11<1API l~S G-G ~I~ ... ~::::? I'° • ~~ ,, .... \lo IMIEn I.JO • I01 1611.+ .... ~.pl 1.10 .• IS 17". Unlllnn Z7 1 • 17°'11 • 1,\ An'IStr I 6 In~+ fll ~~.~~'\ n ~ ~ ::¥11 GAF 10 6 ,. '"-• 14 KeMI :g ~ 3' 1r-_ i-' IMEn pft,IJ • • D 1'111+ -_42 4 l4 ltv., , . UJtrB' I 17 • S 11~ • Vt "5lr pf S.SI 27 CM+ 1.a CotPen IA 717 Ill/•-.._ GAF pl I 20 t 11V. , , .. l(enmt ... 10 11 2t -Yt Nwllnd 1... • W S7'h+ \lo 1.4' S 273 U 'Jo--l'I UtdMM 21 4'"' 1<1> ATT S,40 1 _,,, 5'-Vo+ \4 Cotlln t 1.IO 6 t01 24,.,, • ._ GATX 2 40 S 17 26\<o • l'I KyUlll 2.2.0 I II 17... • ~ 1.20 7 16 -+ " s..m 1.IO S 141 ~. \lo UnP,Mr1 SJ 17 1'"' '"' ATT pf 4 2 61\lo+ V. ColGu 2 ... s S7 1'V. v. GC,&' 20 a m 211'1-111> Ke rrGt ,44 s JI ~ \It .-srw I.JO 1 13 ""• ~ 5M9ll S ,. .._. Yt USFoS ~ 07• S 11"7< 1<\ "TT pf l... I 2'\l't+ l'I Col11Pct .60 ll llS M , l'I GEICO S6 I 10 2S . • KerrM > 1.10 7 76.S cnt14-11'1 NDr'llln t I JI) ~.... $M(Alr .60 11 I ~+ V. USAlr 12 S ISJ i.-. l'I :on ~-: : z ~· ~ so 1)1 2.0 • .. • "" &~~ 2• ,! 111 10Yt .... ~·,ros .,, a l1 ~~. ~ =:r:: 1.01 : gi :::: t: = 1_1; ,; ~ ri~ ~ ~~~:~ 2.-:: ~ .:: ~~ ot.n.sos:..0 •• Ul.4.::: •• ~~.:'1'n°:~s ·~~. ~ G•IH!!' S2 s u 1m.:...-.. Ku::: 110 ••100 1""':" !Mor .5210 SI -'4-\4 ~ , .. '11» ,....,,, • USlnd ,. .. '"" .; ~ I.JO 171112• !? ..... mbEn 160. m 2S"' G~nnet 17tlO•llldJ1V.-... Kldpr8 • 4 4~+ .. ~Ind -,,..°l;°..;;. -14 i ... 2.~ SS 6,~.m,.~·~ USL ... 6010 41 ~:-:> -..,,..... 1.44 4' ., · ·· Comd\ > J4 1 10 >2'-• " G•PSlr .SO • 2 I~• l'I ICkl pfC 4.. 3 46 +I .._.. --.., " US AIY .:IOt 17 S f...., •• t:::; ':1 1) f201Jt:~ CmSwr1 .JO 1 10 ~-l'I GuSvc 1.» • 1l 101'11 .... , flcldt pl1,6' .• 1 JI -1 1._ UO 3 Nt 1"'4-.... M .. •-..+Yo USSllot 12S s 111 ~-11. -n <O 0 •. ,_,., H <0> n•->• Go•~< n 0 <U ••-• lm.C> • > '" ""' I"~'.'. ~ ~·~ , 1:. 2: 1~ :~:;·v; USS'"t 2 7 ICl'21 ~ ''< ArrtSth nlAO s I ltV. + \'o mwE 7.IO 7 "1110 20» + "" Gel<o I 12 5 .. '~ 14 ICftofltR .t2 • 20 1t • -pft.JO " ' IS " . . , • '" ·~· • ~~~~ ~.: : ...: ;:~:I~ ..... w 1.'CI l 71 21111.. • . •E pf I to ic21 12\lo &::::f: uci. ~ '~ ~7 :: ~:rm~. .~ ~; ,~~ :~: ~ IU2 .. a .. ~.. . . " .~ • ' Wt-.... UT cf\ pf 117 2t ~. , ..... ~ pf ... " \I s ....... CwE pl 1110 ' •100 l•\<o , ... GAl11¥ •. ,.. lJ """· . K-r • I 40 • a IS • "-' 1 s a:i !4114. Vt IO 1.IO ' .al ,..... " UTcf\ f' 1 SS JOO ..... ~ 2.41 I 21 » ..... CwEpt 1·31 d 1' • V. GAmOll 8'b11 171251'+116 K,...lllr . 1 7 ...... , 1·• S 1 M">-lto =J,17e 6 4 ~+1V. UnlTe 1°61 6 64'> 1'\lot IA. Ani09 S C) 52 21.a+ IV. wE pt 2.-7 «? ltll> -""' GttBcs~ • J 2 ~ ~ K,_r I 12 • D1 a l'I 1.76 6 ..., JN,,.· .SO 4 2S 11-"-Ur1llrd t 'l5 II ti> 71~ -Vt IW:tDt 1.ll 6 52 ""'• .... •E pt 7,1' ySO 8'111 ,.,_ GCl!lm ... IO 202 «I -" Klllllm ..0. s 112 ~:: •. , Oll6I pf J.tO .. 1'110 IS -fll 1 6 » "'-• ... Unl•er .. 5 2S 19" .... NOe? U2 S 117 •V.+ Yt Com€S I.a 7 23 W,.,+ ~ GnO•I• U 1. \lo ..... K"ftoC .Dt11 11 274--~1.1' .• 1100 45 +\lo ..,_pl .....•• llGD ~'-+1-Unl¥Fd '6 I l IS " AndrG II .2.0 I 17 ~ lo\ omwl 1.lO 11 1"' SJ GnO n ' IM 211' ~ ic!. • a s ·~ " 1.• . •JAGO 4' • "" Sier,._ IA • ICM 11".. Unl .. f , ... • 1• ~-t;, = 60 IJ 31 22\.'t+ l'I oP•Y<. J2" llO " -\(, ,n . ~. -·-..... -J.17 " 1 1S\4-" ~ ... 1 .. J0'.11 ..... u~t':ln 2.21 1 121 •Vt •• ,,, ·-~-s '··" ,', '°',--,, .... • ~ :::p::t • 10 n :~~:: ~:~,oft~hiO: ~:.-·~ Ll'E -~m ,,,'·~ I !! '~"' I~ 2 11 1115 •11>-~ u IFE .. s *a'•""' ... _,..., --Gnf'llb 1.JO 1 13' 31"°+ -1.l'E pf .JO .. 1 -·• -...-..... ""'9 .» 6 ID 11-• .. USLF pf2.1S 11 2214 \I. MU n .$2 s • 12-* Phi/I J 11 lb ,,,,.,_ ... GGlft .... 10 ,.,.. ..... L!TCO ',. so I.JI) s 41 lt\4+ .... ~ .'6 • '°' ~ ..... u~ll•ln< '.. • '"· ~ .4«1 S 41 •"-Iii onAa: '"' SO 2''--"' GHOfls 4 t -· ... l'-CCp .. 1 I • 6 141'o ..... tltl8tr .IOt 1 JS IM .... Ul•PL 210 I IM 1' Aptc:i. .2A 11 " 1~ 14 -1 2.20 S 6 2t • ~ Glftll 1 A 11 -~ Yt LTV •• t S'2 •• 14 .. ,._ • ._ Slntir pf :uo .. 6 22'1>-~ UIPL Pl 7111 I 20 • '-~_!' ~.~ .· .· ~ ,'!:1'~ ~ · :::~n ~:~ t 2~ ~ :: GllMlll' 1... ' 2t1 J7V. + ._ LOlllft1 I 1' 6" IS14-1' ONide J ·z:? S .3 ~· • · · $11\itN .Al 21 1't 12,._ .,_ UIPL pl 2 t0 . I ?O ·~ -~ .... -~ ' .... ~ ... GM<lt 2AOI. ua ,. • "" LMGes t .40 • 4 " -ONIDK -s -~ -H9IA .so • 1 ~. .. . UIPL pl t.l6 J7S 16... "' AAl!Mo t3I s 10 ....... v. onrec: IO 17 ll ,,.., G~~ I l 7S ) --•• ........ ..... Qisllllu '. 10 I . '"'""'n •• s m JI • 1\lo -v-v -~ "5 JO\I0.-1 onEo l.3' s oo 1''"'-v. ....,.1> • • ....... 1.-.-. ·· >1 ,,·::.· .. ·;; i 1.61 1 4t IA!>-"' s.r..ee 2.:12 12 .. s ... ~ -., MMlll 2 :. 1 4.1 -VI Oftfpt l 'U'n . g~\Pf .~i. 1~ r~···~ t=,~','::,! 1J 1114... .Jiit I 12 ..-. .... S'NIOt ... t '2,. ,,;;:::~ ~:..c~ ,: : ~~~ ... \lo Archlln ,14b 6 652 I~ ... ConFd• J.12 ... 31v •• ~ GPU IS ,.,. s • ~lnl .n" 4.1 10 " AO • m 111'>+ ~ ,.,... • 110 s m ,,_ -VA'-\1111 40 • » 1 -.... Arl!PS 2.21 6 701 1'Y>-"' n>Frt 1 S2 l 13 JJVt• l'I Ger1Ae 11610 1M ID -'-LMrl"t .111• l2t 12.,.::1 .IO • 751 11*1+ Vt !i .1lt II 271 I~ l't VenOrn t n 6 31 IS • 14 ~:11 ·: ~ : 1~~~ ~ a::'~ /Jt Z ~i ~:: Gn"t'f' . IO "'-· ..• LffrSo 1.«1 s 4.1 n11o 60 •• "l JI-Y. n tAOe S 11 m .. l'I Varco" 11 • 111 d ,,,. " •~nRI 2 _ 1,. OIPw pf4.SO l20 ~ Gr1Sl9nl 1 . .0 a IJ2 HV.-l'I Ltwy'f'r t 11 1 6 ,.,..:: .,_ Olt'TOr I It S ?2l::!• '°"' 1.60 12 21"'+ .,_ Yerian 5' 71 2t :rt~-'• -· -..,.,., ·• ,,_.._ _, S 100 1 I GnSIHI .6'b 9 S2 15'14. , l"Er1t I OI t S6 t• -" r ' .ID • I ..,,. ... SOM! 16 ''-· VMO .40 6 2t ..... t l'I Armco I.I:) S ... Z2'h+ " '""~ "'"4 1 ' • GTE 2 ... 11172 -· . .L~Plet 61 s • 1~ • \\ OvSllp I .to • 2t IJ"'• \lo SOEG I.ft 'j ll 1Sl't. ·• v .. co .20 11 lt.J 11V.1 l'I Arm< pf 1.10 11 a • V. OlfllW pf ' 11 U "-GTE pl 2 )0 S H~• 1'I L vet s 1• i•-o ... ..c 1.20 'I 13 ""-,. l'I $o.Jefln 1.JO S 6 I~. Vests. 1 a. • •~ NmAu IAO • I 1'¥ot 'lo °'"" pf>. ti · · t7 2S ... • ~ ·• .....__ I .. • = -6 ---114 ArmW!n 1.10 I 1'5 '""°• l'I OIPw IW'11S 9 2• • .,_ GTE pf 7.41 ' 11'-· • Lellmn t.6'lt 12t 11 ..,,....nit ,,.. 1 •• "-I ·"' -.. ~• Vlec:m ~ ts 17 110 2'V. • " °'"" pr'2.SO ' '~ v. GTFI pf Ill). 1160 ,,,,_"" LlflllAr I .JO .. • 10•n -'ir: 01rlrdln ' s s 2~-v. ....._!: 1.n' s ~ !!"'.!· .. ;.: V•EPw 'llll 7 .,. 12'. -p13.7S • rJolO 11 -•1. °'""" of1., ) ""' v. GT Ir• I SOb • 41 !IV. L-• 1 •• I , •"'. ... -l"--0 -~.... 1 ... ..,,,_ •• lfeEP pf'1,n •• LIO .... ,, ~"£ 1.1'~ C]. ~ :o,~-:-~ c.cnAlr .. ' : ·~ G•MKO 7 '"' ..-. .... LHF•y AO s nsuw11 .. "l"HH' 6' 10 «11 1a...-... SOllElll ),JA 6 523 )I-v. VeEP pfl... 1200 $1 • '"' -TI • ~ -" ~ M I 4o14 GnAed .OI '7 "" • ._,, Lwc:d pfl IS 6 ,.,_ PH8MI l.?29 1 I ,._ • Yt $OIAhCD U2 7 "1 121!.-~ VAEP·ptt.7} z!OO ~ '°""'" pf 1 · · 2 "~· ·· ·' ()Ilic,, 2'.t1J 4 t.i.. 2.S\lo•. •i. Gen'1 Q I.ID . 14 ISl.4. • l't LhlSI 1' . ..s 's 1111 d'11\\.:_ ~ PPG 2..Jt S M 10 • V. Sotft0€ Ull 6 1J ~.,. Ve EP of1 tO S )tllt • •It ~rco II 11 12' 11 -"' OttlGri> J.60 ... I ~ ''• G•"""' 1.30 12 ,., ll -VI LhlttF I • 41 t•Yt• \to PSA '° • 1l n ..... v. SHET91 ut • JI G-.... V•EP pf120 . r311b" -.,, "5HOll 2.40 I 10 ~ Olt<io pr 2 2I IS Gel>ec: 1.70 11 Sii ""'-\\ LOF 1 JO Jj 26 22 • "' Pec:AS 1.AOe • . It 10 t ~ SllHE pl 112 .. 1 71V•.... Viste A' 10. 10 7 IP!. "51110 pf•,!G •• IO ,,_ C.111'11111 l S1S vv. ~ G•P< PIB2.H .. JO 131'1-v, LOF pl i1s I JtYt-"" l>ec:GE t.n 6 101 21-14 ~ 1-60 s 91• J2~ ...... Vorn•dO ., 11~ .... AslltO p(U6 . • 11 ~. v. Olnt1' I I S6 9113 l.Vto. .... G•Pw pll.7' .• 1) 1•>ot.. " LlbNltr1 '040 '. 20 22-v. l"e<LIQ 1.16 s " 23"'-.... ,.,lty •.2• 6 11 .......... "' V111ctnc ., I s 110,. ASOOG 1,ID I 179 ~· • CIOM•I jj S1• ll..:" G•PwprJ.,. 1 17 -I'll Ltem•s 4l ll let~· .... Pec:Lum12010 40 21"• V. $oUtCO I.Ji S Jt I~ \lo \/ulcnM 7Aol 6r 11 O •IV.. ~ pf US · · 2D SI · · OrMld 130 7 2 2J\I> GaPw pf2 7S 171 19" • " LlllyEll t to. 11 12• Ul'I • Pe<Pw 2. 16 7 213 , • ...,_ Yt SaoAll'd 1.16 11276 2t • Y, -W--:_n l.60 ~ 5; ~-;;; CDC>l!Un 1 .islr 26 so ~ 'I• Geosr<t l4 • 124 :!tYt-YI Lln<HI ) 7 ~ ~ 'h Pe<P of J.JS , • U V. •. . ~ .GI 11 WZ 17 + '-WICOR 2. 14 7 10 lt'A • \\ ,.._ 1 S2 6 lft ~ ._ GerbPd I •• 6 '2 11-\\ Llft<PI 2-1 U\11 l"ecS<l t .12 t J2 12-+"' $ewnW1i OSt • f7' SV. .... We<l>o• 1..2' 7 13 n , l'I ~CVEI 2.12 • .., 17-v.. o;;i . .. GertlSC IJ 10 101 d 1 .. Lttlort , ..... , ao .. .. l"ecn IAI 10 ,. llV.-.. Senti fl/I •• 23 ·-l't Wecll~I IJ 167 7V. ..... AllCE plSJl •• ' l4 -I c:-uf'J.: I ~ rr"'· ·;~ Gttt? 2 40 • J1S ._,.... V. Llt10ftpl, 2 1 ,~-,4 Pec:Tfpf • ao UV>+ 14 SoMlr s .32 11 17S :IS'l'>-V. Weckhl '411 9 IS ll>ot.• v. "l!Mlro OM l S6 ' • OxlpT 'S<I 4 1l 1~ ·~ G<tttv 311 20 t ll.,_ •• . • . Loeklld · •n •ll'I • l"ec:T In I t S di~ "• SooWI t 1.20 6 :is u -•/, wa1noco u 100 "'"', " ~=r:::i ·~~~f·: ~s,:~ ~ ·;~ 2~: l,I) g~[~ns., s ~ ,i~: ~ t:!!~' .~'! ~ =-. =~~~':1i ;~ :~: =~ ,:~ ~ '~ :~~ ::~ri~,~1~1Clli ~~~ ~ ""Re pf 2 ID . I 131'< •IV• ~ 2 ~ 1' 1!! !!,~ ,_ GlflHlll eJ ' ll IS~• Yi LomFn IAol ) 1 20V. • \\ PonhEC 1.-.i , S J2t 2t-~ SWEN n .r.z 10 111 d12"'-'~ WetCS• " • 43 211'1 4'llHCP 2 " ·~ v. _,.., ... .,, • .,,_ ~ Glll•ll• , 10 I ,., M!la• "' LomMt 2.17• 7 ' ltl'I-v. Pepcft. 1.21 7 " '~ "• WPS I so ) J2ol ,,...._ '" Wetum I., m 11v. ~ > J2 t• 71 :z:J•t... ~8th 1 7• 11 "'° 1"'°+ ~ Gi.HW 10 6 SI "' , . , LnSter I 'Cl S 11 ~ I'> Perdyr1 n llJt ~ Ill ~ 60 S • IO'Wo WellJ pfl 60 1 "''• • "• :~ ~ii'l:: ~ .~ g:i' • • .: :i :: ~ ~ &l:Wi : l Mr. ~:=.~ tit:ii i~ ·:i! ilE:-. :~~·.:: l >!! lit: i 1~ H ii:i! ~ g:;~ . ..i :L·:!l llh "...., .to • 123 221/. + "" gr.::.,lb 2; ~ =.: ~ Garich I,. • ., '"'. \It LIL PIK I.., llOO SJ • l>•rltPn S2.. 11 111't + "" ,... • JI 2'14. 14 WHllGl·1 M I M '1 ..... ~~ lb) 107 -~ ~h •••• ,_ ,.__~u i.-7 --.,__ ,,_ Gdrcf\ pl t7 l.400 d 111•-14 Lil PIU )4.lS II 27-· · · · l>eroon I 1 ' 17' 2.-+ It'; 1.26 1J JT1 1f\lo-14 WSl!Ht t 1.0I S U ""'-\o ~-· .__ ""' ~ ""-" -~ ._.... Gdrcf\ pfl n , I 22-..+ 14 LL:LL ptpl~ J~ ~ ~l:Z....:'i,.. P•tPlrl 11 113 IY, ..• $49Rlllt .lOll 4 12 10';lo-\\ WshWI t .40 S '" 111'• \<'a A"°" wt Z2 14V.+ It• O'ml( > I.CM 4 l2 ... ,._ '°' GoodJ' 1.40 6 131' ~. , •• LOftOOr t2 ' ,. JS-P..,IH t .... I U I~ l'I = .a: ~ ~ ~: ';: Watte ' 40 14 S16 27V. v. A~n _ ~. 7~ II-"-~k 2.lO ~ I~ ~ ~ g:':o ' 1 ~ : ,:: =•. ~ Lo .. t 'n 11 Ito UV.• \lo :::~~ n.~ a Ti ';:...:. ~ 9MM I • .S6 1 1' 16~ '4 ==~~~ .i: ': n ~~ t vt &llmc n .40 6 SI UV.-V. ~ • 43 s ll JS Gr•u uo s m l5"° • -t~s,,: : ,.~ ;!~ ;··· l"H•Y n 1,20 s 10 17 -•t. SIOltO JAi s 2%72 >l'h• '4 Wunun .ow • 1 •14 'A flllrlllll .60 I 11' !Pt.· Q.lllro ~it 1 IS~ ff,,.:.: .... Gr•lngr 1.Cll 10 13 ll.,_ • \It L•Pe< • tl ICl7 1I 14 Pt11QO en. 4 "' ttn • 11t 9IOll'd UO 6 22311 •V. • 14 Wun pt 11t . • 11\1. , ~~ ~·~ 16 1111 : ·_;· ~ o.mEn 2 3 47 ll'h • " Granlh S3 ti 10\'I ~ Lo..¥Gs j n 7 n 1~ Pt11Cn s 6 ,... 22V.-V. MlOll :UO • t41 XIII>+ " WebbO t 104 SV. t ~ ;it'll!W io 11• JA-v, Q6Tlnc 110 11 7 ·~ &:t~~~ IO iJ 7~ a~::-Yo L .... nll 1.10 S •I lt~ • :~en: JO ,.! ": _·;_.. =.:'.~ .• 1~ ~ ... ~ :::~~ ;.: I~ 'l! ~~: :: ~ l~ ,! 1~ ~~ ~ 1,1C:., 3, : w•· GHlrr1 •Si.to J JI v, t~~~1·:1: ~ :~~+ Penney 10• 6..., J2V.--9lenlMt .76 1 61 U\4-\4 :•.nc1 11 1y0r1 6011 91 '7161 13"> Yt 0-0 GtNoN~ , • fj ~ 14 L~s II 41" 10 11 • P•PL J.» • tss II..... ~ ' 1 lCXI ""• I'll C• ,,.,._ ... ~ 'Cl I » Z2 · ·• OMG -JO 1e 3 GtWFln • IM I~ YI L11<llyS 1 1' 1 JOI I~• PePL ptt.60 ... ,. -1 = 1.10e .. 11 IY> ..... W1PIP l 1.IO S 1'4 JO'!> , ~pf' ·'f s ~ ~~ .. a.min 2.0 2t ~ Yi GMP n '·· ., 12" ..... L11••n1 'n • • 11~ P•PL prt.40 ' no SS -llt g 1.l2 ' ,.. II,,._ ... wuc,tf QI°" " II • " -· s .... DMRI 1'12 's IS mr.. Greyf\ 1.10 131 " " :_M-M_ ... , P•,.Ldpri.7s.. 1 u-...... .1111 7 1' 2l'o ... WnA rL "' J~ =• t.~ 6 1! mt~.~ ~ 1:w11 11 n ... ?t'I>-"' Grey wt Md I-V. ACOM 16 11 7~ ~ l>ePL r 13 .. 11GD '2Yt+ 114 ,.... .111 1•1 ..J ~~ ~ :cA!!°f'1 .•! , •• 11 :o,~ ,,..: 8NWn IS2 42115 ~ '-~ l60 I m IW.-l't g~R~ s lMI J !; ;~"' it I::~ 1n ;:::• \lo :::::' .. rT:: ~ n ~; ~ ..., 1,10 ., '; u;: ;; WPKl ' 4 °1' SJ;;.:!; =.iw~.~ ~I~ l1 :.:_;,.; a.c.onn 7 ea.s ::..·,_.; Grvmm1.«llS '6 11-v. GMGr '.44 t 215 ,._·;~ ,..,,,. MolUO l~clMV.-1111 91.-E.V,sl~'I ~ ~ .. ;.: =~~lonpfl:: t 11~ !;~:1•• BICTr pf 2.SO 2 llV.+ \lo Diii'-' , IS 111. l'I in1m P'2fi , I lit .. ··· 8 Lt 0 «I 20 17'4+ ef\Zt8 I " 11...,. ti +2 --•• n . ~··~ •7 ~ ~~~ = .'6 1:1~ ~: :: G~~t ;}, ~ ··~~l ·:~ ec:~H ,i: ~ ~::: V. :::E11 ·'t t M~ s:~ .. it. =,_to!.··~~:.!=~.~~~:?:~ i ~ ;~• ~ o>a...-ft .A 12 ---. .. . . OlyMll '"'o " ,,,. JlV.. ~ Gu"Oll ,,., f S7t3 ,.~. ~ ec:ypf • ts llOO J!Wo-~ Pet>tlCo ,, ... SJO 33 -,,, .75 s " 1~. l't Wshec SI 2D • 10 211'1 ~ _....... -_.,, DI PL 'Cl • s I 1~ ... GulfA• 212 ·~· "" '"d 'u. .. 103 ,,_ v. l"tr•Et .so It , .. 1~. .... 1,12 • 127 19"• v, w • .,.r11. 'JO IS "'1 »"-• .. a.n.Go I 21 '3 14~• V• l'I 1• 1 16 • .,. GllStut I.St s U7 12v.-"' ICI • • JI 7,.. l"rrnlen 1.& •. 2" ""• "' E t IW ~'"" Wtyr pf 2.IO . 10 M~. Yt a.n..t .s .. ' , .. 21 .• " = n , * :: ~.. ..... Gu"Uld U2 s sn ISfll • -H '·., 10 2' 2A14 ..... ""''" ,, .... lG ~ Iii .12 IJ "' • + .. ww!!!.1Pr ·,~ 6. ~ ""'·· ... ::"'r:f'':: iO = 1'~~ DltmP I.JI I G1 ,. _,,_ GllB-n .Jl I " "'····· ~, .. , . 11 •» w.:·::: ,. .. rlftl .so 7 124 1J\'t+"'" It I.at 1 '2111>-" .,;;;,i/r•:ii . "i :rt I'll '" .2At 1 7t :Mt "" Dllt64' ' 13 "7 ""'--v. Gullon .601S ,. ~Iii "l\fn .. s ... 12Y>. .. PetA• ... • lS "'"• .... ~ ,-J!... 's Un .!~ ... ""' ~1PI • 17 ?; ......... DlllGllA • s , -"--hlf .» 6 1 ~ .... l"flnr ,, .. 17 4.SI SI...._ "' _..... ---..... • ' ,.. ee..tl l.S6 SO 0 '1-Yo 1bCJ1 1 t e 441 dlt._:.:· i4 HMW • 17 1-\\ ftCr 1 .» t U IS _ \It PhelpO M f m nv. • 1tt M ... r 6 .J2 ti 67 10\lo • I,\ Wl\r.lt r S . 1100 zn:. • il<o Bi>CTr' .... IS 7IW :iav. ..... l>lrlMfo ' ... 1 • ~ 14 HAT .40n 10 .,... v. ''" ... t.ft • .. J2111-14 Phlbro" ... s ... Jl'I'+-v. In ' 7 l 17'1'+-"" Wll r~ uo 1 IOS u • " =r:a 2.D 1 ~ 1~ ii: ~ °.'6 t S1 11-.--HeOW 2 •It 6 1•1'1-l'I viii 1.t1 t 17S U~+ 141 l"ltlleEI 2 • JU It,.._ ~ I •• S 1l 21114+ ~ Wflll I.SO S 107 !l -'-..._. s JO " -~ DlllllMY .. 21• u IS -v. Hell Fl 1.10 10 '" 216Yt-14 ""' l"IS,«I .• all llt\11. -l"ltll£"' J.a. l«I 2S " • 2·.1110 .• .!! .·.~.· ~ Whw.111ttc plC60J . ..!! nl>!Z ;;_ iMif'o 6 >es 1IVo 015a1o 1.12 S 1 11V... Heltltn 1.60 6 ..,, M ... • -l"CO 1,a I 907 ~ • 1.a PhllE pf t.• . &ISO 60 •I <>• • .. .. " •• 1. l ••• ~ • ,.. =:,.~ t:! ,, I~!:~~ f:rot i:: ~ 11: u-:::·· ~:::y:,.~ s g tt:~ ,._ .~·" 21P':f '~ ~ :=::U"i\ .. 6'":,"'~~ ti ·;~=:~ ::f,~~ .~ f ~0.~.:: ........ " ~ DllE pl t,J2 11«1 60\l'>+l\ll H•flJI '.... 12 ''"'· . • rMld I.JS • • U V.-Ill """Mt 1.«1 • SIS ..... " .... __ '17' ~ ~,. 1'? WllmE" s 17' 11V. "' -. . -·.. DllE~ , .. 1120 ...,.._ VI Hlldtmn 1 1 .. 11V.-.... ''°" ... " '" n --l"ltllllld .41 1 ,.. 17Yt-"" --• ~ .,. Wll6'tr0 .UI u 20 ·~-.... lltkof'I .... s IZ2 2AO • • . " HendH ... I t2 1>1'. \lo ~c' .at s .. d • ~ l"hllln pt 1.. 10 15\l'J. I.Ii ~· •• • ,. .. ~ -WlnO• I " I " Jt + "' 11t1<*1H ·• I • 1~ vt Dlll! us · ltO 41 • · · Henn• 7 s ,,.. 21 -"' pt 1 -. . s 1J•~ + ~ ,.1111Pt4 J.20 s US7 11 •-,10 t 171• u~+ '-Win-f7 1'7 ·~ 11t lltlHow t6 1 2 19"+ ~ OE 2.1S . . J 1~ --,.. .,. .. ~ 6 16 1_ ,...,... Btllll'd .24 I SS ..... -OE llfB us " • ....... . Her BJ • I s I IP/o. I'll rrlOt .JO 11 ,.. lllll-"" ,...,,.,,.. ,60 s ' "~ "' ·-~-•. . Winter J 121 . j J'4 . ...,, OE plK 412 ZJ ~ ,,_ Herllld t 62 10 SS 17 • ~ rll\M 2 10 2m ~ ~ PltdAvt .20 6 111 M -\It • • 11 1'-..... Wl,EP 1 ... 7 01 ~ "' = 0 : : • a; ~: ~ Da!E or 2:21 : 10 .__ 14 Hernltll 40 I 1' ,::.:: :: rlllF 1,1A 112113 2214. -PIING '. 1 J 11.a+ "' = I.~ : !: :nt:::: WlscPL 2.1• 1 " 21V.. v. =:pf l~~ J, ~ ~v._-~ ii ;:~ J l Cl::t : ~=~~1 > 1:!: : :: l•V. • 14 r~~ r.~.r S 1:J ~'-: ·~ ::r~ 2.24 ~ :~ ~: : ~ U0 IJ JJI ~ .... ::~:$ t: ~ m ;~; ~ lll<tfCp 1 " n 14"·· " DI I pf' lO • ~ " ~=~~M '.~ ~ ~ ~~~. : ::rl~· ·= ·~ ~ I;~-::.~ :::::r.'..21~ ,! n~ ~.~~ ..,_ ;" 41 ii r} : . '~ ::~' ~ ,; ~ ~"! ~ •-t• ,,,. s IU ,... v. DI~ ,_,. Ii mt 1Hto! &'t HwllEt 2 ... 1 111 ,. • "M•Ko .76 ' '71 2tl'I• "-"""YB 1.60 ' ltJ 1AY,,... ~ -T-T -WOOdPI 41 10 lJ '""· Berliey · • 11 2>ot.. · • • CltCld s ID 14 MO O\to-1116 Heyes" . ' .,_ • ~ Mewnlt 1.J2 11 ti 21 Yt Plt118 pt >.11 ,, IS n14-lo-. I 12 • 111 .. Ito.. Wolwtf\ I IO I~ IS. 11 .... e .. tPd ,JJ 7 .. II"+ \\ 01gfte1 . 101A7J ~ I'll Hen tin • l1 t 11 .,_ M•sM 1 7te I n 121'1., . , PffUlt' 1.10 16 117 11'-• l'I I I ll 14.,._ \lo Wolw pt 2.10 I J.4 -l<i BtttlSll UO ' llS 10 · · • !>l!lnl n 10b • S ""'• " H~U t .74 6 U M Vt MettyF •. 17' 2~ " ,. .. llRIC 20 JI ·~ + \'o TRW 2.40 1 tlM 46\lo+ Vt WorklAr •• J ,,..: BtqTf\r ,60 I llO ~. • · Qltlan 1'101> I 1S JD1Ao-Yt Hecl•M .. 27' a..• -_,Cp J S6 .. S lfYt + \'o Pt•nt.rn , 16 I 3 17 • 14 ;TM. or U0 . • 2 .. • .•. WWr111rot1y1rl.oMA '. 70s J,1" • -'e'1~~l '·°" 1,0 !! 2~:.. ,; DI-... '1.20 ,. JM --"" H•llm s .n 1 ,. ll -"' -Siii< ,.., . • • t\11, .. P .. , ••• 12 •. ,. ""····· ·~ -I ,.. ,,.._"' 'l ,.-~ ~ ,... -OtWlltt W ~ Hetnr 6 144 1 1'1 19'4-lo-. -IWE JW 10 U ~1 l"tttM\' I.Gall 2 65\olt+ ~ _.. ·•• I JM 2' • 14 Wyt•Lb .«> • 20 '"" l'I etec•O 7610 , .. Ullo ~...... .., • m .... ~ HetenC s ., "'--" -"·' ,JO"',,., IS\4 + 14 Pftelll'IO ' • tU 2!Yt+ .. loY " "' ~"" Wyly 17 40 '" 81kHPw2.1' s • n v. ..... !::.&' .M .. m 11o we1r1111 1.a10 • 11 + llt -tetwt , • 11 ....... ,._,.. • .a 115' ~\Iii lritllf , ., s "-•"' w, .. ,,~ .eo s,. 1s •1 BlflrJn I I a> 24 -.. ... 1 U I~+ ~ Helrnl" 21 1 204 tt • \t Matti pf 2'0 .. 111 12'-.. ,., ...,-arid I It JOO It ....• T91111¥ I M 2") • ... -X-Y-1· 8tluL 1.1• • ' ,. ........ Qonl.J ..20 10 11 ,,,,._ -HemC• ta 3"' .. ~ l70 6 7't !Wt+ I.II Plldl'ot A ' SJ 1,_+ ~ ~ tO JI """• ~ Xerox 3 s eo J51t • \\ Bk•HR ,_., 11 1s1 27 • v. pmwy 1.0 10 M cw.• "" tteml11< tot .. 1 '" • , 1... t • N _..., ~Toi .•SJ u ''"" .. , TCl!Crr .n • 2 11"-l't )(1'AA ·" n u tt~ • ~ 81ut8 1.IO 6 17 >1141~ " OarwJ' 1 6 22 ""'• 14 Htt<lllt 1.Jt • '°' dll ~ Mt tM S to! 2:M>--14 POi1eC M S l '°"····· ~ I 10 •I CM+ .. I~ 1.» J 12 11V.-It eoelnt 1.«1 J toS 1~0 "" o.-, At • 111 11. • .. . • Hert/Ir uo • 1' >s"' • " Mt ,,, t.Jt " zw.-" l'«10£ 1.14 s IP ,,_ • " T*-ft .. S2 • ,,.._ \\ z-t• .n • i•• 11 -" Bol..C l.tO • m ,. t -OlwOI , .. 7 lllft UV.+ Vt HIH1611 ••• 16 7 . . . uo :: 7• ... Ill ..., ltf 11.• ., L11 • -> T..... 6 .. .,,,~ Z.yre .... IO ts\to 14 Bordltn us. 244 JI"•" o.-Jll ·••to •t ..-. ~ Ht6111pf1AO .. 6 -.... ' ' ... II • \It "'9tttcl! IA 1 II ~·\II y...,. I,.. 1 ... l9'1llllR .a u "1 12 \<II •orvw 11.«I 6 ,,. n111o-lti i :.. ' ,,, , ...... " H ... btln ' I PS ~II', I,.. 1 1 ,,....... Ill P.CmEt ,, .. 1 ,. 15..._ "" ,_ J.40 • ICllA 25¥1." .. Zero' •• • 1 n ..... :::;1 2...,·, ,~ if'::411 ·• '"' 1214 ..... =::l:.• :l:"f. ~~ 1'.1.! 1 11\111+ w. ~~~'J 'IL-;:: r .. ., 11 .. 1,._. •••. 1 ...... 11M1uo • m •111+ fill Bos£ "' 1.11 • t W. + ~ 1% 'j " ~ !! HISlwer •• 4 SJ M-~ a •• · ...... '' ...,~ ts 1N ~ ._ ee.e:r '··" s 10 -.... 1All om ~· " HIVOll .IS ... '*'• I' -t II •• ,: ,._I""+~ PrlmMt .u •• IM ,,.,._"" =~r:~ l.l612 7:: ,:~.:..:·-. ~!!" ,' ! ...... =i:~bcl , , .. : ,1,• ~ = ...... . .• t 11'&... ~':. 4:1;' '~.~ = en tM 21011 m s1~ "' ~ ' "' Hel~°", M 1..J m-t\'1t _. S 1• •• .. ,. 'I 1 • i+ * Trad Jk d .,,:p, 1.-. , m ..... : ,. Qlllt.. i.• 1 'aa 1114• • • • • ....... ,. " 41 ~·t 'II .... • .,, -" e ta a en trod:" .1012 • ,,._ .. 0... ,. ..,, .. 010 ,.,,.._ ... ;]"'" l i l,_wG, 1.10 1 ,, " •••• ~~':I "~ l:iw.!I ==.:n·:u ca,..:..:.;~ ,.,.., ~.~ l.11ru00J'!.6. ~mt.•" o;; ,-,... .. • 111 ..... """'° -* • "*'•"" .,_.1,1t .,• •" TOKYO CAP) -Talks aimed at u ...... Y> •-" Dill* u 1• ., """-i. MeftWll :t..• • .., ~'"' f ~ '111'"rR;J • • ' \II..... , so)vin1 perhaps lbe moat seriou1 •= ,::1: : :/ L..v.o ,. o...t 1.t0 r m l!'h \.io =:vu 1.14 • 'J 1Mt-111 • fS t .... , d :r ........ 111 2D :.:·-~~ '" H~ .. = ~,v.~ a ... ~: : ,; 'I:.:.:·-' ··!! .•. ..: ~-·" . tra e ute between the United erMW11 1 s .. •• ~ -"' I 1 ,.... .." 11\111,.... lo :; '" • " States J•-pan encled Wednesd~ I"""" 11. . . " u~.. .. . " s ' ~ ::= uo ti DYt... .. • " 1 ·· •'f . .... ttb UUJe lb miae by ·=~ :: ': .. : =·~ ~ -..,.1, ..._~ .,_rll, ,: • 'ff it·~ ;; t ~ 1 :: , t :::;; !,_ --~-l~to k an a pro 11 ...... ~ "" ., • 1•... • ,. s ._. " "°'"' "uo .. , .. e ., Aot .. ,,. + w ~ ~ eep trying. lwu 1 -" , • ~ " ·" 1 n 12111. •• . • He'."'"' .. IS .. ' ~ "' 11; 1t .. .,. i .. m • " No lpedftc declaion.s were made ~=!"~~.~ ~ •• ~ , ... ~ ·11· ~.~ ~"c:f::-.. f = --~~ ... ~ .. ,_. = .::: ;J' ~···~ durib' th• two daya or talk• Ii.... . 7 11 1"-• "' 1 ~" .... 1 •• • ' + " .. .. .. ~ ii t • .. --·-J .,,...... t• 1 .,. ,._" :: i!E" 11 • • 2 " .. ~ , " conce.•.11111f apan't alle1ed trade •111 .-n Jt + 111 * ,,. 10 11 t • · • ' • • • " re 1 tr l ct on• A m e r i can 1 a a y, ...... -c.-< ~ • " ·; 1• = ~---1 1 I lm· .... ~ '# •····· contributed t.o the reeord '11 bllUoD l~""~t',1 •S ~Dt::.·:~.:. ': J1 ~·= ~--,; :::J,\ ~~·~ ·~ ~·~ l;;~:iJ "I:,~ U.S. lndecllliettwiUIJa,..aa1m. ~t",11 ~. j t ! Lt' . : , rE·: q .t ~:: 1' ,e: _,__.._'It:.. :: '!:~~tI.:' :i-: ~~ t.: 4 • 16 '.ll! 11 ::,.,., .,.,.1'1 11' .,._" .,. J .. ..i.. lime la the p .. t .. to 1olve the x .... s "' .-• " •• -, -. ··" 1 ,,.. a": 14 --.a ., 4 •• -•~ • problem . • t LOS ANGELES (AP> -Southern Caurom1a Edison Co. and U\18 Los Anaeles O.partmeut of Water- and Power ha\le selUed a 4-year-old lawsuit over pollution control equipment that relieves the utilities from installing expensive catalytic converters to reduce nitrogen ox.ide emissions . But lhe state Air Resources Board and lhe South Coast Air Quality Management DI.strict -which the companies sued over a 1978 rule mandating the converters -said Wednesday other provisions In the Los Angeles Superior Court agreement will help reduce nltr.ogen oxide pollution ln the South Coast Air Basin by 60 percent through 1990. The compunies said they would meet that goal by reducing lhe amount of eledric1ty produced in the region. GM-Toyota pact claimed DETROIT (AP> -General Motors Corp. and Toyota Motor Co. have agreed to make a Toyota Corolla-type car with a l,600cc engine under their proposed joint production plan. a Japanese economic. newspaper reported. GM declined comment Wednesday on the re- port, and a Toyota spokesman said lhe report was ..only speculation " Hershey bars costlier HERSHEY, Pa. CAP) Hershey Chocolate Co. has announced a 20 percent increase in lhe price or its candy bars, but said it also will make the bars bigger. The change will add a nickel to the price or its standard-sized bars now retailing for 25 cents. The size or the bars will increase by 33 or 38 percent, Hershey said. Gulf to take Arco cards? LOS ANGELES <AP) Atlantic Richfield Co. gas stations won 't accept Arco credit cards after April 15, but Gulf Oil stations may, the Los Angeles Times reports. The newspaper quoted industry sources as saying that in an effort to win over Arco customers, Gulf stations will soon begin accepting Arco credit cards provided that the cardholder applies for a Gulf card. The Arco card would be accepted until the customer received his Gulf card. PSE to list stock options SAN FRANCISCO (API -The Pacific Stock Exchange, fo llowing the lead of the two major options exchanges, has filed with the federal government to trade options contracts on groups of stocks. The PSE said Wednesday it proposed to list options on 12 groups or five stocks, with each group composed or companies in the same industry. The exchange filed the plan with the Securities and Exchange Commission. GM recalls some 1982 cars DETROIT <AP> -General Motors Corp. has announced it is recalling about 519,000 1982 X·. J . and A-model cars for replacement of clamps on the fuel filler and vent pipe boses and a check on clutch cables. The clamps are used to hold rubber tubes to th•? cars' llller pipes or a nearby vent pipe. They have oeen 1ouncs to break, allowing fuel to drip or splash out. GM spokesman Harold Jackson said. The unrelated clutch problem could result if the clutch cable is too close to the left front brake fluid line. NEW YOAKIAP) Flnel Oow·J_, e¥91- AMERICAN LEADERS HEW YORI( (AP) -se .... weo P'k• encl rlll Ul.tftQit OI l!M ltn "'°'' e<tfW Amtrlc... Sloc:k E•<llente l•WK. tredl~ llAlton.lly •I mor• ~ ti = a'i' ' == ,;~ : :: lttl~E,'.61, " 2tl,SOO 1... -i.. ::h, •· m:: ~= : : Sundance<> 1 tt.JOO 1014 •I~ MO..OllTr llS,JOO 11\lo • " G11HCer1 v 11,,. ,-, • 14 :,~:~:'l\,, ~u: '!-.. = :z UPS AND DOWNS HEW YORK IAI") -nw f'ot-1~ 11111 tMwl '"' New Yorlc SID<' E•d• ..... 1tocU -werr ... u 11181 "81rt OOM UO Ille most --tht most beMO on r:'Clfl~: .. <..... r-rdle.' of voklmt NO "'""Illes tredl"ll "'-$J .,. Incl· llded. Hes -perceftf..-c~ •re "" dlffe,.nct ... ..._. Ille orev~ <IOSlllQ 1>rke •nd ~y~prtce t0< weo., Mer 10 STOCttS JO Ind 20 Trn IS Ult us" lrldUl Tran Utl" U Siii a.... """ ~ c-a. I02 SI llf:zt 7'7,&S -·"• 1.~ l" .. 325 03 31' ... , .. •1-0" 107 76 IOl.ll 107 .tl 101 ,._ 0 14 )1'.lS Jll.11 312 " l ... 11-O.OI WHAT STOCKS DID HEW VO"K (API MAr 10 Ad¥enceel Oe<llntcl u II( "8"111<1 TOIAI ISWK New lllofts H<tw lows weo ... S71 .., I tot II 6l HEW YORK IAPI -10 Advanced Dt<lln.o UllCh•ngitd Tot.I lsSUH Hew h~ Hew lo~ METALS W«I l'1 m >10 711 , • w......,.., •.01uoo ,,..,.100 t.nt,• ,, ..... """ "U, as JOI 11J • 144 Ce11,.., "'-·11 cents e po11nd, U.S. dtstlnetloM. L.t .. •» ,_. -I.tee 41 ,_ • llO"l"d. 0.11 ... ..., TIA M,..ot Met.All w .. k <~II• lb AlllM ..... 1 ... n Cet\U • --· N Y Men..,., '1111.00 per fie~ 1"1At1-$J20,00lro?or., NY H•me Les~ .c"i. Pel ; g:.~ ,, • '"" ~: ~-: SILVER 3 PelrlcaPlf av. + J'o Ut 11..J • v11com • n-. + ,_ u• .l S LLCCorp JV, + \lo Up II.I 6 Pe,_ • nv. • 1V. Up 11 1 7 OloMIMer ' 12~ • l\lo Up 10., : ~~ 2r' : , "' ~ ;j ,~ ~~~ ~~ • ~v. ~: ':• 1GOLO QUOTATIONS lJ Ccioll u~ 1" : v. Vu•p •",s I ~' 13 H-Febrk I> + I.,. :; :~·=, = : : ~= ::; -It ~=~ ,,., ~ · := ~: tl " Ania• • ,,.... I Up ... 1' AllffQI 17 • tllt Ull 7.t tO Ulll!I a... ~1.s . ,_ Up '·' ,...,. Late Che fl'tt, 1 ~O<ltlM pl8 '1 -ll't Ofl u.• ' 2 AmAlrlll WI 4Yt -II& Off 14,. 4 Cf\,.......I pf 61 -~ S HtMoOC«e S~ -Ill 7.1 ~: moml,.ll•lfttPM oo ... '1.00. 1..-..:~llxlfttWI 7',offt l.U. ,..,..., .-.n, """Aot, ,,......,., t.Ja.01 ••• 1.0. l11tkll: I.alt flat,. 9'$1.00, oft Sl.00 1119; QM.00-... NA .. y & Mer-: only delly ...... t»t.7S,ofltUS. I ........ : 9'11? dolly .-Ull.7S, elf S1..U.--, ........ , ....., eelly ..... IMl1< .... SMl.M,Cilff t t.JI. ) ""' llltl , .... _ "" e°" , ... ...,. • "9flrlall ,. -3 1 • .s1 1 JeeltrSete4 '014 -,.,. ' I -rttc;t '·'°" i:ll. -1 E u SYMBOLS • SM<tr•l"llvs 1614 -'14 ',·.', te Wkli..C. •e-~ >I! lvMMo1WI • -\'t Off 7.t -.............. _..,hotll , It °"" ....... "( . , -!II Oft •l '""' ----. -.. ---1t NICOlt ,,_. 11"' -1-. Ott U -....,., ** ._..,. ... IMI ....... i4 Occl S.-r "'-->~ ~ ?·' tr - -.......... .._.. or •lte I·: !~~ '"', .. -1~ le! :-! .......... ---............... _,,., t s.;'evc 1111 ,; = ¥; Of; ;; .,..::::,..,_ .. --.::: :.t::::': ...,. ._ :i ~:tt:1': ~loo\ = : Oft S.4 ............... ...,... 6 .... 0--l-D_C_O_INS _____ Off __ u ~~;:.::..s=.fE -----........ -.. ........ NI* YOllllC iAPl -"''"' tete ",... -,_, 111 --- -...,_..,, ...... ~ .............. -----...... -~ .. T-..•r'tltfb, ......... 11 ........ r:-----~----......... I _,..,.._. ....................... __ 11......-.1trwa,1m.n..1111aa.a •• • •••., ........ ,.....,.... .., ._....,,....., ... ..,.,,,,....... -...--. ........ .. --• -. , .. Wy •••..... 1S. ~ ............ t .............. an. .... -----_.......-. ----~--.....,·~---....... . .. .,,, , .. _,,_,.... ................ . .._.. ............ ==='-=-=-, :.:\: .... ) 111111 l:UIT 1111111UC11mn mm THURSDAY. MARCH 11. 1982 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Conservative, liberal slates will clash April 13 lf you're one of those voters who likes to go to the polls and select an established slate of favorites. you now have two slates to choose from in Laguna Beach. Three seals are open in the April l3 City Council election, and factions from both ends of the poliUc:aJ spectrum have already expre ssed their preferences as to who should fill those seats. On tl\e more conservative side of the race are Incumbents Kelly Boyd, and candidates Pat Barry and Ron Williams. They were endorsed as a slate early on in the campaign by a two-year·old group calling itself Laguna First. And now, a new committee, headed by former Mayor Roy Holm. has publicly come out and a nnoun c e d its s upport .of candid ates Robert Gentry. Bobbie Minkin and Dan Kenney. Ca llin g itself a ··resident-oriented'• com mltlee, the more llut!ral of the two slate organization s has become active. "Laguna's problems must be solved by Laguna residents, not by a manage ment consulting firm based in Newport Beach," Holm said in a press release. He was referring to Laguna First's expenditure of $5,000 to a Newport Beach conaultin1 firm for compiline a s urvey of op inions from about 400 Lagunans. ., The survey results, recording to Kent Snyder . cha rman of Laguna First, will be used by candidates backed by his group to help them "understand where people stand on the Issues." Ca mpaign expenditure statements filed last week by Laguna First show $5,000 of 'Bug' thefts ~l · epidemic CRUMBLING COURTHOUSE Roof apd ste ps of old courthouse in Santa Ana were damaged by March 10, 1933 earthquake. Tower at upper right was ordered removed. One jolt followed anoth~r So m e were less traumatic during county 's 93 years By DAVID KUTZMANN Of IM Dally ~191 Sutt Orange County quietly m arked its 93rd birthday today in a way that surprised some people. The place was still standing. You may recall that star-gazing doomsayers had predicted that a unique alignment of planets on one side of the s un Wednesday would unlea s h a convuls ive wa ve of earthquake s a nd volcanic eruptions. was about as uneventful a 24-hour period as they come. But, there was some hi storical precedent for believing that March 10 could possibly have been more calamitous. That's because on March 10, 1933, Orange County and the rest of Southern California was jolted b~ an earthquake that virtua.lly wiped out parts of Long Beach and Compton. Long-time Orange County residents who remember the quake, which measured 6.3 on the Richter scale, say its aftershocks still reverberate in their minds 49 years later. Though injuries were few, property damage was extensive io places. It was because of this ke -and another which followed four days ~a..,..te_r..._ that county officials decided to remove a tower the old two-story sandstone courthouse in Santa a. in Laguna By STEVE MITCHELL Of .... o.lly ...... l&llff Somebody out there must realJy love Love Bugs, because nine 1966 model Volkswagen sedans -all but one of them blue -were stolen in Laguna Be1lch late Wednesday and early this morning. Laguna Beach police were besieged by phone calls this morning from owners reporting the theft of the blue bugs, mostly taken from streets in the north · end of the city. Two of the vehicles were recovered blocks from their owners· homes, police said. ·'One ran out of gas and the se c ond on e broke down, .. ex pl ain e d d e t ec t ive Alex Jimenez. who was phoning other p olice ag e ncies late this morning to determine whether the rash of bug thefts was lim ited to Laguna Beach. He said whoever stole the cars "was pretty we11 versed on the older models." ''They j u st jumped in, hot-wired the ignition and split." He said the thefts apparently occurred between 10 p.m. and 6 this morning, adding some. of the vehicles were Jocked and some were not. Jimenez said the 1966 model VW -and especia11y parts for the 16-year-old vehicles -are scarce and, thus, valuable. "Good bucket seals can bring $600 each,'· he said. adding that police believe the thieves intend to strip the cars and sell the parts . Laguna First'& war chest went to the Englander Group of Newport Place for surveys and consulting services and Public R esponse Survey , of San Francisco, which conducted the telephone interviews. The new Gentry. Minkin. Kenney Campaign Cpmmittee, headed by Holm, sa1d Laguna First soli cited "major co ntribut io n s from pro-development individuals and funneled most of the funds throueh a Newport Beach ma!'agement company.•• But Snyder. of Laguna First. said "The only way to make sure the issues are clearly defined for the April election is to poll the populace of Laguna Beach." Office r s u se radar guns in Laguna Laguna Beach motor officers are pulling their guns more often these days, and the effort should pay off in safer early morning commuting. The guns are radar speed devices that gauge the speed of passing motorists. and Laguna Beach police are using the non-lethal traffic weapons on Pacific Coast Highway and Laguna Canyon Road. The officers are getting out there earlier, too , after complaints of s peeding early morning commuters on those two busy thoroughfares . Wh en a motor officer ·zaps your vehicle with the radar gun, your speed is shown on a red digital readout. "We're putting officers out in the field earlier in order to slow down commuters beading out of Laguna on the hgihway and out the canyon road," said Police Lt. Terry Temple. H e said he h o p es t h e additional citalions. as ·well as the visibility of the motor officers, will have an effed on motorists in a hurry to get to work. "We want to get everyone through town safely every day," he said. "That's the goal." Left out of either · slate are candidates Paul Christiansen, Beth Leeds and Ricky Slater. A new look for TV Log Your Pilot TV log will have a new look and a few new features this Friday. The new, mor e ·attractive format, will feature a complete rolling Jog that will m ake it easier to find your favorite s how. The 36-page weekly magazine also will feature a new colu mn , Orange Coast TV Antenna , written b y Phil Sneiderman. Gone will be t he program grids which some have found inadequate, but remaining will be the popular features such as Jeff Parker's "Ins ide TV," ··Daytime Drama,·· Sports Highlights and the TV Puzzle. Candidates mee t tonig ht The nine Laguna Beach City Council candidates will meet tonight at a forum sponsored by the Temple Hills Community Association beginning at 7:30 p.m . The forum will be held at the home Qf Ron and Fran Chilcote at 1940 San Remo Drive. The public is invited to attend. Three city council terms will expire this year. They are currently held by Councilmen Ho wa rd Dawson, Willi am Wilcoxen and Kelly Boyd. Boyd is the onl y incumbent seeking re-election June 8. Khadaf y gree t~d VIENNA (AP) -Austrian leaders eager to do business wi th oi l -rich Lib y a on Wednesday welcomed Col. M oa mm a r Kh ada fy , the revolutionary leader accused by the U .S . gove rnm ent of financing terrorism around the world. S uch oc currences would ce rtainly have s poil e d today 's anni ve r s ary, which ma rks the signing of state legislation which led to incorporation of the county of Orange on March 11 , 1889. Historians will note that, other tha n the usual political. social LECIL SLABACK and emotional upheavals of the day. Wednesday B even in those days, much like Wednesday. reports of Orange County's demise were somewhat exaggerated. Lecil J . Sia back. a life-long county resident who now lives in Silverado Canyon, said he <See DOOMSAYERS. P age A?> o.lly~·-~ GUNNING FOR SPEEDERS -Laguna Beach Laguna Beach. Police are stepping up motor officer Randy West points radar speed enforcement of s peeding laws with an eye on gun at passing motoris ts al the north end of early morning commuters WORLD Outside insurgency? WASHJNGTON -A bipartisan group of former high-level officials believe that the SaJvadoran insurgency is under the control of Nicaragaua and Cuba. ~age A3. NATION Soap opera a g ame NEW YORK -For those soap opera addicts who can't iet enough of "General Hospital," a board game lets them play the characters' parts. Pa•e CS. Sen. William1 r esign1 WASHINGTON (AP > -Harri.Ion A. Williams Jr .. D-N.J., resiped rrom the Seaate today ln tbe face 0( almost certain e~pul1ion by bis eolleapes for "etblcall)' repupant" conduct in th4 FBra Ablcam lnvestlpUon. STATE Network d e mise seen LOS ANGELES -A former network executive bas written a scathing novel forecasting the rapid death ol network television. Page BS. · Economic s hift asked A Stanford University eeonomlat believes there's a responsible way out of a "Global Depnuion ." Pase Ct. COUNTY Voter8 1igning up SANTA ANA -Voter rqlstration ln pollt1c:al17 l c:tlft Or1n1e County is headin1 for an all·Ume h11b. Story, BL -.--.- SPORTS The view from Florida What is the Dod1ers' secret to suc:c:esa? It mi1ht have something to do with discipUne. Mana1er Tommy Lasorda says he doesn't believe in rules or fines. Pase Cl. INDEX Ann Landen Bl Al Your Service A4 Movies BM Erma Bombeck 82 MutuaJ Funds Cl L.M. Boyd A6 NaUoul Ne'WI Al Buatneu C&-7 PultUc: Notlceta 02.3 Ca lifomla AS Sports Cl~ Claaaifted Dl,DM Dr. Steincn>M • Conales C$ l&oek Marketa er Cro11word C5 Telewtlkln II Death Notices Ar, ne1W1 BM &ditorial ....... >\2 Entertainment BM World Newt u Jlorotee>pe Ba \ ~ ll L Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Thul'9dav. Ma_rc_t"t_1_t_1_e_a2 ____ .._ ____________ _ .~'-· : -Continued stories • I ! ~~~~.!Y,~:d ·,.: aftermath , Include ~ reports that Santa Ana Hi1h seeing court proceedln1s t.aldn& ~School had been de11lroyed. This place on lhe front lawn or a wu news to h lm because Methodist church next to the Slaback, then 22, sat ln bis car courthouse; of seelnc buildln& t lookln1 at a relatively unscarred which looked llke doll houses (no ' h11h school campus. walls), and of moching each Slaback, who became a court tJme a new aftershock rumbled. 1 report.er like his rather , Not since 1933, S1aback and I• remembers the day ror other others say, has Orange County reasons. endured such a tumultuous I Before the quake hit, he was birthday eve. l getting ready to go out on a Though voters decided on double date with a woman who June 5, 1889 to secede from Los eventua11y became hls wife. Angeles County and create I ' "I was shaving," he said, Orange County, the anniversary l "when the mirror began lo move is officially celebrated on March I around a little bit." 11. l Slat>ack said after his family That's the date that Gov. I J heard a rumbling sound at about Robert Waterman signed , 6 p.m. they ned the house. On legislation which allowed new j his way out, Slaback said he saw counties to form in California. , 1 cupboard doors fly open and The vote in Orange County in dishes come flying out. the June referendum was 2,509 ReOecting on that March 10, people in favor of splitting from he saiCi it was a "fortunate Los Angeles County and 500 thing" that the earthquake people opposed. · occurred after people got home No s pecial observances are from work and before dinner planned to today's anniversary. and theater patrons went back Previously, special celebrations downtown. marked the county's 85th and "In those days," Staback 90th birthdays. observed, "(people) needed to It is ex peeled th at the go downtown more often than county's lOOth birthday will lead they do now." to observances of a special Other memories which he still but not too earth-shaking - carries with him of the quake nature. ·Explosives found at Coast residence Plasuc explosive equivalent to 84 sticks of dynamite, and detonators to set it o rr we re found in a Dana Point residence Wednesday afternoon. T he military explosive, known as C-4, was confiscated from the home of former Marine Dennis Lyle Huff at 25121 Via Elevado after Sheriff's Hazardous Device Unit investigators received a tip from a ''confidential source." Sheriff's officers ordered nearby residences evacuated. Huff, 26, was already in custody for passing bad checks and the distri c t attorne y i s now preparing a felony complaint· against him for possession of explosive devices. According to Lt. John Hewitt of the Sheriff's Department, the C-4 explosive is a military demolition tool used in heavy blasting. The explosive was found in six blocks weighing 1.5 pounds each. He characterized C-4 as a "relatively stable" substance that should never be stored with detonators. The detonators, or blasting caps, were found side by s ide with the explosive. Jet engine flames; 62 evacuated safely LONG BEACH CAP> -An engine on a Jet America DC-9 airpl~ne caught fire while the plane prepared to leave for Chicago, but a Federal Aviation Administration spokesman said all 62 passenger s were evacuated safely. The fire broke out about 6:35 p.m . Wednesday as Jo~light l.22 was preparing for take-off from Long Beach Airport , fire dispatcher Michael Robideaux said. Passengers were evacuated via stairs and chutes, Robideaux said. They departed for Chicago on another J et America plane . Isolate €llba, Schmitz says By JEFF ADLER Ot ... Del ............. State Sen. John Scbmltz's aides enticin1Jy said the Corona del 'Mar Republican would be discussing "El Salvador, the Military Coup a nd the Jews" before the Los Anaeles World Affairs Council Wednesday evening. The World Arfalrs Co"J)Cil had billed It as Schmlti drlcu.salng "What's wrong with our forelin pollcy." As it turned out, what's wrong with the nation's foreign policy Is the Jewish community's infiuence in tilting U.S. foreign policy toward Is rae l as well u this nation's failure to confront the Soviet Union and Cuba, according to Schmitz. The candidate for the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate faulted U.S. foreign policy "for being for Isr ael and not for America." Schmitz said foreign policy has been influenced by the news media thro ugh Soviet misinformation and "overeager, very ambitious politicians who s uccumb too much to the Jewish c ommunity in this country, which has been bulldozed and bedazzled by the Zionists so that almos t the entire Jewish community in the United States now feels obligated to support the Zionist movement and support Israel." To unders core his poin t , Sc hmit z s aid so rn1ny pro-Uraeli resolutions come betore the state Senate that "you'd think we were the Israeli Knesset." Schmitz charaed that the news media and educators In tbis country, especially lhoae In higher educ ation , are the •·stronahold of the left." He added the "media ls running roreian policy." Turning his attention to the Soviet Union, Schmitz said the problem is not in El ~alvador, it 's ,in C uba , Angola ,. Mozambique and the other Soviet client states which export revolution. "My answer to El Salvador· and Poland is Cuba,·· said Schmitz. "My answer is to sever Cuba and Nicarauga from the Soviet orbit." He advocated going on the o ffensive and undertaking "whatever is necessary" to free Cuba and othe r Soviet-dominated countries. ''They talk about de-stabilizing Nicaragua. They ought to be talking about de·slabilizing Cuba," Schmitz said. "If you sever Cuba from the Soviet Union there will be no more problems. It's intolerable to have a Soviet s atellite 90 miles from our shores." Questioned more closely about the situation in E l Salvador, Schm itz fired back, "What if we just clobbe r e d them right away?" He added he personally doesn't believe an invasion is necessary to drive the rebels out of E l Salvador or any of the other South American countries facing rebel opposition. MA BELL STRIKES AGAIN : Only yei>terday in this space I was talking ubout our new Pilot TV Log that comes out this Friday and I listed a ielephone number for our We,.e Listening service. By doing that. I broke a basic tenet or news papering. We paid. too. The numbe r , "or course, was wrong. One of our We're Listening customers called some haple ss so ul al m)dnight as a result. He wasn't listeni.ng. He (;;, r-\ TOM MURPHlll ,~~ was sleeping. . All this re minds you of some years back when this st erling journal at Christmas time went along with a Jaycee program to have a telephone number where the kiddies could ca ll up Santa Claus. OF COURSE WHEN 1t was printed , the number youngsters were advised to call for St Ni ck was wrong. Fortunately, the hapless citizen out there whom we had just volunteered to be the jolly old elf himself. turned out to be a nice guy. He went along with IJpe gag. Throughout the long night: he heard so m <l:ny Christmas wishes from boys and girls that he was coming down with a case of te rminal laryngitis. That's when his wife took over the phones. She became Mrs. Claus. So much for printing telephone numbe rs in I ht" newspapers. SOME OTHER CALl.ERS did get the right number last night to tell us that they weren't so worried about being able to read the new television log as they were about how complete the listings will be . We think on Friday you 'll find a complete log and w<: still solicit your comme nts . But as to the numbe r to call . check it in our .. w c·ri: Li stening" box on Page M . I sure hope it 's on A4 . We won't try to repeat the number here. I'm sure you can understand why. Companion of Be l ush i rock g roup ie LOS ANGELES (AP> -The mystery woman reportedly with c omedian John Belushi the morning he died apparently was no s tranger to the entertainment world and the drug scene, the Los Angeles Herald Examiner s aid tocfay. (Related s tory Page All Reaga·n booed at ballet Cathy Evelyn Smith, who was led away in handcuffs following Belushi's death Friday, left Toronto in 1978 after a re lationship with Canadian folksinger Gordon Lightfoot, friends and unnamed sources told the newspaper. The 34·year-old Ms. Smith, a singer who did back-up vocals along with country singer Nicolette Larson on one of Hoyt Axton's albums, ·reportedly fell in with the Rolling Stones' entourage and worked for a while with Stones' guitarist Keith Richards. Jimmy Cano, mailre d ' at Dan Tana's, told the paper that Ms. Smith had been barred from the establishment six months ago because or her behavior. Scattered jeers meet president at Kennedy Center WASHINGTON CAP l - President Reagan and his wife were booed by several members or the a udience when they entered the presidential box at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts to watch a performa nce or the Joffrey Ballet. A similar d e monstration greeted the Reagans when they returned to their box a rter the firs t of two intermissions Wednesday night. It was impossible to determille how many people were booing, but it was a very small percentage of the capacity audience of 2,200. However, the boos came from several sections of the auditorium and were clearly audible, along with the traditional applause that greets a president on such occasions. It also marked the first time since Reagan became president that he has been greeted with boos in a pubhc appearance - except by pa r ticipants in planned demonstrations. As l\e left the box during the second intermission, Reagan was asked by reporters why the booing occurred. Before he could answer, his wife said, "It was just one young boy, just one young boy." The president added; '•He probably had a broken spring in his seat." The Kennedy Center official, who asked that he not be identified by name, s aid he would "certainly agree" that m ol'e than one person was booing. go to the ballet would engage 10 that sort or thing. A hockey game, yes. A ballet, no." The Reagans initially entered their box, on the first tier over the orchestra seating level, just before the curtain rose. The house lights were already dim, but televis ion camera lights shined on the box. There was no announcement that the R e agan s wer e attending. Hearing planned on coast park A public hearing on the new Crystal Cove State Park south of Corona del Mar will be held at 9 a.m . Friday in Santa Ana. Showers due today An official who has been with Kennedy Center since it opened in 1971 said it was the firs t time . a president has been booed there. Each president s ince Richard M. Nixon has visited the center . Deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said today , i n reaction to the incidents, "I thought people wno went to the ballet were ladies and gentlemen. patrons of the a rts." He said he was "shocked and s urprised that people who would The state department of Parks and Recreation will listen to comments from the public on a draft environmental impact r e port for the beach-a r ea parkland. The hearing will be held in the police anne x auditor ium, 23 Civic Center Plaza. I I Coastal ••ll•y•, s.n F ... .-.s.ni. Cl•rll• vallot, RlverM-S... &.rMrdlno area. 1\1911 -IOw _,.,,, lnl-Oranoe County end Ille coastal, m•tropollla n . llann l ftO , HenMt·EISlnore -lllo her La-• .,..., .. AOMO ratlno• are •• follow•: Mostly clovdy 11\rouel\ Frida y OMO. CHOO; -attllful for sel>Slllv• IHcomfno fair wlll\ ousty wind; P•OPI•. 101.100; unl\ullMut tor l'rktay •-lfto A 70 '"r<eftl cl\ance tvtryon•, 201·300. and l\arardOus, ol rain IOClay, de<r•Hlno 10 10 JOl·SOO perc•t1l °" Friday. Hlof>s In mkt .O. ----------10 IOw 70l. ~noton-N.._t erH tomper.iut9t r-'no '""" SS to 66. T Ef-IWo, '""" Poklt Conception emperatures to tN MHk•n 11oro... -out to miles: LllJl!lverlable wlnchnltl"l•nd • Ml u ~ lllor'lllfto !lours. beeon1lno -OSI JS 20 .CM to wot at 12 lo 20 -nott In Ille ::~ 72 41 •"--FrlcMY. Wotttrly •-" ot t Arnarllto 11 77 to J toel. Mostly cloudy w llt A-viii• •> JI -cfflonal lloM rein lonlotot. Perth AUalltl 70 4' clOudv FrlcMv. Atlante Cty •• 3' eattlmoro '4 77 NoriOl-8trmlft91vn 70 » U.S. summary :=••<-~ ~ llMIOn ,. JI Sflowon aftd -rstorms •pro<HI a to111 IN mld·Mlu lu lppl Valley llro•ntvti. IO ff OJ Ollla City .Oj <>mafia Orlalldo l'llllaclPNa -y. -·· ralft -~-' fttl 11'1 mucl\ Ol IM NOttMtil. Rain altO NII •lonQ ,,,. nor'lltom Pacific Coost and In parts Of the MfttlONI Pta1eau. l ater laday, raln wes ns-<le<I to ""'9H ac,_ IM Pa<lllt CCMtst to , ... Rt<kles. n _, as ov ... ,,,. noMMrn Atlantk C0.11al states Tl\• forecast a lso ca lled tor t<•tt•rl'd snow Jl'H>wtr \ o•tr tM U-r Gre"1 L•kH. T•ms>eratures "l'•r• upec ted lo remain -troerlno onty In tr.. Upper Greet Lallo a rea HIOll temperal\>rft today wlll bO In 11\e 40s OftCI sos from Now EnotaftCI tllrOUOll tlM Ohio Valley .,,., IM "°""8f'n l'lallls to !tie Pac:Klc ~t. and Ill !fie 60I -70s acrou !fie <tlllr•I l'i.llls and In tho Soutll. tomporat..,.., around tM natlOft HrlY today rangecl '""" 1 tn f'vto. M.o .. and~ Foru, N.O., lo 14 In ... , Palm llH<ll. Fl• .. -Yuma. .Arll. .Extended f orecast Buffalo 4 .0 02 ,.._,,1. p~ pttand,Mt Ptt•ftCI. o.- R•no Cl\arllln SC 61 liO Cl\artsln WV •S SI c ... y.,..,. se 11 Cl\lc"° 40 36 .Ot Clncll\Ntl S1 liO 02 ci."1a~ ~ u ~ Columbus to •S .01 Salt Lek• SHttla St Louis SI P-Tampo Oaf.Ft.... H n Denver u n Dos MolroH n ll SIStoM ... i. 02 Sciol!aM IS Tutton Dolrott 40 lit Oulull\ JO 12 .ot Tutu WHlllno1n Wl<ltlla El Peto 13 "3 Har110fd •t J2 He .. na SS 2' .02 H-holu 71 70 .ti Houstoll 7S 62 .......... u 4S Ja<llMvtle 1' '1 l(aM City 7• 1' l .. Vetft 1S 6' lllll• Roell .. S1 Louls•ll.. ~ 4' Ma"'llfll• ,, S7 Miami 1S .. Mll•auk• 40 *' Mt>t .. sc. P 40 2• Na.,,vlllo f' 41t -or-n JJ NoWY-Jt • to 42 76 u •' n 71 SS ., l6 .... S4 41 JS J2 .. ., .. " " q S1 3' 11 SS 77 S6 " 17 SS 4l " 51 1S S7 0 3' 71 0 10.UTHEllN CAllFOllHIA COAITAl AHO MOUNTAIN AltEAS -Partly CllW'f and < ... S--Y .... ""'*"· MolCtY ,.., ... flMMey. ..,_. 11111Y _....., wlMI 111 tlto -'-"" .,,., to<etty w!netY Ill tM C9MUl.,_.H .... lfl tfle~at -t5•7tand •J .. Ullltfl9 _.._~...,ta•D .... ,., -...... to .0 ... .,,. ............. • IUlf llPllT 'l -Wili • ) S...Otevo '° .. ~ Franclt<o Santa 8.Wr• Santa Marla 61 SS ·°' ., Sol .. .OJ Stockton T"9rmal u_,.., .. S1 17 s• Barstow .1t8'9 8Hr .oe 81sllop Catalina 11 ff St J7 10 ., ·'° lOftl 8ffcll Monr0¥1a " S6 7t u 71 SJ Mt. Wiison ·°' ..... .,.,, llMcl\ ''Ontario Palm Sprl119S Pesadena San 8er,,.,dlno S.nJOMt Santa,.,,.. Santa Cnu Ta-Vall•V St .. 1• 17 ,. 76 •7 ., u ~ l'AM AM&•tCAM Acapulco •• ••rbadOs 12 ..,.muda 12 ..... .. CU<acao .. ...,...,.,, • 71 G...Oal•l•• .. . o.Ou ... ._ 71 .17 H ... aN IO .10KI~ H Monteto Bty IS CAJIAOA c .... ,.., JI ElllllOft'°" n Montl'911 " cm-a ·• .-.. 111. n TOf9ftte M v~-.. Wlllflltlet 22 •1 Sol S1 ff S6 SI . ,, SS 4' .JI 4' 7l 70 ti " ., n ,e1 to d ..... ts .07 n .. • 12 •a • ,, ,, Short But Sweet Storekeeper Gina Garrett is wearing A SfOf-. llwlt Q/lm /IM trodltk>M/ ~r /Of' mnt, MIO~ attd boys.. a pair from a great selection l in our Ladies Department ... Summer is just afewshort months away. -1 .. .. L Orange Cout DAILY PILOTIThur9day, Mareh 11. 1982 Cable TV committee could be an asset Many have complained or tbe proliferation or appointed advisory committees that have come and gone ln Laguna Beach. Some were active and were an asset lo the City Council. Others seldom met, and when members did get together. they accomplished little. Now the City Counci l is considering setting up -or more accurately re-establishing a Cable Television committee. The request came from the Laguna Video Club, a fledgling group which films counc il meetings and other events in town. But non-video enthusiads also supported the concept ~~ cable television pane l to keep tab s on the comp l ex telecommunications industry The city's position has been that such a committee would have little to do, except at times when Storer Cable TV, which holds a franchise in Laguna Beach. seeks a rate hike. And, since the clty turned down a customer rate tncrease last year. it would appear such a committee would serve little purpose. Not so. said the City Co uncil. A cable TV committee would be able to serve in aR ·advisory capacity in ter·ms of reviewing Storer's franchise with the city. And while stressing it does not want the committee to serve in an advocacy role to "get Storer," the council said it does want some say in planning and programming with the Laguna Niguel based company. The council made clear it will a ppoint a committee that will include representatives from the company , as well a s the community A well-ba lan ced cab le television committee would be a welcome addition to Laguna Beach cable customers The missing artists Anyone who has visited the Laguna Beach Festival of Arts in recent years probabl y has noticed that not many of the artists themselves bother to attend the annual event. Booths sit unattended during the slow daytime hours and even during hea,vy visiting times when the Pageant or the Masters is being presented -many or the artists· booths are void or the people who have created the work that hangs in them. Last month. the festival board of directors decided to do something about it. They raised the fees charged by the sales booth -which handles sales for artists wh en they are not present -from 10 lo 25 percent. The reason for the 'raise, they say. is to encourage artists to be present on the grounds by reducing their profits if they're not. And while the proposal to penalize artists who do not sit by their booths seems a bit extre me. the festival board raises a good point. A main attraction of the summer festival for many visitors is the opportunity to chat with the artists at their booths The result is an atmosphere of artists and appreciators of art. mingling together in an informal setting . On the other hand. artists cannot be expected to be sitting at their booths for up to 12 hours a day. When would they have the time to create artworks? And many festival e xhibitors have full-time jobs in addition to their art. There should be more artists in atte ndan ce durin g th e seven.week festival run. That appears obvious But instead of a heav y. across-the-board increase 1n s ales booth fees. the artists themselves shou ld get together to propose a syste m whereby more of their peers are manning the booths. A system or sc he duling artists' attendance might be a n a lternative albeit probably too structured for many. But the alternative a 25 percent cut in profits should e ncourage festival exhi bitors to work out their own means of keeping grounds visitors happy Student spying unseemly It appears that some school districts will go to any length to make sure parents aren't fudging by sending their children to school o uts ide the ir home district. Fallbrook Union High School District in San Diego Cou nty. worried that a few Mcvine dependents living on ~amp Pendleton might be cracking the books in Orange County's San Clemente High School. '1ctually sicked a spy on the kids and their parents. Based on purported pho- tographic evidence gathered by a private investigator hired by Fallbrook, it then filed suit against the Capistrano Unified School District to prevent the students from attending school in San Clemente. This latest twist is only one of many in the now year-long battle between the two school districts over the attendance of about 100 high school age students living on the Marine base. Fallbrook administrators say since Proposition 13. they can no • longer afford to let th e youngsters go to school in nearby San Clem ente . The district gets both federal and state funding for their attendance Afte r fighting a year-long losing battle with the state's educational hierarchy and courts to obtain permission for their children to attend San Clemente High School, some Marin e parents decided to board their kids with relat\ves and friends i~ San Clemente . This allows the youngsters to go to school there. rather than making the hour-long trip to Fallbrook. But Fallbrook wanted to make s ure that the dozen or so kids who chose th is option weren't actually living with their parents. Fallbrook school district's sense of values is warped. If Fallbrook is so hard up for money, hiring a private eye to snoop around in the bushes and take pictures or a dozen kids can 't keep Fallbrook from going broke. pplnlons expressed in the °fpace above are those of tf\e Daily Pilot. Other views ex-presse<fon this page are those 6T their authors· and artists. Rea·der comment is mv1t . ~d. Address The Daily Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 . L.M. Bo yd/ Bandit cluuer that the scream is so far the most effective alarm. , What is most likely to sea.re off a bank robber? The American Bankers AaaodaUon checked police records to nnd out.-ln tboee ~--tt wbe would-be bandits turned tail to nee wit.bout •ettlnc the money. they did ao a fter women screamed . Dan1erou1, thls. No authorities advise female vtctJm• to scream. Not aU acreamen survive. But lt la a ract Some scaJp-11pectatbtrdainr 11ny- effective mouthwash also makes a good anli·dandruff lotion. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat ,..,.,_ -r .. , el tM , .. , et,. ....... ., M,. c;este MtM. .__ too~t lJ .. . , ... ,C...~CA---;1, Only TV show ever lo go otr tbe air while still No. 1 in the ratings was "l Love Luly." Thomas P. Haley Pub II sher { -Yfi!!na• 1.. MUfiihln'- E dnor BarlNra Kreiblch Editorial P•Ot Editor I _, _'""°'___ ~ - 1kE StN~TE VOTES ON SENATOR WIU..IAMS 'Superagencies' inflate costs It isn't surpris ing that a legislativt committee h as found th e s tatE government's superstructure of agenc) secretaries s upe rfluous. The only surprise is that the legislators have identified the problem so soon. The idea for the superagencies wa5. born during the administration of Gov "Pat"' Brown. He complained that the increas ing numbers of department heads reporting directly to him was overreaching his span of control Actually, his executive secretary and another known as his ··governmental sec retary" rode h e rd o n the de partments But Brown created a .. Resources Secretary" in charge of the Oe partments of Water Resources. Forestry and Parks. and planned further reorganizations of that type to create a five-man cabinet supervis ing all of the departments THE PLAN was implemented by Ronald Reagan as governor and has been maintained by Jerry Brown. In the less than two decades which has followed the introduction of the "superagencies" they have expanded into ··super bureaucracies" and now cost the state more than $12 million annually Reviewing their work an Assemtly committee has found that, '"Instead of servin~ primarily as a policymaking and coordinating age nt of the governor's office, the agencies have Lakcn on an operating role of their own" interfe ring with the operations or the departments Of course the intent was to provide l1eutt.>nants for the governor who could EARL WATERS advise dC'pa rtmental heads and keep them 1n line with the governor's policies But when those lieutenants build them selves staffs which now total more than 140 persons it is inevitable that the staff people quickly involve them in the operations of the departments Such 1s human nature. The reslOlt 1s the director beco m es nothing more than a messenger carrying out the dictates of the s uperhead on a day to day basis and is no longer essential to the operation. The answer then is to either eliminate the directors or the s upersecretaries. The committee has recommended t.he latter, sug~esting that whatever work now bei ng done b y the agency secretaries that is necessary be given back to the departments and the ove r~ceing of the directors be done by some ··highly qualified" members of the governor's offi ce Directors are paid high salaries to run the departments. If they can't be trusted to administer them w1tbout con!>tant supervision the governor shouldn't apµo1nt them Of' COURSE the public as well as the e mployees s hould have someone to appeal to whe n a director seems to have gont: off the 1rolley The governor can't be cxµected to enter into every breach. Rut his executive secr etary and a departmentcil secretary s hould be adeq uate to handle mos t of the problems. And you can be sure the gove rnor will s tep in pos t haste whenever it becom es more than a problem. The whole sc heme for the superagencies was a bad idea from the beginning Now that it has been recognized it will be interesting to see how long it will take the Legislature to rid the state of this wasteful method of management. Lunch hour not long enough at DMV To the Editor. This afternoon I returned to work after spending my lunc h hour standing in the Une for registration at our local OMV office on 19th Street in Costa Mesa . lf anyone has not been to the OMV lately they sho uld know that nothing has changed except the addition of chairs in the long and winding palh MAILBOX from front door to the window area. I would guess there to be about 36 chairs, and I say guess because I never got up close enough to them to see them all at once around the corner to count. I will s ay that upon entering the door I was probably 20th in line to the chairs and when 1 left at the end of my lunch hour I was 10th in line to the chairs with nine behind me lo the door. That means another approximate 36 were in front of the 10 in front of me. During the whole time there were never more than three windows open and yet there is room to accommodate approximately eight e mployees. AS I WALKED to my car at 1:15 p.m. near curbside areas to mstaJl cables. Besides arousing every barking dog in the area they required personal and guest cars to be-moved out of the 6ath of the diggers. This meant, in our instance, moving (our cars promptly several blocks from the house. THIS PRESUMABLE benefit ror the c 1l1 zenry began last year in November/December. Since that time slit trenches have been dug, about rour inches wide a nd six inches deep - finally installing cable two months later without completing the trench openings which were partly filled with cement but not finished or leveled with the s treet. This is now t.he third or fourth month since they, the television cable people. began the ir nuisance, noisy, and nonsensical maneuvers in t.he name of neighborhood benefit. It's too bad they couldn't have begun their last-minute ale rts. noisy inconvenient drilling, m essy, badly lit, s pace hogging maneuvers in front of each of the city officials' residences meaning the homes of those who gave city approval ~ithout time limitations, courtesy notices and penalty conditions for delays. When it comes to ''improvement" s uch as cable television, It shollld be remembered that it Is perhaps more bane than boon. -ART WEISSMAN Kindly cat curb I spoke with a lady also getting in her car and she had made it up to the window. It had taken her 3 hours. It is about lime something was done to correct this situation as in the six years I have been using this office it bas never been any better. lf this is an To the Editor: ofCice for the public then it is about time Keeping cats off your flower beds the public do something about it. If that does not necessitate drastic dangerous means me, then 1 will be the first to and cruel measures that threaten lives start the movement to correct the of children and animals. situation Just simply sprinkle a few moth As if th.is is not maddening enough. J crystals on the area. or get something would like to also mention the young si milar from the n e ig hborhood people pos ing as youth of Orange veterinarian County t aking donations outside the Another word of advice, this one for door of t.he OMV and have been dolng pet owners· If you love your dogs and this for over a year that 1 am aware of. cats do not travel with them in the car They are nothing more than or truck without sa~ety measures . brainwashed American youth begging Leash them and attach the leash to the for the Hare Krishna movement vehicle. di to be i l ti h r And if you park, don't shut them up in preten n g soc a • ac ve yout 0 a hot, airless vehicle, and don't leave a Orange County. They p y on non-English speaking valuable, beloved anlmal in a car that people, er senior citizens and anyone is u n 1 oc k e d . The heartache is who e rs or leaves t.he building. They unbearable J . ROGERS un·Amerlca as •Jl.Y institution __ _ -..iac-*T'""a=v'"""e ... ever known about and are as n...: _ _ die · un -Orange County-youth as any r~~ pre twn teen-ager can get. Since when have we raised our children to beg, and for what? U lhla is pubUc property then let me be t.he first to say that I am part or the public and this orrends me to the core. MARY JANE SANBORN Boon or bane? To the Editor: How would the cable televtltOD J*>PI• like to recelve the kind ol t.rutnMnt they dish oul? To the Editor: Many letters reach the op-ed pages, citing the need for lower interest rates to stimulate a near-dead real estate market. No. Properties are overpriced. • l.t•lfers /rom readers a" tl>flcome Tht• r1g1H to rond('nse letrer1 to fit spo.ce vr t>ltmwlllr h/>ftl 1., restrv•d t ctters of 300 word3 or ltu wm ~ gf11.,. pre/eTfflCe All lettera JFIUSt tncludt ripo.turt and malling addrni but namts m(JJI ~ wttlahtld on rt· Qtiest I/ 1ulflcmtt rto•on ts opporCPnt P~tr11 will nor r,. pubUsMd. utttta ma11 ~ Working on a related paper I found staggering data ' Over the nex t 12 m o nths. prime coa stal residential properties will probably take a bath from 12 to 40 percent of appraised values! The only saving grace would be a s moking innation rate of say 13 to 20 percent per year. No one wishes to make a prediction or projection as this Perhaps this is the reason no one has done so earlier But the numbers work. While they might reali2e my findings only instinctively, the largest group of sellers unload111g their properties now are r eal es tate agents and other professional investors. KEN PORTER Crucial year To the Editor: The irresponsible statement made by a Capistrano Unified School District offi cial, who implied that there is no information concerning the educational value inherent in a n 180 minute kinder-garten session versus the a rc haic 150 minute session, was fallacious. P s ychologists s ay t h at the kinde rgarten yea r is the most important year in the child's formal education. This time has to be of a high quality, particularly in the light of the broad scope of ·learning that is involved in the kindergarten program. EDUCATIONAL research gives firm evidence of the value of the extended kindergarte n program and all experienced kindergarten teachers will agree. With so many parents involved in assisting as parent aides in the kindergarten classroom. this move by the school board has outraged them as they wonder why they were given no indication of this very serious move on the part of the school board. Why wasn't this matter brought lo the attention of the parents and teachers involved before the matter was acted upon by the school board? Our school distri c t motto is "Excellence in Education" and yet programs are being cut that arrect children's academic growth. SUE WlDTE MARGARET RHOADS lllllY lill Are the protest.era protestlq the l1N la lhelr cas bllla the aacne onn wbO protested tbe production ol natu.nl 111 that caU1ed the rlse? G.J . Specifically. wllhoul advance DOdce, tbeir street dJ11ln1 repreHDtaUv .. rans doorbella In Eutbhaff at pre-da"9 boura to atatG their lnt.entloDI to dJC up tt,.phaMd io 641·6086 • NJllll.L4lld.. PtMline...------------.......... .-- numbtr of th" ccmtnbutor muff bf given for • =:!ri_~ .. :::::':'.~ :::-" .... -:.=:, vtnfiCGlloR-. ..... .. .... • ....,, "t llllllCUIT TH URSDAY, MARCH 11 . 1982 ORANGE COUNTY. CAllrORNIA 25 CENTS Sills in race for Assembly Mural h~ging shelved Special meeting of students, Irvine residents urged Irvine Mayor David Sills formall y announced his candidacy today to challenge Assemblyman Nolan Frizzelle, R-Huntington Beach for the Republican nomination in the n e wl y appo rt ion e d 69th Assembly District. Sills claimed that F r izzelle, who has been in office in the 73rd Assembly District for 15 months "has shown a complete disregard f,or local communities needs ... And Sills said that Frizzelle's record on transportation issues ''h as been both co unte rpro du ctive and confusing." City manager ready for r e turn to job Irvine City Manager William Woollett Jr. s ays he wants to return to work on a limit· ed schedule by the e nd of this week. T he 53-year-old Woollett was released from Western Medical Center Sunday after spending nine days in the hospital for treatment when he blacked out during a Feb. 26 budget meeting with other city administrators. He sa id d octo r s hav e discovered a blocked coronary artery they believe caused the blackout and a similar incident in J anuary, 1981, which kept him hospitalized for four weeks. · Doctors believe they can take c are of the artery through m edication and therapy without surgery, Woollett said Tuesday in a telephone conversation from his University Park home . Sills s~id that since lndlcatina sever al weeks ago that he would challenge Frinelle he has been under "a great deal of heavy h anded pressure and thinly veiled threats from politicians throughout the stale" not lo cause an intra-party war for the Republican nomination in the June 8 primary. ··A s ad reflection on Dr. Frizzelle's performance is his reliance on legisla tors from outsid~ the district for his s upport," Sills said. Sills particularly objected to Frizzelle's vote against Senate Bill 215, which will boost the state's gasoline tax from seven to nine cents effective Jan. 1. and provide a new infusion of mon ey for trans portation projects statewide. · During a morn i ng press conference in Santa Ana, Sills released results of a poll conducted by Public Response Associates which showed he and Frizzelle lo essentially be in a dead heat among Republican voters in the new dis trict were the election to be he ld today. The poll s howed Frizzelle wi th 21 percent, Sills with 20 percent, with S8 percent undecided. Asked who they had a high propensity to vote for , Sills ca me out over Fr izzelle 25 pe rcent to 19 percent with 57 percent undecided. A new look for TV Log Your Pilot TV log will have a new look and a few new features this Friday. Delly l'IMCS\lfl- 0 N CA MPU S UC I Chancellor Danie l Aldrich says a hospita l would have a better chance if located on the campus. 81 8-'ND1£ JOY .... .._ ........ The nap over I.be Irvine Hlgh School mural g~ on. • At Wednetday ni1ht's board meeUn1 in Lakeside IClddle School, Dr. Chriatine Hall of UC Irvine asked members of the Irvine Unified School District Board to postpone banging the mural at the high school. She uked trustee's to call ,a special meeHne to discuss the mu ral with stude nts and reslder>ta. Noting that she represented about SO parents, students and residents , Dr. Hall contended she hadn't received a response to her Feb. 22 letter making the sam e request to Irvine School Superintende nt A. St anley Corey, "I think you made a mistake," UCI leader.urges hospital on campus By J OEL C. DON Of, ... o.lty ,.. ... MMf UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel Aldrich Jr. said today state a uthorit ies may look more favorably at the community's desire ta build its own hospital if it would be located on the campus. "From previous experience on this m atter (at oth e r UC ca mpuses>, the r e is t h e possibility t hat a hos pital associated with the medical school of the university might be viewed as a regional resource," he said. "The beds would a ttract people from around the area." may be necessary for areas considered "overbedded" to trade licenses for beds with the city lo help win state approval ror a community hospital. He also said the university's plans to construct a $10 million outpatient medical clinic would have no bearing on the location of a community hospital. "I don't see any relationship between our establishing a clinic her e on the campus and it paving the wa y f o r a n y hospital," he said. But he believes a hospital on the campus would boost the university's stature in the biomedical comm unity. ··Any hospital that is located h ere b ecomes p a rt o f the evolution of a major medical complex." he said. I s he told the board. 'Tm llfraid ol tbe repercussion•.·· Dr. Hall lndlcated her croup Is afraid that the banglns of the munl migbt touch off racial problems at the school. One panel of the 47-foot-loog mural painted by 17 Irvine H11h School students depicts three hooded heads, symbols of white racism, below tortured black figures. "We understand that t he staff int imately involved with the mural has been harassed ." Dr. Hall said in he r letter, "and that the climate of the school is not comfortable." She also said in the lette r. ·•We are concerned . . . that the climate in Irvine High School boundaries and the climate of the outside community do not become overly hostile. A hastv J ewel ry store h it 2 n d tim e in Irvine For the second time in five months, an Irvine jewelry store has been burglarized, this time by thieves who s mashed the glass entry door and three glass display cases and made off with bracelets, wa tches. necklaces and rings. The burglary at P acif ic Jewe lry. 14775 J e ffrey Road, I rvine, occurred between Tuesday night and Wednesday morn ing, according lo Irvine police who were called to the scene by a passerby who noticed the broken door. Thieves reportedly left behind a tire iron which police theorize was used to smash the glass The st.ore was last burglarized in Novembe r , said owne r De nniss Arritt, who still "is determining the extent of loss. decision may create a situation so heated that it may take years to extinguish." Dr Hall 's co mm e nt s represent the latest chapter in the month-long controversy over the mural which some Irvine residents complain has racial overtones. Although she was told by the board that the mural wouldn't be hung at the school on Walnut Avenue before mid-April, Dr. Hall still pressed for an official 30·day postponement. Privately, she said her group would issue a s tatement about the mural Friday. A rch i t ect s eye cente r in I rvine A rch1 tcclural firm s have shown an "extreme ly strong interest" in the city of Irvine's proposed $19. 7 m illion civic center complex, according to assistant city manager Paul Brady Jr The city received 19 proposals on Feb. 19 from fi rms vying for a c hance t o d esign the 140,000·square·foot facility, to be located near Barranca Parkway and Jeffrey Road. Most of the architects are from Orange and Los Angeles counties with a fe w proposa ls fr o m the San Fr ancisco Bay Area and out of state, he said today. Brady characterized some as ·'internationa lly reco~nized " fir m s . Since Irvine is the large s t -kn own pla nn e d community in the United States , Brady said, it's "obviously very prestigious" for an architectural firm to land the civic center contract with the city . "It's my intention lo be back at work at the end of this week," Woollett said Tuesday. He added that he feels "pretty good" and is re lieved that doctors found the· ap p arent source o f his blackouts. The new. more attractive format, will feature a complete r olling log th~t will make it ea s ier t o find your favorite s h o w . The 36-p age weekly magazine also will feature a new col umn, Orange Coast TV An t e nna , written by Phil Sneiderman. Aldrich's rem a rks come in response to an Orange County Health Planning Council report t hat areas s urroundin1 the Irvine community have more beds than are needed. Such information. according to Health Planning Council offici als, may m a ke it difficult for groups backing a hospital for Irvine to obtain state approval or a Certificate of Need, which is n•essary for any community wishing lo build its own medical facility. 'Bug' thefts epidemic After the 11st or applicants has been whittled down to eight to 10 firms. pi:esentations and interviews will be scheduled for the week of March 22. A group of• cit y officials a nd a local architect will make up the screening committee. Woollett is continuing to talce tests as a hospital outpatient and will soon begin special therapy, he said. Whether he returns to work this week will be up to his doctors, he added Woollett has been the city manager since the inception of the city. Gone will be the program grids which some have found inadequate, but remaining Will be the popular features such as J eff P arker's "Inside TV," ··Daytime Dram a," Sports Highlights and the TV Puzzle. The chancellor s poke at a monthly press breakfast. Aldrich agreed with Health Planning Council officials that it One jolt followe d anothe r Some were less traumatic during county's 93 years By DAVID KUTZ MANN Of llM Dally l'ltot Stat! Orange Co unty quietly marked it s 93rd birthday today in a way that surprised some people. The place was still standing. You may recall that star -gazing doomsayers had predicted t hat a unique alignment o f planets on one side of t he s un Wednesday wou l d unl e a s h a convuls ive w ave o f eart hqu a k es a nd vol canic eruptions. was about as uneventful a 24-hour period as they come. But, the re was some historical precedent for belie ving that March 10 could possibly have been more calamitous . That's because on March 10, 1933, Orange County and the rest of Southern California was jolted by an earthquake that virtually wiped ottt parts of Long Beach and Compton. Long-time Orange County residents who reme mber the quake, which measured 6.3 on the Richter scale, say its aftershocks still reverberate in their minds 49 years later. Though injuries were few, property damage was extensive in places. It was because of this quake -and another which followed four days later -that county officials decided to remove a tower on the old two-story sandstone courthouse in Santa Ana. Somebody out t he r e must really love Love Bues. because nine 1966 model Volkswagen sedans -all but one of them blue -were stolen in Laguna Beach late Wednesday and early this morning. Laguna Beach police were besieged by phone calls this mor01ng from owners reporting the then of the blue bugs. mostly taken from streets in the north end of the city. • Two of the vehicles were recovered blocks from their owners' homes. police said. ·'One ran out of gas and the second one broke do wn," e x plained dete ctive Alex Jimenez. "Anybody can come in and watch the interviews if they so desire," Brady said. H e s aid h e expects a recommendation will be handed to the city council in late April or early May. Such occurrences would certainly have s p o iled today ·s a n niversa r y. whi c h marks t he signing of state legislation which led to incorporation of the county of Orange on March 11, 1889. Historians will note that. other than the usual political. social LECIL SLAllACK and emotional upheavals of the day. Wednesday But even in those days, much like Wednesday. reports of Orange County's demise were somewhat exaggerated. Lecil J . Slaback, a life-long county resident who now lives in Silverado Canyon, said he <Stt DOOMSA YEllS, Page AZ> HAN<MNO IN THERE -A car driven by Jack hit a chain link fence and nearly plunged mto Mnrscellas. 59, of Irvine went out of control a flood c ontrol c h a nnel. P oli ce s aid on the southbound la nes of Culver Drive Ma rscellas may have s uffe red a reaction to a north of the Santa Ana Freeway. His vehicle ~ m edication. WORLD Outside insurgency? WASHINGTON -A bipartisan group of former high-level officials believe that the Salvadoran insur,ency -is under the control-of Nrcaragaua a nd Cuba. Page A3. NATION Soap opera a game NEW YORK -For those 10ap opera addtcu who can't ~et enough of ''General Hospital," a board tame lell lMM play the characters' parts. Paae ca. A-plant ale r t sounded NEW YORK (AP) -Tbe IOWtet poulble level of alert was declared at the indiu Point S plant "'*' 1 mUd earthquake wu ~_cted uitder tbe H~ Rlnr about IM mlfea IOUth or \he nuclear ie:neratJ.ns ska. STATE Network de~ise seen LOS ANGELES -A former networ~ executive bas written a scathing novel foreus\J.q the rapid death ol network television. Paae BS. • Econ omic shift uked A Stanford University eeooomllt believes lJlere's a responsible way oul of • .. Global O..,....lon." Pa1e OI. COUNTY Voten &igning up SANTA ANA -Voter reibtraUoft in poUUcat'7 aeU'N · Onnse COunty la beatlla1 ror an •ll·UrM blp. 5'orJ, Bl. ( SPORTS The vie w from.Florida What is the Dod1en' secret to succ'ess? It might have aomelbing to do with dlaclpline. Manager Tommy Lasorda saya he doHn't believe Ln rules or fines. Page Cl. INDEX At Your Sel'vice A4 Ann Landers 82 Erma Bombed: 82 Movies 83-4 L.M. Boyd A6 Mutual Funds C6 Business CS-1 N atlonaJ News A3 California AS Public Not.Ices 02-3 Cla11lned Dl,DU Sport.a Cl-4 Comics cs Dr. Stelncrobn 82 Crossword a Stock Martcets C7 Death Notices Ar,· l'elevlslon BS ldltorial Thealerl 83-4 Ent.rtainment BM Weather AJ• Horoecope 81 VforldNeWI A.~ ;i, Orange Coeat DAILY • March 11, 1982 Isolate Cuba, Schmitz says l ~~~~.~Y.~!15.:d • ,;, aflermalh, include • ~s::.:¥.:-~~hn Scbmi1&'1 I rerrta that Santa Ana HiCh 1eeln1 court proceedtncs takln1 aides enticingly aald tbe Corona t Sc ool had been destroyed. This place on the front lawn of a del Mar Republican would be wat news to him because Methodist church next to the di · '' s l d b , Slabaclt, then 22, sat in bis car courthouse; of teeln1 bulldlnc 1cuasin1 El a va or, t e t lookin1 at a relatively unscarred which looked like doJl houaes (no MlUtary Coup and the Jews" before the Los An1eles World hi1h school campus. walls) and of flinchlna each Affairs Council Wednesday • Slaback, who became a court lime a 'new aftershock rumbled. t k hi f b evening. t reporter Ii e s at er· Not since• 1933, Staback and The World Affairs Council had remembers the day for other others say, has Orange County billed it as Schmitz discWJalng reasons. endured s uch a tumultuous Wb • With r i Before the quake hit, he was birthday eve. ~lie~~.~ wrong our ore gn getting ready to go out on a Though voters decided on 1 d b • i double date with a woman who June S 1889 to secede from Los As t turne out, w at a wrong eventually ~came his wife. Angeles County and create with the nation's forelgn policy "I was shaving, .. be said. Orange County, the anniversary is the Jewis h community's "when the mirror began to move is officially celebrated on March influence In tilting U.S. foreign around a little bit." ll. policy toward Israel as well as Staback said after his ramily That's the date that Gov. this nation's tailure to confront 1 heard a rumbling sound at about Robert Waterman s igned the Soviet Union and Cuba, 6 p.m . they fled the house. On legislation which allowed new bis way out, Staback said he saw counties to Corm in Caliromia. cupboard doors fly open and The vote in Orange County in ' dishes come flying out. the June rererendum was 2,509 Reflecting on that March 10, people in favor of splitting from he said it was a "fortunate Los Angeles County and 500 thing" that the earthquake people opposed. occurred after people got borne No special observances are from work and before dinner planned to today's anniversary. and theater patrons went back Previously. special celebrations downtown. marked tbe county's 8Sth and "I n those days," Slaback 90th birthdays. observed, "(people) needed to It is expected that the go downtown more often than county's looth birthday will lead they do now." to observances of a special Other memories which he still but not too earth-shaking - car ries with him of the quake nature. ·Reagan draws boos at ballet outing WAS HIN GTON <AP > - President Reagan and his wife were booed by several members or the audience when they entered the presidential box at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts to watch a performance of the Joffrey Ballet. A simila r demonstration greeted the Reagans when they returned to their box after the firs t of two inte rmissions Wednesday night. It was impossible to determiae how many people were booing, bu t it was a ve ry s mall percentage or the capacity audience of 2,200. However, the boos came from several sections of the auditorium and were clearly audible, along with the traditional applause that greets a president on such occasions. An official who bas been with Kennedy Center since it opened in 1971 said it was the first time a president ha'S been booed there. Each president since Richard M. Nixon has visited the center. It also marked the first time since Reagan became president that he has eeen greeted with boos in a publJc appearance - except by participants in planned demonstrations. As he left the box during the second intermission, Reagan was asked by reporters why the booing occurred. Before he could answer, his wife said, "It was just one young boy, just one young boy.'' The president added: "He probably had a broken spring in his seat.'' The Kennedy Center official, who asked that he not be identified by name, said he would "certainly agree" that more than one eerson was booing. Deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said today, in r eaction to the LnCidents, "I thought people WhO went to the ballet were ladies and gentlemen, patrons of the at-ts " He said he was "shocked and surprised that people who would go to the ballet would engage in that sort or thing. A hockey game, yes. A ballet, no." Willia01s • r esigns in Senate WASHINGTON (AP > Harrison A. Williams Jr., D . N . J .. resigned from the Senate today in the face of almost certain expulsion by colleagues for "ethically repugnant" conduct in the FBl's Abscam investigation of political corruption. ·'I leave with sorrow but with resolve, too," Williams told a packed Senate chamber, vowing to purs u e hi s fight for exoneration through the federal appeals courts. However, it was not until Williams was more than 20 minutes into h is prepared speech that he indicated for certain his plan to quit the seat he had held 23 years. "I announce my intention to resign," Williams said in a quiet, firm voice. "I know I broke no laws ... I believe time , his tory and Alm ighty God will vindicate me," he said . In his final Senate floor sp eech , Williams called his ordeal a "two-year nightmare" and accused the FBI or "heinous conduct" in its investigation that resulted in his conviction and those of six House members. ·'It is not onJy Pete Williams that stands accused or indicted, it is all of us, the entire Senate," the senator told hus h ed colleagues. "However _you may view my conduct, it did not warrant the severest degree of discipline,·• he said, vowing to pursue his battle in the courts "with full confidence that my innocence will be proved and my integrity restored." Slwwers due today 1 Coastal vanen. S... Fet''--San1• Clerlto ve11eu, Rlverslcl<l·Sen 8ernerdlno ..... h19'1 ---•1', ......... Orenge Countv eno tlle coHtal, metropo ll ten , 8en11 l 11g . H•,,,.l·E~ -81Q her Lake ., .. ,. AQMO ••lings ere H 1011-1: Mo•tl'I' cloudy tllrougll Frld•'I'. ~. 0.100; -•lttlll.ll for Mf\5111.,. 11ecomlng f•lr wltll QuSly winds people, 101·tot; unll••llllful for Frld•r • .....,1n9 A 70 percent chance evervone. 101·l00. •nd nuaroous, of r•ln 1000, oureolno to 10 :I01·500 percenl on FrlO•r. HlgM In mid 60s ----------to tow 705.. HU1111n91-H•w-1 erN temper alum renvinv f,,,...., U to... T e1-..... ''°"' "'°"'' conc:eiit'-emperatures to IM M .. l<•n ._.,., -out 60 mlln: l19hl varl•ble wind$ nlQllt encl morning llours,-becoming toUlll..,.st to west at 12 to 20 knots In Ille efter,_, Frldar Westerly swell of I to > feet. Mostly cloudy wltl occ.sl-1 llQllt r•ln tonlo"I. Pertlt Cloud'I' FrlO.y. V.S. summary SllOw•n •nd l-t11onns IP"ed elong tM mlO·Mlsslsslppl V•lley tod•r. wNle ••In --ers .. ti In much of the HortMnt. A •In •ISO fell •tono Ille nortllern Pacific CC18SI -111 parts of Ille nortllern Plaleeu. L•l•r todey, rein was eapecled to SP,...., ac:roSJ Ille Pac Ilk Coast 10 tlM Rockl•s, •s -I u o.,.r the northern Atlantic Coestal ll•tes Tiie lorecesl el10 <•11•0 tor sceuer•d snow s~wers over '"" V-• GrNI L•kes. T1mper•turn were ••PKt•d to rem•ln belOw frMrlng only In the VPP•r Greet l •ku e rea. High temperatures todo wlll bt In Ille 40s -~ from -Eng!encl tllrouol\ ~ Ohio Valley encl Ille _.,,..,n Pl•lns to the Pacific Horttlwelt, elfll In tN 60t -10s across !tie <tntral ftljllns •ncl In Ille Souel. Temper•lures •round tlle neUon e•rly tod9Y ,....., from I In F..-,o, N.O ...... ~Fons, N.O., lo 74 In , WHI Palm llNcl'I, Fie., •ncl Yuma, Arla. Extended Smog Albany AlbU- Am•rlllo Atl'levll .. Atlante Atlent< Cty 8•1tlmOA llrmlnotwn llsmer<k 8olM lloston llrownsvlle lluff•lo Cl\arlltnSC Cllarlsln WY CNy•nM Cllkego Cliw:ln..a11 c .. v•land ColumbuS O•l·Flwlll Denver Oe•Mol~ Detroit 011hltll El Pew H•rtford HeleN -ulu HO<ntOll l~I .. Jt<k..,vl .. Kam City LnV..- Llttleltoclil Loult•llle M4...,,1, Mleml MllwouMle Mt>ts.SI. P ... -11 .. ,._ori.-• N••Y- Ml .... """ JS JO .IM n 41 11 11 u JI 70 4' ~ ,. 44 11 10 JS ,. 1 S7 4S » ,, IO " ... ... ., ,. •1 SI sa 21 " Jt S2 '° S4 4S ~ ., 15 ., u n » JJ ... 30 n SJ " 41 1'l NOffollil -Olill• Ctty ..... Omeha .M Orl•IMIO Pfll ...... 02 ,..,....1 • . Pftb*-o" f'tl-,Me Ptl•nd,On .01 Reno ,02 S.11 l •ke .Ot Seattle .01 SI Loult SI P·T•"- Sl Ste MMle 02 Sl>Olil•M :u Tunon 01 Tuite WHlllnqln Wlclllt• so ., 16 SS ., n II SS '3 Jt .... S4 41 JS n .. "' .. ., St .U n ,. 11 SS 11 ,. 2t J7 SS 44 " 51 1S 51 " 1' 72 ., u 2t ·°' 71 70 .01 CALIPO••tA IS U SJ 0 ,. 47' 74 ,, 1S t) .. S1 S4 4' ., S1 1S .. .. . 40 14 st ... 11 S1 " Jt e ... .,51 .. .., 10 t3 " 81Y"ltle M E11rtke st F ... sno ., L...c••ter ., S1 SI • LMA.,..tes II _.. Merysvllle ., Netellet H OMll.tnd U .. _.OClles .., aedlltuft SS • IS tllNwoM Cl'V 10 .. • $1 S4 " ,. S«r•~ .. .02· s.11 ... , •1 ,. '2 IURf RIPIRT • seno~ IO .. s.en Franchco Sant• 8-W• Sanl• Marla ., SS ,06 ,a Ste<kton Tllerm•I Vk .. 11 8•nt.,. .2' 1119 ••• , .OUbl\oll C•t•llna !O l0t>9 lleKll Monrovlti Mt. WlllOn .Ot HewPOrt 8"ch .It Olltar lo P•lm $pr1119S P•MHleN 67 S4 .. .. S7 11 st " " st 27 70 ., " ,. 11 SS " SJ St 0 .. S4 1' S2 " st " ,. I• SI S8ll 8erNrdlno SenJow Sant• Ana Santa CNr T•-Veltey 67 SI .1' 12 SS ., 4' .23 S4 4' P'A•AMEalCA• A<•Plll<O t4 1J lie.-tt 70 .21 llerm..oa 12 t3 lloeot• .. 0 Cur•ceo .. 11 .07 Fr._t " 60 G"*'ll•IM• .. cs ·°'°" ....... " .. ... .27 H•v8N llO .20 lt,lnttlon es 15 .O'I Mo!IWQ08•y u 12 CA•AOA c .... ,., • ,. ECl-ton Jt t Mofttre•I tt 1J Ott••• 4 111...... JI IJ ,_.. S4 4 \181'1(-.. ,, WIMlllee 11 II Tides TODAY l«eM... 4;tf11.fll •••• tee-~ tt:•it·"'• C.• f'•IDAY """' ·-•1•a.1T1. '·' Ill.Int""" ,.,. ...... .... tee:-• 4:G .. ITI. U S.C..-fllltl I0:,.11.191, 4.1 ........ ...., et S:S1 llJ91., ''-,,_, .. k.e ITI, ,__,._...._.et O:Ot "'""" '"9 ~r-.et7lfJ•."1 • • according to Schmitz. The c andidate for the RepubUcllO nomination ror U.S. Senate faulted U.S. rorel1n policy ·•ror betn1 for larael and ool for America." Schmllz said foreliQ poUcy has been Influenced by ..tbe news media through Soviet mlalnformalion and "overeaaer. very ambilioul politicians who succumb too muct .. to the Jewish communit y In this country. which has been bulldozed and · bedazzled by the Zionists so that a lmost the e ntire Jewish community ln the United Slates now reels obligated to support the Zionist movement and support Israel." To underscore his point, Schmitz s aid so many pro·l sraeli resolutions come before the state Senate that "you'd think we were the Israeli Knesset." Schmitz charged that the news media and educators in this country, especially those in higher education , a r e the "stronghold of the left." He added· the "media is running foreign policy." Turning his attention to the Soviet Union, Schmitz said the problem is not in El Salvador, it 's in C uba . Angola. Mozambique and the othe r Soviet client states which export revolution. "My answer lo El Salvador and Poland is Cuba.'· said Sr.hmitz. "My answer Is to sever Cuba and Nicarauga from the Soviet orbit." He advocated going on the o ffens ive and undertaking "whatever is necessary·• to free Cuba and othe r Soviet-dominated countries. "The y talk about de-stabilizing Nicaragua. They ough t to be talking about de-stabilizing Cuba ," Schmitz said. "If you sever Cuba from the Soviet Union there will be no more problems. It's intolerable to have a Soviet satellite 90 miles from our shores." Questioned more closely about the situation in El Salvador , Schmitz fired back, "What if we just c lobbered them right away?" H e added he personally doesn't believe an invasion is necessary to drive the rebels out or El Salvador or a ny of the other South American countries facing rebel opposition. MA BELL STRIKES AGAIN: Only yesterday in this space I was l1tlking about our new Pilot TV Log that comes out this Friday and I listed a telephone number for our We'te Listening service. By doing that. I broke a basic tenet of newspapering We paid, too The number . of course, was wrong. One of our We're Listening customers called some haple ss so ul at midnight as a result. He wasn't listening. I le (;;, ~\ TOI IURPHlll ,~It was sleeping. . . All this re minds you of some years back whe~ this sterling journal at Chris tmas time went along with a Jaycee program to have a telephone number where the kiddies could call up Santa Claus. OF COURSE WHEN it was printed. the number youngsters we re advised lo call for St. N\ck ~as wrong. Fortunately. the hapless citizen out there whom we had just volunteered to be the jolly ol~ elf himself. turned out to be a nice guy. He went along with the gag. Throughout t he Jong night. he heard so m 3:ny Christmas wis hes from boys and girls that he was comrn_g down with a case of termjnal laryngitis. That's when has wi fe took over the phones. She became Mrs. Claus So much for printing telephone numbers m the newspapers. SOME OTHER CALLERS did get the right number last night to tell us that they weren 't so worried about being able to read the new television log as they were about how complete the lis tings will be . We think on Friday you'll find a complete log and we still solicit your comments. But as to the number to call. check it in our "We'n• Listening" box on Page A4. l sure hope it's on A4. We won't try to repeat the number he re I'm sure you can understand why. Explosives found at Coast residence Plasl!c explosive equivalent to 84 sticks of dynamite, and detonators to set it ofr were found in a Dana Point residence Wednesday afternoon. The military explosive, known as C-4, was confiscated from the home of former Marine Dennis Lyle Huff at 25121 Via Elevado after Sheriffs Hazardous Device Unit investigators received a tip from a "confidential source." Sheriffs officers ordered nearby residences evacuated. Huff, 26, was already in custody for passing bad checks and the distric t attorney is n ow preparing a felony complaint against him for possession or explosive devices . . Jet engine flames; 62 evacuated safely According to Lt. J ohn Hewitt of the Sheriff's Department, the C-4 explos ive is a m ilitary demolition tool used in heavy blasting. The explosive was found in six blocks weighing 1.5 pounds each. He characterized C-4 as a "relatively stable" substance tbat should never be stored with detonators. The detonators. or blasting caps, were found side by side with the explosive. LONG BEACH (AP> -An engine on a Jet America DC-9 · airplane caught fire while the plane prepared to leave for Chicago, but a Feder1ll Aviati~ Administration spokesman saJd all 62 pa ssengers were• evacuated safely The fire broke out about 6:35 p.m. Wednesday as f'hght 122 was preparing for take-off from Long Beach Airport, fire dispatcher Michael Robideaux said. Passengers were evacuated via stairs and chutes. Robideaux said. They departed for Chicago on another Jet America plane. Trident bought LONDON CAP) -Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's Cabinet today gave the go ahead to buy t he advanced U S Trident 2 nuclear missile system to replace the Royal Navy's aging Polaris submarine fleet. Short But Sweet A MOtW tlwt oJ1M /lfW t/'Odltioltol l'/KKU'Mltlrf O' ~. '°'°"""' ond boys. - Storekeeper Gina Garrett is wearing a pair from a great selection in our Ladies Department ... Summer is just a few short months away. 1028 Irvine. Newport Bach. Californ~ Phone 642-1061 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thur1day, March 11, 19a2 Volunteer plan best /or crime victim aid Creatlon of an Trvine program or Aid to Innocent Victims of Violent Crime has been proposed by Councilman Larry Agran. This concept, coming in the aftermath of the Feb. 18 murder of an employee at Winchell's Donut Shop in Irvine, strikes a responsive chord. But there are seriou s questions as to the advisability a n d feasibility of a city government trying to operate s uch a program. Should it benefit residents only? Regardless of where the crime occurred? Should it apply to employees of Irvine businesses man y of wh om are residents or other cities? How much funding is en ough? What happens to the victim whose case occurs just after the fund is exhausted? The state's program Cor Aid to Innocent Victims of Violent Crimes -the program Agran says Irvine could use as a model -already has run into serious funding problems. In a genuine outpouring of concern, Irvine s hopkeepers, e mployees and r esidents d id com e together after the recent murder with creation of a committee to garner fina ncial help for the victim's family. That group ca m e up with approxi m ately $7 ,000 in donations, a generous sum. Would public s pirit and motivatio n to volunt eer s uc h assistance be stifled if a city-run aid program were cr eated? Perhaps the program could be implemented throug h a foundation or ~ special non-profit public corporation. or some vo lunt eer organization encouraged by the c ity . Some low-cost rider on the c ity 's insurance policy mig ht even be possible. But the volunteer approach seems most desirable . Project worth support Few cities in Orange County are as affected by the railroad as is Irvine. T he tracks in this city run straight through its center. turning out to be both a blessing and a curse. To those looking forward to the convenient travel a new Amtrak station promises to offer. the tracks bring good tidings . But to drivers caught in busy traffic as a freight train c ree ps across an intersection . o r those awakened from s leep by a nighttime run, the tracks can be a champion annoyance. In June , however. voters will get a chance to authorize a relatively painless bond sale that could go far toward improving the rai l road -r e lat ed aggravations. The bond. to r aise as much as $1 million. would finance design and e ngineering work needed before the city can ~ply for a state grant to sculpt a 10-foot-deep channel through the city for the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway tracks The grant is not a sure thing. but city Public Works Director Brent Muchow says the cit y would be a favored candidate for a $9 to $10 million c heck to build the c hannel. If th e tracks are lowered. noise would be reduced and the cit y could build short bridges to s pan the tracks and do away with traffic delays. The best part of the plan. Muchow claims, is that the bond debt would be repaid through annual s tate gasoline ta}( reimbursements, so no new taxes would be required . This, o f course. m eans some of the state gas tax fund s wouldn't b e available for other road projects But this pro ject seem s <Js valuable as most others This proposa l. in fact . appears to offer the kind of forward looking public works project for which the city is known. And considering that both automobile and train traffic 1s projected to increase. it would seem reasona ble to finance the c hanne l project soon. This plan d eserves the serious attention of residents when they vote on June 8 Roof proposal excessive Members of the Irvine City hazard areas. Council will decide next month The fire d epartment '5 whether a saving in possible fire pro posal. endorsed on a 3·2 vote prevention is worth the increased last week by th e city Planning cost of installing wood roofs Commission would inc r ease the treated with fire -r e tardant cost of a roof by SO percent, chemicals. according to the Orange County It wi 11 not be an easy Chapter of the Building Industry decision. Th e Orange County Association. For a t ypical Irvine Fire Department, which serves home. the cost of a wood roof Irvine, is campaigning to require would go from $4,000 to $6.000. all new wooden roofing materials Fire f i g ht er s s a y f i r e · in the city to be factory-coated retardant chemic a Is s prayed with fire-retardant chemicals. onto a roof after construction are T h e process, firefighters say, not as e ff ec tiv e as the makes homes and offices covered (actory -treated variety . with shake or shingle roofs muc h Although there are strong less likely to go up in names arguments in favor of the during the times when hot, dry citywid e regulation. it would winds fan fires. seem more reasonable to re quire T hey are seeking a citywide f · I prohibition against any ne w the ~reated roo. ing . ma ten a s con struction using untreated onl~ m area~ of high fire danger. wood rooting materials, even if which a~e . m . fact. few and far the building would be in the ,.,,. between m lrvme. center of town far removed from Thus homeown e rs could brush-covered areas. decide if they wish to assume Los Angeles has mandated the cost of the added protection fire retardant roofs countywide -a nd builders who choose to use to make enforcement easier . but fire -r etard ant roofs co~ld San Clemente's fire -retardant perhaps use that a s a selhng roof law applies only in high fire point. • ppinlons expressed In the f PaCe above are those of t]\e Daily Piiot. Other vfews ex-pressed'oo this page are tfiose c5T tfieir authors· and artists. Rea-der commenf is inv1t- .ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. PhOne (7141 {142-~~1. LM. Boyd/Bandit chase r Whal la most likely to scare off a bJllnk robber? The Amerlca.n Banters Alaociatlon checked police records to find out . In t hose caaea whe re would-be bandits turned tail to nee wltbout 1etUn1 the money, they did so a f ter wo m e n screamed . Dangerou s 1 t his. No autborlUes advise femaie victims to scream. Not all acreamen survive. But It Is a fact ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat I - that the scream is so far the most effective alarm. Some scalp speclaUsts claim any effective mouthwash also makes a good anti-dandruff lotion. Only TV show ever to go orr the air while still No. 1 in the ratings was "1 Love Lucy." Thomas P. Haley Pub II sher TliomH A. ~lne Ed itor BarlNlra-Kretblch Editorial Page Editor THE StN~TE VOTES ON SENATOR WIL.LIAMS 'Sup~ragencies' inflate costs It isn't surprising that a legislative co mmittee ha s found the s tate government's superstructure or agenc} secretaries su(>e"r-flu-0us. The only s urprise is that the legislators have identified the problem so soon. The idea for the superagencies was born during the administration of Gov .. Pat" Brown. He complained that the increasing numbe rs of department heads reporting directly to him was overreac hing his span of control Actually. hi s execut1 ve secretary and another known as hi s "governmental se cretary'' r o d e h e rd on the departments. Bul Brown created a "Resources Secretary" in charge of the De partments of Water Resources, Forestry and Parks, and planned further reorganizations or that type to create a fiv e-man cabinet s upervising all of the departments. T HE PLAN was implemented by Ronald Reagan as governor and has been maintained by Jerry Brown In the less than two decades which has followed the introduction of the "superagencies" they have eX'panded into "super bureaucracies" and now cost the state more than $12 million annuaJJy Reviewing their work an Assembly committee h~s found that. "Instead of ser ving primarily as a policymakin~ and coordinating agent of the governor's office. the agencies have taken on an operating role of their own" interfering with the operations or the departments Of course the intent was to provide lieutenants for the governor who could IARl WATIRS advise departmental heads and keep them in line with the governor 's policies. But when those li eutenants build themselves staffs which now totaJ more than 140 persons it is inevitable that the staff people quickly involve them in the operalJons of the "departments. Such is human nature. The resl'lt is the director be co mes nothing more than a messenger carrying out the dictates of the superhead on a day to day basis and is no longer essentia l to the operation. The answer then is to either eliminate the directors or the supersecretaries. The committee has recommended the taller. suggesting that whatever work now being d on e by the agency secretaries that 1~ necessary be given back to the departments and the overst-eing of the directors be done by som <.' ''highly qualified" members of the governor's office Directors are paid high salaries to run the departments (f they can't be trusted to administer them without constant s uperv1 s 1on the governor shouldn't. appoint them OF COURSE the public as well as the employees should have someone to appeal to when a director seems to have gone urr the trolley The governor can't be expected to enter into every breach. But his executiv e secretary a nd a departmental secretary should be adequate to handle mos t or the problems And you can be sure the ~overnor will step in post has te whenever it becomes more than a problem. Th e whol e sc h e m e for the superagencies was a bad idea from the beginning. Now that it has been recognized it will be mterestrng to see how long it will take the Legislature to rid the s tate or th1 !> wastefuJ method of management Lunch hour not long enough at DMV To the Editor: This afternoon 1 returned to work after spending my lunch hour standing in the Hne for registration at our local OMV office on 19th Street in Costa Mesa. lf anyone has not been to the DMV lately they s hould know that nothing has changed except the addition or chairs in the Jong and winding path MAILBOX from front door to the window area. I would guess there to be about 36 chairs, and I say guess because I never got up close enough to them to see them all al once around the corner to count. I will say that upon entering the door I was probably 20th in line to the chairs and when I ten at the end of my lunch hour 1 was 10th in Line to the chairs with nine behind me to the dooq. That means another approximate 36 were in front of the 10 in front of me. During the whole time there were never more than three windows open and yet there is room to accommodate approximately eight employees. AS I WALKED to my car at 1:15 p.m. I spoke with a lady also getting in her car and she had made it up lo the window It had taken her 3 hours. It is about time something was done to correct this situation as in the six years I have been using this office it has never been aoy better. lf this is an office for the public then it is about time the public do something about it. If that means me. then I will be the first to start the movement to correct the situation. As if this is not maddening enough, I would like to also mention the young people posing as youth of Orange Co unty taking donations outside the door of the OMV an.1 have been doing this for over a year that I am aware or. They are nothi n g more t h an brainwashed American youth begging for the Hare Kris h na movement pretending to be social, active youth or Orange County. They prey on non-English speaking people, older senior citizens and anyone who enters or leaves the building. They are as un-American as any institution that I have ever known about and are u un -Orange County -youth as any teen-ager can gel. Since when have we raised our children to beg and for what? U this is public property then let me be the first to say that l am part or the public and this orrends me io lbe core. MARY JAh"E SANBORN Boon or bane? To the Editor: How would t.be cable television J*)ple llkt to ffilelvC the kind of t.ruUIMGt they cllsh out? Speelllcelly, without ...a.uce notice. tbelr atreet dl11tnc repl'eM'ltt1Uff1 rana doorbells in Eaatbluft l l ..... dawn boura to &\ate their lntenl.lom co cl.la up ' .. near curbside areas to install cables. Besides arousing every barking dog m the area they required personal and guest cars to be moved out of the path or the diggers . This meant. in our ins tance, moving four cars promptly several blocks from the house. THIS PRESUMABLE benefit for the c itizenry began l ast year in November/December. Since that time sht trenches have been dug, about four inches wide and s ix inches deep - finally in stalling cable two months later without completing the trench openings which were partly filled with cement but not finished or leveled with the street This is now the third or fourth month since they, the television cabl e people, began their nuis ance, noisy, and nonsensical maneuvers in the name of neighborhood benefit. It's too bad they couldn't have begun their last-minute aler ts, noisy inconvenient drilling, m essy, badly lit. s pace hogging maneuvers in front of each or the city officials' residences me aning the homes of those who gave city approval without time Hmilations, courtesy notices and penalty conditions for delays. When it comes to "improvement" such as cable television, it should be remembered that It is perhaps more bane than boon ART WEISSMAN Kindly cat curb To the Editor: Keeping cats off your flower beds does not necessitate drastic dangerous and cruel measures that threaten lives of children and animals Just s imply sprinkle a few moth crystals on the area, or get something si milar from the neighborhood veterinanan. Another word of ad vice. this one for pet owners: If you love your dogs and cats do not travel with them in the car or truck without safety measures. Leash them and attach the leash to the vehicle. And If you park. don't shut them up in a hot. airless vehicle, and don't leave a valuable, beloved animal in a car that is unl ocked. The h eartache Is unbearable. J . ROGERS Price prediction To the Editor; Many letters reach the op·ed pages, citing the need for lower interest rates to stimulate a near-dead real estate market. No. Properties are overpriced. • l.f'tt~r• frnm reodtrl art Wt'lcomr Th,, right to cnndtm8t ltUtra to /U IJ)Clre or l"hmtn(Jlt hwl '" re3erued L.f:rttrs of 300 uJ()rcU or It.rs Will hf gtucm pre/trf'ftce All LftltTS mu..'t mcludf aignoturc• and mailing addr"~' ~t narntl mo11 be wrrMtld on rt-q 1101 fl s uf/1cltnl reoton It opporenr Pot1 rJI wsll no1 bt' publbh~ l.A1rtra mQM be rrltp~ to 642·60fff. Namt orwl ""°"' numkl' of tht C<i,U~OMlor mu.If be.' gtum tor .,.,,,~ton putpfll'.S Working on a related paper I round staggering data' Over the ne xt 12 months. prime coastal residential properties will probably take a bath from 12 to 40 percent of appraised values! The only saving grace would be a smoking innation rate of say 13 lo 20 percent per year No one wishes to make a prediction or projection as this Perhaps this is the reason no one has done so earlier. But the numbers work . While they might realize my findings on ly instinctively, the largest group of sellers unloading their properties now are real est a te agents and other professional investors. KEN PORTER Crucial year To the Editor The irresponsible statement made by a Capistrano Unified School District official, who implied that there is no information concerning the educational value inherent in an 180 minute kinde rgarten sessio n ver sus the archaic 150 minute session . was fallacious. P syc h ologists s ay that the kindergarten year is the mos t important year in the child 's formal education. Thjs time has to be or a high quality, particularly in the light or the broad scope of learning that is involved in the kindergarten program. EDUCATIONAL research gives firm evidence of the value of the extended kindergarte n program and all · experienced kindergarten teachers will agree. With so many parents involved in assisting as parent aides In the kindergarten classroom, this move by the school board has outraged them as they wonder why they were given no indication or this very serious move on the part or {he school board. Why wasn't this matter brought to the attention o( the parents and teachers involved before the matter was acted upon by the school board? Our school di s trict m otto is "Excellence in Education" and yet programs are being cut that affect children's academic growth. SUEWHITE MARGARET RHOADS Are the protesters prolestlnl the rise lit their 1as bllls the same ones wbo protested the production of natural 1• that caused the rise? G • .I. ,OIHtllltO..C-....•'•.._. .... .,~ ... --_ _._.~-•i-8'tlle"•IJ_,, ... l'W""• ,.... .. ' o.., °'"'' ,.,.. ) 1111111:1111 THURSDAY, MARCH 11 , 1982 ORANGE COUNTY , CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS ~nning prOtest denied Referendum if project approved still undecided TREES FOR SCHOOLS Jim deBoom of the Newport Balboa Rot ary Club shows off tiny Monterey Pine to Ashley Crary (dressed as a tree J and Philip Cook at Mariners School 'in Newport Beach. The rotary group has been .,...-, ,..... ...... llf •kMN 11..-- diStributing pine trees for 22 years in honor of Arbor Day. This year the g roup gave 1,300 young pines to Newport-Mesa Unified School Di strict campuses. By STEVE MAaBLE Of .. Deity""...., The leader of a Newport Beach homeowner group denied t oday that s he is bent on spearheading a referendum drive lf city council members approve the controversial Banning Ranch development project thi! week. Louise GreeJey, president of the West Newport Leeislalive Alliance, said her croup is undecided what if anytltlng it will do if the council okays the project. She blamed the press for allegedly c reating the impression that she is committed to a referendum. The coun cil, which bas tentatively approved a modified version of the Wes t Newport development plan, is set to take a final vote Friday evening. Mrs. Greeley said .she tfi worried that council members might view her group as being unreasonable because of reports of a looming referendum drive. . The homeow ner l eader maintains she only mentioned a referendum as one of the possible courses of action her group might take if the Banning Ranch plan is approved. Others in the group, though, c laim that a re fe r e ndum attempt is likely. The 75-acre development site is located inJand of Pacific Coast Highway and west of Superior A venue. The land backs up to Costa Mesa. 'Isolate Cuba,' Schmitz says By JEFF ADLER Of tM O .. ly ~let Swtt State Sen. John Schmitz's aides enticingly said the Corona del Mar Republican wouJd be discusslng "El Salvador, the Military Coup and the Jews" before the Los Angeles World Affairs Council Wednesday evening. The World Affairs Council had billed it as Schmitz discussing "What',s wrong with our foreign policy." As it turned out, what's wrong with the nation's foreign policy is the Jewis h community's inrluence in tilling U.S. foreign policy toward lsrael as well as this nation's failure lo confront the Soviet Union and Cuba, according to Schmitz. The candidate for the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate faulted U.S. foreign policy ''for being for Israel and. not for America." Schmitz said foreign policy has been influenced by the news media through Sov i et misinformation and "overeager, very ambitious politicians who s uccumb too much lo the Jewish community in this country, which has been bulldozed and bedazzled by the Zionis ts so that a lmost the e ntire Jewis h community in the United States now feels obligated to support the Zionist movement and s upport Israel." T o undersco r e his point, Schmitz s aid so m any pro-Israeli resolutions come before the state Senate that "you'd think we were the Israeli Knesset." Schmitz charged that the news media and educators in this country, especially those in h igher education. are the "stronghold of the left." He added the ''media is running foreign policy." Turning his attention to the Soviet Union. Schmitz said the problem is not in El Salvador , it's in Cuba , Angola. Mozambique a nd the other One jolt followed another Some were less traumatic during county's 93 years By DAVID KUTZMANN Of Ille O;ally ~lee SuH Orange County quietly marked its 93rd birthday today in a way that surprised some people. The place was still standing. You may recall that star.gazing doomsayers had predicted that a unique alignment of planets on one side of the s un Wednesday w o uld unl e a s h a convuls ive wave of ea rthquakes and volcanic eruptions . Such occurrences would certainly have s p oiled today 's anniversa ry, which m arks the signing of state legislation which led to incorporation of the county of Orange on March 11, 1889. Hi storians will note that, ot6er tha n the usu al political. social LECIL SL.ABACK and emotional upheavals of the day, Wednesday WORLD was about as uneventful a 24-hour period a·s they come . . But, there was some historical precedent for believing that ·March 10 could possibly have been more calamitous. That's because on March 10, 1933, Orange County and the rest of Southern California was jolted by an earthquake that virtually wiped out parts of Long Beach and Compton. Long-time Orange County residents who remember the quake, which measured 6.3 on the Richter scale. say its aftershocks still reverberate in their minds 49 years later. Though injuries were few, property damage was extensive in places. It was because of this quake -and another which followed four days later -that county officials decided to remove a tower on the old two-story sandstone courthouse in Santa Ana. But even in those days, much like Wednesday, reports of Orange County's demise were somewhat exaggerated . LeciJ J . Staback, a Ufe-long county resident who now lives in Silverado Canyon, said he <See DOOM SAYERS, Page A2) STATE Soviet client states which e~ revolution. "My answer to El SaJvador and Poland is Cuba," said Sr.bmitz. "My answer is to sever Cuba and Nicarauga from the Soviet orbit." He advocated going on the o ffens ive and undertaking ··whatever is necessary" to free C ub a and ot h e r Soviet-dominated countries . "T h ey talk ab o ut de-stabilizing Nicaragua. They o ught to be talking about d e-stabilizing Cuba," Schmitz said. "If you sever Cuba from the Soviet Union there will be no more problems. It's intolerable to have a Soviet satellite 90 miles from our shores." Questioned more closely about the situation in E1 Salvador. Schmitz fired back, "What if we just c lobbered them right away?" A new look for TV Log Your Pilot TV log will have a new look and a few new features this Friday. The new, more attractive format, will feature a complete ro lling log that will make it easie r to find your favorite s how. The 36-page weekly magazine aJso will feature a new co lumn, Orange Coast TV Antenna , written by Phil Sneiderman. Gone will be the program g rids which some have found inadequate, but remaining wtll be the popular features such as Jeff Parker's "Inside TV," •·Daytime Drama,'' Sports Highlights and the TV PuuJe. Outside insurgency? Remap plan upheld WASHINGTON -A bipartisan group of former high-level officials believe that the Salvadoran Insurgency is under the control of Nicaragaua and Cuba. Page A3. NATION Soap opera a game NEW YORK -For those soap opera addlct..s who can't 'et enough of ''General Hospital," a board 1ame lets them play the characters' parta. Pase C8. Sen. Williams resigns WASHINGTON (AP) -Harrtaoo A. WU1lam1 Jr., D·N.J., resigned from the Senate today lo tbe face ol aJmost certain expulsion by hit coUeacuea for •1.U.Jc1lly Hpugnant" c?°duct ln the FBI'• Ablcam inv•UcatJoa . • ... WASIDNGTON (AP> -A U.S. Supreme Court justice today refused to block a California rediatrictinc plan that Republicans say could give six extra U.S. House seat.I to the Democrats. Economic shift uked A Stanford University economist believes there's a responsible way out of a "Global Depreqk>n." Pace Ce. COUNTY Voters signing up SANTA ANA -Voter rectstr1Uon In poUUcally actln Oran1e County ls heading for an all-time blab. Stoey, 81. o.11,,.....~ IN DISPUTE This is the Banning R anc h area o f proposed developme nt in Newport Beach . Council members said that whe n taking their tentative vote on the project last month, they tried lo find some middle ground between what the developer - Hancock "Bill Banning" -and the alliance wanted. The council informally agreed to let Banning build 379 homes and up to 400,000 square feet of office and industrial space on , the land. RUNNING Irvine Mayor David Sills made it official today. He's running for the state Assembly . to,ollowing t h e in formal d ecision, both Banning and alliance members termed the council vote "disappointing." Mrs. Greeley, at the lime, said "We don't want to go to a referendum but It may come lo that." Others in her group were more adamant about a referendum and sliJI others mentioned there might be a recall drive against Cou n cil w o man Rulhe l yn Plummer. a Cirst-lerm council member who represents West Newport. Mrs. Greeley said she never intended for her group to appear threatening and said she is sorry if it came out that way "We have lots of options," she noted. "T here's re ferendum, recall , an initiati ve and there is the city council election coming up in November_ "We're not ready to make a choice and we're not going lo even discuss it until after the vote Friday .. She said ther e have been "n e gotiations" s ince th e council 's tentative vote and "I'm personally gratified al the wa y the counci l has b een listening to the concerns or the people." Mrs. Greeley previously said, "We feel the council has s pent long hours listening but just haven't heard us." She defended that statement by noting it was made four weeks ago. Mayor said still 'fair' in hospital Newport Beach Mayor Jackie Heather r emained in fair ~ondition at Hoag Memorial Hospital today. Her hus band, cardiologist Lor en Heather. said earlier this week that his wife has some weakness on her left side but is alert and can communicate by writing notes. Dr. Heather said it could be several weeks before his wife is released from the hospital. He did not say whether she intends to return to her city hall duties. S he has been hospitalized since suffering the stroke at her home last Sunday. It's official; Sills challenging F rizzelle. Irvine Mayor David Sills f o rmall y announced ~is candidacy today to challenge Assemblyman Nolan Frizzelle, R -Huntington Beach for the Republican nomination in the newly apportioned 69th Assembly District. Sills claimed that Frizzelle, who has been in office in the 73rd Assembly District for 15 months "has shown a complete disregard !.or local commurulies needs ... And Sills srud that Frizzelle's record on transportation issues ''h as been both counterproductive and confusing." Sills said that since indicating s~veraJ weeks ago that he wouJd challenge Frizzelle he has been under "a great deal of heavy SPORTS handed pressure and thinly veiled threats from Politicians throu,ghout the state" not to cause an intra-party war for the Republican nomination in the .June 8 primary. ··A s ad r e flection on Dr. Frizzelle's performance is his r eliance on legislators from outside the dis trict for his support," Sills said. Du rin g a morning press conference in Santa Ana, Sills released results of a poll conducted by Public Response Associates which s howed he and Frizzelle lo essentially be in a dead heat among Republican voters in the new district were the election to be held today. The poll showed Frizzelle with 21 pertent. Sills with 20 percent, with 58 percent undecided. The view from Florida· What is the Dodgers' ~ecret to success? 1t· might have something to do with discipline. Manager Tommy Lasorda says he doesn't believe in ruJes or Cines. Page Cl . INDEX At Your Service A4 Ann Landers 82 Erma Dombeck 82 Movies 83-4 L.M. Boyd A6 MutuaJ Funds Ce Business Cf.7 National News A3 California AS Public Notices 02-3 Classified 01,03-8 Sports Cl--4 ComlCI cs Dr. Ste!ncrobn Bi Cro11word C5 Stock Markets Cl Death Notices Ar, Television 85 Edllorial Th eaten 83-4 ltnt•rt.alnment 83-4 Weather u - Rora.cope 8a •orld Newa .u r Al ' c'm Orange Oout DAILY PtLOT/Thureday. March 11, 1982 I~' ---------------------------------------------- 1 ~ Continued skwles I SCatteFed boos greet Reagans ,DOOMS AYERS .•• WASHINGTON (AP) - and als artermalh, include President Reagan and his wife seein1 court proceedinas lakinl were booed by several members place on lhe h'ont lawn or • or the audience when they Methodist church next to the entered the presidential box at courthouse; of aeein& bulldlnl the John F. Kennedy Center for which looked like doll houses (no the Performing Arts lo watch a walls), and or mnchlna each performance or the Joffrey J1 remembered hearlna radio • r•ports that Santa Ana Hilb • School bad been destroyed. Thi• l,wu news lo him because t Staback, then 22, sat in bis car ' lookln& at a relatively unscarred hl&h school campus. • Slaback, who became a court I r e porter like his father , J remembers the day for other time a new aftershock rumbled. Ballet. Not since 1933, Staback and A similar demonstration others say, has Orange County greett!d the Reagans when they endured such a tumultuous returned to their box after the birthday eve. first of two intermissions reasons. I Before the quake hit, he was . gettlng ready to go out on a f double date with a woman who l eventually became bis wife. Though voters decided on Wednesday night. June 5, 1889 to secede from Los It was impossible to determiae Ang~Q!lnty and create how many people were booing, Orange County, the anniversary but it was a very s ma 11 is officially celebrated on March percentage or the capacity 11. a udience or 2,200. However, the : ''I was s having," ~e said, "when lhe mirror began to move around a little bit." Slaback said after his family heard a rumbling sound al about 6 p.m. they fled the house. On his way out. Sia back said he saw cupboard doors fly open and That's the date that Gov. boos came from several sections Robert Waterman signed of the auditorium a nd were legislation which allowed new clearly audible, along with the counties to form in California. traditional applause that greets dishes come flying out. Reflecting on that March 10, he s aid it was a "fortunate thing" that the earthquake occurred after people got home from work and before dinner and theater patrons went back The vote in Orange County in a president on such occasions. the June referendum was 2,509 An official who has been wilh people in favor or splitting from Kennedy Center since it opened Los Angeles County and 500 in 1971 said it was the first time people opposed. a president has been booed No special observances are there. Ellch president since planned to today's anniversary. Richard M. Nixon has visited Previously, special celebrations the center. downtown. ·'In those days," Slaback obser ved, "(people> needed to go downtown more often than marked the county's 85th and It also marked the first time 90th birthdays. . since Reagan became president It is expect ed that the that he has been greeted with county's lOOlh birthday will lead boos m a public appearance - to observances of a special except by participants in but not too eartfi·shaking -planned demonstrations. they do now." Other memories which he still carries with him of the quake nature. As be left the box during the .. Explosives found at Coast residence Plasttc explosive equivalent to · 84 s ticks of dynamite, and detonators lo set i• off were found in a Dana Point residence Wednesday afternoon. The military explosive, known as C·4, was confiscated from the home of former Marine Dennis Ly le Huff at 25121 Via Elevado after Sheriff's Hazardous Device Unit investigators received a tip from a "confidential source." She riff's officers ordered nearby residences evacuated. Huff, 26, was already in custody for passing bad checks and the district attorney i s now preparing a felony complaint against him for possession of ~xplosive devices. According to Lt. John Hewitt of the Sheriff's Department, the C·4 explosive is a milituy demolition tool used in heavy blasting. The explosive was found in six blocks weighing 1.5 pounds each. He characterized C-4 as a "relatively stable" s ubstance that should never be stored with detonators. The detonators, or blasllng .caps, were fo und side by side with the explosive. Jet engine flam~s; 62 evacuated safely LONG BEACH (AP> -· An engine on a Jet America DC·9 airplane caught fire while the plane prepared to leave for Chicago, but a Feder.al Aviation Administration spokesman said all 62 passengers were evacuated safely. The fire broke out about 6:35 p. m . Wednesday as Flight 122 was preparing for take-off from Long Beach Airport, fire dispatcher Michael Robideaux said. Pasaengers were evacuated via stairs and. chutes, Robideaux said. They departed for Chicago on another Jet America plane second intermission, Reagan was asked by reporters why the booing occurred. Before he could answer, his wife said, "It was just one young boy, just one young boy.'' The president added: ··He probably had a broken spring in his seat." The Kennedy Center official, who as ked that he not be identified by name, said he would "certainly agree" that more than one person was booing. Deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said today, in reaction to the incidents, "I thought people wno went to the ballet were ladies and gentlemen, patrons or the arts." He said he was "shocked and surprised that people who would Newport Chamber celebration set A day long celebration is to be held Friday in honor of the Newport Harbor Area Chamber o f Commerce 's 75th anniversary. The event begins with a '"Nostalgia Morning" breakfast at 8 at the Balboa Pavilion and ends with a 6 : 30 p .m . dinner-dance at the Balboa Bay Club. The price for breakfast is $12. Price for the dinner·dance is $37 .50. Reservations can be made by calling 644-8211. Showers due today ' Coastal Ylll•Y•. Seti F .. -.s.m. Clet1l• ••lltyl, RIYtrslO.·S.n Btrn••dlM ..... hl9f\ ---rt•, tnl-Ore"o• Coun1y 1nd 1he coutet, me1ropotl 1•n , 8 a11n l n 9 , Htmtl·EI""°"' -ei. ..... lAkt ...... AOMO re1ln9s Art II foll-s: MOltlJ cloudy 11>rouoh Frld•Y. ~. 0-100, u.-.nMvt tor"""""' btcoml"O telr wl1h ou•1Y winds people, 101·'>oo: unllHlthllil for F;lcley ,....,,"V A 10 percefll <1'1.n<e tveryofte, 101.JOO, encl huardou1. of rein I001y, docru slno to 10 301-jOO .,.rcent on Frldey. HIOM In mid '°' ----------to low 7o.. Hunllf'191on-Newpor1 ., .. temperelurn •anolnv from ss 10 M. T EIMwhlre, lrom Poin1 CCll<tPflon ,L emperatures to lhA ~•Ice" bOrdtr -°"' 60 mlles: LIQhtverlabltwlftdsnlQll1•ncl • Ml ~ ~ ~ ::°':!~~ ':'ri !':;'1;:0::":~-:.: Albany 3S 10 .04 ... 1ner-Frldey. WH1trty •-It of I ::~ ~ ~: ~ to J teet. Mostly cloudy wltt Alhlvlll• u 31 OCCHlonel llQll1 rein lon'9M P1rtty Atllnt• 10 4' ---<lolicl'f Fr\dey AUenlc Cl't u Jt CAU,OtlMIA 8•111more u J1 81~mlll9hm 70 3S N-lk V S 81 k • 1 .-Okle CllY • • summary a:;:rc S7 4S ,;; OmallA eoslon ,. SI Orl•ndo s.._ .... -1hlindlntorm• SPQttCI er-ftsvlle IO ff PfllledpH• • •10111 Ille mld·Mlu lu lppl V1ll1y 8uff•I• ... 40' .Ot "'-"1• tOdey, Whlle rein •ncl SflOWS/lowers C11Arl1tfl SC '1 SO Plttsl>uf'Qfl fell In much of the Hortlleasl. ChArllln WV U SI P11eftd. Mlt R1ln ellO lell •lonO Ille northern ClleyeMe SI 21 Pflencl, Ore Peclll< Coell •ncl In per1s o1 the Chlcaoo •• » .01 Reno ftOrlllem Plei.AU CIMlftnatl 51 SO .02 Salt Leke L•1•r !Odey, flln WIS ••PKled to Cle••f•NI S4 0 .OI s .. n .. ..,.tel ecron Ille Peclllc Co.st to -Columl>llS so u .01 St LOUIS • Rockles,as-.tluo ... '1hl-'Mm 0•1·Flw111 IS ., SIP·T•~ • Atlen11c Coltttl llllH. Denver U 32 St SI• Marie Tiie forecut •lso c1lled tor • o .. Moll\H l3 S3 .02 SpoktM 1<eltered .,,_ sh-ors over 1h• 0t1rolt 40 a .U TuclOft U-r G,.el LMH. Oul11tll JO 12 .01 TulM Ttm.,.raturH w"e ••i>e<led to El P .. o 13 '3 Wnhlt>qln r•m•ln below treerlnQ only In Ille Hertford 41 J2 Wlclllt• U pper Grell LlkH ..... High Helena SS 26 .02 t ......... -todlJ "411 be '" -... "-llilli Tl 10 .01 so .i 1• SS •• n 11 SS 43 3' .... Sol 41 u JI .. 43 .. ., St 4J St ,, 71 " 11 s. lt 11 SS ._. 11 51 n S1 ., ,. n " .. 8ahn1tetd 70 '3 81ytM .. •ftd SOI from -EftQlaNI ttlr°""' Houston 1S 62 tlle Olllo Velley Incl the nort11em IMl\ettlls SJ 0 "l•lfls .. ,.. Peclflc Hort-. ..... JICktflVfle 16 47 111 1fle tOI encl ?CK Kross tM ""'"' t(an1 CllY 74 '1 "1plM -In 1119 Soulh. US V..-75 63 Ttm.,.retwes •round the nlllon Llttle Roe~ " S1 HrlY t-y r....., trom 1 In Far90, Lovlavllle S.C 4t H.0 ., Ind Or-Forks, N.O .• lo 14 In Mitmtlflls 6S 57 W.st ,.aim a.ec11. ·Fie., -¥""'•· Ml1ml 1S .. Arl1. -MllWMlkw 40 » Extended f orecast ~ .. St.P 40 t4 NHIWllte S9 • .. -~ 11 57 Hew Yon. '9 J4 Evreti1 st n ,,.._ .. S7 L.tfKHt... •t • 1.otA"911ft 11 .M Mary1vllle 42 Hledle1 IS .. ,. O•le<MI 4J ,, ,._,..,... ., Sol RHllvfl SS .ff R...._. City 70 SJ ,. Seer.--M ••. Sellftat ., ,. n ... .. 41 San Ole9o ~n Fr.n<iKO Sant• 8att>ar• SanleMe<le .OJ Stockton Therm•• Uklell 8erstow .2t8'9 8Hr .Ol 81Sl>Op Catallr11 . SO L""9 8NCh Monrov•• Ml WlllOI\ .06 H"'oor1 8ffch .I• Ontario Palm Sllf1"9' Pewci.n.t S-8er.-dlno Sen Jose SanteAne Sant• Cnu T-VelleJ IO M •I SS .06 ., Sol .. ., S1 " st " s. St 37 10 ., 11 ,. 11 S5 11 S3 St n .. Sol ,. S2 " ff 1• S6 1• SI ., 51 .1' n n •2 ... D s.c .. ,.AM AM•RICAM Acep;ilco •• n ••rbeCIOt ., 10 .21 lat'mlide 12 '3 ...,.. .. 0 Clif'IOO .. 11 .f1 "~ 11 60 OvadelaJat'I .. '5 .o.ou.-i-,. .. . cw . 11 Heveoa .. .20Kl~toft ., 1S .. , Mofttl908ey ., n CANADA SOUTHERN CALll<ORNI A COASTAL AHO MOUNTAIN ARIE.Al -,..,,.., <llMIY -( ... S..-y .... ~. ,...,. felr °" llMMey . str .... ...., -1et1y wlndt In tlle _...... -IOcalfy wlftdy In tlle CMttel _., MlllW lfl 1119 centat _'5 .. 72 .... tSleSSlfltM ----~-Uleia SURF RIPllT Ce ... ry Edmon..,. Moftt,..I Otta•• R .. lfta T-to Venc-WIMl"9 •. 1• " . " ., -) 22 u J4 4 .. J7 t2 " ,_._. ................. .... "'"'* .... go to the ballet would enga1e ln that sort of thing. A hockey game, yes. A ballet, no." As the Keagans entered, the booing began and, like the applause, continued for several seconds. According lo a note in the program, the evenin g 's performance was in honor of International Afghanistan Day on March 21 and was dedicated "to the people or Afghanistan who are fighting for their freedom." The Kennedy Center official reported that Robert Joffrey, the company director. said the note was placed in the program at the specific request o! the White House. The audience included Defense Secretary Ca s par Weinberger, who stayed for a black.tie reception during an ' intermission but left just before the final dance. Hearing planned on coast p a rk A public hearing on the new Crystal Cove State Park south of Corona del Mar will be held at 9 a .rp. Friday in Santa Ana. The state department of Parks and Recreation will listen to comments from the public on a draft environme ntal impact r e port for t he beach·area parkland. The hearing will be held in the police annex auditorium, 23 Civic Center Plaza. MA BELL STRIKES AGAIN: Only yesterday in this space I was talking about our new Pilot TV Log that comes out this Friday and I listed a telephone number for our We,.e Listening service. By doing that. I broke a basic tenet of newsp~pering. We paid, too. The number. o f course, was 'hrong. One · ~ of our We're List ening • ~ customers called some r-. haple ss s oul at --------~r midnight as a result. TOM MURPHHH '~ ~ He wasn't listening. He -------------- was sleeping. . All this reminds you of some years back when this sterling journal at Christmas time went along with a Jaycee program to have a telephone number where the kiddies ~vld call up Santa Claus. OF COURSE WHEN it was printed. the number youngsters were advised to call for St. Nick was wrong Fortunately. the hapless citizen out there whom we had just volunteered to be the jolly olci elf hjmselr. turned out to be a nice guy. He went along with the gag. Throughout the long night. he heard so many Christmas wis hes from boys and girls that he was coming down with a case of terminal lar yngitis. That's when his wife took over the phones. She became Mrs. Claus. So much for printing telephone numbers in the newspapers. SOME OTHER CALLERS did gel the right' number last night to tell us that they weren't so worried about being able to read the new television Jog as they were about how complete the listings will be. We think on Friday you'll find a complete log and we still solicit your comments. But as to the number lo call. check it in our "We'n: Li stening'' box on Page A4. l sure hope it's on A4 We won't try to repeat the number here. 1 ·m sure you can understand why . INJURY ACCIDENT -Costa Mesa Fire Department paramedics give aid to Karen Sieh. 24 , Cos ta Mes a. She was taken to Fountain Va lle y Commun ity Hos pital Detty ...... ~.., Rletoe .. It_.... following a head·on collision this morning at about 10 o 'clock at Placentia and 17th a venues. The driver of the other car was not injured. police said. Short But Sweet Storekeeper Gina Garrett is wearing A ll<>n tltat of!~ /iM JroditioNJI lf'O'lswetl' for lflf'lt, fOIMll and bo:fS. • a pair from a great selection in our Ladies Depart1nent ... Summer is just afewshort months away. 102& Irvine. Newport Beach, Califomi4 Phont 642-1061 ·C Oc•nge Coa•t DAILY PILOT/Thuf'9day, Maroh 11, 1882 Planners can't agree on high,..rise limits The Costa Mesa Planning Commission's decision this week not to make a r ecommendation to t he Clty Council on a plan that would Increase building heights on Bristol Street was a first in th~ cit y. City planning ofticials presented the commissioners with a plan that would have. among other things, increased allowable building heights on Bristol between the Corona det Mar and.the San Diego Freeways from two to 10 stories. But commissioners. unable to agree on a height, decided not to vote on the matter and instead made indi v idual recommendations to t he council. Commissioners did however. approve part of the plan that calls for certain densities and requires developers who build along Bristol Street to pay for traffic improvem:mts along the entire road. As things now ~tand there is n o building h eig ht recommendation and developers will huve lo apply for a conditional use permit in order lo exceed the two-s tory limit south of the San Diego Freeway. It is important to keep in mind that even if a height limit plan is approved by the council. developers s till will have to come t o the Planning Commission before being allowed to build. To simply set an arbitrary line and a ll ow hi gh rise construction north of the freeway ·on ly avoids responsibility to make a fair and intelligent det er mination of what is the proper use of land in the best interests of t he whole city. The City Council needs lo face up to the decision. City's caution wise Last week the city received word that land o n whic h a controversia l plastics plant sits is safe for t he development of condomini urns. So il sa mpl es tak e n und er n eat h t h e Narmco Materials Inc . fa cility and co mpa r e d with two ot her locations in the city showed no "soil contamination problems ." City officials now are awaiting word from state health expe rts who took similar tests. The 72-page report by BCL Associates o f Long Beach co n c lud ed that th e concentrations of metals and ch e micals in the soil was not significant. Although the report said that no harmful concentrations of chemicals were found in the soil. it should be noted that BCL's job was not to look for possible emissions from the plant. Over the years the plasti cs plant at 600 Vi ctor ia St. has been th e targe t of numerous complaints from neighbors who contend that emissions from the plant have caused various health problems. In J anuary. the City Council approved the construction of 69 co ndominiums by· the J anes Company. pending outcome of the studies by BCL and the state. Final approval for the two- a n d three -b edroom condominiums cannot be made until the Narmco factory is de molis hed and soil samples are taken from underground storage tanks. according to the repart. In the past we 've advised the city to proceed with caution in regard to the construction of condominiums there. And they have. But we wouJd caution anyone against interpreting BCL's findings as proof that the area h as a lways been safe . That wasn't the intention of the report. Annual process painful It may seem like nothing more than a cruel shell game to th e 120 teach e r s in th e Newport-Mesa Unifi ed School Dis trict who will receive layoff notices this week. Not all of those teache rs actually will lose their jobs. In fact, trustees voted Tuesday to shave 43 full-time teachers from the district's payroll in June. along with another 30 who are on temporary status . But in order to be on the safe s ide, notices of inte ntion to dis miss will be mailed to 90 rull ·tim e teac hers b y the s tate-m a nd ated Ma r ch 15 deadline. Why put so many people through the pain of wondering whether they will h ave a pay check to support the mselves and t heir families? It is som ething that the Newport-Mesa and other districts have had to do for years because of declining e nrollment and fina ncial uncertainty a nd the • inflexible state education code requirement. Last year the district sent notices of intent to dismiss to 100 teachers and 79 actually were laid off. It is a grueling process that means a lot of worry for many families But failure to s end the advance notices means the district must keep teachers on the payroll regardless of need Last year , a miscalculation on layoffs obliged the Huntington Beach High School District to keep 30 extra teacher s throughout the school year. We empathize with the teachers who wi ll receive the notices and must wait in limbo for the ne xt three months . But at the same time. the district is struggling to make e nds meet. Supt. John Nicoll called the $2.4 million saved by teacher layoffs "j ust a piece of the action.·· with $2 million more that will have to be cut. It is not a happy pi~ture. :Qplnions,expressed Jn the 'Fpace at>Ove are those of tlle Daily Pilot. Other views ex· pressed on this page are those 6r thelf authors and art 1sts. Reader comment is inv•I· .ed . Addres.s The Da ily Pilo~. P.O. Box lS60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (7l4) 642·4321. LM. Bo yd/ Bandit chaser What is most likely lo scare off a bank robber? The American Bankers Association checked police records to rind out. Jn those cases where would-be bandits turned tail to Oee without 1etting the money, t.hey did so after women screamed . Dan1erou1, this. No authorities advise female victims to sc~am. Not aU screamers survive. But ll is a fact that tbe scream ts so far the most effective alarm . Whatever it ls you want to say if you .aaj it to e n oush people, aomebod.Y ia aoln& lo be offended, evidently. Remember that ton& "I Saw Kommy Kiaaln1 Santa Claus?" Numerous irate clUaena thoucbt it IK> dama1lnc lo children that they ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat organized an effort to have it banned from the air . Not e very player of softball realizes that game originally was designed to be played indoors. First such contest of record was inside Chicago's Farragut Boal Club - 1887. In Corrine, Utah, 90 year-ago, the citizens who wanted divorce papers could get them from a vending machine for $2.50 in coins. Q. Why is the Emerald Isle of Ireland reputedly so much greener than other countries? A. Limestone under the sod, rain over It. Thomas P. Ha ley Publisher thcimn A:'~lne Editor Barbara Krelbich Editorial Page Editor • THE StN~TE VOTES ON SENATOR WlU..IAMS 'SuperageJ!~ies' inflate costs It isn't surpri!>ing that a legislat1vE' comm ittee ha s found the state government's superstructure of agenc)' s ecretaries sQperfluous. T he only s urprise is that the legislators have identified the problem so soon. The idea for the superagencies was born during the administration of Gov. "Pat" Brown. He complained that the increasing n umbers of department heads reporting directly to him was overreaching his s pan of control Actually, his executive secretary and another known as his .. governmental s e c retary .. rode herd o n the de part ments. But Brown created a "Resources Secretary" in charge of the Departments of Water Resources, Forestry <ind Parks . a nd planned further reorganizations of that type lo create a five-man cabinet supervising all of the departments. THE PLAN was implemented by Ronald Reagan as governor and has been maintained by Jerry Brown. ln the less than two decades which has followed the introduction of the "superagenc1es" they have expanded into 's uper bureaucracies" and now cost the state more than $12 million annual~Y- Reviewing their work an Assembly com m1ttee has found that. "Instead of ser ving primarily as a pohcymaking and coord1n at1ng agent or the governor's office. the agencies have taken on an operating role of lhe1r own " interfering with the operations of the departments Of coursl' the intent was to provide lieutenants for the governor who could IARl WATIRS advise departmental heads and keep t hem in l ine wi th the governor's policies But when those lieutenants build themselves staffs which now total more than 140 persons it is inevitable that the staff people quickly involve them 10 the operations of the departments. Such is human nature . The resi;lt is the director becomes nothing more than a messenger carrying out the dictates of the superhead on a day to day basis and is no longer essential to the operation. The answer then is to either eliminate the djrectors or the supersecretanes. Tht' committee has recommended the latter. su~geslang th<1l whatever work n u w bt"1ng done b y the agen~Y secretaries that 1s necessary be given ba t k 10 the de partments and the over!iceing of the directors be done by somt "highly qualified .. members of the governor's offi ce Director/) are paid high salaries lo run the departments. If they can't be trus ted 10 administer them without cons tant s upervision the governor shouldn't appoint them 0 .. COt;RSE the public <1s well as lhe employees should have someone to :ippeal to when a director seems to have gone off the trolley The governor can't be expected to enter into every breach. But his executi ve secretary and a departmental s ecr etary s hould be adequate to handle most of the problems And you c<1n be sure the gove rno r will s tep 1n post haste whenever it becomes more than a problem. The whole s cheme ror th e superagencies was a bad idea from the beginning Now that it has been recognized 1t wi ll be interesting to see how long it will take the Legislature to rid the state of this wasteful method of management. Lunch hour not long enough at DMV To the Editor: This afternoon I returned to work after spending my lunch hour standing in the line for registration at our local D M V office on 19th Street in Costa Mesa. If anyone has not been to I.he OMV lately they should know lhat nothing has changed except the addition or chairs in the long and winding path MAILBOX from front door to the window area. I would guess there to be about 36 chairs, and I say guess because I never got up close enough to them to see them all at once around the corner to count. I will say that upon entering the door I was probably 20th in line to the chairs and when I left at the end of my lunch hour I was 10th in Une to the chairs with nine behind me to the door. Thal means another approximate 36 were in front of the 10 in front of me. During the whole lime there were never more than three windows open and yet there is room to accommodate approximately eight employees. AS I WALKED to my car at l: 15 p.m. I spoke with a lady also getting in her car and she had made it up to the window. It had taken her 3 hours. It is about time something was done to correct this situation as in the six years I have been using this office it has never been any better. If this ls an office for the public then it is about time the public do something about it. If that means me, then J will be the first to start the movement to correct the situation. As if this is not maddening enough, I would like to also mention the young people posing as youth of Orange County taking donations outside the door of the OMV and have been doing this for over a year that I am aware of. They are n oth in g more than brainwashed American youth begging for the Ha re Krishna moveme nt pretending lo be social, active youth of . Orange County. They prey on non-English speaking people, older senior citizens and anyone who enters or leaves the building, They are as un-American as any tnstituUon_ that I have ever known about and are as un-Orange County-youth as any teen-ager can get. Since when have we raised our children to beg, and for what? U this ts public property then let me be the first to say that I am part of the public and thls offends me to the core. MARY J ANE SANBORN Boon or bane? To the Editor: How would the cable televialoa people like to receive the kind of treatment they dJah out 7 Speclncally, without advance notice. their street dl11ln1 representatives ~nt doorbells ln Eastbl uff at ~ hours to at.le thelr lntotiom to -up near curbside areas to instaJI cables. Besides arousing every barking dog in the area they required personal and guest cars to be moved out or the path or the diggers This meant, in our instance. moving four cars promptly several blocks from tbe house. THIS PRESUMABLE benefit for the c iti ze n ry b egan last year i n November/December. Since that time slit trenches have been dug, about four inches wide and six inches deep - finally instalhng cable two months later without completing the trench openings which were partly filled with cement but not finished or leveled with the s treet. This is now the third or fourth month since they , the television cable people, began t heir nuisance. noisy, and nonsensical maneuvers in lbe name of neighborhood benefit. Tl's too bad they couldn't have begun their last-minute alerts , noisy incon venient drilling, mess y, badly lit, s pace hogging maneuvers in front of each of the city officials' residences meaning the homes of those who gave city approval without time limitations, courtesy notices and penalty conditions for delays. When it comes to "improvement" s uch as cable television, It should be remembered that it Is perhaps more bane than boon. -ART WEISSMAN Kindly cal curb To the Editor. Keeping cats off your flower beds does not necessitate drastic dangerous and cruel measures that threaten lives of children and animals . Jus t simply sprinkle a Cew moth crystals on the area, or get something si mi lar fro m t h e neighborhood veter inanan. Another word or advice. this one !or pet owners: If you love your dogs and cats do not travel with t hem in the car or truck without safety measures. Leash them and attach the leash to the vehicle. And if you park, don't shut them up in a hot, airless vehicle, and don't leave a valuable. beloved animal in a car that is unlocked The heartache is unbearable J . ROGERS Price predictio" To the Editor: Many letters reach the op-ed pages, citing the need for lower interest rates to stimulate a near-dead real estate market. No. Properties are overpriced. , ' • Letters from readers are u!flcome Th•· right to c<mdtns' lttttrs to /ti IJ)OCt or 11hmmote libel is reserved 1.rttrrs o/ 300 wordi or less will be given prefvrnce, All lelttra mutt mclude sfgnoturt and malling oddr#~ but names mau bt withheld on re· quest if suf/lrient reoaon Is appar~n1 Pot> I ry well not be publtahed. IAtrers me JI ~ tcltp#tOtled to 642-6086. Namt oJtd photlf numl>ff O/ the conrnbutor mwf bf given tor IJt~t/ieolbt ,,..,,,..., I Working on a related paper I found s taggering data ' Ove r the next 12 months , prime coastal residential properties will probably take a bath from 12 to 40 percent of appraised values! The only saving grace would be a s moking inflation rate of say 13 to 20 percent per year. No one wishes to make a prediction or projection as this Perhaps this is the reason no one has done so earlier. But the numbers work While they might realize my hndings only instinctively. the largest group or sellers unloading their properties now art> real estate agents and other prokssional investors KEN PORTER Test of p rogress To the Editor: President ReaRan. while trying to turn back the clock, would do well to ponder words by FOR. spoken at his second inaugurnl in 1937. "The lest of our progress 1~ not whether we add more to the :ibundance of those who have much. it 1s whether we provide enough for those who have little " If Reagan has his way , 1t will again be the haves and the have nots with nothing in the middle ERNA ROSE Critic is~ unfair To the Editor: J am writing this letter because of Tom Willia ms attack on Erma Batham (Ma ilbox, Feb. 21). I am on a Specific Plan Committee for Santa Ana Heights with Er ma Batham. I have found that Erma has always thought of the community and not JUSt her front door. She has never been a no.growth advocate but s he has been a "watch dog" to see that everybody plays by the rules Iler stated position on the Br1stol school site has always been that the development on the school site should conform to a "Community Plan" and that extre m e densities and their resultant traffic should be avoided. Her stated position on the airport has been centered on reducing the noise and to not have one element of the. economy destr~ the rights of another. J ACX W. MULLAN lllllY Ill Are the protesters proteaUn1 the rlse in ttlelr 1as bill• the aame ones wbo protested the production of Dltw'al Ill that caused lhe rise? G.J . .. I llUllCIAIT ._HI I fllll lllCU f HUHSOAY. MAH CH 1 I . 1<~8~ Banning protest denied R efer endum if project approved still undecided TREES FOR SCHOOLS J im de Boom of the Newport Ba lboa Rot a ry Club s hows off tiny Monterey Pine to Ashley Cra ry (dressed as a tree ) and P hili p Cook at Ma riners School in Newport Beach. The rotary gro up has been o.lly ~ "--~ akM N IC_. ... distributing pine trees for 22 years in honor of Arbor Day. This year the group gave 1,300 young pines to Ne wport·Mesa Unified School District campuses. 8y STEVE MA&aLE Of ... D.ity ........... T he leader of a Newport Beach homeowner group denied t od ay t h a t s he ls be nt o n s pearhead in g a refere ndum drive if city council members a p prov e the controver s ial Ba nning Ranc h development project this week. Louise Greeley, president of t he West Newport Legislative Alliance, said h e r gr oup Is undecided what if a nythin1 it will do i1 the council okays the project. She blamed t he press for al l egedl y c r eati n g t h e impr e ssion t h a~ s h e is com milted to a referendum. The counc i l , w hi c h has tentatively approved a modified ve r sion of the West Newport development plan, is s et to take a f inal vote FT'tday evening. Mrs. Gre eley sa i d she is worried tha t council members might view her group as being unreasonable because of reports of a loomin1 referendum drive. _. The ho m eowne r le a d er maint,.ins she only mentioned a r e fere ndu m a s o n e o f t he possible courses of action her group might take if the Banning Ranch plan is a pproved. Others in the group, though, c lai m t h at a r efere nd u m attempt is likely .. The 75-acre development site is located inland of Pacifi c Co~t Highway and west or Superior Avenue. T he land backs up to Costa Mesa . 'Isolate Cuba;' Schmitz says By JEFF ADLER Of -D .. lf , .... Si.ft State Sen. J ohn Schmitz's aides enlicinglY said tbe Corona del Mar Republican would be dis cussing "El Salvador, the Military Coup and the J ews" before the Los Angeles World Affa i rs Council We dnesday evening. The World Affairs Council had billed it as Schmit z discussing "What's wrong with our foreign policy." As it turned out, what's wrong with the nation's foreign policy is the J e wis h co mmunity's influence in tilting U.S. foreign policy towa rd Is rael as well as this nation's failure to confront the Soviet Union and Cuba, according to Schm itz. T b e c a n di date fo r t h e Republican nomination for U.S. Sen ate faulte d U.S. fore ign policy "for being for Isr ael and. not for Amer ica ." Schmitz said for eign policy has been influenced by t he news media t h rou g h Sovie t misinformation and "overeager, very ambitious politicians who s uccumb too much to the Jewish communit y in this country, whjch has been bulldozed and bed azzled by the Zionists so that a l mos t th e e ntir e Jewish community in the United StatP.s now feels obligated to support t h e Zionist mo ve m e nt and support Is rael." TO unde r score h is point , Sctimitz s ~l d g o many ·p ro-Israeli resolutions come be fo re t he st ate Senate that "you'd think we were the Israeli Knesset." Schmitz charged that the news media and educators in t his co untry , especially those in h ig he r e duc ation . a r e the "stronghold of the left." He added the "media is running foreign policy." Turning his attention to the Soviet Union, Schmitz said the problem is not in El Salvador , it 's i n C uba , A n go la , Mo zamb ique a nd t he other One jolt followed anothe r Some were less traumatic during county's 93 years By DAVID KUTZMANN Of IN D•llf , .... Si.ff Orange County quietly marked it s 93rd birthday today in a way t hat surprised some people. The place was still standing. You may recall tha t star -gazing doomsayers had predicted that a unique a lignment o f planets on one side of t h e s un Wed nesday w o u l d unl eas h a convulsive wave of ea rth q uak es a n d volcank eruptions. Such occu rrences wo uld certainly have s p o ile d today 's annive rsar y. w h ich m arks the signing of state legislation which led to incorporation of the county of Orange on Mar ch 11 , 1889. Historians will note th at, othe r than t he us ual political. socia l LECIL SLABACK and emotional upheavals or lhe day, Wed nesday WORLD was about as uneve ntful a 24-hour period as they come. But, there was some historical precedent for believing that Marc h 10 could possibly have been more calamitous. That's because on March 10, 1933, Orange County and the rest of Southern California was jolted by an earthquake that virtually wiped out parts of Long Beach and Compton. Long-time Ora nge County r esidents who remember t he quake, .which measured 6.3 on the Richter scale, say its aftershocks still reverberate in their minds 49 years later. Though injuries were few, property dam age was extensive in places. It was because of t his qua ke -and another which followed four days later -that county officials decided to remove a tower on the old two-story sandstone courthouse in Santa Ana. But even in those days, much like Wednesday, reports of Orange County's demis e were somewhat exaggerated. Lecil J . Staback, a life-long county resident who now lives in Silverado Canyon, said he <See DOOMSA YERS, Pa&e AZ) STATE Soviet client states which export revolution . "My answer to El Salvador a nd Pola nd is Cuba," said Schmitz. "My answer is to sever Cuba and Nica r auga from the Soviet C\rbit." He advoc ated going on the offe n s ive a nd u n dertaking "whatever is necessary " to free C u b a a n d ot h e r Soviet-dominated countries. "T h e y ta lk a b out de-s tabilizing Nicar agua. They oug ht to be talking about de-stabilizing Cuba ," Schmih: s aid. "If you sever Cuba from the Soviet Union there will be no more problems. It 's intolerable to have a Soviet s atellite 90 miles from our shores." Questioned mor e closely about the situation in El Salvador, Schmitz fired back, "What if we jus t c lob be r e d t h e m r ight away ?" A new look for TV Log Your Pilot TV log will have a new look and a few new features this Friday. T he new, mor e attractive format, will feature a complete rolling log that will m ake it eas ier to fi nd your favorite s h ow . The 36-page weekly magazine also will feature a new column, Or a n ge Coast T V An tenn a , written by P hi l Sneiderman. Gone will be t he p ro1ra m grids which some have found inadequate, but remaining Will be the popular features such as Jeff Par ker 's "Inside TV " "Day time Drama," Sports Highlights and the TV Puule. Outsid e insurgency? Remap pla n upheld WASHI NGTON -A bipartisan gr oup of former high-level offi cials believe that the Salvadoran insurgency is under the control of Nicaragaua and Cuba. Page A3. NATION Soap opera a game NEW YORK -For thoae soap opera addlcta who can't ~et enough or "General Hospital," a board aame lets them play the characters' parts. Pace Cl. Sen. Williams r eeigne WASHINGTON <AP) -Haniloa A. WlWama Ir. D·N.J ., reslped from tbe Senate today lo the face Ol almoat certain expUlalon by b1J coUeal\MI for "etbicall)' repupant" conctucl lo the FBI'• Abecam fnv*tttiaUoa. · WASlllNGTON CAP> -A U.S. Supnme Court justice today refused to block a California redlltricl1A1 plan that RepubUcans say could give six extra U.S. House Hall to the Democrats. Econom ic shift uked A Stanford Uruveralty ec:oaomlat believes the,.., a res ponsible way out of a "Global Oepraaion." Pat• Cl. COUNTY Voten signin g up SANTA ANA -Voter retiltntloa la ,..UticaUJ 1dlw Oran1e County l1 beadln1 ror u alHime b11la. Story. at. o.11,,......., IN DISPUTE This is the B an n ing Ra nc h area of pro posed de ve lopm e nt.. in Newport Beach. Council me mbers said that when taking their tentative vote on the project last month, they tried to find some middle ground between what the develoj>er - Hancock "Bill Banning" -and the alliance wanted The council informally a1reed to let Banning build 379 homes and up to 400,000 square feet or office and indus tr ial space on the land. "UNNING -Ir vine Mayor Da vid Sills made it official toda y. He's running for t he state Assembly Follow in g the informa l d ecision, both Banni ng and alliance members termed the council vote •'disappointing." Mrs. Greeley, at the time, s aid "We don't want to go to a referendum but it may come to that." Others in her group we re more adamant about a referendum and still others mentioned there might be a recall dr ive ag.Unst Co unc ilwo m a n Ruthe l y n Plummer,. a fi rst-term council mem ber who represents West Newport. Mrs . Greeley said she never intended for her group to appear threatening and said s he is sorry if it came out that way. "We have lots of options," she noted . "T he re's r efe re ndum, recall, an initiative and there is the city council election coming up an Novem ber. "We're not ready to make a choice and we're not going to even discuss it until after lhe vote Friday." S he said the re have been "negotia tions " s in c e the council 's tent ati ve vote and "I'm personally gratified al the wa y the counci l h as been listening to the concerns of the people." Mrs. Greeley previously said, "We feel the council has spent long hours .listening but just haven't heard us." She defe nded that statement by noting it was m a de four weeks ago. Mayor sai d still 'fai r ' in hospital Newport Beach Mayor Jackie Heat he r r e maine d in fair condition at Hoa g Me m orial Hospital today He r hus ba nd, ca rdiologist Lo ren Heather, said earlier this week that his wife has some weakness on her left side but is alert and can communicate by wr iting notes Dr. Heathe r said it could be several weeks before his wife is released from the hospital. He did not say whethe r she intends to .return to her city hall duties. S he has been hospita lized since suffering the stroke at her home last Sunday. It's official; Sills challenging Frizzelle Irvine Ma yor Dav id Sills f o r m a lly a nno un ced bis candidacy today to challenge Assemblyman Nolan Frizzelle, R-Huntington Beach for the RepubUcan nomination in the n ew l y a pportion e d 69t h Assembly District. Sills claimed that Frizzelle, who has been in office in the 73rd Assembly District for 15 months "has shown a complete disregard for local com munities needs ... " And Sills s8JCl that F r izzelle's record on transportation issues ''h a s b e en bot h co unt e rp r odu c t ive a n d confusing." Sills said that since indicating several weeks ago that he would challenge Friz:r.elle he has been under "a great deal of heavy SPORTS h a n ded p ressure and t hinly veiled threats from politicians thr oughout t he state" not to cause an intra.party war for the Re publican nomination in the June 8 primary. ·'A s ad r e fl ection on Dr . Frizzell e's performance is his reliance on legislators from outside the dis tri ct for his support," Sills said. During a morning p r ess conference in Santa Ana, Sills r e le ased results o r a poll conducted by Public Response Associates which s howed he and Fri:r.zelle to essentially be in a dead heat among Republican voters in the new district were the election to be held today. The poll showed Fri:r.zelle with 21 percent, Sills with 20 percent, with 58 percent undecided. The view from. Florida I Whal ls the Dodaers' secret to success? It might have something to do with discipline. Mana1er Tommy Lasorda u ys he doesn't believe in rules cw fines. Page Cl. INDEX Al Your Servltt A4 An.n Landers. B2 Erma Bombedt Bl Movies 83-4 L.11. Boyd A8 Mutual Funds C8 Bust .... Ct-1 N atJonaJ Ne..-s .u Caltfonlia M Public Notices DN Cla11lft.ct Dl.DM Sport.I Cl-4 Com lea cs Dr. Stefncrohn Bl Ctoltword a Stoek Martell C1 DeathNotlNS DI, Tele'fialcla 8S l:~.T•menl Af.t TtMat.en BM BM Weather A2' lloroKOpe • World News .u \I l --"' N Orange Co.ut DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, March 11, 1982 Newport tries a new approach on drilling Ne wport Beach city officiaJs have decided to do things a little dlf!erently in the ir eHoct to di s courage oil drilling or exploration orr their shoreline . As late as last week, Newport and Laguna Beac h offic ially were opposed to offshore oil drilling. Now, Newport Cit y Council members have dec ided not to oppose -at least not outright orfs hor e oil operations. Instead, the city hopes to attach stringe~ e n vironme ntal and economic conditions to the sale of offs hore' land tracts for oil drilling. It is the ir hope that the tracts will become .unattractive and that potential operators will shy away. In its position statement , Newport notes that drilling structures could hurt the city's tourism business and that an oil s pill could gum-up bays and inle ts to the point whe re they never would get clean. City officials also argue that 1t would be wrong to e rect oil drllllng platforms in sea lanes used by the U.S. Coast Guard. · In short, Newport is set to offer oil companies a very grim 'picture of what their life off the Newport Beach coastline could be like. City officials appea r to have hit on a good idea . Secretary o f the Inte rior J ames Watt already has gone on r ecord. say ing h e will n ot eliminate any potential offshore oil tracts simply for the asking. H~ may. though, be willing to consider a lis t of s ig nificant e nvironmental safeguards that could keep oil firms fro m getting too excited about bidding on the tracts off Ne wport. Compi-omise essenlial Despite threats of a recall and a referendum as well as Ma yor Ja c kie H e ather's uncertain health. the Newport Beach City Council is scheduled to vot e on t h e large and controve rs ia l Banning Ranch developme nt project Friday night. And the r e a r e s igns of trouble all the way. Residents living near the development project site have vowed to push for a re ferendum if the council okays the 75-acre project. Others from West Newport have hinted they may attempt to see k Councilwom an Ruthelyn Plummer's ouster through a recall drive . These residents contend Mrs . Plumme r . who represents West Newport. has not truly represented their concerns with the project. On top of all this. there is now co n cer n th at Mayor Heather's continuing a bsence due to a stroke could s pell trouble fo r the deve lopment project. When the council took straw votes on the development scheme last month. it was the m ayor who broke what would have been a d eadlocked vot e o n several major portions of the pl un There is worn • that \.\-ithout Mrs Heather. the fmal vote on the project could come out differenlly. We 're less worried F or st a rte rs. the tcilk of recall and referendum at this point at least is nothing more than a scare tactic . Co uncil members hav e a dut v t o represent their constituents but this doesn't mean they have to give in to blackmail · And co n ce rnin g M rs I leather , we too a re concerned t ha t her absence may change the game plan. But we a lso trust the r e maining council members will hit up o n a rea so nabl e compromise a nd go from there. Annual process painful It · may seem like nothing more than a cruel shell game to t h e 120 teacher s in th e Newport· Mesa Unifie d School District who will receive layoff notices this week. Not a ll of those teach e rs actually will lose their jobs . In fact, trustees voted Tuesday to shave 43 full-time teachers from the district's payroll in June . a long with another 30 who are on temporary status. But in order to be on the safe s ide, notices of intention to dismiss will be mailed to 90 fu ll -tim e teache r s b y the s tate -m a n dated M a r c h 15 deadline. Why put so many µeople through the pain of wondering whether they will have a pay check to support the mselves and t heir families? It is somethin g that t he Newport-Mesa and other districts have had to do for years because or declining enrollme nt a nd financial uncert ainty a nd the • inflexible state education code requirement. Last year the di strict sent notices of intent to dis miss to 100 teachers a nd 79 actually were laid off. It is a g rueling process th~t means a lot of worry for many families. But f ai lure to send the advan ce noti ces m ea ns the district must keep teachers on the payroll regardless of need Last year , a miscalculation on layoffs obliged the Huntington Beach High School District lo keep 30 ex tra t eac h er s throughout the school year . We e mpa thize w ith t h e t eachers who will receive the notices and must wait in limbo for the next three months. But at the same time. the district is s truggling to make e nds meet. Supt. J ohn Nicoll called the $2.4 million saved by teacher layoffs "just a piece of the action ... with $2 million more that will have to be c ut. It is not a happy picture . $)pin Ions, expressed in the fpace abOve are those oft~ Daily Pilot. Other views ex- pressed on this page are those or their autnors and a rtists. Reader comment 1s inv1t- .ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 9262b. Phone (714) ~42-4321 . LM. Boyd/Bandit chaser Whal is most likely to scare off a bank robber? The American Bankers Association checked police records to find out. In those cases where wouJd-be bandits turned tail to nee without 1etUng the money, they did so after · w o men s c~eamed . Dangerous , tbis. No a uthorities advise female victims to scream. Not aJl screamers s urvive. But it is a fact that the scream is so far the most effective aJarm. Whatever It ls you want to sayl lf you _11., lt to enou1b peop e. aomebody la 10in1 £o be offended, evidently. Remember that IClftl ··1 Saw Mommy K.lssin.1 Santa Claus?" Numel'Olll irate cltlsen1 thou.lht It so dam11i n1 t o cbUd ren that they ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat organized an effort to have it banned from the air. Not every player of softball reali:ces that game originally was designed to be played indoors. First such contest of record was inside Chicago's Farragut Boat Club - 1887. In Corrine, Utah, 90 years ago, the citizens who wanted divorce papers could get them from a vending machine for $2.50 in colns. Q . Why is the Emerald lsle of Ireland reputedly so much greener than other countries? A. Umestone under the rod. rain over it. Thorus P. Haley Publisher Thcimas A:'"Murplilnit Edllor Barbara Krelbich 1Edltorlal P~ Editor TuE StNITT VOTES ON SENATOR WIL.LIAMS 'Superagencies' inflate costs It isn't surprising that a legislat1v t com mittee has fo und the s tate government's superstructure of agenc) secretaries 'Supe rfluous The only s urprist! is that the legislators have: identifi ed the problem so soon. The idea for the superagencies wa~ born during the adminis tration of Gov ··Pat" Brown. He complained that the increasing numbers of dep artment heads reporting direetly to him was overr eaching his spa n of control Actually, his executive secreta ry and another known as his .. governme ntal sec r etary ·· r o d e h e rd on t he departments. But Brown created a ··Resources Secretary" 1n charge of the Oepartments of Water Resour ces, Fores try and Parks. and planned further reorganizations of that type to cre ate a five-man cabinet supervising all of the de partments. THE PLAN was implemented by Ronald Reagan a s governor and has been maintained by Jerry Brown In the less than two decades whic h has followed the introduction of the "supe ragencies" they have expanded into "super bureaucracies" and now cost the state more than $12 million annually. Reviewing their work an Assembly committee has found that, ··ins tead of serv in~ primarily as u policymaking a nd (•oordinat1ng agent o f the governor's office. the agencies have taken on an operating role of their own .. interfering with the operations of the departmenL'> Of course the intent was to provide lieutenants for the governor who could EARL WATERS advise departmental heads and keeµ t hem 1n line w1lh the governor's policies. But when those lieute nants build the mselves staffs which now total more tha n 140 persons 1t is inevitable tha t the staff people quickly involve them tn the operations of the departments Such 1s human nature. The resi;lt is the director b ecom es nothin g m o r e than a messenger carrying out the dictates of the supcrhead on a day to day basis and is no longer essential to the operation. The answer then 1s to either eliminate the directors or the s upersecretanes Thl' committee has recommended the latter, suggesting that whatever wor'lc now he1ng done by the agen cy secretaries that is necessary be given. back to the de pa rt m e n ts and the overseeing o( the directors be done by som e "highly qualified" members of the governor's office. Directors are paid high salaries to run the departments If they can't be trui>ted to adminis ter the m without cons tant super vision the governor shouldn"t appoint them OF COURSE the public as well as the employees shoul d h ave someone to appe<.11 to when a director seems to have gont.• off the trolley The governor can't be c·xpected to enter into every breach. But his executive secretary and a deµartme ntal set"r ctar y s hould be adeq uate t o handle most of the problems And you can be s ure the governo r will s t ep in post h aste whenever 1t becomes more than a problem. Th e wh ole s c h eme f or the supcragencies was a bad idea from the beginning Now t ha t it has been recognized it will be tnteresung to see how long it will take the Legislature to rid the state of this wasteful method of management Lunch hour not long enough at DMV To the e'ditor . This a fternoon I returned to work a fter spending m y lunch hour standing in the Line for registration at our local OMV offi ce o n 19th Str~el in Costa Mesa If anyone has not been to the OMV late ly they should know that nothing has changed except the addition of chairs in the long and winding path MAILBOX from front door to the window area. I would guess there to be about 36 chairs, a nd I say guess because I never got up c lose enough to them to see them all at once a round the corne r to count. I will say that upon entering the door I was probably 20th in line to the chairs and when I left at the end of my lunch hour I was 10th in line lo the chairs with nine behind me to the door. That means another approximate 36 were in front of the 10 in front of me. During the whole time t here were never more than three windows open and yet there is room to accommodate approximately eight employees. AS I WALKED lo m y car at 1: 15 p.m. l spoke with a lady also getting in her car and she had made it up to the window. It had taken her 3 hours. It is about time something was done to correct thls situation as in the six years l have been using this office It has never been any better. lf this is an office for the public then it is about time the public do something about it. tr that m eans me, then I will be the first to s tart the movement to correct the situation. As if this is not madde ning enough, I would like to also m ention the young people posin g a s youth of Orange County taking donations outside the door of the D M V and b ave been doing this for over a year that I am aware of. They ar e nothing more than brainwashed American youth begging for the Hare Krishna movement pretending lo be social, active youth of Orange County. They prey on non-English speaking people, older senior citizens and anyone who enters or leaves the building. They are as un·American as any institution that I have ever known about &nd are as un·Orange County-you th a s any teen·ager can get. Since when have we raised our children lo beg, and for what? U lhls is' pubUc property then let me be the first to say that I am part of th.e public and this offends me to the core. MARY JANE SANBORN Boon or banet To the F..dltor: How would the cable televtalon people like to receive the k1nd ol treatment they diJh out? Speclfically, without advaee llOtlff. lhe.lr street dl&ainl reprewatatlva ran1 doorbells in EHtbluff Ill pre.dawn boura to ai.te tbelr lnttttaau· to dil up near curbside areas lo install cables. Besides arousing every barking dog in lhe area they required personal and guest cars to be moved out of the path of the diggers This meant, in our ins tance. moving four cars promptly several blocks from the house. THIS PRESUMABLE benefit for the citizenry b egan la s t year in November/December. Since that time sht trenches have been dug, about four inc hes wide and s ix inches deep - finally installing cable two months later without completing the trench openings which were partly filled with cement but not finished or leve led with the street T his 1s now the third or fourth month since they, the television cable people, began their nuisan ce, noisy, a nd nonsensical maneuvers in the name of neighborhood benefit It's too bad they couldn't have begun their last·minute alerts. noisy inconvenient drilling, messy, badly lit . s pace hogging m aneuvers in front of each of \he city officials' residences meaning the homes of those who gave city a pproval without time li mitations, courtesy notices and penalty conditions for delays. When it comes to "'improvement" such as cable television. it should be re membered that it is perhaps· more ba ne than boon. ART WEISSMAN Kindly cat curb To the Editor· Keeping cats off your flower beds does not necessitate drastic dangerous and cruel measutes that threaten lives of children and animals. Just simply sprinkle a few moth crystals on the area. or get something si milar fr o m the. neighbo rhood veterinarian Another word of advice. this one for pet owners: If you love your dogs and cats do not travel with them in the car or truck without sar~ty measures. Leash the m and attach the leash to the vehi cle. And if you park, don't shut them up In a hot, airless vehicle, and don't leave a valuable, beloved anjmal in a car that is unlock ed-Th e h eartache is unbearable J . ROGERS Price prediction To the Editor: Many letters re8ch the op-ed pages, clllng the need for tower interest rat.es to stimulate a near-dead real estate market. No. Properties are overpriced. • l..eHtrs from rttlder8 art t.otlcomt Th•· right l fl conMrisr l1tter1 to fit ~, or ehn11not1 ht>cl b r•at'1lt<1 urreri o/ 100 words "' fna will ~ given pn/trtnct All Miers mwt 1nclud1 8tgnoture a,,d maillno addrtn but nam.t1 maJI ~ aotthlwkJ on re· qiu•al 1f 11.1/f1c1tnt reason I• oppartru flOtlrJl-wlll nof bf publlthtd. IAttffTI ma11 ~ tthrphmwd to 642-6086. Nome oftd pllOM num~ of tht colll'1btd01' must bt> otl.lfft tor !Mlri/icotton Jlfi'Pff• Working on a related paper I found staggering data' Over the next 12 mo nths . prime coastal res1dent1al properties will probably take a bath from 12 to 40 percent of appraised values~ The only savmg grace would be a smoking inOat1on rate of say 13 to 20 percent per year. No one wishes to make a pred1ct1on or proJection as thJs Perha ps this 1s the reason no one has done so earlier But the numbers work While they might realize my findings only instinctively. the largest group of sellers unloading their properties now are real est ate agents and other professional investors KEN PORTER Test of progress To the Editor P resident Reagan, while tryi ng to turn back the clock. would do well to ponder words by rDR. spoken at his second inaugura l an 1937 ··The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundanC'e of those who have much, it 1s whether we provide enough for those who have htllc " . If Reagan has his way, it will again be the haves and the have nots with nothinJ! in the middle . F.RNA ROSE Criticism unfair T o the Editor: r a m writing this letter because of Tom Williams attack on Erma Batham (Mailbox. Feb. 21 ). l am on a Specific Pla n Committee for Santa Ana Heights with Erma Batham I have found that Erm a has always thought of the community and not just her front door. S h e has never bee n a no-growth advocate but she has been a "watch dog" to s~ that everybody plays by the rules. Her stated position on the Br1stol school site has always been that the development on the school site should conform to a "Community Plan" and tha t extreme de n s ities and their resultant traffic s hould be avoided. Her stated position on the airport has been centered on reducing the noise and to not ha ve one element of tbe economy destroy the rights of another. JACK W. MULLAN CllllYm Are the proteetera proteatlnc the rtae la tbelr 11'11 bllll the ume on•• wbo PTOletted t.be production ol natural 1• that caused the rlM? O.J. ......, ... c-.. ...................... ... Ilk_.._ f'lflelt • ~-.... ... • • • ...... -. ........... ~ ..... ""l t • , ' t • Orange Co•t DAILY PILOTIThureday, Maron 11, 1812 N Dow Jories Final UP .67 CLOSING 805.11 LOS ANGELES (AP) -Southern Califorma Edison Co. and the Los Angeles Department of Watel" and Power have settled a 4-year-old lawsuit over pollution control equipment that relieves the utilities from installing expensive catalyUc converters to reduce nitrogen oxide emissions. But the state Air Resources Board and the South Coast Air Quality Management Dis&ict -which the· companies s ued over a 1978 rule mandating the converters -said Wednesday other provisions in lbe Los Angeles Superior Court agreement will help reduce nitrogen oxide pollution in the South Coast Air Basin by 60 gercent through 1990. The companies said they would meet that goal by reducing the a mount of electricity produced in the region. GM-Toyo ta p act claimed DETROIT (AP> -General Motors Corp. and Toyota Motor Co. have agreed to make a Toyota Corolla-type car with a l ,600cc engine under their proposed joint production plan, a Japanese economic. newspaper reported. GM declined comment Wednesday on the re· port, and a Toyota spokesman said the report was "only speculation " Hershey bars costlier HERSHEY. Pa. CAP) -Hershey Chocolate Co. has announced a 20 percent increase in the price of its candy bars, but said 1t also will make the bars bigger. The change will add a nickel to the price of its standard-sized bars now retailing for 25 cents. The ·~ size of the bars will increase by 33 or 38 percent Hershey said. ' PSE to list stock options SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -The Pacific Stock Exchange, following the lead of the two major options excha n ges, has filed with the fede ral government to trade options contracts on groups of stocks. The PSE said Wednesday it proposed ·to list options on 12 groups of five stocks, with each group composed of companies in the same industry. The exchange filed the plan with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Gulf to ta k e A rco cards? LOS ANGELES CAP > -Atlantic Richfield Co. gas stations won't accept Arco credit cards after April 15, but Gulf Oil stations may. the Los Angeles 'Times reports. The newspaper quoted industry sources as saying thal in an effort lo win over Arco customers, Gull stations will sOQn begin accepting Arco credjt cards provided that the. cardholder applies for a Gulf card. The Arco card would be accepted until the customer received his Gulf card. GM recalls so me 1982 cars DETROIT CAP> -General Motors Corp. has announced it is re~alling about 519,000 1982 X-. J. and A-rnodel cars for replacement of <?lamps on the fuel filler and vent pipe hoses and a check on clutch cables The clamps are used to hold rubber tubes lo the cars' filler pipes or a nearby vent pipe. They have been toun<1 to break, allowing fuel to drip or splash out, GM spokesman Harold Jackson said. The unrelated clutch problem could result if the clutch cable is too close to the left front bra)te nuid line. . ~TOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT 1.127,000 17S,700 670,JOO Sl0, 100 511.200 501,«IO "2,900 47S,2GO 44t,l00 414,SOO a .JOO "'·-,.,,. 31.2,000 M .SOO UPS AND DOWNS COLD COINS Pct. Up tU Vp 12.7 Up ... VP t .l Vo I.I Up ... Up l.l Vp 7.1 uo 7.t Vp 7.1 Vo 7.0 UP 6.7 Up 6.7 VI" 6.7 Vo .. , VII •·t Vp 6. VO .. , Uo &.I NIW YOllC '""I -"•lu1 lete ................. °""'· ~ .. . , ....... ..,_.. •••na4 t trw-. ,_.'ti. ...... ......... '"'"""·-·"·•"• ......................... ,.."' .. AMERICAN LEADERS METALS HEW YORK IAPI el•I prl<H IO<Uly . '~ • •t. • \lo t v. SPot nonterrou• c.,,., H'lt.·77 unh • pound, U '· llln•ll~ ....... ~J2 ,_.pound llllC ., (-.pound, Oelltte'ecl Tlll'$6 ... ~ll WMk c-ll• lb iu.tMi-,._n cent~ a POunO, H v MeKWY U.0,00 !Mr llHk. l"i.t._ '120.00 troy Ol • H V SILVER GOLD QUOTATIONS iay , ... _ ..... "'"'" Sele<l!M-ld.,.. P"kel ,_y; ~: ............ ll•lflt UM.•. Ill> ..... ~ • .._,, ..... .,,1.7),elttl u. ,..,.., u..n . ...,11.e.i. l'r....-..: PM 01, Ull l UM. hncltl ~ flolno SPI •• oft SI .• -..; ua.......... . M•H• & MarlftHI Ofll., d•llY ~-· tnt,7S,.ttS1.U. ......... elllY .. ,, ..-• ..,..,,, ""' tl'U . ........ ! OfltJ C19llY """" fa~ ... IM.M,"" tt~I. SYMBOLS an . ....... •<-. .... ""' .... -..." ............. 4111 ... ,a.e #PU,