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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-03-25 - Orange Coast Pilot- -11111111 llllY Ml 1 HUHS DAY MARCH :''>, l'iH:1 <H~A N CaL COUNTY C ALIFORNIA 25 CENl ~. 500 THOUSAND Estimated ,..._.. of ftuorocart>Qnf Into envttonment det..-mlned by atmoepheric data. Robot ar01 passes first test • ID space 400 THOUSAND 1170 1975 1980 ' Ozone shield periled? UC/ scientist says danger of fluorocarbons continues By JOEL C. DON MIMDe1J"°'8Uft Despite earlier·warrungs that fluorocarbons in the atmosphere could increase rates of skin can- cer or produce genetic mutations and even alter the F.arth's climate, emissions of the man-made chemicals conti.ilue to rise, according to a UC Ir- vine scientist. UCI Irvine atmospheric chemist F. Sherwood Rowland, who first warned of the dangers of fluorocarbons to the Earth's protective ozone layer, reports that the total amount of these chemicals in the atmosphere has tripled in the last 10 years. And because fluorocarbons remain in the atmosphere for as long as 90 years they might pose a hazard to the environment well lhrough the next century, he said. Dr. Rowland's findings will be published in the April issue of the Geophysical Research Letters. His research team included UCI chemist S .C. Taylor, Derek Montague of UCLA and Yoahihiro Ma.ldde of the University of Tokyo. 1 ..!fheir results differ sharply from data on iyearly fluorocarbon emissions compiled by the .Chemical Manufacturers Association (CMA), an industry trade group. Rowland said yearly emissions of F1uorocar- bon 12, the moat common of chemicals known generically u chlorofluorocarbons. increaaed by 20 percent from 1974 to 1979. CMA reported the release of F1uorocarbon 12 into the atmosphere has been reduced by 19.6 percent during the same period. . In an interview, Rowland attributed the dis- crepancy between his findings and CMA data to the different sources of information. CMA esti-· mates come from chemical production reports from 19 manufacturers, repre.entin.g 95 percent of the total world production. · Rowland'• investigators used atmospheric data collected from the South Pole to the island of St. Lucia in the West Indies for their calculations. ''The chemical industry has reported reduction in the overall .production and release of fluoro- carbons; however, the atmosphere telJs a diffe- rent story," he said. · Dr. Joseph M. Steed, a chemist with DuPont and chainnan of CMA's F1uorocarbon Program Panel, disputed Rowland's findings. However, in TONI OI' P\.UOft<>CAMOM-12 ACCUflMJUnD IN ATMOPHIM WOM.DWIOI (MeMured _,. .lenuety) I I I ~fully Mfecllw / 6 Announcemtnt 01 ptena 10< bell / MILLION Oii UM .. -oeol pc~ I In the United •• ..... 5 7 MILLION ~ / 4 v MILLION v 3 Ml~ v 2 MILLION 1 MILLION - 1170 1975 1110 a telephone interview Wectne.day, Steed would not cite specific objections. He pid he wouldn't until he had aeen a full copy of Rowland's new re.earch paper. nuorocarbona are ever-j;reeent gaaes uaed in Industry and by private consumen. Aeroaol sprays using fluorocarbona as propellants account for about 50 pen.-ent of their use. F1uorocarbons also are found in auto air conditioning systems, refrigeration units, foaming agenll and induatrlal aolvents. Rowland said more than 95 percent of all flu- orocarbons produced eventually find their way into the atmosphere. F1uorocarbons have been used since the early 1930s, but Rowland noted half of all chemicals produced w~re manufactured within the last decade. Like nuclear waste that remains radioactive for thousands of years, fluorocarbons are stable molecules that persist in the environment. The life expectancy of Fluorocarbon 12 is 90 years. Fluorocarbon 11, the second most com- monly used chemical. will last as long as 50 years. (See OZONE, Page A2) Saddlehack endorses hospital Trustees back efforts of Irvine Medical Center By JORN NEEDHAM Mhl>elJ,...IWt Saddleback College officials will be negotiating with a group of community leaders regarding plans for an Irvine hospital being built on the college's North . Campus at Irvine Center Drive and Jeffrey Road. Saddleback trustees adopted a reaolutlon Tuesday designating the Hoa~ Memorial Hospital· supported Irvine Medical Center f?"OUP as the _agency best able to WORLD win approval for construction of a hospital. Irvine Medical Center is pu- shing ahead with its community- based drive to establish a hospi- tal in Irvine, despite warnings that Orange County could have· too many hospital beds by 1990. A recent report issued by the County Health Planning Council said that by that year the county could have 170 unneeded hospi- tal beds and up to 1,473 excess physiciana. Ahother proposed site for hos- pital construction is on the UC Irvine Campus. However, there is an extensive approval process before hospital construction Is able to proceed, which is prima- rily bued on the need for addi- tional hospital beds in an area. Leaders of the drive to build a hospital in Irvine concede their planl could be held up because of the exceaa bedding issue. But Ir- vine Medical Center has a Los Angeles architect drawing plans for a 200-bed boepital. (See HOSPITAL, Page A%) STATE CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) .:... A1tronaut C. Gordon Fullerton succeafully exerciled the grip of Columbia's 150-foot robot arm today, lifting a pac- kllge of acientific instruments from the ahip'a cargo bay u the shuttle hummed along on the fourth day of its week-Jong mis- sion. The grab-and-lift was the first test of the robot's capacity to do the job It waa built for: depositing and retrieving satellites in space. The ship was in the midst of a prolonged thermal test when Fullerton donned binoculars to maneuver the arm into position to grab a 353-pound payload with <Anadaml'a wire-snare fingers. The procedure was anything but routine. Sharp eyes and a firm grip on the controJs had to substitute for guidance from a failed video monitor. After capturing his target, the pilot, working by remote control from a post at the rear of Col- umbia's cockpit, flexed the spindly ar1o's metallic muscles and ginaerly lifted the 353-pound payload from its berth, moving it ..-ound the ca- vernous bay, careful not to hit other experimenta 1tottd there. "The PDP·haa been unber- thed. It has been taken up, it's been lowered down and we're ready to reberth lt agalr," said Fullerton. This initial test with the arm took only 1lx minutes and it wu executed perf~y. The captured lnstrwnenll -a Free airline ticke-t victors flying high BJ JERRY HERTENSTEIN <M'"hlallr"9C.._.. Their feet 'are on the ground but tome 176 people, many from the Orange Coast, were flying high today. They were winners in a free Republic Airlines ticket drawing Wednesday. The drawing took place at the Westminster ti.all. An estimated 5,000 people crowded the first floor site and lined the second deck and stairways. Karl Kirk, of Costa Mesa, ap- peared momentarily stunned when he heard hil name called an hour into the drawing. "I feel wonderful," said Kirk, 25, an unemployed heavy equip- men t operator. "l'm going to Washington D.C. because I ha- ven't been there." He said the experience made his recently being laid off from work "a little easier." He said he would take his fiancee on the trip. Mary Halstead, 65, a 20-year resident of Costa Mesa, appeared (See TICKET, Page At) Landlord sentenced LOS ANGELES (AP) -A landlord twice convicted for maintaining unsafe buildings was sentenced to 90 days in jail and fined $13,000 for criminal viola- tions of health, safety and buil- ding codes. Muf\lcipal Judge Mary Waters sentenced James Dimov Wednesday for his Feb. 23 Jw1 con~ctlon. -· 17 kidnappers convicted VERONA. Italy (AP) -A Verona court today. convicted 17 members of the Red BJ1gades of kid- napplna U.S. Army Brig. Gen. James L. Dader and sentenced them to prison term1 ran1ing from 26 months to 27 years. Below-co~t sas studied NATION Nancy Sinatra i• baclc After taktna teVen yean off, Nancy Sinatra ii beck in show bull.I-. Md plam a natiOnwide tour openina for her father. Pap A.5 • . ' C:OOper loot WJluelcy Short-lived fame ~ the cl1ecovery of ..,.._., hljlcbr D.B. Cooper'1 loot bM led to DOtbiDC but mllery for one family. P-c9 Al. MODESTO (AP) -A temporary ban on eelling . guollne below cost in Stanialaus County has been kept in effect until a Judge decide• w~ethei: to make it pennanent. Pricel for reculu' fell• low as $1.039. COUNT Y Referendum controversial Ju.t over a week after lta sian. there are reports the Banninl Ranch referendum drive in Newport Seidl la nmnina out of pa. Pale Bl. -.... 'Caaada' 10 tlJe n¥eue Canada appean ready to ball out flnandally· troubled. Newport a.ch~ Goldln W.a AlrUn-. ,.a. . Shuttle Problems ------- ?' Rear Window ~ Fogging Tiles Missing from Nose Cone anctlon in Waste Collection System AP AP WhpMto SHUTTLE BUGS -The space shuttle Columbia has traveled more than 3.5 million miles on three test missions and has encountered the problems indicated in diagram on the current test flight. None of the problems is serious enough to prompt an early end to the mission. Plasma Diagnostic Package - measure the shuttle's electro- magnetic field. A television ca- mera captured the maneuver and pictures of the test were received with satisfaction in Mission Con- trol. Fullerton and commander Jack R. Lousma. "feeling a little bet- ter" almost half-way through their mission, had to delay the exercise -first scheduled Tues- day, because of the failure of the camera on the wrist of the Canadian-built mechanical arm. (See SHUTTLE, Page AZ) Panel OKs HB Inan for CY~ chief post SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Senate committee has approved Antonio "Tony" Am)..dor of Huntinaton Beach as hea~f the California Youth Authority, saying opponenta didn't provide any evidence that he mistreated blacks when a police officer. Opponents had sent the com- mittee letters which "called into question his fairness in dealing with blacks in particular," an aide to S en. David Roberti. D- Los Angeles, said. But tile Senate Rules Commit- tee voted 5-0 Wednesday to rec- onunend to the full Senate that the appo intment, by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., be confir- med. Said Senate President Pro Tem Roberti, who presided, "The committee asked for specifics on these charges and specifics were not forthcoming. The committee . . . has no fair course but to vote for confirmation." (Amador has served on the Huntington Beach transportation commission as well as on a com- mittee that fielded q uestions from citizens a bout city problems.) Amador, 38, who spent 13 years with the Los Angeles Po- lice Department, said he had "never brutalired anybody." "I don't know what they are talking about," he told reporters after the hearing. The CY A is the state's prison system for young criminals. Brown appointed Amador in 1979 to the Youthful Offender Parole Board, and named him INDEX At Your Service A4 Erma Bombeck B2 Business C6 . 7 California A5 Cavalcade B2 Cluaified D4-7 Comics C5 Croaword C5 Death Notices D2 F.ditorlal A6 Entertainment B7-8 Goren B2 SPORTS APPROVED -Antonio Amador of Huntington Beach has been approved as head of the California Youth Autho- rity. c hairman the next year. The governor appointed him last De- cember to succeed Pearl West as director of the CY A. The only specific allegations came from Mary Henry, execu- tive director of the Avalon Car- ver Community Center in Los Angeles. She said two assault suits were filed against Amador when he was an officer, but nei- ther one was pursued. Horoacope B2 Movies 87-8 Mutual Funds C6 National News A3 Public Notices D2-3 Sports C l-4 Stock Markets c:T Televllion B6 Thee ten B7-8 Weather A2 World News A3 Red Cliina poup In area Sportswriter John Sevano lntervieWll a Red Chlne1e 1ymna1t (with a little help from an lnterpreW). Pate Cl. I \ ~ HOSPITAL PLANS • • • -100. Alto at inue In the drive to on• eatabllah a h<>1pltal ln Irvine la ,,.,8, whether h will be a teaching .1,..11 facility affiliated w'ith UC Irvine a.)'" or a oOmmUnity holpltal. ·1110 Srddlebeck offidala say lf the . "4hl' propoaed hospital were to be '(dn. bulh on the dlstrlct'a North ot ij• Campua, lt would be the only ~II• such arrangement between a . major health care f~ty and a ~ti community college \n the coWl- 11 w1.1 try. 1 • The land proposed for the • an . construction site ls currently ow- .Ua •. ned by the Irvine Company, but to n is available to the district under a -~ phased purchase agreement for cs •J expansion of the North Campus. -tt1i1 .,(J~ The North Campus currently · consists of 60 acres. The district rt 1 1 ·, has until Aug\ifBt of this year to 1>lll1. purchue 40 more acres from the >f<-1) .. Irvine Company at $45,000 an .,p acre, a figure far below market ' ovli value. "Jril Leaders of the Irvine Medical bttt Center IJ'OUP include Dr. Arnold 11 0 . Beckman, chairman of Beck-·tl!Jf~. man Instruments of FullPrton; mm Daniel Aldrich, ch4ncellor of UC iu> ~, Irvine; George Hoag ID of New- . •010 port's Hoag Memorial Hospital; ub1~~,. Irvine Mayor David Sllla·and t•Jrl Robert Lombardi, chancellor of '.' l• 1 Saddleback College. Suggested in the group's pro- posal to Saddlebaek ts immediate construction of a joint-use buil- ding of up to 15,000 square feet to house ~rooms and an audi- torium on a 10-acre campus si~. Later, a 200·bed ho1pita1. community health center, medi- cal and ldentiflc Neearch insti- tute and a he91th mUleUm would be built on the lite. Speclfica on the flnanclal ar- rangements proposed between the college and lrvine Medical Center have not been released. College official• say arran1e· menu under which uae of the land-Would be transferred to the group. -sale or leeae -wW be hammered out ln the negotla- tiona. According to Saddleback'a di- rector of public information, Bill Schreiber, of greateet interest to Saddleback official• is the pro-s~t for new buildings ln which to houae health education and nursing -~~· He said at would be poeaible to open the health education buil- ding within a year since approval of construction wouldn't require the extensive review demanded of hospital construction. Four other hospital groups are competing with the Irvine Medi- cal Center group to build the h<>1pital. The competing groups must file a certificate of need application with the county's Health Planning Council for re- view. The other gr9ups are Santa Ana's Western Medical Center. Tustin Community Hospital, the Nashville, Tenn.-based Hospital Corp. of America, and the Health West Foundation o! Chatsworth. i. 1· I SHUTTLE TESTS . . . .1 "Fullerton reports that for the first time we have executed a grapple and capture with the arm," Mission Control reported shortly before the lifting exercise took place. . "The spacecraft is demonstra-I ting to us that it's a pretty soun~ piece of machinery," flight di- rector Neil Hutchinson reported. . I I I • I The shif:'s third flight was to I , end after 16 orbits next Monday I· in New Mexico. I · Columbia's second flight was I cut short In November by fuel- 1 . cell trouble. Flight 3 has en- 1 1 countered only minor trouble, '":• and every orbit today added to : the shuttle endurance record set I ·· Wednesday when it passed the ; : · 54-hour, 21-minute mark on its •-· 37th orbit. tr.. "We'd like to more than double ~'\·. ~ • ..:. that." Lowana said. ~ .. Today, Columbia wu flying with i ta noee to the sun, ita tail ln the cold shadow.. On Saturday, after 80 hours in that position, the astronauts are to fire three sets of engines ln the tail to de- termine if they have been af- fected by long exposure to tem- peratures down to 215 degrees below i.ero. "It's going to be a busy d.ley," Mission Control told Louama and Fullerton this morning. • Fullerton said tney were "definitely feeling ready to go to it." On Wednesday, NASA pared the crew's workload 10 they could recover from motion aick- neas and fatigue that had bothe- red them slnCe they began their seven-day trip Monday. First thing today, Lousma said be and F\illerton were "up and at 'em," and "feeling a little better." ~~=t:=:;::;~m~~~·Shuttle commode working CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -No need for a backup mode for the commode -at JeMt for now. Shuttle flight di.rector Nell Hutchin80n aays Columbia'• potty i• working, "slow, but working." The balky toilet took ~p a lot of communications time Wednel- day between Mission Control and those moat directly concerned, aatronauta Jack R. Louama and C. Gordon Fullerton. But Hut- chiNOn appeared to have ~d the matter to rest before the crew retired for the night -aort of. MINDS JN THE AIR -Huge c~owd packs atrium, balcony and stairway hopeful names will be called in free airlines ticket giveaway at Diii ............. .., "*' .. .,... Westminster Mall. An estimated/'5,000 atten- ded with l 76 names drawn. "We'll now get an education on the commode," he aaid in responte to a reporter'• query at an end-of-shift brtetlng. It seems, he said, that a bag of " aorne sort -poeaibly a uaed air- sickness bag -got tangled up in the Waste Collection Syatem, \;Vhich is NASA'• term for the apace toilet. The bag "didn't get shredded" and jammed up a fan-like device called a •linger, which is suppaled to help dlapoee of wute material by whirling it around and throwing it against the inner wall of the commode. TICKET DRAWING. • • nervous aa she accepted her ticket. "rm thrilled to death. rve ne- ver won anYthing." She said she-would fly to Green Bay, Wis., to visit her aona and daughter, a trip she had planned to take ln May. It will be the first time she has aeen them in three years. Miriam Craig of Huntington Beach was ao excited about win- ning that she seemingly could barely contain herself. ''Thls la fantastic. I can't belie- ve it,'' she said. "We (fiance Mike Juchnewtcz of Long Beach) came here to have lunch, saw the mall was packed, learned of the drawing and re~tered ~5 minutea before Press meet postponed? WASffiNGTON (AP) -Pre- sident Reagan probably will not hold a news conference Monday, as he had announced, because it would compete for attention on television with the Academy awards, the apace shuttle landing and the NCAA basketball cham- pionshi ps, his spokesman said today. . Deputy presidential press se- cretary Larry Speakes said the session probably would be sche- duled later in the week. Reagan bad announced the news conferen ce Wednesday, deflecting a question by saying that a news conference was upcoming Monday. fluke." it started," Miriam said. She ad- ded ahe had no idea where she would fly. Don Wilcox of Huntington Beach aaid thb I.a "lncreduloua. rve never won anything in my life. I came down here on a He said he was doing yard work at 11:45 a.m: when a friend called. The final two drawingl were acheduled today ln Los Angeles and Sherman Oak.I. From Page A 1- OZONE WARNINGS U industry release of fluorocarbons each year has decreaaed, as CMA contends, then the total amount of those chemicals ln the atmosphere should be Lncreuing at a rate much slower than it has been, Row~ said. But his atmospheric studies show the amount of fluorocarbons continues to rise more rapidly than CMA estimates. From 1970 "° 1980, the total amount of fluorocarbons in the atmosphere jumped from 2 to 6 million tons, he said. Fluorocarbons gradually riae into the stratos- phere -7 to 30 miles above the Lrth11 sur- face. When ultraviolet rays strike the moJecule8 in the upper portions o1 the atratoaphere, ozone-destroying chlorine atoms and chlorine mmnou.nda ~ _releued. Oz.one, which contains three atoms of oxy- gen bonded together, shields the planet from the dangerous effect.a of ultravio- let radiation emitted .by the aun. An initial effect of in- creased ultraviolet exposure could be more skin cancer. "There is no way we will be able to attribute the in- crease in ultraviolet rays to skin cancer," Rowland said. "It appears the overwhelming cause of akin cancer is due to a change in lifestyle." "OWLAM> But he predicts a 1 percent lea in the ozone layer may eventually lead to a 3 percent rise in skin cancer rates. However such predictions are dlfficult to prove since cancers often have a la- tency period of 10 to 20 years. • • • The CMA still believes Rowland's ozone· depletion projections need further study. ~~act, the trade group has suggested its own lheorY -that most fluorocarbons are trapped in the troposphere, the atmospheric layer closest to the planet, and are removed before they can diffuae into the stratosphere. Eight years ago, Rowland and UCI colleague Mario Molina proposed their theory about the potential dangers of fluorocarbons to the envi- ronment. After extensive study, the federal government Instituted a ban on fluorocarbon-based aerosol propellants in f9"f9. Canada and three Scandinavian countries also have clamped down on the use of fluorocarbons as ael'0801 propellants. But Rowland emphasized that the threat of Cluorocarbons is a global one. "The general belief is the problem was aolved l>y banning ael'080ls, .. he a said. "But that's not what happened. "All of the other uses of chlorofluorocarbons have not been banned in l'D08t countries and have continued to increase. The net result as far as the environment is co~ la there has been no change in the past six years. "And most U.S . manufacturers," he added, "were free to seek other outlets for their product." Measurements of fluorocarbon concentrations in the atmosphere taken at sites throughout the world show no more than a 10 percent diffe- rence, he said. t1~ . "~~:~· Chance of sholVers In 1974, Rowland predicted specific levels of the ozone layer might be depleted by about half a percent a year if fluorocarbons continued to be released into the atmosphere. "It is a regional emission that in a abort time becomes a worldwide problem," Rowland aseer- ted. ''The amount that is in the atmo8phere over North America is the sum total of the amount releaaed everywhere in the world. ·1 ·. ' . 20 to 40 mph In lt'9 afternoon. Coastal Tl!undwahowefa .,. l«-.t -ftr LOI Angelu. COHt•I and "'••rm•dlete vall9)'1, th• Sen F«nendo, Sen Oabflel and San Mo111y cloudy through Friday lemerdlno valleyt, north to tlM · lnOO'nlng with • 20 peroent cMncl ~altal •r•• of Sant• Berber• of ._,, tllle efternoon end • Coumy and eovth u tw .. the 10 ~r~nt chanc• ton'9hl and ar.,. ,.. _ _.. "*'___.."'.,.. Frld1y momlng. P~nly cloudy ..tv ~' vvvnv ......,.. Friday afternoon w4ltl d9crMllnQ -~--rtd-"'-m .. ·"°'-'-*-ig.. ___ _ lh-•· High• Frld•y &3 to 8'f. Lo•• 48 to 55. Huntington· Temneratures Newport ., .. tecni>«alur .. fall· r ~ lrllll' e low of 50 lo 1 high OI NATlOM EIHwhere, from Point Con C9J)tlon to th• M••lc•n border ltld OUI 60 mllel: Night end mor-ning vaneble wind•. -t«ly 10 10 18 knota. Wwt«ty .-. of 1 to 2 fMI. MOltly cloudy through Frtdey with a ch.-of ahower1 tonight. Allluque Anchor904t A.lhe'Me At..,,ta Allantc C1y Beltlmor• Blrmtnghm Bltmatck Bolte U.S. summary ::':; Cllerttte NC Cold ~ elf -puehlng Chertstn SC acrou th• nation'• mldHCtlon. Charlatn wv today. i.taYlng b9hlnd anow and wlnda II\ part• of th• cent rel ~ "':; 11nd tnOW tell over ~•n Clnclftnalf ~.and --lallng In = •••tern N•bruka. Sc•tt•r•d D•fl Wth 1ho-• and thund•retOnT11 hit ...__ the eouth Allantlc coutal etatee. ..,.,..... Light .,_ '911 In 1119 1.1111• SUI»-' 0. MlllMI rlor reglOn. Detroit The Natlonal WHth« Service El Pao pr•dlcted 1hower1 and thun-=d derah'-• along the aouth At· lantle coHt, with thow•ra over HonoluluH-·-' tlMI T.n..--end Ohio vallfft """'°" and tlM ml'd;and upper-Atlantic ~ coast• ..... A l•w enow 1howere •er• ~v~ forec81 fof th41 Greet Ubl .,.._ .__ ... CIMr llllM -• npec:ted over UNI Roe* th• Rocky Mountain' tnd Ill• ~ Ptat-.i region. -- Temperstur .. -• expeot.cl Mlenll to rHCh only the 201 and 301 = from th41.norttl«n Pl•ln• to the OtMI LAMa. New Or-.. f91npet91ur" around IM na· ....., YOllt tlon ~ tocNy rtnged from 10 In Dttle rJo.. Sh•rldan, Wyo .. to SO 'tt Key Ofnetlt" w....... Orllnclo =:-= Ptlancl.~ =City · Rlctwnond Sell LIM 8-ttle 'st Louie .. a.. 68 29 34S 27 eo aa 59 52 .. 9 38 eo 29 71 50 34 29 67 30 se 33 63 30 eo 57 69 47 5.e 87 eo 85 88 5t '49 50 n 58 3& 79 73 ., 91 M 72 72 .. 71 7t 51 tl 74 55 10 •5 • to 71 • ... .. 3S eo 81 et '° .. 45 56 30 23 45 38 30 29 57 32 32 30 -43 29 21 • eo 38 M at. 41 ... 40 47 ~· 33 42 &4 3t 40 31 &4 ao ... 2t 2J 48 11 28 34 M 47 48· .. ISi P-Tampa 89<*-T uceon WMhlngtn Wichita CAU'OMIA 81 53 74 82 • .. 72 78 74 74 50 87 ao &4 70 • 72 ee StOCltton ee 38 32 Tehoe V~ 55 2S 39. Thennel 82 ... 38 T Clrr9tlCe 73 4$ • 1 That predJction was proven true last year when National Aeronautics and Space Admlnl- stration satellites d19Covered a 5 percent drop ln the ozone layer from 1970 to 1979 at the 25-mile altitude level. "It is a little ~rting for a scientist, from M envirorunentalist point of view, when you are on the island of St. Lucia ln lhe We.st Indies and they have the same amount of chlorofluorocar· bona as we do in the United States." Oxford Goth Pullover 32 Y~ 85 IO ' Storekeeper Monte Pries is wearing our all cotton oxford cloth shirt in a ticking weave stripe. This shirting was originally created by a Scottish mill in the late 19th century, and still remains a tradition today. Available in blue, burgundy, pink. lav- ender, and yellow stripings. ------...-- Extended forecast .. a.. 71 5t ~ H S7 ... 90 72 s1 ee 79 5t 101 ee 82 52 M 81 Seturde~~rlaDle CIOUdlMM • ,. to ... ·mer 8"'ndly Md . ~ In 00111tA11 -M to 11. ot19 48 to 115. HIOh• et mountain "9CH't 19¥911 4t lo M. LoM 2' to II. A store that of/en/int traditional sportswear for mm, women and boys. I I I I ! . : f i \ . NEW TOOLS -Assembly Speaker Willie Brown tried his hands at the keyboard fo the Capitol at Sacr a me nto where he unveiled a new computer system for state lawmakers. The AP Wl,.,iftolo system is d esigned to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the Le gislature by kee- ping track of bills without lots of paperwork. The project will cost $7 million. Reagan's .popularity slipping President's support 'going lower before it gets higher' WAS HrNGTON (AP) -The immediate news was good -in- fla tion was rising at an annua l rate of jus t 3 percent. But that seemed onJ y to point up the fru- stra tion Presjde nt Reagan is fa- cing. His spokesman , Larry Spea- kes, lightly knocked his fist on a desk for added emphasis and told reporters: "The president has cut inflation, cut the budge t, made good on his promises. and the money market still won 't list.en." Ronald Reagan does have his problems: Interest rates are n 't dropping significantly, Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev isn't falling into place and Congress is balking at offering F: Salvador the support the administration seeks. Private polls taken for White House aides are sh owin g the same slippage in the president's popularity that public polls dis- play. And the president is being told by visito rs t h a t laid -o f( workers are not likely to support Republican congressional candi- dates in November. "Sometimes, you feel like you can't win," Speakes said. But, he said. ''with an upturn in the econ omy, or signs of it, you'll see signs of the president's jo b a p prova l back on th e upswing." But Louis Harris, the pollster. told business leaders last w eek that all the signs he sees indicate "support for President Reagan is going to be lower before it gets higher." "He's got a negative rating at last count that has dropped from 52-47 positive m January to the lat.est one that is 44-56 negative," Harris said. Reagan's recent predecessors also showed drops in popularity at about this time in their presi- dencies, and Speakes. acknow - ledging on T uesday that White House officials are "wary, but not overly concerned ," sounded much like Jody Powell, President Carter's spokesman, four years ago. "It's expected," said S peakes, the de puty White House press secretary . He confirmed that pu- blic opinion surveys completed by pollster Richard Wirthlin for Reagan s howed popularity de - clines and said, "It comes with the job we're trying to do." Still, he said, a drop in the unemployment rate, or in inte- rest rat.es , could mean Reagan's fortunes with the voters will rise again. "IC ... unemployment has a slight bre ak, or inte rest rates have a slight break, everything's coming up roses," he said. Like most presidents who are experiencing declining popula- r ity, Reagan has been on the road in recent weeks to shore up political support. But his appearances have been primarily before elected officials, in state legislatures, and to the Cirmly committed Re publicans who a re w illing to pay up to $1 ,000 t o atte nd GOP fund- raising ev~nts at which the pre- ;1dent is the prime attraction. Reagan changed that last week on a hastily arranged visit to Fort Wayne. Ind .. to inspect flood da- mage, at the end of a three-state speaking trip. "We were wary we were ma- king these trips' out in the coun- try and weren't seeing anybody," Speakes said. So, the visit to Fort Way ne was added to Reaga n's schedule just hours before he got there. Indeed , the planning w as so rushed that the youngsters pla- cing sandbags on a dike of the flooding rivers in Fort Wayne and the elde rly evacuees at a high school may have been among the few people in the past months who have not been screened through metal detectors before meeting the president. For several days. an impromp- tu stop had been under conside- ration . But possible eve nts in Montgome ry, Ala., and Okla- homa City, where White House aides considered visiting a farm, were rejected. The cuts Reagan has proposed in spending tor domestic social welfare programs, and congres- sional resistance to them, h ave put the president on the defen- sive. "I'm Sc rooge to a lo t of people," he said, while protesting that actually "I'm the softest touch they've had for a long time." Mandatory gun law delayed until May KENNESAW, Ga. (AP) -The City Council is delaying until May l the effective date of a new law requiring heads of h ous e- ho ld s to own and m a intain fi rearms so that details of the ordinance can be ironed out. "We've been deluged with the news media since we passed the ordinance and frankl y w e ha - ven 't had a n y time to do an y- thing except answer questions," Mayor Darvin Purdy said. "We haven't got our safety program under w ay yet, and we d idn't want to do anything untU we had that in place." Instructors from Dobbins Air Force Base have offered to teach firea rms safe ty classes to t he public, The Atlanta Constitution r e porte d and a private firing range has been offered its facility at a reduced rate for the sessions. The City Council, which drew national attention when it adop- ted the mandatory firearms or- dinance last week, voted Monday night to delay the. effective date, which or igina lly w as set for Thursday. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat CIHtlfled edverttslng 7141142·5171 All other ct.pertments 642-4321 Purdy said the delay also will give the city time to build a trust fund to be used, in pa.rt, to buy gu~ for its indigent residents. The mayor said the council also plans to decide before May l whether -and how -to en- force the ordinance. Thomas P Haley Pubttl'Wt and Cr\·•' £•Kuti'¥• Olhf•' Robert N. Weed .._.,, Thomas A. Murphine (di tot L Kay Schultz v~,.,_."4 ..a 0.•llC>IO' ot ()pelatoO"I Michael P Harvey -·"O O..octot Kenneth N. Goddard Jr C•~""'°" O"tct"' Charles H. Loos ............ (.,...,. MAIN OFflCE lJO WHI..., SI,. Cost• llMW, CA. Malt •ddf'tU: Bo• "'°·Cost• Mew, CA.~ C•vr19f14 "'2 Or .. CN st P\11111.iii"I '-"· No n...,. !llWiet, 11tu•rellor1" M"°""'' -°" .0. •ertlw.....,., herel11 may i.. r-oduud wit._ l9K l•I .. """sbl of CoPYr .... t _,_,. VOL. 71, NO. 14 "One of the reasons we anti- cipate difficulty in enforcing the law is that we do not have gun registration, fortunately," Pu(dy said. "Many municipalities do. U they had a Jaw such u ours, all they would have to do would be to pull the records and thoee ci- lbens who did not have suns would be cited." \"'""'-· Purdy aaid Kenoeaaw has no way of determining which of its citizens own firearms, "but we expect voluntary compliance." We're Listening ••• What do you like about the Dally Piiot? What don't you like? Call lhe number below and your messa1e will be recorded,· transcribed and ~livered to°" appropriate editor. The aame 24·hour answe~~ servire may be used,'to record let• lers to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors muat Inch• their name and telephone number I• verification. No circulation calls, pleaae. Tell us what's on your mind. Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, March 25. 1982 Nicaragua 'pc;tlari·z~(I.! ., ... : Revol utionary changes worse f o'r some, better for o~h~~s ·· MANAGUA, Nlcar•1ua (AP) -A red-and-black flaa, symbol of ~ guerrilla uprising, flutter• over Sandino Airport, where ~ban and Soviet airllnen 10me- ttmes park three abreast. Youns men ln military fati- gues acrutinize travel docwnents and question· travelers. They wear pistols on their belts and call each othe r "companero ,'' r o ughly the equival e nt of "comrade." of communl&n -North Koreans and L ibyans are a mong the gueeta. Revo lutionary change has come to Nicaragua -some claim for the wor se. others for the better. chipping away at pe~1 ·u•- tlea, cenaor•ng·the pre11 -nd . equeezing b~ who hew · stayed on. The Reagan admJnl- strallon clainu ttie SansUnitt• also are ex1>9r\lng, Jheir rtwol~­ Uon, funneling Mma; froin Cube · · to the le{llac. guerr.illaa'fp nearby El Salvador who are ·flghtlrtg to . bring down. the t,1.s·:7aup~r~ junta there. . · · . Sandinista le~rs deny the,.e . charges and<contend their own . revolution is home1Jrown. · ·' In Managua and other Nicara- guan cities these days. pictures of Marx and Lenin ador:n adobe walls, along with such slogans as "Death to the bourgeoisie and the CIA." Troops with automatic rifles still surround the "Bunker" that ousted President Anastasio So- moza used as his headquarters, but the gua rds n ow ca rry Soviet-made AK-47 ~ult rifles instead of U.S. M-16s. The Marxist, nine-member Sandinista Directorate has the country firmly in the grasp of its rapidly growing army , no w 14,0QO perBOnnel, and its militia of 40,000 -in contrast to So- m oza's 8 ,000-man Natio nal G uard and 4,000 reservists. But the Sandinistas also claim to have made social gains. As one example of these, they point to a six-month liter acy campaign in 1980 which, with th e help of funds from the United Stat.es and other Western nations, they claim to have ta ug ht 500,000 o f the na tion's 1.2 mill ion Somoza- period illiterates ho w to read . About 2,000 Cuban teachers were brought in for the campaign but were reported to have left when it ended. T hey claim they a.re buUctm, a :· new society wilt\ equality for all.'. They say a rec..'ent. ~pension of civil rights is necessary-as a pre- caution against what·they 1a1.l1 a, . threatened invasion bei_ng J)re·· pared by U.S.-s upported exile " groups. . . 1 Ho w eve·r.. the (eud with Washin·gt.on, which prompted . · Nicaragua's demand· las t w~k · for a U.N. Securi~y. Council de-.. ba\e of the a llege·(! ln.vasloq threat, may be h eade d fot the. bargaining table. · ··. ·. . Me rcedes-Benz automobiles and escort veh icles bristling with guns still shuttle oCCiclals from the same palatial residences to luxurious offices, but now they ferry forme r guerrilla fighters savoring the spoils taken from the previous regime. At the Inter-Continental Hotel -whe re Somoza's friends and business cronies once held forth in the bar· bemoaning the perils T he Sandinistas' politica l opponents and many ordinary Nicaraguans. however, contend the Sandin isws are organizing a Cuban -style dictatorship that is growing increasingly intolerant of dissent. They claim the government is The New York Times reponed. that the United States and Nica-· ragua have accepted a Me>C:ican ini tiative to open direct talks on their differences: Mexican Fore-. ign Ministe r J orge Ca,~taneda · br ought U.~. s uggesho~s for settlement to Mana gua this '· week. · ' HELICOPTER SALVAGED -A Fort Eustis, Va., h e licopte r is pulled from the James River a fter it crashed following en - ,., ...... gine failure. Eleven people were ~td µte whirlybird whe n it fell into the river, bul.no injuries were reported. Annual Inventory Reductiori : · SALE 1/2 OFF This Is ele cted Merchandise From Our Own Stock -Regularl y Sold In Our Own Store · • T Chains • Watches • Rings • Bracelets • Pendants • Necklaces •Pins •Charms • Earrings . •Mountings . Sale Lasts through Saturday · March 27th Uae your VI•• or Meatercerd No Hou1e Cherge1 All 8•'" Fln•I ., I ·• .· .. ... .. , . .. · .. • .l ' Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, Maroh 25, 1982 -' NancY Sinatra's hack Singer teams with famous dad in series of acts LAS VEOAS, Nev. (AP) -It wu openlnc nlaht-plua two and pandemonium prevaUed ln Nan- cy Sinatra'• crowded d reutna room. Two errant eyelashes were st· Vil\I her lita; daugh ten A.J. and Amanda flltted from room to room, dabbing at a room tervice dinner a nd atealina occaalonal glance• at a droning televlalon tel. Ou tside a few scant yards, a long line of Saturday night re- velers snaked through the posh caa1no of Caesars Palace, waiting for the attraction promised on the hURe sign on The Strip: "SINATRA Frank & Nancy" The lady whose boots had im- pacted America in 1966, proving hersell an entertainment talent In her own right, was back again after a seven-year hiatus from this entertainm~nt mecca. Now 41, she has 106t little of the pizzaz:z that kept her atop the charts for years in the 1960s and •705, Bu t there are new priorities -starting with 7-year-old A.J .. 6-year-old Amanda and husband of 12 years, director-producer- choreographer Hugh Lambert. What brought her out of reti- rement and her cozy Beverly Hills famUy environment to re- turn to the rigors of the enter- tainment industry that has been her life? "My father gave me a job," she laughed. Then, 4s she searched for the elusive eyelash glue, she turned a serious side. "I thoug ht it was a good op- portunity for him to have more time with us and the family," s he said of her famous 66-year-old father. "We don't see him very much." For the next nine months, she'll be the opening act for her dad in a rash of engagements in Las Vegas, Allan.tic City, Los Angeles a nd, likely, poin ts in between. The public exposure is sure to HITACHI HITACHI 2S" Console, Random "cceu Tuning wit+. re- mote control. 10/2/I Worronty. Come in & Check our pr~e on this model. ZENITH ZENITH 23" Tobie Model Remote Control. Time & Channel Oi1play. Coble Reody wolh 112 Chonneh. $599.00 , .. W'll# ,.,....,..... TUNEF UL TWOSOME -Nancy Sinatr a, n ow mothe r of two, croons with dad Frank during an engagement at Las Vegas. She recently emerged from a seven-year retirement. help h er new album, "Mel & Nancy," which she cut recently with country star Mel Tillis. She says the unlikely combo develo- ped a year ago when she met Tillis while in Nashville for some television tapings for friend Bob Banner. She and Tillis cut her first single in years, "T exas Cowboy Night," and its success prompted the album. She says he r return to the stage is on a trial basis because "my priorities have changed." "I look over and see my kids sitting in the wings and they bring you right back to reality. Life is different now . But I do love it, I must say." . The last time she appeared on stage was in Las Vegas with her dad and brother Frank Jr., just months after A.J . was born and before Amanda. "The other night Amanda sat through the w h ole show, en- grossed . I couldn't get her to leave," she said, her voice cho- king with emotion. "I said to Hl'MCHI HITACHI (Th,. 2~" Tobie Model. Rondom "«ell Infrared Re mole control. Oigitol Chonnel lndicoto•. Sole preced at $629.00 ZENITH ZENITH 19'' Computer SC.4000 Remote Control with "dvonce Spao Phone. Time Control Proo· rammer. Coble Ready. Prked too low lo quote. Daddy, 'That's what happened to me, isn't it?' And he said 'Yeah, just exactly.· " She says the girls are musically lnclined -thankfully. "Can you imagin e if t h ey cou ldn't sing a tune? Can you imagine what Daddy w ould think!" She opens the show with "These Boots Are Made for Walking," the upbeat hit with which she whittled her own ni- che in show b u siness in 1966. Late r in the show there's a n emotional duet with her dad, their hit song from the '60s, "Something Stupid." A voice on a backstage speaker drones "15 minutes" and Nancy Sinatra excuses herself. "When you're opening a show for the world's greatest entertai- ner, you have to be on time - with or without eyelashes. Ope- ning a show 1ate is the only sin in the world to him. He can't stand iL" SO" Projecloon Telnhion. Htgh tlrightneu. wide angle Ylewing. Hl·FI Sound from ,,,_a. ke". Rondom Ac- cess Remote Con· lrol. 10/2/1 War· ronty. $1995,00 ZENITH ZENITH New 1982 19" Portable with Auto tvne, auto color. '319.00 RCA CLOSE-OUT. ALL CONSOLES AT ~oBs' ---.._.;; 26 Cu. ft. Side by Side. Water & ke on Door. GloH lhelwi. "'" -" only t 1199.00 1.$ QI, ft. ltefrlgeratot/frH&tf, Rewrilble Ooort, fro1t·proof. $469.00 FULL SERVICF DEPT. for Video Re-corder<,, Mic rowOYf.'' onci rv· .. OF' Prt•rf't,1·~ ' .. starts Friday, 9:30 a.m. • many limited quantities • not all sizes may be available in each grouping • colors and styles limited to stock on hand so shop early for best selection! • 1n our Huntington Beach store women's sportswear Now 25 JUNIORS. SLV. TEE 8"1RTS . .. .. .. .. . .. 98c 73JUHIOATURT\.ENECKTOPS ....... .' ..... 1.98 llJUNK>A PUU.OVER SWEATERS .......... 1.98 1111.SSES' TURTl.ENECKTOPS . . . . . . . . 1.98 17JUNIOAPANTTOPS ..................... 3.98 142JUNIOAJEAHS ....................... 3.98 57 JUNIORS. SLV. TEE SHIRTS ............. 3.98 12LAAOESIZEPANTTOPS ................. 3.98 127Ml88ES'COWLNECKSWEATER8 ...... 3.98 53111SSES'PAHTTOPS ................... 3.98 106JUNIORLSLV. TEESNATS ............ 3.98 108 •SES' COORDINATES ................ 4.98 54 BENDOVER MATae BLOUSES .......... 4.98 33JUNIOA C~DINATES ................. 4.98 158 MISSES' BLOUSES .................... 1.98 ltJUNIOA SWEATSHIRTS .................. 6.98 44 LAAOE SIZE SWEATERS ................. 6.98 23 LAAOE SIZE PANTS ..................... 8.98 53JUNIOA co.oROINATES ................. 1 .98 ee JUNIOR POL VESTER PANTS .........•.. 9.98 • llllES' PANTS ......................... 9.91 311 JUNIOR PANTS ........................ 9.91 71JUNIORPANTS ........................ 15.98 dresses and pantsuits NOW 31 JUNIOR DRESSES .. .. . . . . . .. .. .. .. .. .. 9.98 21 lllSSES' DRESSES ...................... 9.98 1tHALFSIZEPANTSUO'S ........•........ 9.98 23JUNIOA DRESSES .............. : ...... 14.98 21 •SES' DR£SSES . . . .. .. .. . . ......... 14.98 lingerie, loungewear Now 118A8YOOU.S .......................... 2.98 21WARMPAJAMAS .... -.................. 3.98 27 UNDERW1AE BRAS . . . .. .. . .. . . . . .. 3.98 32FASHK>NCOLOREDBRAS .............. 4.98 11 FLORAL PRINT DUSTERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.98 15 LONG QUILTED ROBES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.98 11LONGHOSTES$LOUNGEWEAA .......... 5.98 27 LONG GOWNS ........................... 5.98 women's accessories Now 17CHAt8TMAS ORNAMENTS ................ 18c 21 FASHtON PENS ........................... 48c 108 PENCIL SHARPENERS .................. 48c 31 SHOES .. . .. .. .. .. .. . .. . .. .. .. . . .. . . .. 48c 37 DtCKIES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68c II FLOWER COMBS ANO BARRETT'S ......... 68c 74 SANDALS (HOSIERY DEPT.). . . . . . . ....... 98c 57 BEL TS .. .. . . .. .. . .. .. .. . .. ............. 98c 211 TUBE TOPS ............................ 98c 33 SHAWLS . .. .. .. .. . .. .. . .. .. . . • . . . .. 98c 74CANVASHANOBAGS ................... 1.98 12BELTS ................................. 1.98 24SUPPERS(HOSIERYD£PT.) ............ 2.98 5t0UILTEDJACKETSANOVESTS .......... 2.98 12BELTS ................................. 2.98 34 CANVAS HANDBAGS . .. ................ 3 .98 14 VINYL HANDBAGS ...................... 3.98 198ELTS . .. .. .. . . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. 3.98 A LUREX TEE SHIRTS .. .. ................. 3 .98 53NYLONWALLETS ........................ 3.98 infants and toddlers NOW 36 INFANTS' TEES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98c 1 17TOOOLERS'SHIRTS ..................... 98c ta Dl8POSA8LE BOTTLES .................. 98c 31TOOOLERS'L8LV.TEES ................ 1.98 21 IHFANTS'LSLV.PUU.OVEAS ............ 1.98 n•ANtS'JEANS ........................ 1.98 49 IWANTS' PANTS ........................ 2.91 31 TOOOLEM' IWEATERS ............ -. . . 2.98 1 11 TOOOLERS' SWEATSHIRTS .............. 2.98 17NEW80ANl'~RAWLERS .•.............. 2.98 I 21 TOOOCER OIM.S' GOWNS ............... 2.98 21 TODDLIRS' OVERALLS .....•..•........• 4.98 11~'QUILTS ....................... 9.98 a DelltOIMLI IOTTLE8 .............•.... lie buys for girls Now • IOCICS ..............................•... llo S71eGGeALS' TU8 . . ..................... 1.• 11 llG QR.I' OOWH8 ...................... a.• 11um.a.....-OOWN1 ................. 2.• • L,fTTLaGlflLl'OVIAALLI , .............. 2.98 ••OILl'WOVINT~ ................ 2 .• 1••--.a'PANTI ..................... 2.M 119LITTLEOIRLS'PLUSHTOPS ............. 4.98 51 LITTLE GIRLS' PAJAMAS . . . • . . . . . 4.98 17 BIG GIRLS' ROBES . .. .. . .. .. .. .. . . .. 4.98 29 BIG GIRLS' POLYESTER PANTS . . . . . . " .. 4.98 41 BtO GIRLS' FAMOUS MAKER SLACKS . 4.98 31 BIG GIRLS' OVERALLS . . . . . . 8.98 17BIGGIRLS'RAINCOATS ............. 8.98 39 BIG GIRLS' JEANS . . 9.98 29UTT\.EGIRLS'PANTS ................. 9.98 12.ePRE-TEENPANTS . . . . . . . . ...... 8.98 73UTTLEGIRLS'RAINCOATS ...... 3.98 37 SCREEN FRONT SWEATSHIRTS . . . . . . 6.98 18 LITTLE GIRLS' JOG SETS . . . 11.98 buys for boys ~w 19COWBOYHATS ...... . 98c 44BIGBOYSLSLV.SHIRTS . . 1.98 114WESTEANSHIRTS ................... 1.98 50 LITTLE BOYS' SLEEPERS _ . . . . . 3.98 10 BIG BOYS' PANTS . . . . . • . . . 3.98 34 BIG BOYS' SHIRTS ....................... 3.98 41 BIG BOYS' SHIRTS . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.98 buys for men Now 21 HANDKERCHIEFS . . .. . .. .. . . . .. . . . . . .. . 48c 17 JEANS (XL SIZES ONLY) . . . . . . . . . . . 98c 99 BASEBALL CAPS . . . . . . . . . 98c 47WESTERNHATS . . . . 98c 15 T-SHIRTS .. . .. . .. . . .. . . .. . 98c 13S.SLV.SHIRTS ....... . . . . . . . 1.98 33 FAMOUS MAKER L.SLV. SHlRTS 1.98 59L SLV.COTTONSHIRTS ... .. .. . . .. .. 2.98 15THERMALJERSEYS... .. .. . 2.98 27 COTTON GAUZE SHIRTS. . 3.98 67 FAMOUS MAKER JERSEYS . . . . . . . . . . . 3.98 19Z1PPEREDSWEATSHIRTS . . . . . . 3.98 31 S.SLV.COLLAREDSHIRTS . . . . .. 4.98 . 2255.SLV.PLAIDSHIRTS .. .. . .. .. . .. 4.98 33 FOOTBAUJERSEYS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.98 13FAMOUSMAKERSHORTS ............. 5.98 147L SLV.WESTERNSHIRTS ................. 7.98 83LSLV.OtANA•NYLONSPORTSHIRTS ..... 7.98 43 BEL TEO SLACKS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... 9.98 79FASHIONHOODEDSWEATSHtRTS ......... 9.98 25S.SLV.POLY/COTTONSHIRTS ............. 9.98 17GENTLEMEH'SJEANS ................. 13.98 21 UOHTWEIGHT JACKETS . . . . . . .......... 19.98 shoes for the family Now 47WOMEN'SPLASTICSANOALS ... .. . . . 48c 29MEN'SCANVASCASUALS . . . . . . . 4.98 47 CHILDREN'S TENNIS SHOES .. . . . . . . ..... 4.98 31 WOMEN'S CASUAL PUMPS . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.98 52 WOMEN'S CASUAL WEDGES . . . . . . . 5.98 33 WOMEN'S SANDALS .. . . . .. .. .. . .. . . . . 5.98 29 CHILDREN'S NYLON JOGGERS . . . . . 7.98 57 WOMEN'S FAMOUS MAKER CASUALS ..... 10.98 57WOME'N'SFASt:tlONCASUALS .......... 10.98 17 MEN'S CASUAL SLIP OHS. . . . . .......... 11.98 19 WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . 12.98 23 MEN'S SUEDE ANO LEATHER CASUALS . 14.98 91WOMEN'S FAMOUS MAKER CASUALS . . . 14.98 43WOMEN'SANKLETlEWEOGES ........... 19.98 yardage and n6tions NOw 43 CARDS BUTTONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38c 97CRAFTPATTERNS ......................... Uc 43 BUCKLES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.48 59YOS.NYLON/ACETATESATINQUILTS ...... 1.98 31 VOS. COTTON/POLY DENIM .. .. .. . .. .... 1.91 43 CREWEL STITCHERY Krrs ................. 2.98 17 BAMBIE CROSS-STITCH CRIB SHEETS . . . . . 5.91 for your home Now 140 WASHCLOTHS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28c 51 f1NOEAT1PTOW£LS .. . .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Uc 2t8 HANDTOWEL8 .......................... Mc II TOASTER COVERS ........................ elc 140 COFFEE MUGS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . lie •CURTAINTII! BACKS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . lie 17 IAL T ANO PEPPER SHAKERS .. . .. . .. .. . . 2.98 -~······· ·················•·• 37 IEOSPREAOS .. .. .. .. . .. . .. .. .. . .. .. .. . 15 •• jewelry buys ·NOw 71 NECKLACEM"ACELETS ...............••• 48 38 PINOANT ANO EAAAINO SETS ...... : . .. . . lie 17TEXAllNITRUMENTWATCHES ........•. 14 •• 71ANYODIOITALWATCHE8 ............... 24.M .. llG OIRLI' flAMOUI MAKIA PANTS ...... 2.11 • Huntington Beach • 9811 Adams Ave. at Brooktiurst St. • 963-9731 I • , I DEAR READERS: The plne bark beetle ii comlnl out of lt11 winter dormancy ln lnfeated wood and will be eeeklnl new pl.nm to attack, acco~ to Steve Tjoavold, Oranae County farm ad- vller for the Coo~tive Extenlion. All types of pine treea are 1uaceptible to theee beet.lei which bore into the trunk and tarae limbl about halfW~ up~ tree. They feed and reproduce ln the thin layer of plant tlmue Juli • W\demeath the bark. After the beetles are well establlabed, the tree top belins to tum yellow, Ulen brown. Beetle 1nfestatlon can be identified from exit and entry holes in the bark along with boring dust ln the holes and on the bark. Pine trees should be sprayed lmmediately with 11ndane or sevin mixed with a miticlde, Tjoevold suggests. Alto, health of the pine trees should be maintained through prudent watering, fer- tllizinl' and control of other pests. Pines that are more than 50 percent dead have little c~ of surviving a dark beetle attack. These trees should be cut down, and the wood immediately re- moved from the area since it is a source of beetles for infestation of other trees. Energy-use bookle t offer e d DEAR PAT DUNN: A year ago or so yoa pabllslaed tile name of a trade a11ocladoa that pat oat a booklet Ustlng tlae energy use of various aew refrigerators and freei ers. la tlaat information still available? U 10 , wbere cu I get lt? S.W., Fountain Valley The Association of Rome Appliance Manufacturers directory is published twice a year and often is available from local ap- pliance dealers. A copy alao can be purchased for 50 cents by writing AHAM at 20 N. Wacker Drive, Chicago, Ill. 60606. Energy costs are given for 54 brands and more than 1,200 models in the 16-page "1982'Directory of Certified Refrigerators ~d Freezers." The costs are l;>ased on federal test procedures and national average utility rates established by the Department of Energy. Two costs are given -one based on 4.97 cents per KWh and the other on 5.64 per KWh. The costs based on the 4.97 cents rating are the same as those shown on the yellow and black . "EnergyGuide" labels found on each refrigerator and freezer. Incidentally, the energy efficlepcy of refrigerators has improved 58 percent and freezers 52 percent over thOl!le manufactured 20 years ago. 'i • "Got a problem? Then write t.o Pat Dunn. Pat will · cut red tape, getting the answen and action you • 1 need t.o solve inequities in government and business. . Mail your questions to Pat Dwtn, At Your Service, ,... • Orange Coast Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1~60, Costa ! I Mesa, CA 92~6. As many letters as possible will be answered, but phoned inquiries or letters not including the reJ)· der's full name, address and business hours' phone number can- not be consid~red. " 0. Berkeley supports gun !Jan B ERKELEY (AP) -That campaian :e:l!"t hand1una hat come to Ber y, where the City Councll ha1 voted to support a ban on piatola lf aUnllar laws ln other cities survive court chal- lenaee. The council unanimously ap· proved a resolution by Gilda Feller to su pport a pistol ban such as the one propaied by San Francisco Mayor Dianne Feins- tein. "l'm encouraaed that San Francisco is p ursuing the legal luue," aald Councilwoman An- drea Washburn. 1'I hope that Berkeley will follow." Feinstein on Feb. 21 propoeed a ban on handguns which would make it a misdemeanor to sell or own a pistol following a grace period during which the guns could be surrendered or sold. The proposal was inspired by a Morton Grove, Ill., law, which took effect Feb. 1. Although the Morton Grove law has been upheld by the courts, city and state experts have disputed the legality of the San Francisco proposal under stale statutes. Sinai force drug re port confirme d FORT BRAGG, N.C. (AP) - Some members of the U.S . con- tingent of the multination Sinai peacekeeping force have been identified as drug users and will participate in a drug rehabillta~ tion progra m while overseas, Fort Bragg officials said. Capt. William B. Maddox, a Fort Bragg spokesman, said Tuesday that 24 soldiers removed fro,m the peacekeeping force showed signs of drug use follo- wing uring tests conducted in January. However. he said 15 of those "were to be removed for other reasons." REDWOOD , URl.'S '"~----TRE C.11 642-5&71. Put • tew words to work for ou. 2 x 6 -36• 1111. ft. 77 5-1 491 16808 S. HARBOR DEC KING Our U/rra feminine Sling "'--• .. Af----... -. • SI ltC 7tl&\:' ~·••.Ce ,..,,. ~,.,,, a1 VQuf ()of)r • tC ... Stor.-....,HJ YOllf •'••• COSTA ...,.641-1289 • ... ..__ .. .. ._~gS-0401 ' ,_,~~-.c .... oe.ee"""" ., ... .,., .,, • .., f,..... SU RP RISED -Former heav ywe ight champ Muhammad Ali is flabbergasted at the feats•of two ma~cians at the Las Vegas convention of ma gicians at the Frontier .. ~ .. H o tel. Performing for the champ were Sh y war ace saluted IRONTON. Ohio (AP) - World' Wa r I fl yi ng ace Wllllam Lambert shunned fame during his life, but he received a 21-gun salute when h e w as burie d atop a hill ove rloo king this southe rn Ohio town. A formation of jets fl e w overhead and an Air Force color guard ~lso attended this week 's ceremony as a small crowd looked on. Lambert, one of Ame rica 's forgotten h eroes, was cr edited with shooting d own 22 Ge rman aircraft, second only to the more flamboyant Capt. Ed- die Rickenbacker, who died "in 1973 . Lambert, who died Friday after a long illness at age 87. was buried in the lieutenant colonel's uniform h e earned during World War ll. Siegfried, left, and Roy, stars at one of the shows. LOS ANGELES (AP) -A paternity su,it filed against a National Basketball Associa- tion player has been expan- d e d l o include ce le bri t y lawyer Marvin Mitcbelson who branded the action "an o bv ious a tte mpt t o seek publicity at my expense." Robert K. Steinberg, the Beverly Hills attorney who represents Susan L. Riley in her paternity action, concedetl that it was "highly improba- ble" that Mitchelson is the fa ther of her fi ve-month-old child. But he said h e wants Mitche lson to take a blood test to make sure. The origina l defendan t in the suit, Los Angeles Lakers forward Mitch Kupchak, has already taken such a test, and Steinberg said 1t showed a 97.9 percent p robability tha t he 1s the father. NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -C.Ountry music entertainer Tom T. Hall, who wrote the h it song "Harpe r Valley P .T.A.," said he decided not to run for governor of Ten- nessee as urged by some De- mocrats. S tate Democratic Party Chairman Bart Gordon had said that Hall, 45, was con- sidering the race. Hall is host of the syndica- ted country music television show "Pop Goes the Coun- try" N E W Y O RK (AP) - Eubie Blake, the 99-year-old songwriter and piano player, was given the first video disc of th e Broadway musical ''Eubie!" by RCA Chairman Thornton F. Bradshaw, who said it was "the fi rst ste reo produced in the video disc process" "We wa nt your music to reach both ears," Bradshaw told Blak e at a ceremo n y Tuesday at the RCA Building. The musical is made up of songs Blake wrote. tn many cases for Broadway musicals of the 1920s. by/~~ A classic pleaced vamp sling on a new mid-heel. U.S. GOV'T LATEST REPORT: Shoe Size Scale AAA 61h to 9' 1 AA . 6 to 10 A 7 to 811'1 B 4'11 to 10 ~ t"'i~ SHOES 99 Fashion Island ... Newport Beach ... 759-9551 WE'RE A LOT MORE THAii . A •LL • YOUR •LL Behind the bell. Behind the famous Seacoast sticker. Bel)lnd all the atate-of·the art protecilafl devlcea we make and kwtab, II Setlcout c.ntf91 station. When an alarm goes off on your prOC>lf'tY. Wt get the llgnal In. neet· by.· 24-hour·a·<My central station. If the llgnel Indicates fire, burglary or hOldup, we caM the police or fire dt-- pertment. Since our central station la UL lilted. our central station cuttomeB can qualify for a llZable dllcoUnt on their lneurance. . And to lncreaM our reach. make responae time even faater and Im- prove elflolency we're computerlz'lng our 11a11on. But improvements eren't rrlw IO Seeoon1. We"••.J>•11 _. better fof 2 t ~ And todey we're the IMdefa In the '9CUl1ty bullnell In lhe hllbor .,.. wtttl °* t0,000 cuttQm«I lncWlng a wide rtn09 °' big and emal ,...., lnduletWI and oomrnerctll • tablltimel ltt. · To find out ITIOfe aboUt aeaoo.t C*'ltral atadoo write or come by our new faollMy at 2"88 Newpof1 Blvd.. ca.ta Mela. ' King; Menthol or Box 100's: ;;;;;;;..;:;;;;;==;;.....::..~;...=--.. of Carlton has glepaekof ••• ... KINGS ••• 100's TAR NICOTINE WI NICOTINf mu c9 mu o0 mo oo mo 09 Carlton IOO's •I Kent l-2 1 0 Kent 100's 14 Winston L~hts 11 09 Winston L~hts 1oo·s 12 Marlboro 16 1 0 Benson & Hed2es 1 OO's 16 Salem 14 1 l Parliament L~hts 1 oo·s 12 Kool Milds l 1 09 Salem 1oo·s 15 Newpon 16 l 2 Marlboro 1oo·s 16 TAR & NICOTINE NUMBERS AS REPORTED IN LATEST FTC REPORT Carlton Klngt LfflthM 0.5 0.1 Carlton Menthol leuth., 0.5 0.1 Carlton Box 100'1 LHa th., 0.5 1 2 0 9 , 1 0 9 1 1 1 1 0.1 Box-lowest of m! brands-less than 0.01 mg. tar, 0.002 m g. nicotine. C arlton is lowest. U.S. Government laboratory tests confirm no cigarette lower in tar than Carlton. Werning, The Surgeon Genuel Has Determined That Cigerette Smoting Is D1ngerous to Your Health. I ' Box: less thin 0.5 mg. "tar", 0.05 mg. nicotine: Soft Pick. Menthol ind 10011 Bolt less than 0.6 mg. "ter", 0.1 mo. niconn1 av. per cigtrette. FTC Repon Dec. '81. • , •• [ J 8 Permit denial may leave school vacant Prospects of the University oC Southern California ever settlng up a satellite campus at a vacant Corona del Mar grade s chool dimmed with a recent s tate Coastal CommissJon ruling. Co~ioners denied USC a permit needed for converting the elementary campus to a sraduate scboo for business adminlatratioo studeta • It ~as only th~ lat.est in a se- ries oL~tback.s for the TrojanS. · ~he flap started after USC signed a five-year lease fQr the school with the 'Newport-Mesa Unified School !))strict, owners of the campus. Residents in Corona del Mar, who claim they were never noti- f i~ of the USC deal, complained that the satellite campus would cause noise and traffic problems and bring an infusion of students into their neighborhood during evening hours. They filed a lawsuit which is pending in Orange County Supe- rior Court. Finally, USC was inforf!led that it nee ded a coastal permit. The private university applied for one and, late last week, commis- sioners denied tt. It is now unclear whether USC or the local school district intend to appeal the coastal ruling. Officials from USC have made no secret of the fact that they now att acouting Orange County for an al~ernate site 'for th~ 1raduate school. ' Waile thta last fact shoul~ c·omfort some Corona del ~r residents, it is bad news for the school district which would have to waste more time and money seeking another ten"nt for the vacant campus. The financially p~ district doeso't need that. On the other hand, the diStrict possibly could .have avoided this mess had it made a genuine effort to let the Corona del Mar residents know ahead of time about the use lease. The district should have been aware of the potential problem from the experiences Coastline College h~d trying to rent schools for evening classes. Time-share questions Laguna Beach City Council members have given the city some breathing room to consider the impacts of time-share units in town. Last week the council im- posed a four-month moratorium on conversion of existing hotels and motels to time-share use. The move gives Laguna planning officials some time to • gauge the possible effects of time-share units on Laguna's budget, population and r ecreation- al resources. Operators of time-share units, such as Laguna Shores and now, the San Maarten, "sell" time to purchasers who have use of a unit for a week or two weeks per year. Proponents say time-share f units provide an opportunity for people who would otherwise nev- er be able to afford to do so, to "own" property near the beach. Opponents say a proliferation of such conversions would only deplete Laguna's supply of over- night and weekend accommoda- lions for visitors. That, they claim, hurts r es- taurants, boutiques and other shops in the Art Colony, although it can be argued that time-share owners would use the commercial facilities as much as sh ort-time visitors. The council's concern, how- ever, is the impact of time-share projects on the city's budget. What must be studied in the next four months is the legality of charging a bed tax, or transient ta'x to operators of time-share units. Hotels and motels in town currently pay an 8 percent tax, intended to pay for the costs of services for the additional people in town. Another question is, who is to maintain time-share complexes once the uni ts are sold? . A four-month study period seems fair, and since only one po- tential operator currently is going through the city process for such a conversion, the freeze will not adversely impact developers. Dump harmony welco.me / State water quality officials have approved continued dumping of oil drilling muds on a 13-acre site in the Bolsa Chica wetlands near Huntington Beach. The decision to grant Aminoil USA Inc. a five-year permit to continue using the site to dry oil drilling mud isn't that surprising. But that the decision was supported by the Amigos de Bolsa Chica environmental group is a surprising reversal of that group's long-standing opposition to the disposal site. Aminoil has operated the site since 1973. The California Regio- nal Water Quality Contr61 Board extended that right after review- ing independent laboratory stu - dies that stated the mud wasn't toxic and was confined to the 13-acre site. The board also ordered that Aminoil establish a $700,000 fund to restore the site to a natural wild life habitat when disposal opera- tions are concluded. Amigos spokesman Peter Green was at the meeting and he commended Aminoil officials for ordering the independent tests and said the detailed results of those studies persuaded the envi- ronmentalists that the dump po&ed no long-term haurds to surroun- ding mal'Sh. Board Chairwoman Carolyn Ewing in t.urn thanked the Amigos for causing interest and closer scrutiny of the disposal site. Aminoil officials say the in- dependent tests confirmed what they had been saying all a long, that the disposal site is operated efficiently and poses no hamrd to the wetlands. They agree to eventually restore the area to a natural condition. . - So while continued operation of the disposal site is nothing new, the chain of constructive actions that found Aminoil ordering the independent s tudies and the Amigos supporting the disposal site is a unique development in this type of confrontation. Opinions elCpressed in the space above are those of tM Daily Pilot. Other views ex- pressed on this page are those ot their authOrs an<1 artists. Reader comment.JS 1nv1t· ed. Address The .:>a1l y Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Me!Ml, CA 9'2626. Phone ·(7UI 642·4321. L.M. Boyd/ Sense of humor Which sex tends to have the better • sense of humor, the male or the female? Studies at Wesley and Smith colleges once wound up with the conclusion: "The tendency of men to laugh at anything labeled 'joke' strongly suggest.a that their sense of humor is less well developed and discriminating than that or women." A recent poll among teachers ORANGE COAST llQPilat·· reveals that 38 out of 100 say they'd never go lnto that line or work, if they had it to do over again. Question arises as to how old you have to be before you can wear contact lenses. No age limit., evidenUy. At least 40 babies have been fitted with contacts at the UniversJly of California In Berkeley's In/ant Vlaion Clinic Thomas P. Haley Publisher Even FBI can lose evidence WASHINGTON -The glamorous side of the FBI's work has been chroni- cled o') television and in the movies. But as any FBI agent could attest, there's a vital part of the G-man's life that will never make it to the screen, mainly because it is b-o-r-i-n-R. That's the seizure and safekeeping of property against the day when it will be introdu- ced as evidence in a federal trial. Pro-' bably not even Nonll8D Lear could make the Top 20 with a show titled, "FBI Property Clerk." MUNDANE AS IT IS, the custody or evidence is a crucial ingr,edient of any su~ful proeecution. And an internal Justice Department draft report charges that the FBI clerks could be blowing some cases. The nub of the still-secret draft, pre- pared by auditors in the department's management division, is that nobody keeps proper track of property that has been seized for evidence. Things are so sloppy, the auditors complained, that evidence could be lost or otherwise dis- appe.ar and no one would know it. In their low-key, bureaucratic jargon, the auditors put it this way: "The systems used by the FBI for the hand- ling of seized and recovered property are out-of-date and lack the specificity to effectively meet the respo'nsibilities and requirements imposed by regulation." The auditors noted that "we were told a number of times that 'we (the FBI) have never lost any evidence,' " but ad- Q " -J1-c1-11-1-11-11-1 --~ t ded coldly: "In our opinion, the system now in use would not disclose the loss of evidence if it did occur." The basic problem, the auditors con eluded, is that property taken into cus- tody by the G -men is "not effectively supervised by either agents or Support Service Supervisors." As an example of this distaste for im- portant but dull detail, the draft report cited "extensive time lags" between the seizure of property for possible use as evidence and its ultimate recording in FBI logbooks. In the Detroit field office, the investi- gators found many items of personal property that had been in FBI custody for more than eight years without being entered in the record. Time lags in the Philadelphia and Atlanta regional offices. exceeded a year in some caaes. ·•<;>nee personal property is taken, the FBI becomes responsible for it and ac- countability is mandatory," the draft report points out, and adds: "Delays such as we found (in recording) are unwar- ranted and unjustified." IN ADDITION TO the agents' casual attitude toward seized property -pos- sibly because of it -the subseQuent handling by property clerks "is neither proper nor adequate,'' the audito~ com- plained. The reason for this, they deci- ded , was inadequate training and a poorly written manual of instructions. The Justice Department investigators found some ridiculous examples of pro- perty that had been retained long after it was useful -like the mink coat that had been stored in a cardboard box at the Philadelphia FBI office since 1972, even though it was involved in a case that was dosed in 1977. Evacuation plans delude the people To the Editor: The "crisis relocation" plan on which the federal and state governments are working would evacuate populations from areas experiencing the di.re effects of nuclear war. This plan is a hoax. ac- cording to Beverlee A. Myers, California MAILBOX Director of Health Services. It is unfair, deluding the people into thinking that there can be an escape. The state Office of Emergency Ser- vices, working with the federal govem- meft't, bas stated that we would have three to five days advance notice from the Soviet Union. This is utterly falla- cious, for surprise is an effective ele- ment of attack. A miscalculation aJ.most triggered an attack a few months ago. For neither the well calculated firing nor the impulsive release of a bomb would have there been a warning. BOW WOULD an evacuation take place? During peak traffic periods, such as we now experience on popular beach recreation days, or at times of special events, such as the Pasadena parade, traffic is so congested as to be practically immobile. Our highways would be enti- rely inadequate to enable a terrorized population to fle.e from a threatened area. Where would the evacuees go? With the U.S. and the Soviet arsenals armed with thousands of nuclear warheads an explosive power approaching more than a million Hiroshima bombs could be re- leased. Over thousands of aquare miles the air, water and land would be blanketed with deadly radioactive con- taminanta. The earth could become u devoid of life as the moon. SurvivaJ? No. The nuclear anna race is not confined to the U.S . and the Soviets. Great Bri· tain, France, China and probably India have nuclear weapom. Several of the less stable countries are intent on acqui- ring them. The nuclear anna race is a matter that should be of concern to all of ua. MARY SCXYI"T Support indexing To the F.ditor: I would like to extend my genuine thanks for your editorial support of my permanent income tax indexing legisla· tJon. The three-year long battle has en- ded. We succeeded in getting legislation to benefit the wage earners of California for two years and now the only hope left is for the people to understand that there will be an indexing meuure on the June ballot. It la now up to them. IT JS IMPERATIVE t))at tblt Jarvla-apomored 1DH1ure recelvea an overwhelmtn1 support vote. The wordina la ldendcaJ to my fint lndex1na bill. d21e. Altbouah I am unhappy with. the ln- dex '9ed. the c.lifomia ~ Pr1cl 1ndex. I teel that It Ill MC 11 I ry to have t indexing of persona1 income taxes to al- low the wage eamEir to keep pace with inflation. We can work together to gee that the CPI flaws are changed by the Federal Bureau of Labor St:atistics. It will conti- nue to be the thermometer that does not give the right temperature until the housing costs and pther luxury elements are recalculated. I hope you will continue to support all permanent income tax indexing. MARIAN BERGESON Assemblywoman, 14th District Likes the log To the Editor: [ wish to congratulate you on the new Pilot TV Jog which you started last week. It is by far the most complete TV guide of all channels and makes it easier for the ''addict" to know what is prog- rammed, thereby eliminating going through three or four separate )or. The format is excellent, and hope this will be a permanent addition to your fine newspaper. ROBERT GUGGENHEIM Comparison To the Editor: It seems to me the situation in El Salvador is very comparable with that in Poland. If we object to the Soviet Union's support of an unpopular government ln Poland, then the U.S. should stay out of supporting the unpopular ~overnment ln El Salvador. If we believe it is legitimate to support the unpopular government of El Salvador, then it seems hypocritical to blame the Soviet Union for its role in Poland. BRIAN H. KLEINER Good work To the F.ditor: The California Coastal Commission should be cotnrnended for its decision to delete the extension of University Drive from the Newport Beach Local Coastal Plan.'The extension of thJ8 road, if built acroaa Upper Newport Bay, would threaten the nesti.na pounds of the Light Footed ClaJ>per Rail, a~ endangered apedee of bird ~tivt._ ~-this area. It ii a fact that. the lJ*11 la IU8tleptible to extinction; two aped• of Hawailan Rail now no longer exist. The Global 2000 Report to the Prelident, a U.S. ~· ment study, predicta a ~ ic. of 600,000 to 2 mlllion ·~ of plant and animal Uf, from the e.rth by the ~ 2000, a truSc Dredktlon bued on the rate of 1099 of na&ltat due to urbanized de- velopment. WHILE MOST of this loll la ocx:wTina tn tropbl.,...., we tee thJa pbenomtnon haPPllW\a richt her. tn Southern Call- fomla. wfiere the ~~ ~ Calif°"' nla lAMt Tern. and 1191dintt• Savannah Spurow an mdapred ...-bec•n.• • l.••ttr•.,_,.,...,., ...... _. ,,.~ .. ,..,... ... . ...... "' ... ., tlllNMtt , ..... , ,_..... ....... . -·· • ._ Wlfl .. """.,...._.All"""' ..... ~ ,.,... .............. _. .......... -..., .. .,,_ .. tft ,._..., •• llllfllC~ -"....,.. • ...,. "111 "9t• ........ I.a...,,_, .................. .... ... -........ _.., ..... , . ., ................ -...,.,1( ..... ........... • > of the lom of their living space. Roughly 90 percent of the original coastal wet- lands that these birds need for their survival have disappeared under urban developmenL The pressures of coastal development are just too great for local governments to handle right now, jud- ging from recent actions of the Orange County Board of Supervisors vis a vis the Bolsa Chica wetland&, and the propensi- ties of the Newport Beach City Council vis a vis the University Drive extenston. We need a more responsible, less my- opic, view of the precious little coastal wild.life habitat that remains in Southern California. The Coastal Commission, mandated by the Coastal Act of 1~76, is now fulfilling that need. I hope they continue their good work. JAN D. VANDERSLOCYI' MD Remember inflation? To the Editor: It wouldn't hurt if you would remind your readers that scarcely a year ago. everybody was wringing their hands over a high rate of inflation. This. we were told, and I believe rightfully so, was our biggest problem. Look at us now. Inflation is down and has been down to a single digit number these past few months. Now everybody wants to increase the money supply. It seems our biggest problem is high inte- rest rates. So, start the money presses and bring back good old inflation! Our President said long ago thal licking inflation would not be easy. How quickly people forget! J.W. REID How dare he? To the Editor Once again it becomes "us" vs. "them." "Us" being the ones who elect "them" often to our sorrow and detri~ ment. I listened to Sen. Willi~ the other day as he crawled back under his rock. His statement to the effect that he bad not done anytltlnc contrary to the stan- dards of the Senate should anger the remaining Senators with any integrity. rm sure it does the electorate who cho9e him 1o repretent them. How dare he try to tar everyone with the UtQe brush? And how dare he blame the FBI for the fact that (to quote from "Lady ln the Dark") "ln 27 languaaes he couldn't say N0"1 . MARY JANE WOOD 111111 lill rm ~ to wonder lf the °'Moral Majorlty" la (wu eve.r) really the (a) majority. B.B. .. t .. •) ! d f, , ... .... I Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT /Thuraday, March 26, 1982 AT NEW YORK (AP) -Coca-Cola trie9 '°buy Colombia, purcht.le9 Col- wnbla Pictures by mlltake and uka for ha deJ,Dlt blltk. Sclentlats dlecover that 1Uicon tUrl\.I lnto melba toast, caualn~ panic ln the computer lndu-auy. The A.url computer company •11NASA. Tbe newapaper reportina thla look.a a lot Hk• the aober and intluentlal Wall Slre9t Journal, but it's not. It's •Uf Tl\e Wall Street Journal," and It I• io appear on the nation's news- 1tinda on April Foola' Dey. The parody of the Wall Street Journal ii being publlabed by many of the same peoj>le who prin\ed "Not The New Yor~ Times" when the real Pricas Eff&ctiM Thru Tu•sday, Morch JO, 1982 EVERY ITEM SOLD CARRIES STANDARD BRANDS UNCONDITIONAL Tlmetl WU •tnick bl 1978. ''An e.Umatea .. blWon changed handa in b1.&tlne11 tranucUona r._est«day," •Y• an item on Pace 1. 'CorporaUonl continued to earn vut prof ht, once a1a1n reatflrmlna the 10Undnet1 of the naUon's free enter- prise •r.tem." "Existence of God proved conch.aaJ\rely,'' ~ in index item on the cover of the MCOnd aectlon.",f!ffect on market. P11e 29." 1bere la no Page 29. One story ~~·.Secretary of State Alexander M. nal8 Jr. "flnda a Nica- raguan insurgent under hjs desk. Haig saicf this proves 'beyond an irrefutable iota of a doubt' there are cornm~t influencea in El Salvador and the State Department.'' The edhort of th4' parody, under the direction of Tony Hendra •lld Robert V are, •Y there will be a fil'lt printing of ~.000 cop.lea. They aay It celebrates the lOOth annlvenary of the Journal, the firtt year of Rcaganomic1 and the birth of sur.ply-stde economlcl. 1Atari, Inc .. yesterday acqu1red the Strategic A1r Command. t,he National Aeronautics and Space Administra- tion and most of the solar system," says an ltem about the computer and video game oompany. In a lengthy editorial, as serious in tone as any in the reel Journal, "Off FLAT WALL PAINT COVER KOTE ® LATEX ROOM· A good qvollt1,1 point for use on most svrfoces lotex flot woll point 1s for 1ntert0</exter1or use Avolloble In white ond off· white A super valve ot this special pvrchose price Comp. Retail 5. 99 LOT We hove grouped these selected woH- coverfngs Into bundles ot 4. 6 ond 8 .__ •. -.:···~ N · E single rolls ond moriced them down o iau DL s ~~~~ ~ '°'t :i::i~ OFF OUR REGULAR LOW SINGLE ROLL PRICES 9fl. x 12 A.AT INTERIOR LATEX HIDE-All® One coot hides It oll. White. off-white ond 16 colors. C~. Aetoll 9 • 95 Gallon 8 YEAR WALL PAINT VINYL ACRYLIC Gvoronteed to lost 8 vrs. White. off-white ond 41 colors. Comp. Aeto1I 14. 99 3/4" WIDE l Gonon ¢ 1-1/4" The Wall Sttfft Journal" utlft Pre. aldent Rea1an to provoke a nuclear exchange with the Ruuianl: .. We urae the President to pr91 the button. Our future is In the flnaer. Our des1iny t. in the wlld blue yon- der, 1treaked by the contrail• of weapons of vast de1tructlon .-.-. 1peeding hither to thelr tar1et1, amaahing, killin~. laying waste, cleansing, leveling.' Far back on the inside pages, among the dense figures in the 1tock market tables, are comments such as: Mafia - "In complete command." And in the final entry there, 00 ff The Wall Street Journal" says WallStJm is "Dull." 9" x 10" FUNT SANDPAPER MASKING TAPE PUTTY KNIFE IMPORTED NATURAL ABER Exotic Imported grosscloths from Chino lend o decorator touch to those noturol contemporary decors. Colors VOfV from llght to dork eolthtones 1n tight ond loose l.lleOll8S. Don't po1,1 more for decorot0< quollt1,1 . shop Stondord &onds ond sove. Hvrry for best selectloo. • VALUESto 3~951 Comp. Aetoil 17( 9' x 11' PlASTIC DROP CLOTH Comp Aetoll 29< Comp. Aetoll 79( 9• POlYESTER ROllER COVER Comp. Aetoll ff< STEP STOOL 2 FT. HANDY11• WOOD All wood construction makes this hondy .step lodder sturd1,1. Collopsl· ble for eOSIJ storoge . OtM LOW PRICE WOOD STEP LADDtAS ALUMINUM STtP LADIMAS 4 FT. Ow tow Pric• . . • . 15. 95 to. 4 FT. c~ IS. 95 ....... 17 •"to. 5 FT. Ow low Pric• ...... 11. 95 to. 5 FT. Comp U." ..... J 1. 99 ... 6FT.0wtowPric• ..... 11.95to. 6FT.eomp 4t." ....... J4.99te. 16 FT. AlUMeNUM fXTfNSION l.ADOfft Comp "'·" . . . • . • • • . 49 •" e.. Roll Comp Aeto1I 99( '• 9" PlAmc PAN & ROLLER SET • Ea. -. - 0tMge CoMt DAILY PtLOT!Thund-V, MIW'Ott 21, 1811 . iost s•yjacker was bad luck DJ:NA!l\ (AP) -The Iona lolt hUricker, D.B. ~· m-ou.ht a moment of tame and lo1a of t.d auck lrlto the 1lve1 ef the Dwayne Inanm family. Two yeare a1ot.Intram'1 aon, ~rlan, found ,G,800 In frayed bllJI under an inch ot And he DUIMd llide to bu11d , fire for a family pknic in ~~ near the C.olumbla River. '' 'nM lnarama recently moved to the amall Sta· l;nw.UI County community of Dena1r to get away from the pubUdty they couldn't adjuat to in Van. COUYW W.-h. ' "lt'1 been 10 years linoe D.B. Cooper jumped from the plane1 and I'm 10 years old now," the EYEI BENCH -Jayne Thom.,.on, 36, wife of Gov. Jim Thom peon ot I111.nolt, hll •.Pplied for a federal jud1e1hip ln Chtca10, lt wa• repor· ted. ' . 'FV to purchase lO !police cars Vehicles to be added over two years at $8~ 371 each Detplle one member'• obJec· lach pollc• car wlll ,co•t DOinted out that. the city alnedy Uom, the Fountain Valley City '8 .. 311.47. h.u~ lta ..-of pollmoan Council hu authort.Md the J>Ur"' CoundimAn ...,_. Van"'Duk by a1reeln1 to replace them chue of 10 new pollce patrol complained at 1Nt week'• mee· every three y .. ra rather than, can. t1na that police otfJclall had pro-I every two yean, u tt Md done in • The clty wUl buy flve cara, vicied no milHp ftcw-or other 1 the put. dwin1 the current fiscal yearrecol ... _...Ide""' to prow that the preeent The police car purchaM wu I and tlie •econd ttve next year. ·police can need replacement. approved on a 4·1 vote, with Van The new can will replace police Thouch he pneenied no writ· Duk oppoliba. uni ..... t ha >leted three ten doc\&mentatioQ, Pollce Chief r-----''-"'--_.;:;.----=-· --ti wNI ve comp Marvin rotttn Mid the life of the r-..-i!~---1 yeen of 1&rvice. preaent police can °cannot be °' a.llW A4 1 The cars will be purchaaed extended without the can beco--A~ 1 th.rouah a state fleet t>uytna plan mt.na danceroua to operate and A DAILY"'°' 1' u.eed lor California Hilbway Pa· expenalve to maintain." · AO-WSO. 1 ~ Incl'am·Mid. ',~ A lMn known only u D.B. Cooper demanded ,---------trol vehk:le9. . . ___ C;:;..:oouurncllman Marvin Adler ..,...,. I 0,000 undmalated $20 bil.11 on a Northwellt Boeing l~!~f.Uaht from Seattle, strapped the money to his f:Dm' and paniehuted into the Caacade wlldernees in 11971. "" . Brian wu the first penon to recover any of the 1 rujlcked money. . II Hl1 30'·year·old father turned over three \bundles of tattered bills to the FBI when serial ,numben matched thoee on bllla given to the na· tion'• only unaccounted·for air pirate. "They told us this was goi(lg to change our lUe," the...tather of thre& !Mlid. "It sure did-; My whole world fell down on me~· First, he lost pay when he took time off for FBI interviews and p.ews conferences. Second, a fire in the Ingram house gu~ a bedroom. . Third, Ingram was arrested on an Oklahoma :warrant accusing him of skipping car payments. He spent two nights in jail and had. to pay a bonds· man'• fee for bis relee.ae. The charge wu diamissed a month later when investigators determined his payments were up to date. • "We were heroes one dar,. then I wu called a crook," be remarked. "I don t think it was in the script foe me to get rich no matter what exciting. things will happen." A painter by trade, Ingram hasn't held a steady job since moving. The lngrams never received any of the reco- vered money. The father acknowledged, "I'm a dreamer. Wouldn't that money look good now?" · Their role in the Cooper legend is reflected in a scrapbook bulging with clippings about Brian's discovery and memories of network television ap- pearances. Although the FBI concluded the hijacker is dead. another Stanislaus County resident ls hoping to spur new interest in Cooper to go with a book he's writing, "D.B. Coo~: Where Are You?" Ceres attorney Richard C. Tosaw offered a $25,000 reward to anyone who can lead him to Cooper dead or alive. 'Cliffhanger' ad takes TV award LOS ANGELES (AP) -Britain produced the world's best television commercial for the second mauiht year with a "<:]iffhanger" ad for Citroen cars Tn the Hollywood Radio and Television Sode. ty'1 22nd Annual International Broadcastina Awards. The winning commercial. which showed a tire on a Citroen exploding at the brink of a cliff was honored in ceremonies at the Century Plaza Hotel. The HRTS awarded its top radio commercial prize to a 60·aecond spot titled "Gentex Lens" for t'.olumbia Optical Co. in judging that included some 5,000 commercials from 50 countries. GI IS GP IN .. 2 AND SO CAM YOU! 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Vlcleo Computer lyste111 only $32.88 in Corona del l1r Store 0111 (llllllM.....,) CUISIM~T LIST Price DLC10E$1a0 $99.99 DLC8E $1S~l49.99 DLC7E s2dl 99. 99 -l ~ All locbets HEIRn LUICH PIL By The Makers of Blue Ice lunchpol s5 I 8 8 Hearty $8.88 HAPPY COOKER Kettle BBQ • 22~" with hinged cover • Brown poroelafn on steel • Ash catcher $59.99 and handle Mts 25% Off l1t1nn1tic Ti•• Ill lultl11l1 pro1r•• ti••r #0811 ~as• , Prtoes good through March So, 1082 • ,.-CROWll HARDWARE AU. STOllS OfllM 1 DAYS WISTCLIPF THUISDAY11U. .. • • ____________________________________________ ....,. __ ...,.,... ______ ... \ . 11111111111 THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982 CAVALCADE TELEVISION ENTERTAINMENT 82 86 87-8 Tony Orlando has learned a lot about survival in his show business career. See Page 87. . NB Banning Ranch referendum faltering?· By STEVE MARBLE O{tfle DellJNetlllllt Report• that a referendum drive aimed at turning back a 11\ajor Newport Beach develop- ment project is faltering only days after being launched have . been denied. "Whatever support we may have loet, we've more than pick- ed up from other areas of town," said Loulae Greeley, a leader of an alliance of nine homeowner groups protesting the approved Banning Ranch project. She said enthusiasm for the referendum, which couJd force a citywide election on the 75-acre resldentiaJ, industrial and office deveJopment plan, is high. rendum drive hacks broad sup- port and claim the alliance Is suffering from diJlension. Several people cloee to the re- ferendum movement maintain the drive has been designed to build up enthuaiaam for a recall try later thJs year against Coun- cllwoman Ruthelyn Plummer, who represents West Newport and supported the Banning pro- ject. One referendum leader and West Newport resident -Or. Matthew Ross -agreed there is continuing talk about a recall at- tempt but said it ls secondary to the referendum. Dave Goff, a top leader of the West Newport Legislative Al- llance, punctuated his displeasure with the referendum push by resigning. "The alliance worked hard to downacope this project and I be- lieve we succeeded," he said. "The council made a good compromise." He said homeowner leaders in Lido Sands -a West Newport community ·-are nearly unani- mously opposed to the referen- dum. Cathy Anderson, president of the West Newport Homeowners AssOciation and member of the Alliance, said her colleagues ~n her board also appear opposed to the referendum. "l just don't believe it's timely. We j\at had one and I don't be· lieve we thouJd referendum this town to death," she said. te referendum ls the second in the past year. Critics of the Newport Center expansion pro- ject put together a successfuJ re- ferendum <Uive last year. The City Council, at the re- quest of the Irvine Company, repealed the development rather than put it to an election test. Referendum leader Ross said his group has received support from the citizen group that worked against the Ne wport Center plan. "There's no doubt in my mind we'll reach the goal," said Ross, POUTING PIONEERS-Ti.mes are tough when your cup rwmeth out and your bonnet falls off at the. Ji'.iesta de las Golondrinas toddler races. Just ask Brandon Billington, l, of 0811y ~ Ptlot09 by Nchetd Koetllef Laguna Hills and Christine Ciampa, 16 months, of San Clemente. .. Paraders flocking to fiesta The annuaJ Fiesta de las GoJondrinas parade which culminates the week-long celebration of the swallows' return to Mission San Juan Capistrano will wind its way through the streets of San Juan Capistrano early Saturday afternoon. . Beginning at noon, the largest non-motorized parade in California will begin its annuaJ circuit of streets surrounding the old mission. Grand Marshal for this year's parade will be Fulton Shaw, who helped organize the first SwaJ- lows' Day parade in 1960. Shaw. "El Presidente" of the De Portola Ri- ders, who will appear in the parade, has been a r~ent of San Juan Capistrano for the past 25 years. I Preceding Saturday's parade. the city's Wo- men's Club will host a pancake breakfast at their club headquarters. And for those still hungry after the parade, the San Juan Capistrano Histotical Society is spon'j()- ring a family steak barbecue in Oescanso Park. To the music of Chuck Buck and bis Buckaroos, diners will be able to feast on a steak dinner, which will Include beans, tortillas, salsa, coleslaw and punch or coffee. Cost of the dinner is $7 .50 per per&0n. As part of the day's festivities, chiJdren age six and up are being asked to join the San Juan Capi- strano Recreation Department's kazoo band. . referring to the 4,200 signatures his group must collect by April ~. "There's a feeling throughout Newport Beach that the cityis general plan is sJowly being dis- mantled piece by piece," he said. But Mrs. Anderson said many West Newport residents feel they stand to lose "some real good benefits" if the Banning Ranch project is killed. Developer Ha ncock "Bill" Banning. meanwhile, maintains that his firm is not yet convinc.'ed that the approved project makes economic ~nse. The project was scaled down by the council while r equi re- ments for road improvements were added. • "It will still take us several more months of looking at the plan before we can determine whether things will pencil out," Banning said. 0811yNotSUlfll'Mt• TARGET? -Some say recall of Councilwoman Ruthelyn Plummer is r eal reason for re ferendum drive. Irvine council split on fund for victims By GLENN SCOTT O(lho Delly Piiot Steff Opinions are mixed on whe- ther the City of Irvine should have a fund to pay up to $25,000 to victims of violent crime. City Councilman Larry Agran and Councilwoman May Ann Gaido said Tuesday they favor payments in certain situations to assist innocent victims or their survivors. But council members Bill Var- doulis and David Sills said they don't believe taxpayers shouJd be required to participate as long as others are willing to donate money. Sills added that private donations might be used to fund a special insurance fund admi- nistered by the city for such vic- tiJns. . Council membe rs, minus ab- sent Art Anthony, this week or- dered a staff report due in 45 days on financial implications of a victims fund. To Agran, taking care of resi- dents victimized by crime should be an activity of a government. He cited as an example the wi- d ow and five children left by worker Pedro Alfaro.. who was killed during a Feb. 11 robbery at an all-night doughnut shop in Irvine. Agran noted that more than $10,000 had been collected for the famil y. But while commen- ding the generosity of the givers, h e said other victims may not receive such donations . And h e said the $10,000, in reality, "doesn't go too far" in . today's world. "We pay taxes to insure the city against people tripping on the sidewalk and cracking their - heads . That happens all the time," he said . "Here. we have horrendous crime and no organi- zed way to respond. "The city ought to have a heart too." Agran said such city payments should never exceed $25.000 and should be limited to cases of ma- jor disability or death to adults (wage earners ) and only if the crime occurred in the city. Furthermore, people injured in either traffic accidents or do- mestic violence would not qua- lify, he said. V ardoulis said he wouJd rather see criminals make retribution to their victims, but Agran answe- red that such a propo,al is ''whistling in the breeze ' •nd noted Alfaro's loller has not been captured. Nevertheless, Vardoulis said aiding victims has never been a function for government and shouldn't be. "The more government gets involved with it . . . I can see it growing endlessly." he said. BiU Ackman, a merchant who o rga nized t h e Alfaro fund- raising effort, told council mem- bers he believes in the power of volunteerism. He said the $10,000 was raised for Alfaro's family despite the fact he lived in Garden Grove, had worked in Irvine for only four months anp was a "virtuaJ unknown.'' Laguna hopefuls tell financial links Laguna Beach City Council candidates Ron Williams and PauJ Christiansen top their seven opponents 1n financiaJ holdings, according to economic statements filed by the hopefuls. Statements of Economic lnte· rests are required to be filled out by candidates seeking municipaJ office by the Political Reform Act. Williams, a reaJ estate broker, lists financial interests in more than two dO'Zen properties, part- nershJps and stock. He lists i nve stm e nt s "exceedin $100,000" in Laguna Canyon ~ffice and Storage, a rental partnership, and Laguna Carmel, a motel operation in Carmel. His statement lists stock in- vestments in KMS Industries, Saxon Industries, Inc. and Ron Williams, Inc. exceeding $10,000 each, but lees than $100,000. Other interests that exceed $10,000 each include partnership lnte!'esU 1n a South Laguna lot. Coast Glen, Bluebird Profesalo- nal Center, La1una Mammoth, Plua Development Co. of La- guna Beech, Laauna SNwa, and equl\~ in property in Seattle, Palm Sprl.no and 1A8Um Bach. He .i.o llltl hia reel •tate of- f lee aa belna w orth more than $10,000. Inte1n\I t.h•t do not exceed $10,000 in value include 11.oCk 1n Imperial Pet"°1eum, Inc., SCI Proff!lllonal IndUltries, KantiU\ Concepia, Inc., parcela Qf land 1n Palmdale, Mon\ana, and Lacuna BMch. ChrtaUanlen, an lnnkeeper ln ~ 8-eh. liata lnv..unenta ln ialu 1tocu. each valued at $10,000«llla. Those include common stock in ITT, Jhirmack, Hungry Tiger Restaurants, Wickes, Inc., Wyle Laboratories, NMSI medical s upplies, Pa,cific Resources, Freeport energy, -and Castle and Cooke, Inc. He lists investment and real estate partnerships. with values exceeding $100,000 with Merritt-O'Mara Enterprises, Merritt-Royston Enterprises and Menitt-M¥ter Enterprises. A ranching partnership with Protea Productions ls listed as worth more than $10,000, but less than $100,000. He also lists the Hotel Califor- nia in Laguna Beach H bein¥, worth "In excess of $100,000 ' and includes several deeds of trusts and equi\ies with value exceeding $10,000. Pharmacy manager Dan Ken- ney lists stock 1n three hospital groups, each valued at more than $10,000. Those include C.Ompre- henaive Care Corporation, Brea Hospital Pharmacy, Inc. and Kellogg Hoepi.tal Pharmacy, Inc. He Usta equity in his heme., more than $10,000 but ie.. than $100,000. Robert Gentry, •dmlnlatr•t.or at UC lrvtne, repol'tS lnt.erelta ol le11 than $10,000 tn W.R. Gl'Mle I and C.0. and equity in hla home at more than $100,000. Bobble Mlnkln, a homeowner uaoci•tlon officer, llata only a corporation 1rant deed with a vuue of lea 1lwn $10,000. Bu1lne11woman Beth Lffda Usta her Alrioom. airtJrwtl buli- rwa .. worth 1-thm t lt.000 .. And Incumbent X..ll7 '80yd, and candldatH Pat Barry and Ricky Slat.er flied fGl"llll Npoif tine no economic ln ...... ·! • . I , I • • -~ '• ·: • • ·' •' ·' •'. ·; .. • ·I ... •ANN LANriEas ERMA BOMBECK •HOROSCOPE Gold crowns· concerns for 'future life' I DEAR .t\NN LANDERS: My mter bu a family reunion where,. ln • two-hour pe-· be 1lvea aay alcollolle bevera1ea -aot · \ been after me for eeveral yean to make a riod. my 9-month..ald nephew w• llvm a ev• a teupooafal -ud beer IS aa alco- wW. I hate even to think about where I half cup of beer (by hla father), a ball cup of •Uc beven1e ID 1plte of wbat 10me people want my money and po11 e n•ona to ao after J ICOtch (by hit pand.father) and a half cup of tWU. die. • wtne by hll grandmother. Hia 2-yeat~ld Here'• yoar lefter. Start malll•I co- Thia may IOU.hd crazy. but I have l1x I 1i1ter fared a little better -1he 11'pt ,an. u dae fatlaer ud arudpereat1 lmew ~ aold crowna ln my mouth and I know throulh the meal. iaey were umapa, tlaote clllldrea, I can't • th8)r are worth a lot of money. I firmly be--ReepolWJe to~ protesta rancecl from believe &My'd keep tap. U.V. there will be a reswTeetlon and It will 0 a little can't hurt• to "mind your own · come aooner than moet people think. I want busfNW." DEAR ANN LANDERS: I recently to be ready. If I leave the gold crowns to a Ann, please tell them again: Giving pve a party for my husband's employees. relative, I would then need to have the children alcoholic beveraaea oomtitutea child St~~-one invitations w ere sent with an crowns replaced after I am resurrected. abu8e. None of thme people would advocate RSVJ>. Forty-two responded, 34 (couples) Dentiltry may be a lot more expensive by giving a child nicotine, oocatne or heroin. but accepted and 11 couples came. the time I ri.e again. Alao, the waiting pe-they are killin& off eome of the child's brain· · A great deal of time and effort went rtod to get an appointment might be even cells big before he's old enough to make the into the party. It was catered, maids and wone than it ls now. choice for himeelf. barterlder hired, flowers ordered, etc. The ' ' freezer is filled with leftovers. How can people who say they are coming not even bother to call or show? In case you are wondering -the weather was fine. Blan me -IRATE IN NEW JERSEY DEAR IRATE: I would plloae every "no 1bow" ud ask, "Wiant bappeae4?" It 11 Inconceivable that 34 coaples accepted ud only 11 came. I'd wut to know wily. I wouldn't dream of discussing tbls I look at theee two beautiful, heal= problem with anyone I know. but it weighs children and get ao angry I can't 11ee or ! heavily on my mind. You are the only one I I work with emotionally d1lturbed cllil can go to for help without looking like a often the victims of abuee and neglect or of fool. Please guide me. drug-or alcohol-addicted parents. The deck . -LOOKING AHEAD IN NORTH CARO-ls stacked against them. Some days I get ao iNo w a y to start d a y a LINA heart.lick I sit down and bawl . DEAR HEAD: Since yoa are certain Please say something on thia subject, yoa will be needlllg )'oar teet~ for yoar re-Ann. Maybe they'll listen to you. tllrn to eartb, my advice 11 keep diem In -RIPPED AP ART IN RHODE ISLAND your moatla ud oat of you will. Tiie dect-(P.S . If my letter appean in print, rn 1ion 11 sure to take a load off your mind. send copies to everyone at that dinner). DEAR ANN: I have just returned from DEAR RIPPED: Clllldrea 1llomld not Aries gains f r iend Friday, March H ARIES (March 21-April 19): Clash of ideas proves stimulating. You earn friendship of one who previously opposed you. Circumstances will favor your elforts. You will be at right place at crucial moment. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You rec- eive signal which lets you know family ls with you. Money dilemma will be resolved. Another Taurus and a Libran play signifi- cant roles. Domestic adjustment occurs - you'll feel more secure as result. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Friendship is tested -you learn what is real as con- trasted tg__ illusion. Study Taurus memage for valuable runt. Terms will be clarlfied. Focus on romance, desires, valid business tips and profitable investments. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Lunar focus on Career, added responsibility, chance for promotion and increased compensation. Relationship grows stronger, commitment is made and aense of direction is clarlfied. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Emphasis on long-range plans, travel, education, spiritual insight and completion of important assign-~ ment. You'll be rid of unnece988fY burden, numerous expenses will be eliminated and ability to communicate will improve. POT SHOTS ·· BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT 1;-,· WOULD VOICE ~ ti MORE COMPL.AINTS IJ n u t . \F I WEREN'T ~O AF"RAID OF" THE P.EMEDIE'S PEOPLE MIGMT $U(QGEST. HOIOSCOPf BY SIDNEY OMARA VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You make new start in new direction. Emphuia on independence, originality, creativity and meeting with exciting lndlvidual. Focus alao on financial status of one cloee to you, In- cluding partner or mate. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Empbasia on contracts, public relations, cooperative ef- forts and marital status. Permit others to take initiative -maintain low profile while being shrewd observer. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): What be- gins u routine tuk can be developed into profitable project. Be politive of detaila and source material. Open llnet of CQDllllunica- tion, make plans for expansion. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Emphasis on romance, recreation, ability to build on aolid bue. Focut alao on creativity, change, a variety of eensations and deallnp will\ young people. Short trip could be part of scenario. Relative ls involved. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Changes occur at home base. Yoll'll have greater opportunity for self-expreuion. Emphasis alao on property, safety, M!CW"ity and gain through written word. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Em- phasis on relatives: domeltic affaJ.rs,. diplo- matic settlement of differences witll one wboee ideea clah with your own. Display versatility, humor and integrity. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Define terms, check finandal reeources, locate loet article, see places and people in realistic light. Get accounting, perceive motives, re- fine techniques and be practical where money is conCerned. GOif i 011 l llDGf BY CHARLES H. GOREN AND oMAR SHARIF · · •. • • Ji Eaat-We1t vulnenble. Soutb cleala. NOS TB • Q.Jtl • <::>&I O Qt . •AKIOO WEST EAST •14 •1'10871 <:;) AQ.18111 <::> ltl o 5 <> UIU •Q.J7 ... 80lJTB •Al <:::'41 <> A&l741 .... The biddiq: a... W• N.rQ.JMt 1 0 t <::> ..... I <> Pue INT.._ ,. ,._ 40 ... 5 0 ,._ ... Ollie ... ,_ ... Opeata1 a..d: Nlae ol •. , __ ~ -· led a tMut. aDd W•t did UM bHt be eould by rlalnr with , the .. and return.has a beart. Declarer won dumm7'• kltar. eaahed tbe q...-n of apade1 and ruffed a 1pade. He then euMd lbe ace and tin1 of duM befote rufftq another ...... Declarer had loet on17 one trick. He wu down to A-8 of lnlmpe and a club wblle Eut beld J-8 of U'\UDpe and a 1pade. Tommy tbnplJ edtecl with a dub. He did IMK are which defender woo tbe tr'lck. bec:au• be wu eertahl to wt. tlae lul trieb me. IUt trump' t.uee wu ,_eh. edo•tr &ut. When will people ever wise up to the fact that getting up late in the morning is not an accident? Don't prees me for details, but it's defini- tely a compiracy . . . a plot against you to puniah you for something you did, but you can't remember what it was. ) Some fools think that by rushing, they can catch up to their life. Wrong. For Che rest of the day you're stuck! You're a cata- lyst for every rotten thina that can possibly happen to a person. BU'nONS F AU OFF shirta. Skin gets caught in zippers and must be removed surgically. Your neck expands and no longer fita into a ahirt you've been wearing for five years. Hema unravel. The shower will do one of two things. It will hit you like a sprinJ-fed mountain stream or aaute you standing up. There is no in-between. The soap will fall to the drain and just as you reach it, will bub.Jle down one of the holes and disappear. Your shower cap will lprinC a leak. • Aeroeol cans will have a field day with you as you shave with tub and shower cleaner, bold your hair with deodorant that protects you for 18 hours, and spritz your pita with breath freshener. The morning cup of coffee ii an enigma. ERMA IOMlfCi AT WIT'S END You know how on a normal day you pour a cup and three minutes later it's cold? Not on a day you're late. Hot steam rolls off it, causing small blisters down to your belt buckle, and it remains tepid until you spill it down the front of yourself when the car in front of you stops suddenly for a light. YOUR FA VO RITE parking place will bE closed for repairs, the elevator will stop at every floor and no one will be there. You will be halfway through lunch with your guest before you realize your billfold is at home on the bureau. The day is unrelenting. The pantyhose on backwards are making you crabby. The hair that wouldn't curl keeps sticking in your coat collar. You get a flat tire at the drive-in window of the bank. The re are some people who still fight when they get up late in the mornings. Still cut corners. Still try to get back on the track · again, but they're naive. There is nothing they can possibly do to save the day. The smart money stays in bed. DRISllCILLY REDUCED EVERYTHING MUST GOI SllTS RllQULAR TO ...... ... $108 -l lEIS SlllTS RIGULAJI TO •• SNITCOITS REGULAR TO $225.00 t ... $58 SUCIS R£QULAR TO Sll..00 15 88 "" ..,.,.... Cans ·· SAN DIEGO (AP) - There'll be lot1 of tan cant alon1 th• ocean- front from La Jolla to Ocean Beach this sum- mer. They'll be bright yel- low and bev. the al<>san: "Tan; don't li ter." Live Chicks s .. them hatch for Easter from our farm Incubator ot the Huntington Center MoH The City Council has d fl th A 10 qecided to eave ltae lf ijiijiiaiiiyiiiruiiipri.iiil. ta.ooo a year on the price of trash barrels on the · ,E-tARE" beaches. The Coppertone Company will donate 1, POil AU°' YOU• HIALTHMHDS 500 cans, in return for . ~ .... y advertising apace for its • sun lotlpn. IV ' IHD Coppertone will be responsible for the cans' upkeep. t:o0 AM-t:oO flM llASOHAIU NU FL YING HIGH -A tiny trouper takes to the There was only one no vote on the proposal. Councilman Bill Mitchell air, with the help of her father's feet, during a performance b y the Segura family at Rap- perswU, Switzerland. They're members of the Swim national circus, known as "Knie." wanted the city to can ~~::=;~~~!!!!!!!!!~" the whole idea before someone groposes ads on police earl. -Parking study set Meet The Candidates 1 Laguna seeks solutions to perennial woes For city electio11s in Hunt. Bch., Fountain that appear to have the greatest po-By STEVE MITCHELL Of .... Deir ......... By late summer, the Laguna Beach City Council ~hould have a compre- hensive report that outlines possible I· solutions to the town's perennial par- king problem. It won't be the first such report prepared over the decades, but this time around the city has some money in the bank to create additional par- king for Laguna's congested down- town area. / Council memben agreed last week 1 to appoint a five-member task force, with a member from the Chamber of Commerce and four members from the Circulation and Scenic Highways committee, to help the city with its study. tential for parking. Vly., Westminster. Sites identified for potential par-They'll be here at the king structures or expanded parking Huntington Center Moll include the Glenneyre Street parking on Fri. eve & Sot., Mor. Jot near Park Avenue, the municipal 26 & 27. See posted parking lot adjacent to City Hall, and the Act V parking lot in Laguna 1-------s_c,_he_d_u_le_s-l. Canyon, about a quarter mile above r: • --·--- the Festival of Arts grounds. As required by law, Once an evaluation of potential new bu s 1nes1e1 parking lots is completed, the city can u sing a Fictitious begin to decide which locations hold Buslnesa Name must the potential for the most spaces at register that name the least cost. t with the County Clerk. Laguna Beac h expects to have ·c o.a.ILY PILOT $837,000 available for lot construction . all the ""' LEGAL DEPARTMEN.T or acquisition by June. That fund for forms and further comes from parking meter revenues and parking stickers sold to local Information. residents. 642~21 Tokai Bank will not only take good care of your money, we'll make it grow and growl Our Individual Retirement Acoounts (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. • Current IRA rate 16°/o *. • FREE personal checking account that pays 5 1/4°/o interest. • FREE Bears. " won't be any · ~ .... ....,,,.>':'" monthly maintenance fees for the 18 month term of your certificate. That's a very good deal indeed. But there's still more. We will also give you cuddly bears. They'll watch over you and let you know that everything's all right. Just as everything's all right when your money is growing and earning at Toka1 Bank. Many banks charge maintenance fees for NOW accounts. But when you open an IRA account for $500 or more, there Call or drop in at the Toka1 office nearest you . And go home with new fnends, and new financial security. ·simple interest "Substantial penalty tor early wllhdrawat Rates sub1ect to change This olfer 1s gOOd while supplies 1ast Each depositor insured up to S100.000 Member FDIC lOKAIBANK '' ~ OF CALIFORNIA NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE 3333 West Coast Highway• (714) 646-7121 HUNTINGTON BEACH OFFICE 19006 Brookhurst Street• (71 4) 963-5651 Other offices conveniently located m Hermosa Beach, Playa de/ Rey, Inglewood, Pasadena, Alhambra. Temple City. Los Angeles and San Francisco They also authorized the city ma- nager to hire a parking consultant, at a fee not to exceed $5,000, to prepare a cost-benefit analysis of aeveral sites Another $142,000 is available from Ext. 332 I parking-in-lieu fees -money char-•---------.:... ..:..· _::::::==============================:::::::._ __ _ ged to merchants who cannot provide enough parking for their customers. Teachers' science Mesa cop ~ . 1.: course due at UCI resigns r: Elementary school teache.rs who'd like to bone in probe .· up on the sciences will be offered a 10-week re - ! fresher course beginning April l at UC Irvine. I • "Physical Sciences for Elementary School Teachers" will be held by UCI Extension Thursdays from 7 to 10 p.m. University credit is available for the course, which covets various topics ln chemistry and physics but does not involve mathematics. The course is designed to boost the science background of teachers as well as help them inte- rest their students in the sciences, according to Dr. Mare Taagepera, the UCI chemistry professor who will teach the course with UCI physicist William Barker. Family files suit in crash death The family of a Costa Mesa man who died in a · ught airplane crash near Mammoth Lakes has filed a wrongful death lawsuit-against the Cessna Air- craft Corp., manufacturer of the plane. The legal action, filed in Orange County Superior Court, also names as defendants the estate of the pilot of the p~ and its owner, Parson Air of Santa Ana. The suit was filed on behalf of Rosemarie and Kenneth Thompeon. parents of Michael Thompson, 25, a pamenger in the aircraft. The.amount of damages being sought In the action is not specified. 'Santa' salesman sentenced SACRAMENTO (AP) -A department store salesman who played Santa Claus With about $20,000 worth of his employer's merchandlae before Christmas last year has been sentenced to eight months in jail. Orlando Dato m told officials he became angry when he wu 1-.ed over for promotion, 10 he be- gan giving thino away in the television and stereo department of Montgomery Ward's Country Club Plaza store. A Costa Mesa police sergeant resigned just hours after an internal lnvestigation into allega- tions of misco ndu c t leveled against the offi- cer was compl~ted. ac- cording to police Chief Roger Neth. Sgt. Gerhard Barwig's resignation came one week a fter he was sus- pended with pay follo- wing accusations by a part-time employee that th e officer used "improprieties" in hand- ling police auction mat- ters and filling out his payroll time sheet, said Neth. Neth declined to spe- cify either·the exact na- ture of the charges or the findings of the internal lnvestigation. Had the 38-year-old o fficer not res igned, Neth would have deci- ded what type of disci- plinary action, if any, to take. "Based on the allega- tions I probably would have imposed severe disciplinary action," said Neth. "Since he res~gned we're cloeing the case." Barwi~ had been with the department 17 years and had worked as a supervisor in the depart- ment's property and· jail division for about a year and a half, said Neth. Pr11111on Off1rin1~~~~ PATIO COVERS~!!!:!~~ "Th. Newport" Rov9h eown Dou9lcn Fir. Pr.cut or cut to your de.ign. Other designs & -;;:::::::::::----.111L.A. size• availabte. Order '--· youn today. Delivery & Insta l- lation available. Pr .. taining optlona~. Reg. $207.59 ...... ~· ...... IUL IUWNI umcE PUEU ..... 11.11 0RTHD WEEl- 1-101'" U..IM . ...... he.A.ff .... ~llJO ORTHD ILEEI UP™ ..... " .. k!hf. 1Htll11 .,., ,., ., .. •Mfr•lh4 ..... AU ITml mllE.I II Ill ITIOl 11 ... D NllWS ULI 8EllllE RAILIOAD TIES ,., .. ...., ..,. 111.11 CllCIETE CWIEI A ffCOQd effort de1l1ned to ...... endJca\lon of the d.rMded IYlllY moth from a small WM 1n aJ San J uan Capl1trano la under way th1a week. Ha The mod\, which l.n ttl cater- pUlar form can dev11tate 6r· . chards and fore.ta, wu detected tn San Juan In 1880. That dJ.lco..' vtty=DDWCI an bUtlal round of tpn ol the 1n.c:Udde 8evtn ln and April of 1Mt year. Tbe -..ond rciund of ~ 1hould be the lut one n..<tM., accordlnc to 1tate and county .,ncultural offidall. SpraYina wlll be performed on foliale 1'nOwn to be attnctive to the IYfll'Y moth. The lnlectidde wm not be applied to lawn1, f---. or ltl'UC'CUlw. Homeownen will be edviled of the 1prayln1 before It takea plla, oftidall Mid. ANNUAL YIELD 6-MONTH ACCOUNT 30-MONTH ACCOUNT ' POPE AND BE AR -Pope John Paul IJ is entertained by a dancing bear as the Moscow ., ............ Circus performs in St. Peter's Square, Vatican City. The circus is on a tour of Italy. Elf«uvt through Mar. 29. Effectivt through Mar. 29. 3 cops arraigned in secret Minimum $10,000. Earns above rate for 26-wk. term. Yield assumes all funds are reinvested at same rate. though rate may change. Compounding of interest not permitted. Rate announced weekly. Minimum Sl,000. Earns above rate for 30- month term. Interest compounded daily. Rate announced every two weeks. Anaheim officerSt charged with misconduct Three former Anaheim police officers charged wittt using ex· cessive force while members of an elite, crime-fighting task force were arraigned out of public view in cloeed door proceedings that even the judge described as "highly unusual." . clings in his chambers this week. plaint issued on March 2, charged the men with conspiracy to ob- struct justice, falae imprisonment and assault under the color of authority. By Federal law. Certificate withdrawals ~subject to substantial penalty. Savin~ insured to $100,000. £e ~GmRALTAR SAVINGS ._ ~ Assets cnerC.7 billion dollan ·Offices statewide ,., f 1"'2 Gobr•h•t s.. • ._.,.i LNft ,.....,.. .. ,...., FOIL WRAPPED CHOCOLATE CANDY ~~~'1B~From West Germany ..-RABBIT 2'/J • long .24 MEDALLION 3• long .24 BUTIERFLY 21A • long .34 LIGHT NATURAL RAnAN T"IAIU"E CHESTS From Singapore Superbly crafted, pirate de- . elgned ctiesta have Inside wood framing and an Incised braN clasp. For travel around the horn, auper storage or Interior accen~~t.~-~ many uses u•1r1 ........ ;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;::;;:1!1 from aouffle ----• to salad! 3• to 3>,4 • dHp, WHITE PORCELAIN ACCESSORIES FROM OUR GRAND OPEN STOCK SELECTION From Japan WONTON SPOON .---::::i~,... ~·long .75 SPOON REST 3• long .85 LIVILY EARTHENWARE MUGS From Korea LOTUS BOWL 3'/1° di• .• 85 4Y1" dla. 1.09 Two appMllng design• on off·whlte . 3y,· tall 8 o~ HEXAGON BOWL 11W' d&a. 3Yt" dMP 4.71 I SIZES ... to ev. ~wide 2• to 3'4' deep .49 to 1.49 Rather than having the ar- raigrunents of the three men take place in open cou rt, Orange County Superior Court Judge Luis Cardenas granted defense motions to handle the procee- During their arraignment, for- mer officers Peter Wann, John R. Jansen and John C. Everley pleaded innocent to allegations contained in an Orange County Grand Jury indictment handed down earlier this month. Judge Cardenas scheduled a post-indictment preliminary hea- ring for April 19 in West Orange County Municipal Court. The grand JUry, in its com- (An indictment is a formal charge made against a person by a grand jury. It does not establish guilt or innocence.) Before their firings by the city in February following an inter- nal probe, Wann and Everley were detectives and Jan.1en was a sergeant on the police force. MARBLE OR BRAIS PLANT STANDS From Taiwan Add dimension to plant or statue. MARBLE WITH CAST BRASS FEET 6" dla. 5.99 HEAVY DUTY OPENWORK BRASS ON CASTERS 11 • dla. 15.99 AM Bl DEXTER STAINLESS STEEL SHEARS From Japan Sleek shears with orange plastlc coated handles for right or left handef's. . 6" tong 2.89 a• long 3.29 WHITE RICE PAPE" l BAMBOO BLINDS From Taiwan Stunning ShoJl·lnsplred bllnds are oonalrUj:ted of two layers of rice paper with matching bamboo ribs. Complete with white pull cord, natural wood bar, bamboo base and locking metal mechanism. NOTICE OF DE A TH OF M011CS "" CMN0WT10te iecmc11 cw ......cAllOM MARILYNN S. BREWST£ NOTICE 11 HEAEBV GIVEN lhal t1M foa ~ • Llmllad PattnenNp pr-.ty Hl9llft0 0 ........ CW ALCOMOl IC AN D OF P ETI T I ON T '*-GEAAU> J. COLEY .. 111'2.... MVIAAGe UC... ADMINISTE R ESTATE NO :t.'4t==~H~~~·T~~": To Whom 11 ~'"n AUOAEV A·lllH S. n 471 o-i.ke 0."'9. El T0<0. Calltomia A. HELENIHI and ClAAENCE p HELE· To all heirs, beneficiaries ~~°:":'r.~ ::.:_~ :; =:.1~':~~-~1~ creditors and contingen berry P-1<. c.llornle 91320. MARVIN E SALE GENERAL (PUB PAEMI IO -al· d I f M ' l S THOMAS et POtll Olllce Boa 425. CeOar ClOl10loQ -egee 81 2901 KarbOf lloule-c re tors 0 art ynn . Aklo•. Callfoml• Hl24. ANTHONY M vwd. Coat•-· CalllOfnja Brewster and persons wh oefOICH e1 6051 Hempton Coun. WMI· Publlehad O••nt• cou1 oauy P1101. may be Othe....n ..... ln•-rested mlnllw. CaltfOfnla 12113, LVLI! A. TAV· l.UICh 25. 1912 t~~2 • ~..... "" LOA at 33754 Slwra Valle!O Aoacl. s .... in the will and/or estate: t,~· t tUO and WILLIAM T • A . . .h L.--f'led "'2000 Cot•.._ ..._. -,,,. ~c peuuon as ~n 1 POf1 a-:ti. Cellfornla ueeo .. umuao ~ -•llK by James R. Brewster in th P..,,,.,., -111e """ -o1 A a o ----------Su~rlor Court of Orang ~~'1i~iMl:.!'~11~~~· :.:..~ NO~ ~~llOM County reque1t ing tha t0tnlat2807,waed1uoive<1bymutua1 ~OllM.COHOllC J R B L.--.ellecllve~27, IN1 M ~~ ames . rewster ~ ap-1H011 owN'IO to 1.,. p.,,,..,.,,.., -111 ~ pointed as personal repre-c1a1ma aoalftat t.,. Pa•tn.talllp w111"" To wi-" Mey eono.m sent.alive to administer the recetve.i by AICHARO c OSTOICH at MYRON Mill.EA .. ~ 10 Iha 0.. 22471 o-t.lle on.., E T0<0. Celifo<nla P*1"*'1 01 ~ ..._.. ConttOI e s t a t e o f M a r i I y n S . t2t30. 1or .. 42 .. OH SAL.E llEEA a WINE (PUB Brewster (under the lnde· .. eacw~-IC~ tlN21UCK'~ PAEMI to H ll aic:oholic bev•••tH al • . ..... ......, ......., .....,. 18522 Botta Chica. Huntington Beach pendent Administration of ~'::. L......., California. · "'·tat.es Act) The petition is A .., Publl•Md o ...... COHI Dally Pllol "'"' • II & G •nub:• .... LI& Mwc:ll 25. 1112 1~ set for hearing in Dept. No. 3 JACl(M*. lllDOD a tucttl..IMQ at 700 Civic Center Drive, -::';: 1:E,-., West, in the City of Santa •:;-r::: Dr. Ana, California on AprU 14, Publr:::o'renge c~.~y Pllol . "ICTITIOUS •USINESS 1982 al 9:30 a.m. MWCll 25. tM2 1..o..tt NAME STA~MbtT' - IF YOU OBJECT to the .,.,!1~~0~~1"0 _.''°"' •1• do•no grant.mg of the peution, you Nm.JC 9T1C( AllMEff'S. m' P1«en11a A....,ue, should either appear al the COS1;.:=u~.,l~~=~~\,, Oe>el hearing and state your ob-B•lboa 111-.ca111ornla'7Ml jectlons or file written ob· ....._ BarlMI•• Al·Baull. 111 De>••. jectlons with the court be-cw~~' 8~:':~~·:~o;".:::.'.!,, .,. fore the hearing. Your ap-AT::Z"J: ::;-1...,1,,1c1 ... 1 • pea ranee may be in person 1n '"' s-"" c-i o1 t.,. St•t• o1 ~ Al·k1at1 b Calfornla. lot Ille CounlY of 0.-Tiii~ ~--t WM 11194 With the or oy your atRtomeE Ay.CREDI In the -Ol lhe tat ... OI ~ L. County Clerk ol Oran99 CO\lntv on IF YOU A • Sctlwwtz, OaoMwd. March J, ttm. TOR ti t red' No11oe" 11ete11y 111_.. -11>e ._._. ,., .. ,.. or a con ngen c 1-a1gnac1 .. _. • ~ ..... to .. hlCI-PvbllllWd 0r-. cout oa11y P11o1, tor of the deceased, you must -end .,_. blclder, eubtaQ to_..... Marc114, 11. 11, u. 11112 "4.C. file your claim with the ........,.,. ... ..__c-t,onor...., _. ----------..,. 1111 wt OI Aptl 1912 M .. olllOe of court or present it to the Ju111111 a.~• P1a1111l1M,.. eorpo. •C llJIC( personal representative ap· r111on. roo s .... 111 ftow«. 22nc1 fl .. Loe ------------Angetea, County of Loe AngelW, S..le OI polnted by the court within caQ1orn1a, a1 the tlclh•. t"ie'"" ..._Of ..cnnoua ..... f lhs f h date f Mid ci--1 al IN -ol dMltl end al MAm STA~ OQ{ mon rom l e o 111e ,.... 1111e '"" .....,.. .,... IN ... ,. first issuance of letters as Of Mid .-..-s"" eoquhd by oPar• • n.a lollOwlr'9 .,.,_ •-. - provided in section 700 of ~-~~of~ ---.. ·.~ Music av SHAY. not Channel Ca "f _....,to u-_, , ~ Aoec1 S-.CAl2tl1 the probate code of h or-•-OI dMl!l, tn'"" to a1 the -1aln,... LARRY SHAY, 220t Ch.,,.... Aoacl. nia. The-ti me for filing property llltuatad In C11y ottl\'"llngton llalbOe. CA t2t11. clalms will , prl kach C....nly 01 Oranoe. Stet• of Cati-Tllla buelnea i. condvclad by .,, In· not expire or tornie. part1cu1W1y clWcrlbed .. tollow9. dMdual to four months Crom the date 10 wtt; lMY'< 511ey f h h . ticed bo Loi 21 of Ttac:I HIO .. P« map t~ Tl•I• •t•l•m•nt ... lll•d •1111 111• o l e eanng no a ve. Otes.ct 111 a-21&, Paoaa u 10 21 o1 County Clerk of o..,... eouncy on t.lercfl YOU M AY EXAMINE :'f:.:"~..:,.-c:,:;e:::: 1s.,t112 tr•t11 the Clle kept by the court. 11 .. , 9745 P0t1 Royal Clrcle. Huntington Publlahed O••nr. Cont Dally Pllol. you are interested In the es-~ C:-: ca111 111 .....,. ~ of 1:4arctt 11a. All<• t. • 15. '* 1405-Q tate you may file a request 1.,. Unllad stat• °" Mia. °' '*1 -" -.,. _ . h. h . '"" .....,_ .,..._ by -_.., .....,_ ... ~ wat t e court to receive by M0t19:orTrv110aaoonttoepro.. ---------- special ,notice of thde infvehn-~~~of .,_,,,t llld nc:nnoue .,.. .. tory o estate an o t e 1Mc1e0<ot1erato11e1nwncine'""•be MAmSTA~ petitions accounts and re-rectlwd 11 ti. •lotwald o111c. at eny-TM tottowlng P«IOn• ••• clolnO .,.,... ports de~ribed In Section ::' ci'.': ~tion 11ereo1'"" 11e-,_.:'D-e-MHTALS, 2016 Hnor eo... 1200.5 of the California DeledlNa 1t111de)'otliWdl. 1t12 '-"l.~.._,CAm11. ~-,..__,, Stefan._.. _.....T.LEWISENTtN'MeS.INC. c1VU01te ......,..e. ~tor With-• Calllomla c:o<p0<9tloft. 2011 HwMf N I CHOLS, STEAD, 801· -.ciof111a&1ai. ~.c-.-.CAeaw7 LEAU 6 LAMB ...,. e. '::!Mid o-crent ,.:.:-• -*-d tiy. _._ 3Ji Pomona Mall West A::::t ~ John T. Lewtll Ent . tnc. Pomona, Ca. ti 719.....-:::"1 1 1 c..pw....,, =.:..,. .._.., ('114) l!S-UU "' ..... ..._,llMA. Thll aletement WH llled wlllt lh• Lea ......... CA 9'1 County ca.-of 0..,. ~on "'-di Published Orange Coast A......,,., u 1 ...... 23, tta Dally Pilot March 2,. 26 P'11blltlled Or•ne• Co•ll O.Hy Piiot, ,,_ ' "'' ' Metdl 25 2t Apttl 1 1"2 Publlallecl <><•noe CoHt Dally P'ffot, April l , 1982 1407"'82 ' . ' tSSMI t.wcin H, APtt11, 8. 16, 1M2 131M2 " BEGINNERS ~COME! REGISTER NOW for lnttmatlonalv famous lea C.epedea SkMlng School Whche you'w lee •ed &.fore or never lee skated In your life, one ol these du.Ms lt fot you. Mesa Verde Center HARBOR 6 ADAMS 2701 HARB08 879-8880 &troll Now. -Leara Row To Ice Ska&e "8JC IKATING EVDYDt\~ C*LY A -1mE ~Y1 ' . »Wlr•••"• DEVIOUS? -Author Charles Bordin of Phi- ladelphia goes eye-to-eye with Jellybean, an Angora rabbit at the Philadelphia Zoo. Bordin thinks rabbits are devious.and says in his book, "Killer Bunnies," that rabbi ta will go to any lengths to get their favorite vegetable, broccoli. .. ICTITIOUS aus1N•S.S NAMl!STATUHllT '1CnTIOU9 .,.._ .. Th• fOlloWlftO ,.rson• ere dolnt ~ ITAT'ilmlfl" bll•IMHM: The lollowlllg ~we-. bwl- LENK WOOO ASSOCIATES. 1422 ,_ea: Hl ... re w..,, Colla MaM, Callfonlle DA'IOHfi Coet<TAIL LOUNGE. 2t01 92626. ~' loulavard, Costa MeH, CA L-'--Wood. 2422 N~ra CLAllENCE P. HElENIHI, 11111 Wey. C-Mne. C9'1fw~ f2'». Poppy Avenue Fou111a111 Valley C Rktwcl M. Wood, tm H'-ollra t210I • • Wey, c-Meow. c.lllornl• .... AUoAEv II. HELENIH~ I 11118 "°""" Tiiis bullnets " colldvc:t•d by • A-. Founlelll v-.y, CA '2708. ee11ere1 l*'tMn/llp. Tl\19 bu81MM •• condU01ed by .,. In· LMN Lani! W-dMdual. Tlll9 IU'"-1 -lllact wllll Ille CW--P. Helenll'tl Count' Clerk of <>renoe county .,., Tl\le •••••m•n• wu ltl•d wllll 111a March 10, 1t1L County Cieri! ol 0...,. County on Merell HAPPY -Author Studl Terkel Mid he•a 11deU1hted .. that the Girard (Pa.) School Board refUMd to let atuc1enta aldp rNC11nc narta of hJa belt eeller. r.workinlt bec:auee at contalnl profanity. Country Pine Antiques Sale • Small Harvest Tables • Plate Racks • Blanket Chests • Kitchen Shelves • Dressing Tables • Side Draw Bakers Tables • Large Harvest Table r _ y much, much more ·~( ,,, -21 Fastion Island ..i)l~u;,..m ~-~ Newport Stach, Calf. ~~'-il\Jll (714) 644-6990 .... CID'llr,,. 'Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thut'ld1y, MlrOh H, 1912 J Newport ~rt I es ti val nears Entry forms ready for artists interested in 2-day event ~try forma are available for all Oran1e County art"ll inter· ested in part.klpatina in the an· nual Newport Beach City Art• Fe1Uval aet for April 24 and 25. The two-day featlval wUl be held ln Fuhlon bland and, for the first time ln the festival'• 18 years, artiall wlll be perm!tled '° aell aa well aa display their worka. F.ntry fonna are available ln all county ltbrarle1, muaeuma, the Ouia aenior dtlz.en center ln Co- rona del Mar and the Parkt, BellclMI and Recreation Depart- ment at the Newport Qty Hall, 3300 Newport Blvd. Top winnert In the fntival'• juried art competJtlon will rec- eive cuh awarda. In addition to cuh prh.el. the worka of ooe ar- tiat will be aelected for a tpedali dlaplay in the Newport City Hall. All art fonna, from aculptwe to phc>tqp"aphy to painUJla, are ae- oeptable. The festival hours will be from Help yourself to a · Heapln1 N lectlon ol Qualified ffope(ul1 in the DAILY PILOT HELP WANTED ADS • continental arts • period furniture • to}l's • bronzes • lamps • artgJoss Cl c:: 8 ·.:: Q.l e ~ ~ -c:: ::s 8 • -:a: 8 c Cl (.) .i'.: Q.l E < • Cl) 00 c -.5 Q Dorothy Emerson & Don Nolan present II FAill DRIVE• COSTA MESA. CA MAR. 25, 26, 27 & 28, 1982 THURSDAY THRU SATURDAY, 1-10 P.M. • SUNDAY, NOON-I P.M. General Admission $2.50. With this ticket any number-$2.25 each. Use Arlington Drive (bac k) Gate 3A entrance Saturday aftern oon and Sunday. I o,._ _______________________________________ __, • dolls • lighting fixtures • jewelry • watches • collectables • paintings • 0 ::!. Cll ::J -Q -Q ... -~ • (') -~ ~ en • QQ ., Q ~ :r r:;· cn • --· ::s Cll ~ ., s· -en • .. ,Mal 23. lte2 .... ltllJNcl Or .... Cout Delly PltOt P-11 t----------------------,___-------------------------------------------------Mercll 11 1e. u A!lrll 1 ltm 1091~ Publlel>ed Orang• Co•at Delly Pllol, • -• -• Merell 25.,..,,. '· •• 15, 1"2 140t-t2 ACTmOUS .,._.. f'tCTmOUS ...... MAim ITAn.wr Nam ITAT'DmNT The I011ow1119 ,,__we dOlng butll-The 1o1ow1r1g ~ is~~ ,,... ea: . -.: ROADSTER MOTORS INTERNATI(). PRINT PLACEMENT 915 Weel hi· NAL. ~ w. 1711t Stt..c. Coet• ...... CA -Boule'lwO. SulM e. H..iiort ..._. 12627. CA 92tl1 FRANK YOUffO HUTCHISON. 507 GREOOfrf J LITTLE. 412 E.,...lng 3Stll Str..C. Newpor1 8eecll. CA t2tl3. SW ~ NRPor1 ...,,,_ CA t2MO DAVIO OEAH WEBSTER. 507i. 35di T!Me --le condllc:ted by.,. In· S!reel, Newpor1 8eecl\. CA 12ta. _,. Tiiie ~ .. conclucted by • ~ Gteoort J Utt1e ~Young HulcN9«! Tiiie e1e1eme111 wu filed wllll Ille Tiii• el.•l•ment wu 111•0 wllll the ~Cieri< ol Or.noe County on Mwcl\ County Cleft< 04 Or.noe C-ty on Mwell ' P11fm 23. 1982. ,_,. Publiel>ed Or•i.• Co••• Deity Piiot. Merell 25. Aprtl I, . IS. 1912 1311-t2 f.-:11.-------...._- Publt.....i Or•no• CoH I Delly PllOt. flC11nOUe ._.. M8'dl 25. Allrt 1. I. IS. 1112 13'7 llAm SfAT.-.n ----------+Ille tCllclwlat -_.....,.__+--....c ll'f1Cl -~ COMllFS HAIR OESIONI FOR M£H AHO WOMEN, 2111 IWbor ........ ACTTT10UI .,.._.. -a. C:C.Ce ...... CA t262t MAim ITA.,_,.,. MICHELE LA COMBE. 1223 ..,_ The lolowlrlg per-. it doillO .,....._ ~~ ~.ft..fil~i223 ,._ M : CEILING KL.EAN, 1400 Quell Slr..C, Drive. S-Ma. CA t270... Sutt• 110. -,.ort 8eecll. CA t2MO. Tiiie ~ it c:onclW:ted by • gentrll H Ttmoth Hlc-•J · 721 Amigo• pwl~ LA~ W~le~~~=br en In-Tiiie etatemenl wu filed wllll the ~ Coun1y Clrll ol Orange CounlY Oii Merell . H ~ Hlc*ey 2. 1M2. ,,.._ Tiiis atetemanl wH Iliad wllll Ille Publl-Or~ CoHI Delly Piiot, ~ Clelt ol Or.noe County Oii Merell M8'dl :lS. A11rt t, 1. IS, 1812 t40G-C ,_ Publlalled Ore1199 Coat! Dally PMot P9JC l9JIC( MIJtCll 25, APf'W 1, I, ts, tN2 t40<!-82 ---------.,.1 STATUillltT 0" WITHOttAWAL "ttOM PAltTNllltSHIP OPl!ltATINO ~1 UNOlllt flCTITIOUS au111111ss "'CTITIOUS aUSlllES.S NAMI llAMll STATIMINT The lollowtft9 ,,..._ llltS wllhdrewn Tiie loll-Ing __ , e re dolno es • t•nerel P•rtner fro"' Ille IMlslneuu· P.,lnenlllp operetlno uncl•r Ill• NEWpORT DOG SMOWS tm• flclltlous llvWneu -ol M ~ M Mc:Ourmott S..lte C. lr\llne. CA t,7,., MAINTENANCE SERVICE el 300 MOSBOUR COR.PORATIOH, • Bucknell•-. Coste IMM, CelHornle Cellfornl• corporation, 1122' '262' Mc:Ourmott, 5'111e C, l rvl119, CA '271l. Tiie fictitious bus ln•n neme This busln.ss Is collcluc 1ec1 b' a , .. ,.,,..,.,for llM P11rtn9"lllp •H llled corporation. oft Aprll 12. 1'71 111 Ille County 01 MOSBOUR CORPORATION °••noe Wllll•m Antypas Jr Full Heme end Adclreu of 111e Prasldeflt ' • Penon Wtno.wing: Tiiis S\I...,_. WM filed wttlt Ille ltollerl G.,etll K•nned,. JOt County Clerll of Ol'eft9e COilftl' on Bu<kneH R-. (Oita Mew, Cellforllla Merell J, tm. '262' Isl lt0ber1 Gwett> IC-y f'Oftl11. .. , Pvbllshecl Oranoe Coast Oelly Piiot, Published Orenge CoHI Oell, P iiot, 1 Merell 4, 11, II, U , 1"2 1 Mer. 4, II. II. ts. 1"2 tS.-12 , Holland Flowers This Weekend's Special $395 $900 a Bunch Reg: a 10126-A Adams, ... 963-0739 l1owUi .Mill "MORE THAN JUST A FLORIST'' &.:EARN ••• lntarJor Design -FREE- '111 have over S9fXJ,OOO by age 65." '1t used to be real estate. "Mine will total over S5fXJ,(XJO when I'm 62." \ l ~ BankofAinerlca'sIRAPLUS: It could beyour million dollar nest egg. 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Open )'1>Urs at Bank of America t<>tkl)l IRA+ An c~ crl cw: cl our ln\'l..,.m1:nc 11f'(lof\il 15.75% 18Montbs <:um'flt Annual Rau: 'll:nn •~oo mlnllllUm \k'Pillll. Rall' IN 11l4<t.1 ro ~~hut L~ tlxt'\I 11c time: uf lll'l111.1nf up:nl"IC liw the U.'"11 of the: ln\\1"mt•nc. ·~~~ ............... llK'.-e.14•-...~n. .. tMa1«••«..albc~•--IM ___ .........._ ••ww. «tWJ1 H~ ......... "9foft. ff\; -~UOpcNhl111 • ... Mtn .... *'°"" ,,.,.,_, ........ -mft. ... . I ' . I I I If . c I. .. '· f• ( .. ·. .. ,. 1111 i.: .... 11" .;.....IVBM- 1.11111ee N1W1 . CHAN.IE'•~ . . I THI .IVffMOHI HAWAf f)Vl-4 , I ....... ~ UNOIRITANOINO HOMAN IEHAW>R ··st; .. ·· . ()) 0-. NEWS. ·== C'IJ MOVll * * "Btonco BUly" ( 1980) Clml EutWOOCI. Sondre LQCl!e. A former .00. ..-.nan from .._ Jer-.y rwia .. 1119 drHm QI I*· tormlnQ In e Wiid W•I ehow. 'PG' ei10 G MOV1£ * • * * "CaHblanca" (11143) Ingrid Btrgmail. Humphrey Bogart A gem· btlng casino ·owner hold• the key 10 I.he eec:ec>e or • Frend'I Relll1anoe IMdet and hll wife, WhO ere l'IM-~ ''°"' the Nwa. 9: 16 {%) CHAAUE CHAP.LIN COMEDY ll1EA TAE "One A.M." (1918) Charlie plays .• drunktn playbc)y WhO returns lrO(TI a night on lhe town and runs an obSlade C:OOrM wllh his front door. the llalrt and hf• bed. l:30 . WELCOME BACK. KOnv. • Cll a "fEW8 ll!I BUSINESS REPORT 9 BARNEY MILLER (8) THIE UT'Tl.EST 'MERMAJO Animated Richerd Ch1mberl1ln nerretes Han$ Chr1&tjen A~'s story about a mermaid wl'IO 11ranl1 to become 8 human being · 0 UTTl.IE JOHNNY JONES This revival ot the· t~ George M. Cohan mulicel c:omedy lbout llll a Ameri- can JOC)key who lt191 to win t'1e 'Engttlh Derby tMtuiet SUCh f-vor1t91 u "Give My Regatdf To 8roadW1y" and "Yank .. Doodle Dan- dy." t :36 CI) MOVIE . * •'h "Any. Which Way You Can." (1980)' Clint EutwoolS, Sondra Loci<e. Before Mttllng down with h11 girt and pet orangutan, a b111e-hsted fighter 11gn1 up tor one lui. 1vcr111ve metch. 'PG' 1:00 II 088 NEWS D N8CNIEWS g HAPPY DAYS AGAIN 8 A8CNEWS • M0A•s •H When• Q9"9'el diel II the 4077111. hi• aide strugglea . lo 11'\ake ii -he died hetoocally 0 in belt'-. .., .JOKER'S WILD &l OVIER EA8¥ Guest: Ralph Bellamy (RI lb DICK CAVETT Cl) P~M. MAGAZINE Snow pc04 l!J EHTERT AINMENT TONIGHT 9.ackstage at 'The Young And The Rellless" with Jamie Lyn B1uer. Dennie Cole, Debra Adair and St• ven Ford .. Qt THE MUPPET'S GOest JOf'lathen Wlnte<s. ~Mo\11e * *'~ 'Ode To Billy Joe" ( 1976) Robby Benton. Glynnis ·O'Connor 8aMd on tne soog by Bobbie Gentry. A tortner)led lttn· 8gef'11 P811 •IU>etlenc:et OranQe ODllt DAILY '.tLOT~. Mlrdt II. 1181 DEBUTS -Oscar, Tony, Grammy a nd Emmy Award-winner Rita Moreno debuts in television series, "9 to 5" premiering to- night at 9 on KA.BC (7). . complicate hl9 "'" true ,~.·pa• (B)TIMIW.U "Tht 19M>I" Olok C1V9tl exlmlntl the enttrtaln- ment and IOClal titu1llon1 during a lime l*lod wMll every corner ol !ti. wonct WN Involved In -on • matllve ecelt. (D)MOW. * * "The Jazz Slnget" ( 11180) Neff Diamond, Lair 1ence Otlvler A New York canto• breatla with famlly t•adlllon and M l• out to find MICCMa u 1 . poo mulic lier. 'PO' 7:30 II 2 OH THIE TOWN FMtured: a profile 01 ~ ot LOe Angelel' lemele dllC jod(eye. find out hOw the city echool'• mutlcel Instrument• are repaired; vl1ll Biii S<;hroed4w'1 pet dream. a 1pot11 museum. D Qt FAMILY F1EUO g LAV£AHIE&SHIALEY &COMPANY La\'tlfne latk1 Shlrtey Into taking a day off from WOf1I llthebt~ 8 EYE OHL.A. Featured: • report on talk· Ing antmela, 1 look a1 cakes thal are work• of art. a· weekend getaw1y with Elmer Oms. 8) M•A•S•H Cot Polt9'. Hawkeye, B.J , Ftanlc and Rader get~ let.My loll on their 11r1y beet< lrom 1 ~ mttl· a()) TIC TAC DOUGH • MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT ID NEWS 9 YOU ASKED FOA IT Featured: "Voge 1'1 The Sky" and "London'I Flan Surgeon .. 1:00 8 (I) MAGNUM. PJ. M1gnum enc:ounlt•• a IWaggetlng. cowboy hilt· wetrlng T eaan wtlo looll 1 e11ac:tly Ilka Hlggint. D QIFAME A megulne wrltet P«>aM N a IMClhing auilllnl to ge1 lnform11lon tor an 9(11- cle ht la llrritlng. . 8 MOVIE *. ··~ "Chllfade': (111&4) Cary Grant, A~ Hep- burn A women beComel 1"9 largel 01 her murd«ed hutband'• cronl91 who belie'ol• ahe knows where• 1t1Sl0f0f1une It rnocten. Ind Supporting Aclr-. Beet fllc1ure end Belt Sono. • p .M. MAOAZIH9 An anlmel trllner'1 cloet lrlendlhlp with 1 kHlef Whale: 1 man who moved hit 11m11y to the counrry to brlng them doMr to09th- er. • • MOVIE * * • "The Young Phlla- delphiane" ( t959) P1ul Newman. Barb1r1 Rulh. The Integrity ol • young lawyer 11 lnttrumet'ltai In hll gaining I pr .. tlglou1 POlitlon &rid a be!WtllUI girt. . • ™'8 OU> HOUSE Bob Vile inetllll the new kllehen al)pllancee and Norm Abram build• a new rfffpetlo.a D MEAi< ltREvtEWa Roger Ebert and Gane s111c;e1 took at thl1 year'• 09Clfnoml,_ CID 80XJHO'S llE8T: JAa< JOHN80H A "" 10o1< I& tMan et the 1atraordinery Hie ol the "GalVHton Giant," tM first black to t>acome world heavyweight cham- pion. (l)MOVIE *** "One On One" ( 1977) Robby Benaon, Annette O'Toole A l>Oy WhO goet 10 college on a bUketbell Ktlolarahlp ii abused by lhe COacil, ICOmed by hit tutor and uMd by the ~ lor tt1 own purpoaet. 'PG' 0MOVIE * *'* "The Competition" (t980) Richard ~. Amy kvlng. Two ptanltt1 11 a San Frenc19co mutlc: rompetltion find lhat their love tor Md\ other con- lllc11 with their proleulon- al embitionl. 'PO' 1:30 8 0 8080M IUOOIES Kip, Henry end the f•I OI the gang imlglne them- ...,,.. .. Mnlot olt!Hn• In • luturiltie toClMy. 0 • AU. .. THE FN/lli.. Y The Bunlter home 11 r av.gec:I by fire -then by Archie -In .,, elfOt1 to oot· lec:1 ~· Insur~ mon-ey. • AUSTIN CITY LIMITS Clarinetist Peta Fountain. llddler Johnny Ollnble and • 0 POClCE SQUAD( - - Oe1ec11V9 Orebin't probe & 8 ao Qful.aU L-f Qll\&A._ Ramirez and hi• band Jazzrru1njan Devil are fee- of• mordef leads him Into a IOve triangle in which he ~ entanQled with a vengeful ex-wife. a chQr\19 Q!_r:l and an ex-oon. CJ YOUR CHOCE FOR THIE06CAR8 RICI\ Lllllt and Oel>ble Peynotdt hOlt the 17th annuli ednlOn 'of 1i- aw 1r d a honoring the wtn.-1 of a popular poll In the Ii• maior 0sc:er cete- gorle1: Beat Actor. Ac:lrMI. Supporting Actor IUl'ed. CO PORTIWTS IN PASTEl.8 "Young Man With Beatd" 11:35 (X} MOVIE **'It "WhO'I Thal Knock- ing At My 0oor7" ( tll67) Haryey Keitel. Zina Bethune A young man Uv· Ing in New York'I lillit Ita- ly hes trouble adjusting when he emberll1 on a rornanc:e with a blorlde WASP 1=:r: ~ "T'*cl """"' Q1"V Tli. atrono ~_. .. Jon~ eno KMI nuno'a csocv- mentuy look• ti ti• dl"tr· ent 1am11y. thuel.lone llorlg ~ York'a lhlfd A~. a 1treet ot dlvtrN ct ..... and OIJhurM (R) • HOM-m'TIOH TILIVtllON "No M.ac>e On My TIP9" Tllr .. blacl( jlm tlj) deno- tfl .. Sandman 8lma, Chuck Orttn end eklMy Br!QOI r rtmlnlee. lbOlli lht petl Ind lhOw wha1 they •• doing to continue I YtfY apeclet tradition. (R) (C)MOVll *•'it "B"' Friend•" ( 1975) Rlchtrd Hatch, 0oug'Chec>1n Outing. trip to Celllornl1, 1n emotion· elly dlllreteed YoU11Q man lrlel to deltrov hlti bell lrlend'' rellllOnlhlp wiO'I hi• glfllrllfld. (8)MOVIE * • ·~ "The Rolltcklng Advtnture1 01 Ellu Fruer" (tll78) Sueannall York, John w11.,.. In 19th-c.ntury Autlrallt. a ... captaln'• wtt. f.ill tor a lec:M(ou1 rogue lboltd llllp • (a>MOVIE * flt 'it "The Poelman Alw1y1 Ring• Twice" ( 11181) Jec:k Nicholson, Jelllca Lenge. A young woman and her lover plot to mut~ her husband. 'R' 11:80 G Q) GIMME A 8A1EAK Ntll uvee the day When the Kamtnlky home la robbed 8 9 TAXI Lalka and Slmke decide to get married and ch<>OM the Sunlhlne Cab Compa. ny garage to be the slla tor ''*' nupllel vowe. a 10:00 8 ()) KHOT8 l»IOIHO Laura tellt Richard that the II pregnant, and Val w11tn • novel about the Ewl'!i_I. D Q!) HILL STREET BLUES The cope lalle on 1tie tout gangs In a ti.ntlil buket· ball game. and B411ker and Wastungton celch 1n X· riled marlll\on when they 11ue out 1 porno movie houM. lltll••~ NEWS D O 20120 • TO THE MANOR BOAN Recently widowed Audrey Forbef.Hemlllon looks lur· ward to running the Grantlelgh Matlor Eaute on her own ())TWO TOP BANANAS Don Adams and Don Rk<- kln teem up tor a allow· cue ol burlesque and unceneored comedy 10:05 {%) MOVIE * * * "Mean Street•" ( t973) Harvey Keitel, Rob- et1 0. Niro A ltl\llll-tlme hood and hl9 lrr9IPOl'IS1b.e lttend ltnd ptenly ol troubte in N-York'• little llaly. 'R' 10:30. NEWS • BUTTEAFUES C0 TliE LAWMAKIEAS Correapondents Linda Wet1h.imer and Collle Rot>en.1 JOin Paul Dulle tor an up-to-tti.-mlnule tum· mery ol Congraaslonal ectlviues (C) MOVIE * * * "North By No<lh- wnl" (111511) Cary Grant Eva Mane Saint An advet· t111ng men's Ille la~ aru1rc.~ he,.~ ta~en lor a CIA agent 0MOVIE * • '• "Bullin' Loo11e· I t981) Richard Pryor, CQ. ly Tyson A bumbling bur- glar. a concerned Khoolleacher end e+ght Children mike a frighten· 1ng c•OM-country trip In 1 br<>llan-down school but 'R 11:00 11 D 8 Cl><ll Qt N£W8 g SATUN>AY NIGHT HOii Fred Wlll•d Gunia Oevo. D Ko.w< • THI JEFnMONS . CH~NNEL LISTINGS t:OO . (I) ~'I.ACEY (Premiere) Two female dlltctlvu 1truggllng 1galnat 1e11l1m trt uslgned by theif rtluc1ant, dleuvinlat boa to 1nvee11- gate 1 murder caae. Tyne Oely Ind Meg Fo.ter atar G Q) Olff"RIEHT l'TAOKE8 • SANFORD ANO SON I. OtC:K CAVETT INSIDE WA8HIHGTOH (O)MOVIE fJ ICNXT tCBSI 0 KNBC (NBCl 0 KTLA (Ind I 8 KABC: IABCI 0 KFMH !CASI 0 KHJ TV llnd I Iii) KC.ST· I ABCI G> IC TTV tlnd I II) ICCOP TV I Ind I SI KCET tPBSI ! (9 IGOC E I PBSI 0 On·TV Z l TV H HBO · c ~Ctnem.u I t i !WORI NY .. N Y 11, • 1WT8SI Wiiiie astumM • aupertOf' 1ttitude wl'llle trying to get Into • tra1ernlly. 8 0 tT06 E <ESPNI " SOQlltQhl 9 CCabl~ News N~tworl!J (Premfenl) Rita Moreno, Valerie Curtin and Rachel Oennleon atar et three worlung women humor· OUtly s1ruogling lo make 11 1n • men'• world llfnlt two otters Ptf purc111st Couoon gooo llftlr for COlllbtlll!IO<I ¥rl\lft/llitk 016111 Clltiomtt PIYS Ill IQOlte,1blt MltS IU 01t1t tX1>111S Apr~ 4. 1982 PfW ~y VMf at OllhCtPlf•llO louhOflt • COUOOll QOOd ~ Ill SOlltllt(n C,hlofn~ wfltll you \tt'lllt mel!IOl•s~ ~ ot 1111 •t111uc_, f1..a Cl\10~ AnotilllCMl llil .. ___ COUPON _ .... * * "FunhouM" ( 1981) Ellabelh 8-ndge, Sytvi1 Mllea. Four teen·•gere le>end • lrlghllul night In 1 cernlv1I lunhouM Inhabit- ed by • demented balker and hit moo11rous eon 'R' (J)MOVIE *'It "The Kiiiing Kind'' (11173).John Savage, Cindy W~l11m1 Aft• _,,,ng two year• on a trumped up aex I TUBE TOPPERS KHJ (9) 8:00 -11Your Choice for the Oscars." Ric h Little. Debble RoynoJda host a wards honoring winnt!rs ol a po- pular poll. KNXT (2) 9:00 -.. Cagney & La<:ey.'' Premier or series about two fe- male detectives struggling with sexism and fighting crime. KABC (7) 9:00 -"9 to ~.'' Series premiere about three working women humorous ly str uggling to make it in a man's world . See photo, left. KNBC (4) 10 :00 -.. H ill Street Blues." The cops take on the local gangs in benefit basketball game. cnarge, • young woman 11 releaNd lr0m prison and btglnt •••king h•r rtvf!!P9. 'A' 11:30 • (I) QOINCY D 8TOHIOHT Holl. Johnny Ceraon. GuHt1: Chrlttophar Rteve, Albert Hague 8 0 ABCNEWS NIGHTUNIE 8) ALl IN.THE FAMILY • LOVE. AMERICAN l'TYLIE • N£W8 GD CAPTIONED ABC N£W8 (H)MOVIE * * ~ "The Seetet 01 Seagull l1land" (11181) Je<emy Britt. Nicky Hen· eon. A yOung Am«lcall glrl trltt to Ir• her bllnd llller from her ISiand ceptlvlty 12:00 8 ENTERTAINMENT TOHIOH1' BICkti.ge at "The Young And TM Reetlela" with Jamit .Lyn Bauer, Oennls Cole. Debra Adair and St• Y9n Ford. 8 0 VmAS A lllet'1am veteran wtlo hold• Dan reeponllble for hi• wartime l'ljurkM hlrH 1 hit man Jo klM him (R) U MOVIE * *'"' "All The Brothers We<e Valiant" ( t953) Rot>- etl Taylor. Stewart Granoet. m MO'llE *** "Mary, O.-01 Scn11" ( 1972) Vane1N Redgtave, Glende JICk· eon ., LOVIE. AMERICAN STYLE • FOCU8 ON 80QETY (l)MOYtE * • ''Th9 FINI Cottlllct" (11181) Sim ...... RoNwlo Brazzi. In the third p"'1 of "The Omen" trilogy, )'()Ung Damien. the embodiment of the Antlchr111, la now In adult 111'<1 a !rutted edYlaot to ow pretldent ot the U S 'R' 12'.30 a a u n NIGHT WTTH OAVIO LETTEAMAH G-1· author John Ehri- lchman. g COUPLES Todays epl.00. deell wtl h • woman who clalm• thet &he'd leave her hu1bend ii Ille had llle money ·~ 8IST9l8 Anrta. Ruth 111'<1 JUM I*· lorm 1n •cone.rt leetunng "Fife," "Yes We C1n Can" and "He's So Shy .. 12:36 (I) MOVIE young woman conlldtr1 her po1lllon on virginity. 1:008 MOVIE * ·~ "Jungle Wom1n" ( t944) Evelyn Anker1. loll Colllet • MOVIE * • '-t "Impact'' I t9491 Brf. an Oontevy, Elle Ralnea. 1:10 8 MOVIE * * * "To Love A vam- pire" (11171) Ralph BllH, 811bata Jefford 0 NEW8 1:15 (ff) MOVIE * * '"' "Wholly Mote1J" ( 111110) Dudley Moo••. Ler aine New"*1 In blbll- cll Egypt, I falM PfOPhet named HerlChel .. vee. drop1 on a dlvlne oonvet· Nllon' wtth Moset and decide• he must be the one to lead hie people out of llavery ·po· 1:30 .~8 ** ''Funhouse" (198t) EllZabeth Btrrldge. Sytvta MllH Four teen-agers 1pend • lrlgntlut night In a carnival funhOUM inhabit- ed by a demented barker and his mon1trou1 ton. 'R' 1:60 (l) MOVIE • *'"' "American Pop" ( t98 t) Anlmlted The hlS- to<y of American pop music, from vaudeVllle to rod! 'n' roll, Is 1raced through _.. ~· Hon• ot a temlly ot musi- cians. 'R' 2'..20 1 NEWS MOVIE * "Jungle Captive" ( t945) Otto Kruger, Je<ome Cowi1-o A med 1Cl9nt•st. en aoe woman and a scared aecretary ere all invotved In jungle horror. 2::2& • MOVIE * * '" "Kin Tomorrow Goodbye" ( t9501 James Cagney, Ward Bond. 2'.30. MOVIE • • 'h "The Unbehevable Var an" ( 111112) Myron Hea· ty, Tauruko Kobeyashl (tJMOVlf • • "Loving Couples" ( 1980) Shirtey Mac:Lalne, James Coburn. A married couple and a pair of young singlet •wllch partn«s in a game of 111 .. 1y1e sampling and romantic revenge ·po 2:36 {I) TWO T~ 8>.."!A..,.. Oon Adema end Oon Alc:- klel teem up lor • fhOw. caM of burlesque and unc:.naored comedy 2:<t08 NEWS 2:56 II MOVIE • • "Bronco Bllty" ( 111801 ~twood~SoodrL-' Locke. A former lhoe .-..man from New Jeney reeMDs hlS dream of pelf· lormtng 1n a W•ld WMI 11\0W. 'PG' * * "The Law" ( 19741 Judd H+teell, John 8eci< A seoseuonel homicide trial leads to un1avory maneuvenngt behind the scenes 3:00 ["ti) MOV1£ 12:40 9 CIJ MCMIU.AN & WIFE Sally'• MCtei aomlrer kUl1 a petty lhief wl'IO tried lo &IMI her purM (R) 12:45 CC) MOVIE • * * "Sunday In New YOfk" (11164) Clott Roben· eon. J-Fond• Alter bejng plied by her l>Oy· friend and travellng to New York to 111111 11« broth«, • * * * • "The Stunt Man" ( t980) Peter O'Toolo, Steve Rallsbec:k Wanted by IM police, a dtslurbed lltelnam veteran finds an unsure haven on a movte set wNW• a World Wa• 1 epoc 111>94ng !timed 'R' 3:30D MOVIE * '• "The Jungle" (1952) Rod c.meron. Cetar Rom· 910 JOHN DARLING ANO NOW MOMENT '()U'VE ALL BEEN ~!ING" ~ .... PUIJC llTIE ftCTITIOUS au ... 11 MA•I TAffMOIT n.. 1-.V .,.._ la doing -.. CENTl!NNIAl INVESTMENTS. l302 W Paclltc Coul Highway, Newport Be4Kll. CA t2t63 DUANE ANTHONY WENGELER. 28 I Henovet 0.1 ... Co.ta M .... CA g2m Thia bualneH la conductttd by an In· dMdual O.lltdA w~ Tllll atalament wu Iliad wllll tlla Count) Clertl OI O.enoe Countt 0'1 MWcfl 23, tM2 ,.,. Publiahed 011119e Coal! l>aHy Ptlol, Mardi 25. Apftl t, I . ti, tt82 tJ 10-la .MOYll •• ·~ ''lyhill\•••" (tM1) lloout~ w-. WilllMI Hult A ......., ·-----~ with.~""°~ 111\0W mor• tllOlll I llU• Oer ""* ... wltMMed ... "'"~ .,.. 'I!~.._ ...... ( t1171) OllrlClafio ~. 8hlrl1)' 810111 Wtill• lln9'itoNCI In a NM GOflo- c.ntr Mion CMICI, I .,.etf '""' ,.,,. .. ~ ... I. lot-~-­~ lo 1119 ultlrMM t• . l:M {I) MOVW * •; "Tbtt Kllli"O Kind" ( 1973) Jolvl '-"•· Cilld)' Wlllllrlia. Aft• Mtvlng two yetfl On I tnlmped up N X ChWga, I young WOflllft la r....._, from p<ltotl fll'd begin• .. t lilno htr revtnge. 'R' 4: 10 (.c:J MOYIE • *~ "od. To 8lly Joe" (1970) Ro~by 8•n10t1, Q1ynnl1 O'ConflOf. 8ued on the IOflO by 8obblll Gentry. A tormtr1ted ,..,,. ager'• 1)911 ••Pettanoee c:omplic9tt hit flrtt lrue romtnQ9 'PG' 4:211 ID MAYlllEAAY R..F.O. Sam hhl 1 colorful firm hand WhO qulc:llly beCOmet Mlke'1hero. f'nda11'• Da11• l •ft Mo.,le• -MORJieilG - 1:00~ ** "lt'1Allve"(11174) John Ryan, Sharon Farrell. A bouncing beby COtM9 Into the world with ••no•. clawe end a llrong detlr• to kilt. CJ)•• "COUntdown To DIHter" Anlm1ted.The Thunderbirds Mt out 10 .. ve the Empire State Bultdlng from cof111P8ino on Mann.11111111enc1. ·o· 1:30(8) *'"' "CttarlleChan And The CurN Of The Of-Oon 0-" (111111) Peter u111- nov, Rlc:herd Hatch. Ctler· lie Chan 11 aided by hie bumbllng grendaon In 10Mng I ltrlng of l'TIUf • dert 'PG' t:.o6 (%) * * 'h "The Moon'1 \ Our Home" (11136) Merge- ,., Sullav1n. Herny Fonde. 8ued on Faith Baldwln'a 1tory. An aaplrlng ect•- lall1 In love with a nov.U.t. f'.30 e * '/\ "Thrte Ttxu S1tet1" ( t939) John Wayne, Carota LMdll A COWbO)' ndes to the rtlCU9 of a young women who l\U ~ ttveateneo with the loee of h« ranch. ~ * * "The Gin And The General" ( 111117) Rod Steiger, Virna Utl. 10:00 CID **'~ "Any Which Wlf'/ You C1n•· (1980) Ctlnl Eastwood. SOndra Loclt• Cl)*·~ "A Gtobal Affllr" (1964) Bob 1io99, LllO PutYw A baby, tound by a bec:helor In the IObby ol the UnAted N1tl0nl. Is Ol81rned by 811 the member Nllonl. " •• ·~ "Cardlec: Arr•t" (t978) Gerry Goo- drow, Mike Chan A bledl ~ opwation thet .... dl~i.d '*"'' !Of lttn1911nl• Is dllccMWed by &r1 oltbeet homlc:lde cop. 'PG' 10:30 (%) * • • "S.Ven Beeu- llH" (1976) Giancarlo Giannini. Shirley Stoler. While ltnt>f'lsoned In a Nazi cqnc:cintrtlioo camp, a Ptl· ty tlllel linds hf• o~ detlre '°' aelf-pr.-vllion put to lhe Ultimate tw1 11:i0 (C) •• *. "The 400 Blowl." ( 19511) Jean-P*1t luud, Pa1rlck Autley. A young boy dtprlved of parental wtrmlh and tht acoaptance of hll Ptf"I turl'll hlti lllen•llOn Ind deapllf towerd a Ille of 111\811 c:tlme. •• *~"The C.1 And The Canary" (19711) Honor Bledlmen, Mlc:tlMI Gall9n. Heffl battle lor a lorlvne 11 the apoolly eetal• ol • .....,n•a•e.'N ' 1 ... * *. "Ttle-...U," ',, .. , "•"'• .. , ... . ..._, .............. . ~ tO tml.. I IJOXlt ................ ••1w .......... In r.~°"""811 ,,..... ( ,..., ""' Lin- .... • -0-.."" ,... .. ..,,, ...,.. ~ .............. .. ..-..y ...... to l!!tldOWll•,....... ···~"CNlll ~ lllnt" ( ttlO) Hl#l'llllV~ '°""· ......, l'etlW. Gtl9d ... ooetl I j9t ll!!O' .. llOflOr Ind ,. gll'I. Cl) • • ..,,. flllMI eon. Mot" (1M1) hll'I ,,.._, ~ lfml. In IN lf*cl pert °' ''Tlw °"*'" riotf, YOllnO o.n.n. u. _ .. g dlment of ,,. ,.,._ Ohtlet. 1a now • ldlllt Incl I ""'*' td\lleor 10 the ~ oftMU.8. 'R' tt:t0(8) ••• "l09t Hortlon" (11137) Aon•lcl Coln\ln, JIM Wyatl, A 11.lclMppad cl!J>lotnll d"°°"*8 the Hlma1ay1n lllnodofn of llf\lngfl-LI, • .. of ...-NII~ Incl ltrnmot'· !Mlty. (J) * * "Tht Flnll Con- lllct'' ( 11181) Sam Neill, Roaeano Brau.I. In tht thlfcl Ptfl Of "The Omen" trilogy. young Demien. the embodiment ol the Antt- ctwl9t. II now 1n ICklll and • trualed ldYll« lo the preeldent ol the U.S. 'R' 1:00 • * * * "AlegrO Non Troppo" (19711) Animated. Uft In the rnechlne ... 11tlrii.cl. 'PG' 1;30 ~ * * "Tiit AUlc" (111711) Cltr'9 Snodgrttl. Rly Mii· land. A Ub<wlln ....... In the pall with her memot* of • '°"' wtlO dll&poeered. 'A' 2:30 ® • • * "Chept• Two" ( t9711) J-c..r . ....,_ Iha MMon. Soon all• hit w!M'• Mith,. Wflt« llnd• hlmaell reluctantly lalllng In '°"' lglln. 'I\'(). • * * * "I Sent A letter To My Love" (111111) Simone Slgnoret. .I.an Roc:h91on A mid~ woman wtlo NII tpenl mol1 of her '°"' ~ c:.r- lng IOf her lnvalld brotn.r decldM to write a iett• to • ~ lonely 11Nt1• column. 'PO' 3:00 G **'""Then Came Btonaon" ( t988) Mlcheel P.U. Bonnie Bedella. A runaway bride mee11 another IOUl--c:her " Big SUt whtn he errtvee on 1111 motorc:yde. 3:30 (1) * * ',\ "Americ:an Pop" (11181) Antme1ed. The llla- 1ory of American pop mualc, from vlUdevllle to rock 'n' roll, 11 trec.d tlwough _ .. g9ner• llOnl ol • famlly of tnu91- denl. 'R' 4:00 ~"Winge In The Wtlder-...... CJ)*'* "CounldOwn To DIHl•r" Anlm1tad.The Thunderbird• Mt out to .. .,.. the Empire Stele Bulldlng from c.ottepllng on M~t11n lltllnd. 'G' 4:i0. flt*~ "Tht Fl9nOish Plot Of Of. Fu Mandlu" (1M0) ..... s..... Sid C-. The FBI Ind Soot· land Ywd't o.t ~ Smith ~ lht 166- yeer-old arch vlHaln U he -~ '°' the lngred· lent&, Including Iii. Crown '**"'· uMd to meke his llfe.$)rOlonging eblr. 'PG' 6:0l5 (1) * * ~ "Tht Moon's Our Home" ( 1113e) MerQa- ret Sullevlfl, ~ Fonda. Baaed on Fiith Beldwln'a ttory. An Q91flng actr ... flltl In lo\lt with • novelist. 6:30(C) ** "tt'1Allve"(1974) John Ryar1. Sharon FatTell. A bouncing beby oomet Into lht WOtld wlttl f8"QS. ~ end • 1trong deWa toklll. (8) * • ~ "$myggMr'• Cow" (1848) Leo Gorell)'. Huntl Hal. The 8-y 8oyl Mt off on the trail of ·~oang. by Armstrong a Batluk "tCTITIOUS 8USINHS NAM• S~AffMUn Tiit l0Uowfn9 HrlOfl> a•a dolt19 IKl\l ... u ., (A) ACCENT ON NAILS; Ill ACCENT ON NAILS BY TEIU, J7t12 Forbe• Road, LaQuna N l911et, Catltornla, Sult• O. 92'71 Gre9ory S. and Teri A. Ouc•wonh, Hlnl>ancl ancl wife, 21911 Fa101n. Minion Vlalo. Calllornl• ., . ., Mary RUloefl$tolrl, UOt Humtlold1. ewne P"11. ea111em1a '°'2t Tiiis llUtlMU Is c-tod t1f e teM••t~p. TMiA 0-k~ll Tiiis ~1 "'" filed wtt., Ille Co11nty ,..,.. ot Oranve cou"IY °" M•rclle, 1911. l'ICTtTIOUS I USIHEH HAMI STATI MENT Tiie lottowlno peno"' are doi"9 buslneu e\ . 8VCHANA N ltl CCt I. ASSOCIATES. ?Oto Ou.Ill, N-port 8Httl, Callfoml• '7'60 L•fl'Y H. Akel, 14111 LaHenno .. Laguna Nl9Ufl, Catllornl• ttt77 8arbll1a 1<. 8U<~Mll. 1100 l!si.tte Lene. Nt1lrp0'1 8N<ll, Celllornla 9"60 f111s """"°" ts <ond"<l..i by .,. unin<.oopot-auoci.11 ..... ot,,.. t...., ap1rt~tl'llp LMryN Ricci 8.,,,.,• K 811<Mt\en Tiiis staw...m •• "'" •••Ith -C:ounty Cler-of 0.•"'19 Coo;nty .., Merell J, t"2 Pl..... ...1 .... Pulllltlled Or.not c .. st Oalty PllOI, P11bllthtd Or .... , .. ,. Oally Piiot, March lt, ti, ts, A.Pf'll 1, n 12 i ns.a. Mar 4, 11. tt. u . n et '*'' 1. ' 1. i . t I I t . ) ! I ' • , • • • f i i • I ' ; I I : l LAI VICIAI W'l -Wb1ia ~ Orludo wu ~· tli\&;~ of a ......... , 1 bll ... ~ork 0'1'• ta••• ~:::.hli au-cMlnat. lbOw .,.., ......... llW' v1Ya11"9pl. Today be ~ ..... In laVtlb lbowrcaolm. .... 5crowdl haw n~ tbe tall bU of mid· Manhattan'• au1ui .,..... the yo~ clrMiMr eavWoned the ........... ovatlanl. In that --~ rtdl from rooftop tlO mountaintop, Ol'llndo bal l..rned a MW ........ b IUl'Ylftl. Oitmclo'• outlook ii • UDbiat • hil 1how, wblcb 1tarta wit& the aona ............... Deliwnd.'' ; ........ tlll It all: "Like a fool. I ,,.., a8d 8IUed too Iona. But now r. '** ... rm W1na ICr'oal· Here I 11Dt ~ •• ..... ancf deliwnd." Theni1 allo hll llOdc·in·trlde "Tie A Y.UOW Ribbon" and a .. ,,......,. in which be waclee into the audience, 1tandlq on tabl• and 1ervln1 aa aanduCtlOi' • He=tt;., .m,alonp are like fa-mily on West 21at Street in &be 1 wbln he would steal away to hll rooftop stqe. "A roof in New York City la a ~ boy'ihn-..Y.lallad.1-... tlO pt up on that root Ulla ... ~ who •&and In that ~ ....... box, ready to hit the Wadd ler1el home run. I had ovation al- ter ltandina OYadon on t rooftop." He reca1Ia belftl hooked on 1how ~ afW .... "san,lnc in the Rain" at.,. t . Ho thlnlil Aamb ~lo< -of thole limp)er dlDll . "I think we are a lot more aware of character buU inJ ~gain. Thin&I that were conlidered hokey or corny a few yean aao are not cOnai- dered that ~ymore. They're oonslde- red smart. And be tblnD maybe othen in hil fut-lane profelllon are leamlna It too. lt'1 too lat. b' IOIDr. eomic JOhn Bela.bl; cbe friend Freddie Prime; l:Ma Premley, the Jdant Who WM in the showroom at the Laa v..-Hil- ton when Orlando wu playlnc the Jounce in 1970. missing. -··---:Fascinating .. aoon -Ton1 Orlmdo. "on the roor• during a recent TV tpedal, sees drug Wle in show b"'8ine9I on the wane. Mention Belushi'• name and Or- lando'• fiery brown eye. fix on a apot on bta d.r"'tn1 room rug. Emotion ~at hil voice. 'The world can't afford to loae another lau1h. When someone like John goes, the public aeruiea an in- credible la. becau.e th.la is a 10U1U of lauahter for them and there aren't many aources left." Orlando aaya there la leas drug uae Two movies honored · · ~~=be" u:1:Yfi~-:!~ BERLIN (AP) -Rainer Werner hiatus the bulinetl to cope with Fusbinder'1 moivte "Veronika Vo.," deprellion apurred by the death of hla about the decline of a ~ German sister and Prime. movie atar, won B.:;"~_.. Golden "Alotol~plebaveaeenwhatlt'1 Bear at the 32nd , the inter-done and it a frilhtened them," Or- naUonal Berlin film f.altlft1. lando said of drua u1e. "They're Sydney Pollack'• American pro-aeelntJ there'• nothinl hip about it duction of "At.ence ol Mabee" won a anymoc-e, nodUna fashionable about it special mention for tt. ''couraaeoua anymore. lt'1 vieWed by mc1t of ua as analyaia of a~ problem aometbinl aelf-deatructlve and no- in aociet ," the aaid. thing constructive." 1-' M.lil/a, NEW 10/tKTIMBS EX£LU.IVE ORANGE a»UNT't' ENGt4lGEMENT Libby Tucker hitchhiked from Brooklyn MlcllHI Callie DSATM T1IAI' IN) 12:40 J :OO S:20 7 :JI 1:10 to .take Hollyw-ood by storin. And her father by suq>rise. TWENTTEni C£NT\JRY·FOX PRESENTS WALTER MAITHAU ANN-MARGRET DINAH MANOFF A HERBERT ROSS FILM NEIL SIMON'S I OUGHT 10 BE IN PICIURES Director of Photography DAVID M. WALSH Music by MARVIN HAMLISCH Produced by HERBERT ROSS and NEIL SIMON Executive Producer ROGER M. ROfHSTEIN Screenplay by NEIL SIMON Directed by HERBERT ROSS J u11ulH1d orr1t1I" ...____, .... IUtl Jlft 12 oz. Jelly jars with ltds 8 pack #81400 Reg 5.09 The roller kit painters all across the United States have come to love. Reg 7 77 ~ .............. Femou1 i.tex flat wall paint from Olld- den. heuttful flet finllh. Scrubl clMn, 1taya colorful Euy water c!Mn-up. Reg. 11.99 Large blede screwdriver with retchet head for auper-eeay hendl- lng. Home & euto kit, with 3 bits. #AK-8. ~.14.95 PL.A YFUL -Reaina Katy Regan rnalte1 overtures to Reginald Rook ln a ecene from 11Divlsion Street," now on stage Tue1- day1 through Satur- dayt until April 10 at the Laguna Moulton Playhouae in Laauna Beach. Call 494-T>743 for details. Sylvania 60, 75, 100 Watt SOFT LIGHT BULBS f Pronounctld 'BUBS' in pam of Texas} u-mont Chan, tab/ti$, lolllllft Big Ofll$, littll Olltl$, som1 as big • 1 /JtJdl ALL AT 31roFF limited OfiihtititJI ltalhllletrall and .. ,. cull 25-peck IHf & tra1h beg1, taro-32- gellon capacity. HMvywe6ght, for garden debrl1. -----~ -......_...·~-------...-' - ~------. . . . . tne teat ll1Mrr ffttra•lf 20 pound tow 1ud1, concen- treted, gently brlghten1 White• end without prnoak- lng. Req. 11.99 ....... "'" ..• Never before at this low pncell t 7130 with tank Reg. 223.95 to stay In hot .... 111••- 30-gallon water hHter wtttl e,,.rgy •vino temperftlte lhut-oft. .......... 114.11 ................ ...... ..... ,,... .. ~ -··"- • ' *BARGAIN MATIN••s * Mond1y thru l1turd1y All PerlormancH befofe 5:00 PM (bcept ,,..., E11111111111111 IM Htlay1) ~Y''"' •tAt. __ ,...,_ "0EAn4WISH11""' _____ ._. ._ .................. .. ... LAKEWOOD CENTER WALK IN ·---"OH OOUJE.H '°"°" "' .,., ___ _ "POMY'l"-•Z>OI.--,,... - LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAlK IN ~ utCJEt THE IUN'' -............ -''" I ,---''QtMIOTI OF AM""' ._ ___ _ ''f'OM\"I''-_____ ..... •oc1111y 01 Condlewooo 213/IJ1·tll0 ......... .,.. ._ __ .... - "SHOOT THE MOON" "10, JM. •10, 1:40, 10.10 -----"CHARIOTS OF AM':.,.. ...... -~--" --Soutll Coo11 tttwoy J ol lltooOWoy 494-1514 "RICHARO ""'°" Litt ON THE SUNKT ITIUr till -.·-.--&AT_,,,, ___ _ __. .................... _.e..is . IM,ORTANT NOTICE! CMILORUI UttOH t2 fRU! M•N• ...i • .,.., -""' Fn 5:30 • s.t s.. -4:30 ,. CM<R IOIM • l'OUI AM CM MOO IS 'IOI.Ill SftNIDI 1• NO AM ~ MOIO W!llt OfllDN llCXlSSOllT llQSITIDll ~ Alll l'OllTMll l•AU CIE'I CllWMG Ill .. Ml MIJG "~A.Mfl ~ ANAHEIM ORIVf·IN ,,.••oy ti ot l•-St "IJEAllfrRN"~ --·'THE ..... a .. "' ~~~·,.~~-··-'°~~~~~--~~-~~~ ''aftl11ANIE F.'' t11t -''VUIOUAD"11t CM fl SOUie> 8u! ... A <A~r BUENA PARK DRIVE IN UncOln A•• W••• Of •nott 121·4070 @. I '4 A P .& "-11! LINCOLN ORIVf·IN '"'coin A•• Weol OI •noH 1 121-.co10 t111t fl SOUllO "DEATKTRAP" l"GI -''THE IHl .. NO .. 1111 Clltl fl SOUllO .t. ••A"" .t. LA HABRA l .. ,.,, N ._ ... _" __ , __ _ 171-1M2 ---........ ORANGE l>111"t ·~ ·~·· .. """' MIQHf-UQlfft Wl#f OUT I~_.... .... ..... •, . " MISSION n111\ 1 1,.. . -.· "mAn4 ....... "' -.....,. t4llWICS'' .. C1'1t·l'I- ··RICHARD ""'°" LM ON THIE SUNMT ll'Rlll'" 1111 -"THINK DltrrY'' 1111 .. ,,,,..,TtlNG"" -I ·~·" Clllf • R SOUllO Dllr .... ,......"' ~...,... COMPETITIVE -Among the visiting gymnasts from the People's Republic of China is Fu Lu Min, who says h? and his to'uriog teammates are out to gain some athletic respect for their country. Golden West College was the meeting site for community college releaguing talks. C2. ·Chinese gymnasts really deserved a .,. break BY JORN SEV ANO o<h Dllr .......... I think it's always a little unnerving when you meet an intriJlUirul individual for the first time. At least it ia for me. I suppoee it's a.kin to meeting the Pope, or the President of the United States. or the Queen of England, or anyone, for that matter, that holds an aura of fascination about them. For centuries, the People's Republic of China has held that kind of charm and mystery, especially to many of us in the United States. Sure, China dots our history books with stories of Genahls Khan and the Great Wall, l>ut my best recolfection of the country ia that it borders the nation of Tibet, where the fabled paradiae city of Shangri-La exists. · Anyway, China has always peaked ~y curio- sity so when the chance arose to interview a '}>er of the country's national gymnaatica team. 1'°;?ped at the opportunity. 'ftlaturally, l waa apprehenatve about the tnee- What should I ask? Where can I find a good Chine9e take-out restaurant in Southern California? Nah too tacky. How are relations with Taiwan th~ days? Nah, too international. I figured my best bet was just sticking to the basics. the South Coast Pf.aza Hotel. I was also told the U.S.A. gymnastics team, with whom the Chinese will be competing Friday and Saturday nighta at UCLA. would be there, too. When I arrived the only faces I saw were that of a weary Chineee contingent. I was told later that the U.S. members decided to remain in their rooms to catch a little more shut eye. From the looks of the Chineae, they probably wished they had done the same. Instead, they were ushered to a tent where they were told breakfast would be tlel"Ved. A.domed in blue sweats with gold trim, the 14-member team, along with its coaclies, judgee, teem physician and interpreter filed &lowly along the buffet table. The breakfast, sJ)Oll80l'ed by McDonald's (the hamburger chain is alao sponsoring the gymnastics meet)~ ind~ tweet ro111, donut1. various muffiM, and a variety of fli»i~ and juioa. Wha• » ~·t include w ere any bot dishes, which ia bo'N the Chinelle uaually start their day. "We uaually eat something hot in the morning like rice porridae or sometimes noodles," explained Fu Lu Min, who talked through hi.a interpreter, Lun Shufen. With no Egg McMuffina to appease hit appe- tite, Fu Lu Min smiled and beaan playing with his I w•-~ld the interview would take place at 7:30 a.m. Wednesday on the second_ floor terrace of ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SPOf!TS EDITOR ~~fJt Dianionds • ap~enty We've. got a ooupJe of guys ln the news room that are real baseball nuts. One in particular knows every Yankee trade since the days of Col. Jacob Ruppert and Joe McCarthy. Thus when Roby Megill of Hunt- ington Beach penned a letter to me (and other sports editors in the county), I immediately thought of our bueball addicts acroaa the room. Anyway, Roby and his wife have put together an enticing two-week tour that will take his group to 11 major league stadiums on the East Coast. The tour, priced at $1,098 per per- IOn, includes airfare, bus transporta- tion, hotel accommodations and tick- ets for the games, plus tours of the 11 stadiums. The Megil.la and their group plan to depart (via plane) from LA July 27 f« New York Oty, returning Aug. 8. In that span, they'll make atopa in Ba.ion. MontreAl. Toronto, New York (Shea Stadium), Philadelphia, Cin- cinna.U Chicago (Wrigley Field), De- trolt, develand. Baltimore and finally t.ck to New York (Yankee Stadium). MesU1 ..,. the poup will -nine Aanerican Lmaue teams in actklll and tiltltNLdubl. And. u an added bonua. the tour wtU include a day at Coopentown. N.Y., Aue. 1, which happem to be the !flD9 day tbat Frank Roblneon and ~ Am'on will be inducted into the s.n °' rmne. MepU NY• that transportation tram ~ to d&J will be on a luxury bUI dill will .. equipped witb a re-el .... 'lbe botill ~ ............. price 1eYel - =r.:,or the pmea are ~he bnt •' 'f ald,==•bcime ~ .. •_, •• 1 crwritato 8111•1U ToUr, 101 8 Cln:le, ................... I l&aew nmeoae who'• on •h• ........... Cl) ; . -. pastry. "We're just not u8ed to oold food," he would We are very proud of our country and we want to gain some honor for it." aay later. · Fu Lu Min wu introduced aa a 21-year-old high bar specialist on the Ch1neee gymnutks.quad. He didn't look a day put 16. In fact the entire contingent looked more Jib a junior high .chool cla8I than a national teem. AB Fu Lu Min spoke, he continued to smile and talk in my direction. After awhile I found myself nodding as if I understood. Some impression I must have been~. "What is China's No. 1 sport," I asked. "Table tennis," be answered quickly, "but there are several sports in China that are quite popular. Soccer is now attracting bigger crowds than any other sport at the moment. Then there's volleyball, basketball, badminton, gymnastics -all these sports are very popular." "Maybe it's the Asian style," he said, still smiling. "We're ana1ler 10 we look younaer." Fu Lu Min didn't look an inch taller than 5-4 or a pound heavier than 120. Of coune, such a oompect stature baa contributed greatly to China's sudden and dramatic ri8e in the field of gymnutics. Out of the public eye f« more than a decade in protest over the recopitl?n of Taiwan in the Olympics, China final)y rejoined international ..,........tion in i~BJ1t81, the auw bad made tMif marts:, finiahlm& U.lrd tn the World Cham- piorwblps behind perennial powers Ru.la and Ja- pan. When time allows. l'u Lu Min said be worka out about three hours a day, aeven days a week. A student at Peking University. be'a majoring i.n physical education, 'W)lich he hopes will iwn into a Coaching career. "Actuall , I didn't think it was that surpr1aing becauae we ~ve very good equipment and good coaches in China," explained Fu Lu Min. "Ge.nerally speaking, sports are very POPular in China. Mainly it's for the purpoee of our health, but we aleo take a lot of competition for our athletes. Of ooW"Se, the interview wouldn't have been complete without a few questions oonoerning our country. What are vour imoressions eo far? . "This country is very beautiful," he said. "When I was in China I had seen some programs on (See CHINESE, Page C%) -Fernando_,_s image tarnished? Dodger pitcher says he doesn't regret anything VERO BEACH, Fla. (AP) - The storybook rise of Fernando V a1emuela from rural Mexico to baseball stardom in Los Angeles in a ainale year may have been tainted by the young pitcher's holdout. Valenzuela threw 10 minutes of battil!_g practice at the Los Angeles Dodgers' camp Wednes· day in his first workout with the team this spring and said later that he bad no regrets. He re- ported to spring training Tuesday night, a month after most of his Dodgers teammates. In the morning prior to bis workout, Valem~uela faced a crowd of some 40 reporters du- ring a press conference at Dod- gertown. Asked if he thought his nego- tiations with the Dodgefl, and his holdout, might hurt him in the fans' eyes, Valeruuela replied through an interpreter: "It's hard to tell if my image will be tar-tions, so I decided to come here nished. The people Will have to and join the team." tell you that, and they will know Valenzuela fended off a ques- if I was right in defending my tion concerning his dissatisfaction rights. with $350,000 for 1982, saying: "I do not regret anything. I am "The best people to answer that not here under protest. I'm here are my agent, T">ny DeMarco, to join my teammates." and my attorney, Dick Moss. Valenzuela", the National They negotiated in my behalf. League Cy Young Award winner They're the ones to answer that." andltookie of the Year in 1981; Neither accompanied Valen- had been asking $850,000 for zuela to Vero Beach. 1982. The Dodgers, however , Asked who was making the exercised their option to renew decisions in his case, Valenzuela bis contract unilaterally, giving said: "I was giving my opinion to him $350,000. He reportedly them (his advisers) throughout made $42,500 last year. the negotiations. I don't know He said he would not sign the much about numbers." 1982 contract although the Dod-Although the regular-season gen had oUered about $100,000 opener is just some two weeks extra in lncentive bonuses. • away, Dodgers Manager Tom Asked U he had come to camp Lasorda aald be thinks Valen- in responae to a letter the Dod-zuela will be ready to pitch by gers had sent him, Valenzuela the first or second weetc of the said: "Yes, I received the letter. I campaign. The left-hander saw no aucx:eas in the negotia-pitched winter ball in his native Mexico and worked out during the holdout. USC will appeal Valenzuela la expected to make his first regular-season appea- rance either in the aeries against San Diego April 9-11 or ln a pme at Houston one of the next three days. • Trojans facing two-year probation I LOS ANGELES (AP) -The University of Southern Califor- nia, factna a reported two-year ban on lta football team playing ln bowl games or aprartna on television, will appeal ita cue to the NCAA. USC President James H . Zumbefae, in a prepared releMe, said Wedne9day that the echool will ap_peal the NCAA'• report regardinl alleged violations by the TroJma. · An ?(CAA probe Into the USC footb$11 procralD repcl(tedly dealt With two principal pomta -.. mt.ant ClOlich Marv Oowc'1 alle- aed 1ale of foot.,.11 tlck•tl a• above face ftlm CID behalf of the ..,..... and Dluen -~to receive aeaa.mtc credU for a coune tb9Y were not au.ncttnc clHHI. GOux hu denied the ticbtalll9tklnl. Whlle.tlte NCAA••.P".9~ MnCtiGDI ·~ loUOlerD Cal llav• been repor,ed to be a ...._.,_. prilldDn ... , ......... •nchacte the two-7Hr baa on bowla ... tei.vtrlilD a.,,..an- l cea, there still has been no offi- cial word on what the findings were or the poeaible penaltiea. In the releue issued by Zwn- berge, it was noted that the NCAA had asked the achool not to make any public announce- ment of what was contained in the report by the NCAA'• Com- miitee on lnfraction1 after ita inveatiptlon of the IChool. The university received the NCAA'a report on March 115, and had 15 days to decide to accept or appeal the fi.ndinel. ' "'rhe school's appeal wlll be beard by the 19-member NCAA Council, the electect_aovemtnc body ol tbe NCAA. The earlielt the ...... couJd be heard woWd be at U. cound1'1 next IChedWed .....UW. Mri1 21-23 In St. Louil. The \781: football proaram ... lier had been the ~ of a Pldtic-10 c.onfennoe lnWIUp-..... aunc ~1e irr .. ••rt~ liel in~ football paa,..-., .. Pao-10 blid buned the 'fro.. Jul Irma poe•-•uon pla7 In lllO. , He had a 13-7 regular-seuon record last year I winning his first eight de~iaions. NAISMITH TEAM INCLUDES MAGEE From AP ...,_idel ATLANTA -UC Irvine's, Kevin Mqee is amona the elite group of ~liege basketball players namelct Wednelday to the annual Natamlth AU-America teem. The teem, eelected by the At- lar\ta Tip.off Q\lb. includes Vir-atnta'• '7~4 center Ralph Samp- son, North Carolina forward Jamee Worthy, DePaul forward Terry Cummiftel, o.or,.town ~.Erle "Sleepy" Floyd and ~ players will be bonored ~ 1 when the 'np-off Club U1 14th annu91 timquet. At chat Ume. &he dub wm •-.. winlm' of tb1 Nalmaltb' 'fro.. phy -WOI\ 1Mt ,.., bJ Sunp- IOll. qJ '(-.. - .. ~ .. "' .. '-. "' .. • . . u. •• , • t l • I. -.. ... marie di8eoYer& mando isp't Ir~ ~ .......... .. LOS ANOELl!S -The t.o. II ~-Unified School Dtatrict ap- parently WAI IOIDeWhat SUJ"Priled at Neeivfna a $20,000 bill f<>r four com- merdala in which Loe A.nee* Dodcm"a llitcher Fel1W\do v~1a uraes •tuden• in s~ to _, ln achoOl. lk,at the dietrtct lln't colDplaln-tna. . ' Valenzuela reportedly received no money tor b.la appearances, but his a1!!nt, Tony De- Marco, aaid he took a low producers fee f<>t h1a efforts. "We were •oin1 to aak for an (advertiaiJig) agency to produce the commercials." Bill Rivera, a consultant to the district su~rintendant, said Tuesday. 'But we deci- ded not to. There ~re com- P""~ plicatlona of working with ~ Fernando in Spanish. To get YA&.IMIWL.A it arranged, we declded It would be best if DeMaroo put them together and direc1ed them." ' DeMarco wrote. produced and directed the four commercials in which Valenzuela tells chil- dren his best pitch is "to stay in achool." At the time the commerciala were decided upon, production costs were not dilcua9ed. Riv~a said the district was told of the $20,000 bill after the oommercials were about two-thirds complete. DeMarco said the $20,000 ia leas than an advertising afency would have charged. He said he charged • a modest producer's fee, nothing that wouldn't be standard." School board President Tom Bartman said be did not know beforehand about the 0081.a, but fie added he Is not upset about them Jets streak past Kings, 5-3 WINNIPEG. Manitoba -Rookie cente r Dale Hawerchuk scored a n ~ empty-net goal .and added two aasists Miii to spark the Winnipeg Jets to a 5-3 victory over the Los Angeles Kings In NHL ac- tion Wednesday night. The triumph was the sixth consecutive for the Jets, raising their season record to 32-29-13. The three points enabled the NHL's top rookie scorer to reach the 100-point plateau for the season. Hawerchuk has 44 goals and 56 as- sists. Paul Mac Lean, Lucien DeBlols, Morris Lukowich and Bengt Lundholm also 9COred for Winnipeg. Rick Chartraw, Jim Fox and Mike Murphy scored for the Kings. Doug Keans was brilliant in the Los Angeles nets and was tested -.2 Umes. • -""'·-----= Red Winge' WOii oonttnue ~tb tuit l:ql _.,. In the ttrat Iii ~rlod, -Clrica10 difenaeman ••• ' •• ,,., lauqdMd a •&-foot alaDlhot which eluded DeU'olt IQelle Ortl ' · ..... And the ma HaWlll went ma UMlre to hand the Rad Wtnp their' 13th conMCUtlve ct.- fH&. 1-4, Weclnnda1 n~1~t in the Natienal ~~.,....~and o...m ....... each »iecf twice for c~:c, . . . In other I la Gelllt lalnd fijs--.. ....... ~'it; ......... lllie1 ICONcl two .-la and 1 1111 -a plllr al'"a1bln -the New Yon .....,_ ran thelr ~ten --to..,..., pmee with a 7-2 ~over Pittaurgh •.. MlrHlav p,,_ ICOr'ed with 12 eecorMia left in the pme to &tw Totanto a 4-3 victory over St. Loula . . . '11alrd-place Vancouver atretched It. IMcl to M'V- en point. owr the Kinp wtth a ~ ~over ColOndo ... Former Ranier Pete l t .. a-8'1 W• arreeted Wed.needay and charpd with cri· minal IOlldtatioo and conaplracy to (.'Oll)mit ex- tortion after be allegedly approached a~ ln- Wlltiptor in a bar and hlred him to beat up a fcnner businem partner. Quote of the day Al MeO•lre, college buketball com- mentator for NBC, upeet that the network lost te1ecutinc right.a to ~ for the NCAA finals: ··1t'1 like getting all the dancel with the girl, but when it comes time to take her home and pt in• the rumble aeat. it's CBS that la touch.in' the eoft apota." Sonics closing In on Lakers Forward Wally Walker scored Seattle's final three po~ts Wednes- day night as the S~perSonics out- laaced the Milwaukee Bucks 99-97 in the National Basketball Aaloclation. The victory, which left Seattle 1 ~ games behind the idle Pacific Divialon-leading Lakers, snapped the Bucks' winning strea k at five games .. , Ellewhere, Alex EJa1H•• arut Du lueJ notched 25 poln18 apiece \o lead Denver to its seventh straight victory, 129-115 over San Antonio ... Re11te KiDI hit a layup with 35 se- conds left. and Steve Jobnsoa batted away Atlanta's in- bounds pass with 31 eeconds left ~ Kansas City beat At- lanta 110-106 ... Gres "Bal- lard scored a game-high 30 WM.Jen points and pulled down 13 rebounds to pace Washington to a 114-106 win over Indiana ... Ray Wiiiiams netted a season-high 39 points as New Jersey came back from a 12-point deficit to surprise Philadelphia 111-106 . ~ . Robert Parltb scored 27 points and Larry Blrd added 25 as Boston tied a club record with its 17th COMeCUtive victory 136-115 over Cleveland . . . Phoenix moved Into a tie for third place wtth Golden State in the Pacific Division with lts win over Dallas. Ch~ooeau leada lndtan charge Jee~bk • ...,o1mar CIOUblft to lead a CleYelaftd offenM that pounded ftw doa•Nee.nll tlwe triplea .. the lndianl extended tlW Caetua J.Aacu• winniftl ltnU to MWD ..... with a 6-2 victory over S•anle W .. nilday afternoon ..• llaewhere, .,.. ....... bit a thrw-run homer and Oeerp PMter oou.ctad four bHlt drow in three rum • the Mei. trOUQeecl Toro_pto , M .. 'ntLGllu..11 and I•• Peutat euh had lhNe bite and drove In two 1\1111 '° i.d ~ Frandloo to • 8-2 wln over Milwauk•• ... Geers• Ina Alllld a MWnth·lnnlic: rally jl'lth a pair of hita u Kanaaa City crulH~ .PHt Chicago, 13-3 ... llarll no 1 ew Wa1aer'1 two-r.,an double tupllpt.ed an eilht-nm fifth ~•Tew willoDed the Yanhee. 14-6 ... p.q ow--. 8bte "'Lneuo and Bnderlck Penta Cambmed to drive &n seven rum • San Dleeo routed the Cube, 11-0 ... Omar Mereao drove in three tun1 with a bues·io.ded double, leading Pitta-~ to an 8-2 win over Minneeota ... Dave Celieepcloa doubled, tripled and drove in two runs, •parking Cincinnati to an 11 -4 rout of Boaton ... UareU Porter's two-run triple helped St. Louis knock off Detroit, 5-1 ... Pitcher Ste.e Besen •paced alx hU1 over slx i.nnJ.ngs to help Montreal claim a 6-2 victory over Atlanta ln a game called aft.er 7 ~ lnnlnga be· cauae of rain. Georgetown coach honored by writers Jolm Tlaompaoa, whole George-;. town team will play In the J'lnal Four t of the NCAA buketball tournament. has been named college Coach of the Yeat by the U.S. Basketball Writ.era A..>clation. In 10 season. at the helm at Georgetown, the 40-year -old Thompson bu compiled a 20&-90 record, averaging 22 victorim a aeuon the pMt eight years ... Meanwhile, Thompson aaid Wednesday he did not think his eixth-ranked . Hoyu . wowd be bothered by all the hoopla and media a ttentlon this weekend. "An inteWsent team raponda to the environment,'' Thompeon said aa h1a _..,departed for New Orleane and prepared itself for Saturday's aemifinal clash with LouJ.avtlle . . . Former World Boxing As- aoclation heavyweight champion Jolua Tate, still seeking to rebuild a boxing career shattered when he waa knocked out ln two consecutive fight.a in 1980, meete veteran Leroy Caldwell tonight In a scheduled 10-round bout in Las Vegu . . . . The Univeraity of Southwestern Louisiana will remain a Division I-A echool in football, the NCAA announced Wedne9day . . . Retired Geor§etown Univer- sity Athletic Director Jeo L . J•cll" Ba1erty died Tueeday of a heart attack. He wu 78 . T elevlslon_. radio TV -No event.a acheduled . RADIO: No event.a ICheduled . FRIDA Y'S RADIO Bueball -Dodgen va. St. Louis at St. Pet8'1burs. 10:10 a.m., KA.DC (790); Cleveland VI. Anae1S at Palm s~ 12:55 p.m., KMPC (710). s :·._ ____________________________________________________________________________________________ ........ ______________ _. t ·t. i Playing a game of musical conferences •• • ·L_Mara!hon re/eaguing meeting at Golden West apparently leaves everyone After five years oY-~ne J.o cpme_up_with.-a ----... ----------- appy restttacrunng plan-rorsouthern California commu- : nity college athletic conferences, Dr. Lee Stevens ~ finally hit upon the ideal war to get the job done. • Last Friday, Stevens, the presjdent at Golden : • West College, assembled just about every athletic ~ di.rector and every community .college president In i~ Southern California and put them all in one big • room on the GWC campus. t He then locked the door and threw away the ~:key. . j ; "Now choose among yOW'8elves," Stevens told t • the prisoners. .. ; • Actually, the conditions weren't that bad, and ~: upon several adjournments, the inmates, er, repre-f: sentatives were allowed to leave now and then. t BUT DURING the times they did meet - roughly for siX hours -the athletic direct.ors and : _presidents came up with a releaguing propoaal that appears to have left everybody happy. · The idea of releagulng the various Southern California community college athletic conferences is J, not a new one. Like Stevens says, he's been trying '.:it for five years. And as chairperson of the relea- ,,... gulng committee, he was determined to make it stick ~· this time. )/. It should be noted that the plan that was born $'last Friday -the one that goes before the Southern _.California Community College Commission on ~Athletic. fort~roval next month -does not ':pertain to foo . J. Buically, this is what took place at GWC Fri- "day: · ' First, four geographically close colleges were ~~bunched together into core conferences. Six core conferences in all were fonned. 1 For example, Orange Coast is in a core confe-:1 rence with Saddleback. Santa Ana and Fullerton. · 1t Next, everybody adjourned. Part one aeemed easy enough. COMMUNITY COLLEGES CURT SEmEN AFTER ADJOURNMENT, the remaining col- leges were allowed to join any oore conference they wanted. At that time, both Cerritos and Cypress choee to join the OCC oore. After that, achools which were oligi.nally a part of a core were allowed to break away from their core and join another core. At that time, Golden W~ and Mt. San Antonio slipped over to the OCC core. Now, there were eight teams In that core. Everything was going along smoothly until the core of what was the old Metropolitan Conference, upaet becauae it was down to a six-member league, decided to align itself with the OCC core. That made for a 14-member conference. Things were just starting to get interesting. Next, Mt. San Antonio and Saddleback decided to go their separate ways -M t. SAC heading toward the San Bernardino-area sch ools and Saddleback heading south to joln the San Diego 9Cene. WELL, AFTER some diacl.lllion, Mt. San Antonio agreed to come back to the OCC oore, while ~ Pierce agreed to return to the old Metro core. That left seven teams in both the Metro and old South Coast cores.,. , While all of the realignl.Qg was going on, both the Western State and Southern Cal conferences had b.icauy ~lved by now. Meanwhile, both Hancock and Taft made thino lnterelltinl by agreeing to join the Northern California community college area. Everybody lfJemed relatively happy, until the • ' i A ( ·. ~ B EadJey takes NIT Kroyer paces Orange Coast J. Bitterness linge~s over NCAl\ snub , NEW YORK '(AP) -Dick winnln1 the NIT.title for the .;;} Versace, fiho coeched Bradley to tcSurth time , tling the Brave1 '(f the 46tti National Invitation with St. Johns, N.Y., for the . Tournament title with a 67-68 molt champklmbipa. .v. victory f1W!r Purdue Wedneeday •inwte•e no doubt in my mind · 1 nilbt, toned down his anger to-tbat If we had aotten into the ward lhe NCAA for not inviting Midwest Reclonal, we would .: the Mu.ourt Valley Conference have won It," be said. . ' "'8Ulat teMOri chunpioN to the He a d d e d t b e re w • • I natlooal cbamplonahlp touma-''tometblna wrona IOlnl"Where" inent. • that the MVC winner did not • "I'd •• to put that i"ue to r.! into the NCAA tournament. '*"" llil V....oe. 0 1 think the 'Maybe we don't _eubllctse Nll'll•.-ttournament.Ibope ~----...h.~ & ..,..:._ To p1ay here ••. ..-. '° llddrw om tbdllW_... ~ .. m'he tmeDt IW'faiCed me>-»arney Jllnea and Jualor -· liow•~~ v... ~ WIUllt ~ WMftl iiUdat wean.day'.• ~--dlall=,_. ..... ..,.. Cuafai•a lf blla p11r ,.._..,... 1'7 = ._..;iaftckine •Ml ID ~mil a Hr Did ....... ;. a. MC.AA tourDeY M It did in for lhe Btaftl:i8-1a; ·"'- " achoola were Uked if they were, indeed, satisfied. Compton and Los Angele. CC weren't. SO COMPT~N ic>ined lhe old South Coast Conference, Loa Angeles CC headed for the Metro and once again, there were two propoted eight- team oonferencm. If approved, the South Coast Conference would 1nclude Cy]n9e, Golden West and Compton but be minus Gromnoot San Diego Mesa. Mesa, Groaamont, Southweatem, Imperial Va~aC09ta, Palomar, San Diego CC ~ s.d would compri9e another conference. The Metropolitan Conference would include Los Angelea CC, Santa Monica CC, El Camino, Long Beach CC, Bakersfield, Pasadena, LA Harbor and LA Pierce. The San Bernardino area, ominously referred to aa Region E, would include the likes of ChaUey, Riverside, San Bernardino, Citrus, Mt. San Jacinto, F.ast Los Angeles, Glendale and Rio Hondo. THE REMAINING colleges, such as LA Southwest, Canyons, Antelope Valley, Trade Tech, Moorpark. Oxnard, Santa Barbara CC and others, will be divided into two more conferences.. "I thought everybody left there fairly satisfied," noted OCC's Dick Tucker, who la both athletic director a.nd head football coach for the Pirates. "Everybody bad all day to make the ne- cemary changft. "And, nothing was done without being in conjunction with the achool presidents. The people were always cal.Ung and calllni." Tucker adds. - "I was surprised Compton opted to play in what ii e.enti.ally a gteatef" Orange County league, but I think it's a good move," adds Stevene. "It will certainly ad~ a new dimension to the leque." Stevena la ~ glad the whole thinl has been resolved as far • the proposal i.s concerned. "For a while, I startecl to think it would be best just to have one 48-team conference," he adds. Mater Del plays to a draw Huntla8ton BMch ~ ltl ._., ,.., record lo 3-l •hllit ............... w .... wen wUmtn m tlM1teD-=*-WediJ I trr. Marina abut out Ocean View, 4-0. wbll• HuntJnction liidt bMt W-,....,, f.I. ............ Dit -a.m......,.. '° • Z-2 tie b9fan the A ...... • LeMm ,_.WM~ due to dwbw and MllMo VlejD IDand • 1-3 South CoMt J..eecue wtn owr ~ Hiiis. Here'• how rt went: ............................... 2 Brfan Beard and Gary Bucklea teamed to throw a two-hitter at the defendln1 CIP 4-A cham_p u the Oilers ran their Sun.et f8ll'IDl'd to 3-1. Brian Patrick gave HuntJ.ncton a.di the ..-ly lead with a run-«Oring triple in the top al the tint. Patrick finiahed the pme 2-for-3. Buckle9, who went to the mound in relief of Beard in the fifth lnnlng, added some lnaurance runa with a two-run double in the aeventh. Charley Hartwell went 2-for-3 for the Oi.lera with one RBI. Gerardo Llamas and Ruben Maciel got the only hita tor Westmina1.er. Huntington Beach meeta Ocean View Friday night at Mile Square Park. .wtna t. Oc.en View O TreU Bennett struck out eight and yielded just two hite in an impremive pitching perlormance as the Viklnp evened their Sumet mark at 2-2 with" a win at BJair.neld. Ocean View got a runner u far aa third bMe only once and that came in the first inning. Bennett got out of that jam and sailed the rest of the way to record the win. Ken Laaz1o had a pair of RBI aingles aa Marina came up with two runs in both the fint and fifth • lnninp. Mater Del 2, Servlt• 2 The Angelus League rivala played into the night until umpires called a halt to the game aft.er nine innings due to darkneM. Servite took a 2-0 lead on Dan Honicle's two- run homer In the third inning but the Monarchs rallied to tie it. In the fifth. Mater Dei got singles from John ~lea and Paul Wallace, a sacrifice by J ohn Mc- Shane and a successful squeeze bunt by Greg Soper to make it 2-1. Mike Kelly tied it for the Monarchs in the sixth with a double to cent.er field that scored Steve Livernois. Mater Dei is now 1-2-1 in Angelus play while Servite is 2-0-1. Minion Vl•Jo •• l.a9Una Hiii• 3 The Hawks broke to a 3-0 lead aft.er three in- nings but some shoddy play in the field helped visiting Mission Viejo come back for the win. The final five of the Diablos' runs were un- earned as Mis&on Viejo moved Into a ntie for the South Coast League lead with Dana Hills at 3-1. Brent Chappell hit a two-run homer for La- guna Hills in the third inning. The Hawks are 2-1 in league play. From Page C1 CHINESE • • • TV and they would sometimes give us Information ~ United-Sbrtes." -- What kind of lnfonnation? . "During news programs they would tell of achievements In the United States In science -like the apece shuttle." What have you learned, if anyt.h.lng? "What rve eeen has helped open my eyes to see how the people of the United States live, the way they are living and how they act." What were you taught about our country in IChool? "China and America are two different coun· tries that have different social systems. F.ach has its own st.rorur points as well as weak points." •"l'h8\l"s a verj diplomatic anawer,'' I ended. 'The interpreter relayed the meaaqe and the both of them chuckled. It was the warm, friendly kind of laugh usually associated wi•'l friends. Somehow, China didn't seem such a mystery anymore. The Chinese team is In the midst of a six-city, three·week tour of America's West Cout. The squad bas already staged exhibitions in Seattle, San Frandaco and at Chico State. Friday and Saturday's competition at UCLA, however, will be the only one In which 11COres will be kept. Friday night (7:30) will 'feature the men with Saturday (again at 7:30 p.m.). set aside for the wo- men. Said U.S.A. coach Abie Groesfield: '"This may not be China's No. 1 team, but it's like college )>as. ketball, the difference between No. 1 and No. 10 isn't 'Very much. The level is still very, very hlah." The U.S. men's team will be led by national members James Hartung (Nebraska) and Peter Vidmar (UCLA). Heading the women's field are Julianne McNamara and Tracee Talavera. Added Groasfleld of the Chinese team: "Their techniques are every bit as good as the R.....ma.ns - poasibly better. Artistically, they even have a nice body line. The big difference now is that the Rus- aians are more consiat.ent. But that just takes time. .In 1984 the Chineee will be right with them." ~JC~~: .. Half Milt Dirr • ~7,·, :;-,J., ,, ~.I I ·j Ip fl.: lr ~ • f.. '1 ! i ' . ~ ~-l LJ I I - . ",. CYCLES SPRINT ~ PIOllC•ID .................... ma:. ••& ,, I ,. ,) ,, \".' I " ,, •)" l · I •, er.,. eo.t DAILY PILOT~, w.oh 21. 1MI. COlllMK't: ·Jdf Johnson SOUlh Orange OJual~ln'lne 7Mll5H050 Auto sales decline 43% DrrROrr (AP) -C..-1a119 far the a. Three automaken declined 43.& perwot in the mMklle 10 dayw ol March ccmpand with the period a yeer aao. the cannaken have NpONd. Geftenl Moion C«p, led the drop wttb a 48.7 percent decline ln the March 11-20 period. Ford Motor Co. car salel wen off 29.7 percent compared with a year qo, while ~r COrp. salel were 011 34.9 percent, lhe automaPn repcried. GM eo1d 112,700 can in the middle 10 days of March thJI year, compared with 219,46'7 ln the pe- riod ln 1981. Ford delivered 43,015 autos, down from 61,140 in the period in 1981. Chrysler aalee in mid-March were 21,252 compared with laat year's 32,618. Foe the fint 20 days of March, the Bia Three sales were off 39 percent fJUn ales a year ago - from 508,901 in 1981 to 328,536 thia vear. GI IS GP IN '12 Ate SO CAM YOUt' . o.fleld at ~oUa In Huntington Beach E XPANDED FLEET -Goldf:n We1t'1 ac· quialtion of $40 million worth of DeHavilland Canada to aid Golden West . . BY STBVE MARBLE or ... .,.-,,......., 'The Canadian government la ~ to agree this week to help bail out financially troubled Golden Wst Airlines by reetructurina ~ of dollars in loans taken out by the Newport Beach-! bued firm. . . . . . Voea said loans were taken oqt at a v~blf interest rate with hopes that rat.ea would .di'op. Instead, he noted, rates eoued to 19 per'dlllt, -~ Golden West f.iJwlcially plnched. · 'Earlier thia week, Pan Am had been expected to pick up as much as 25 pen:e;it ln1erest in Golden . . West, which loet $6 milllon Jut year and nee& at least $2 million to keep operating. : . I Henry Voea, president of Golden West, made the announcement Thunday, just hours after oon- -----------------.....f~~~~~~~~~!ll!!!!l!S! .. -----~ cedini that talks with Pan American World Air-ways aimed at landing the Newport firm needed But Pan Am. which ii having its own finanda1 . : problems, rePOMedly killed the deal . I 33% Off! Add This Cassette . Deck to Your Stereo sCT-2• by RNllatlc* I • • I--~ ----I Save s50 -, • • Get it now at this low price! Dolby• NA extends dy- namic range and lowers tape "hiss'.' Bias and EO aetectors for reoording on normal, chrome or metal cas- sette formulations. Two-color LED meters allow easy re- oord-kMtl setting. Built-in MPX fitter "cleans up" stereo FM signals or can be switched out for widest response. 95 Reg. 149.95 Push-key controls, soft~ cassette door. 114:613"'---------'RIHJoc~i:ID:lnmrllB:-lfi No installation-just plug in and talk ~ tween any two rooms! Press Talk-Bar to speak, or Lock-Bar for hands-free talking or monitoring. Talk-Bar doubles as night light. FM and adjustable squelch cut elec- trical Interference. Cal~Tone button. Vol- ume control. #43-212 Cut'20 791&:.16 24-Watt Car Cassette Player By A_,l8tlc . , , I • ·~ •• I • !!I " II II Save '40 5995 Reg.99.95 High power, low price! "Ignition-off' Auto-Eject, locking fast-forward/ rewind, bus ·and treble controls, stereo head- phone jack, #12-1809 Wllh undef4ull mounting hardware and ~ CllbM 310/o Off 1•5~5 money had collapled. Va. declined to detail the pend.ma agreement with Canada but said it should put Golden West back in the black and keep Its turbo-prop planes in the sky. "We've been saved," said Voea. "I believe we'll end up stronger than ever." Golden West reportedly had been negotiating with the Canadian govenunent's Enterprlae Deve- lopment Board in recent days with hopes that loans taken out in Canada for four new planes could be restructured. It is believed that through the development board, Golden West can obtain more favorable interest rates on its loans. The Newport firm, one of the largest commuter carriers on the West Coast, expanded its fleet last year with the purchaae of $40 million worth of new DeHavilland Dash 7 turbo-prop planes. OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS MUTUAL FUND !.w YORK (AP! TllA'e 7.93 U3 -nit .......... ~ QplNT t.G NI. ="~~ ~ ar:. a.at 1!11111 " ~ EUt '·" 6A Dlltlrs. Inc.. -OWQllor Of'ol4l: .. pr1Clla -~ ... • •• Golden West alao haa asked ita.419 emplOyeet . to take a 10 percent pay cut to help the firm, ·AJ:-· cording to a Teamater9 Union apokelllnan. who -re-·· ' presents many of the workers, a majority of .the employees have signaled they're wilJ..lnB to take the cut. Voss also announceq this week that Uokien West intends to halt its Southern Califomia.lel'Vioe 1. to Lake Tahoe n:?xt month in an eUort·to·aave . money. · ·· He said bad weather from Novembel' to Ja· nuary cataed the airline to~ 761 fllghts and that flights bound to Tahoe freque~tly. were-di- verted to Reno, leaving Golden WM with the c~ and expense of hauling pasee~ back to Tahoe. Voos said the firm hopes to rei.nata~ Tah~ flights during peak summer and winter months. Golden WM employees, in an effort 't0 hdp the company, agreed earlier this month to a· pey deferral that totaled $400,000. DOl#9ll Uill Ollll Pict. 214t .,.. '" Off SU M ·-"'' Oft JU J ,-1 OfftS.I M -V..·Oft1"7 7 -1'•0ff16.4. J .....; "" Oft \0 M. -"" Oft 11.S • -"" Oft 11.1 M -"° Off IO.t M -.. Off19.J No -.. Off 10..t 2"' -" Off , ... ..,., -"" Oft 10..t ,.. __ Off 1U --114t Off ... ~ -,. Off t.s ~-'410ff u "' -. 14 Oft '·' ..... -'-OH U M -161 Off t.t ' s ..;..y,Oft .. ,. JY, -.. Off •··•' WI --Off t .1· W. -Yl Off l.T 1-. -"" Off l.J '° -4"' Oft. u 1W. -1Y, Off u .. . . . J, .. •I I ~ O>iact ·Jdf Johnaon SOUth Onu1le OJunf}'llrvlne 7H/85M050 J\uto sales decline 43% orrROrr <AP> -ear..._ tor~ eur niree aut.omaken cMcl1ned (3.5 perceDt In the mUld1e 10 daya of March oompared with the period a year aao. the cannaken have~· General Moton c.c>rp, Jed ~ drop with a 48.7 percent decline Jn the March 11·20 period. Ford Motor Co. car aalet we~ off 29.7 percent compared with a year aao. while Chryaler c.Grp . ..ie. Wen! off 34.9 percent, lhe au~ reported. OM IOld 112,700 can in the middle 10 daya of March this year, compared with 219,467 ln the pe- riod in 1981. Ford delivered d,015 autoe, down from 61,140 in the period ln 1981. Chryaler aalee in mid-March were 2i,252 compared with last year'1 32,618. For the first 20 day. of March, the Big Three sale1 were off 39 percent from u1et a year ago - from 508,901 in 1981 to 328,536 this vear . GI IS CW .. '12 Ate SO CAN YOU!° GerfMNcl at Mlignolla In Huntington Beach .. EXPANDE D PLEET -Gold~n Wett'1 ac· quilltlon of $40 million worth of DeHavilland Duh 7 turbo-props cawed the ~· Canada to aid Golden West By STEVE MARBLE or .. .,..,,......., The Canad.Lan government ls ex~ to agree thil week to help ball out financially troubled Golden West Airl,ine9 by restructurtng milllona of dollara in loam taken out by the Newport Beach-! hued firm. Henry Vma, president of Golden West. made Vo. said loena were taken out at a variab)f intere1t rate with bopea that rates woul~ di-op. Instead, he noted, rates IOal'ed to 19 perclllnt, lMW., Golden Wm financiall pinched. · Earlier this week, ~an Am had been exoected to pick up as much as 25 pe~t interest in Golden West, which l08t $6 million last year and needa at least $2 million to keep operating. · I the announcement Thunday, just hours after con- ------------------~==-~=~~~~~!!!!!!!ll!!m .. _____ 11.l cedina that talks with Pan American World Air- ways aimed at landing the Newport firm needed money bad collapeed. But Pan Am, which is havln& f1s own finaDcial problems, reportedly killed the deal: . · !. 33% Off! Add This Cassette Deck to Your Stereo SCT-24 by RM llat&c- ~ ... ,, .... ,,. I • ......... _ .. , • 1--~--1 Save s50 __ __, I I 1,.il . :::: • • Get it now at this low price! Dolby• NA extends dv· namic range and lowers tape "hiss'.' Bias and ea selectors for recording on normal, chrome or metal cas- sette formulations. Two-color LEO meters allow easy re- oord-level setting. Built-In MPX filter "cleans up" stereo FM sionals or can be switched out for widest response. Pu~key controls. soft~ cassette door. #14-613 95 Reg. 149.95 43o/o Off 3995 Reg. 89.95 No installation-just pfug in and talk be- tween any two rooms! Press Talk-Bar to speak, or Lock·Bar for hands-free talking or monitoring. Talk-Bar doubles as night light. FM and adjustable squelch cut elec- trlcal interference. Call-Tone button. Vol- ume control. #43-212 Cut '20 791s~,5 L.ow-<:ost 18Curityl Protecm doors and windows. With llarm bel~ control box, key lock. twdwere. lneb'uctlonl. f.iM74 llltlly ... 24-Watt Car Cassette Player • By RMllatlc ~; .; I .. &!I • . . •• II 11 Save '40 ·5915 Reg.99.95 High power, low price! "lgnitlon-<>ff' Auto-Eject, loci<lng fast-fofward/ rewind, bass and treble controls, stereo head- phone jack. #12-1809 With under'4Uh mounting hardware and 8')Mker c:Mlle 310/o Off 1P:1s ....,. Square root. pen::ent and clMrldear entry keys, auto ~.off. a.digit LCD. With 2000-hour batterlee, blttfold ceee.~ Va. declined to detail the pending agreement with Canada but said it should put Golden West back in the black and keep its turbo-prop planes in the sky. "We've been saved," aaid Voea. "I believe we'll end up stronger than ever." Golden West reportedly had been negotiating with the Canadian govenunent'a Enterprise Deve- lopment Board in recent days with hopes that loaru taken out in Canada for four new planes could be restructured .. It is believed that through the development board, Golden West can obtain more favorable interest rates on its loans. The Newport firm, one of the largest conunuter carriers on the West Coast, expanded its fleet last year with the pu.rchaae of $40 million worth of new DeH.avilland Dash 7 turbo-prop planes. OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS Golden West alao ha. asked lta. 419 emplOyeee ' to take a 10 percent pay cut to help the firm, "At:-: . cording to a Teamsten Union apokeRnan, who -re-.. , presents many of the workers, a majority of .th e I employees have signaled they'.re willing to take the cut. · V osa also announce<J thla week that. µe>.lden West intends to halt ita Southern Califomia.IJel'Vice to Lake Tahoe n :?xt month in an effor·t·to·aa~e . money. · He said bad weather from Novem\>6 to Ja· nuary caused the air~ to cancel 761 flights and that flights bound to Tahoe lreque~tly. were dJ- verted to Reno, leaving Golden West with the c~ and expense of hauling ~ back to Tahoe'. . V ooa said the firm hopes to reinatate. Tahoe flights during peak summer and winter months. Golden West employees, in an effort 't.0 helj> the company, agreed earlier thia month to a· pay deferral that totaled $400,000. VIII . '--a. Pc1.. t +~Utl SU 214 + Vt Up ... ~ +M• UJI tu ' 114•-Ull .... • 1W. + 2" Up 1'.• 2 >-16 +._16 Up 16.7> N + _, Up IS.I w. + Vt Up 15.A > +•U. IO 2 +lol.Utl.1•.J 2 + "•Up IU M +° .. Up IU 6111 + -. Up 1U No + _. Up IU M + \fl Up IU 4\t. + Vt Up IU 2 11-16 ... ,. Up 111· WI + " Up IU 214 + '4 Up IU 214 + 14 Up IU ' I + ... Up IU S\11 + -. Up IU · '~ + Vt VP 11..f -· +° Vt Up 1U ..... • Vt Up 11,4 "-+ Vt Up llA• DOW'9 Utt OIQ Pel. • M ~1~ Off JU Wt ·-fVt Oft JU J . -1 Oft ts.I M -~· Oft 1'.7 1 -1-. Oft ,.., l ....:\IJ Oft \.U lll'L -\IJOftfU • -Vt Oft 11.1 M -'lltOff IO.t M -lit Off 11..J '" -" °" 10.e J\6 -" °" 1t..I ,.,.., -Vt Oft IO.I • -_, Oft IO.O IC* -I~ Off U ,..-!'Off u 1"' -.. °" u ,.. .... Iii ()ft ':l .,.._,.Off. M -Iii Olf t.1 . J ~~Off .. ,., 2~ -.. Off . t.f . ,-. --Off t.1· Jiit -~ Off t.T ,.,. -... Off .., '° -·~Oft u 16Vt -1Vt Qft ~~ ~ >· ma .. .,_ COIRMNCI ,,.... ....... W L 47 22 46 23 Sf 31 u 31 " 32 San DllOo II 152 ---~ SM Antonio 42 27 .IOI -o.r-ae _, 1161 a~ Houelon 31 a2 631 15 KWWM City 26 « .3e2 17 o.... es .a .333 1t Utah 1t 50 .275 23 ...,..... cowuac. .... ~ 5o4 15 47 20 35 34 34 34 30 3t Cet1tr• °"9tM9ll Mllw9ill!M 4 7 22 Allll(lla 33 35 o.trolt 32 ae ~ ~~ ~ 15 53 WeclMMey•e ._... .713 - .701 I .501 19 .soo 19'A .436 24 .111 - .41$ ''" .471 t4\t .«9 11 .412 18~ .221 31'1\ eo.ton 138, CleY91and '15 New .lerMy 1 I I, P1111*'91phla 108 Wlllhlngton 114. Indiana Ille K-City 110. Atlanta 1oe °"'-129, San Al'ltonlo 115 "'-'Ill 104. Dallu .. 8-ttle 19, MllwaukM 97 T........-eo-l'tllladelphla et Detroit GOiden Slate at Utah Houston a1 Port18nd NBA L.Ndet1 ,.._..,..._..21) ICONNO ' ~ on~A .... .. 121 474 2140 33.4 17 712 518 2082 31.2 .. 755 511 2071 30 5 17 894 303 1191 25.2 se m 334 15e4 24.2 14 110 308 1521 23.8 a I07 211 w1 n.1 15 135 259 1537 23.1 12 5" 214 1451 23.4 13 523 3e3 1439 22.8 Maton., Hou Slkma. S.. 8 .WMl'n9, NJ Thmpen,Pon Luc.u. NY M~o.f T• A"9- 17 447 517 914 14.4 87 179 143 822 12 3 .. 292 534 828 12.1 14 214 537 751 11.7 II 2111 521 737 11.2 AH41TI .............. 8 0 .... 4q. ............ A 114 811 9.7 ~LA M a1 .. 1 CllMl!a, Phil 13 513 8.5 ArCllll>ald. Bos 53 432 8.2 Huston, Cle 13 499 7 9 flELO GOAL l't!"C!NT40« FO F04 ~t. Giimore. Clll «5 1NM .1141 S.JOhnaon, KC 302 509 .593 Nall, Pon 4JO 741 680 8 .Wllml. NJ 421 729 .578 KlnQ, GS 110 1091 575 Nn CHAMptONSHIP Btedtey ST, Purdue 51 PtMDUE -Elfer1 o. S-oe 11, Crow 11. Edmonson 11, Hell o . PelomblzJo 7, 8ullocX 2. StalllnQe 4, Gamfw 2, 8en9on O Totall: 21 11-21 &I MAOUY -Alt6et· ton 11. Thlrdklll 15, R-2, Mlnff 17, Scott 17. C~ 0. Wabat« 0, Mathewe O Tol#ll: 28 11-17 17 Halttlme -Pl#due 31, ~ 31. FOUl9d out -PlllOmblzlo, AM.. Cook Tolal fouls -Putdue 21, &.-,. 20. A -9.572 COMMUNITY COLLEGE WOMEN 0rMCM Coeel II, Cerrltoa IO ORANG! COAST -Etllnoer 10. Marie 13. SandYlken 5. Kroyer 11. p.;i.., a, Berry 10. Totela: 2111-1113. CllllUTOI -Robarge 18, Humphrey 3, Pope 4, Recur 17, Wllll~•r 2. Lery 14. LaC<Olx 2 Totals· 27 S-10 80 Halftlme: Cerrltoe, 32-21. Total IOUll: Orange C:0..1 14, C«rt.oe 11 NHL C.....U C°"""81CI ~ L~OP QA '1a. ll·Edmorl1on « 17 14 319 281 102 Celgaty 27 31 17 311 323 71 VancoUYer 25 33 11 211 271 11 ...... 23 3e 15 291 332 II Cdcwedo 17 41 11 224 331 45 Nome~ MlnnMol1 ~ St. Louie T0<on10 Oetroll 33 21 20 311 2tl5 ee 32 29 13 303 307 77 28 38 11 314 341 17 29 3fl 7 291 330 15 20 39 11 215 354 58 18 40 12 254 331 48 WAUICOHP'IMNC« .. atndr~ •·NY lllandera 5C. 15 fl 359 NY AanQete 37 24 13 292 PNladelpllla 38 29 9 302 Plttaburgll 28 38 1 I 283 Wuhlngton 23 40 11 293 ~OMe!Oft 229 IOll HO 87 29<1 81 318 17 311 57 1-MontrMI 43 14 17 33fl 205 103 Botton 40 24 10 291 255 90 8uftell> 38 23 15 217 240 87 ou.bec 31 28 II 331 323 78 Hwt10<d 21 38 17 24' 320 5fl x-CllncNd llrat pt-In dlvltlon • .......,.,lc«M WlllnlP9Q 5. ltlftt9 ~ OWb9o "), Heriford 3 NY AanQete 7. Plttlburgll 2 Toronto ... SI. LOUIS 3 ClllcMlgo I, Oelrolt 4 v-5, Colorado 4 T...,..'•O- Buffalo a1 lloelon MIMMola 11 Oelroll WMl*tgton at~ Mont,..., a1 NY 191eno.ra ..... 5, Klng1 I ---~~ Lo. Aft9MI 1 1 1 -3 ~ 13 1-5 """..___ 1. Loe An,.1 ... Cllarlraw 2 (Kelly. '::~:• • 2. Winnipeg, .. Kl.Mn 33 (Ha ). tl:415. P9naltlti -L Murphy, LA. 7!08: 89\wd, ~. 1t:ol. . ....a ..... • 3. LOe Angelll, Fox 21 (ea. TeniOfl). 2:07; 4. Wlnnlpeg, o.&lo'• 24 (Chrletlan, Sm1tl), 1;45; 5. Winnipeg, Lullowlch 41 (B10yefl, H-cllull), 1:4t; 8. Winnipeg, lundl!Olm 14 (Steen, Llnd•trom), 11.41. P9nlllllll -lev9r0. Win. 12; 1J; Olonne. LA. 14:21. l'*-f'wftM 1. Loe Angelll, M. Murpfly 2 IW•I. 1:21: 8. WIMIPI01 ~ « (~>. lt:lt. ,_...... -°'*"""'· LA. :22: I. Murphy, LA. 4::IO: .,.._,, Win. 13: 11. 8fM* Oft flllll -LOI ~ l-1CM-21. WlnnlPN 1 .. 11-11..U. Ooellee -LOI A~•. K11n1, Blake. WIMIPN• ~A -12.111. ....... ......... ,.,....,....., OllilMd IOD ODO OOt -I I 0 ~ 00. 100 000 -1 1 0 ~'l'.':.~·=rcn.~.=~:i.:= • W -~. L -!Qloft. t4" -Oelli.nct, Oro. .................. C•V...._.t Phhde~ 140 000 0 -5 I O Loe .,.... 100 OM 0 -4 I 0 Krukow, AaJtlqh (6) Ind Vlrgtt, Dlu (I); Ootti. Font« (I) w · eotoeda. W -Knl· kow. L -Goltz. ,..,.... I, T'"'"8 I (It., ....... , MIMMo1a 100 100 000-2 7 Pltabl.rgh 000 510 20ll_. 18 0. Aedllrn, Cooper 15). HoOt>e (7), O'Comor (I) and 8utera, Smllh (7). llaum9ar1en, F\o!no (5). .._ en Niemllwl (8). laimlento (91 end"-W -~ L -Ald-lem. HAI -"""'-ola. Geettt. PllllWVfl, l'llomplon, .....,..14.Y.._I , .. ~ .... , New YOtk (All 040 002 000 -8 10 2 T-001 Ol3 02lt -14 17 I Righetti, McG•lfJt•n (5), LIROCll• (7), 0oeeage (I) 8nd Cerone; 8uteller, Sdlmldt (8) •nd 8. John•on. W -Butoher. L - McG•ftlgan . HR• -N•• York, Murcet. T•ua. e Johnlon. ...... ,,,c ... o (atY-) Chicago (Nll 000 000 000 -0 5 0 San Diego 503 101 Ob -11 17 o Bird Grlftln (41. Campbell (7) and MOfe- lend, bavls (5); Etcl'l•lberger, Boone (7). lueu (81. OIL.on 9 and Gwoe<IL w -Ei-chelberger, l -Bird. HR -San Dl•go Gwoedz. ' Cltenlet..,__2 (at ... tffy, Alta.) San Ftancilco 100 012 002 -I 15 2 Milweu!IM 010 100 000 -2 8 2 Schatted« l la"'811e (7) Md Pr\1111; Cald· W911, Sla1on (fj), Eut«ly (91 and Stmrnona, Yoe1 (9). W -Scmtz9det. L -Caldwell HR -San Frandaco, 0.1118 ... 11."9dlo•4 I.CT-I jSoalon 200 010 010-4 14 o Cincinnati 008 100 04x-11 13 I Ojeda. Stanl•y (5), Sc11oppH (8) •nd a.omen: Pastore. Harrla (7), l<wn 191 and TreYlno, van Gord« (7) w -P .. tor .. L -Of«IL .......... ,,.,.. (1tSL.....,...g) Toron10 002 ooo 10-3 11 2 New Yen (NU 004 002 30x-9 15 t LMI. Todd (8). MUtT1y (7). JadLlon (81 and Whlll, Petrattl (81: Jor111, LHc:h (71 end Steams W -~ L -L_,_ HR -New York. Klngman. Cerdlftaa &. n.w. 1 (at La&Mlftd, '1e.) St, LOUIS 000 000 002-5 8 I Oettotl -000 001 000 -1 5 0 LaPolnt. Lltllll (II. Sutt.,. (81. Romo (9) and 8jorltman, Brummer (7), Rozema, Rutz (71. LH (t i end Caallllo. W -L•Poln1. L -Rozem1 "°1• ts, WNte 1o11 a (al Fott ..,...., Fil.) Chicago (All 000 012 000 -3 t 4 Kansas City 203 000 80x -13 11 O Barnes. Ibarra (4), Mc:Glotl'lerl (7). Com-aneho (8) and Hiii; Spllllor1f, Wright (I). 0..-.berry (81 8nd Welhln. KMtlly (I) W -Splittorff l -Berne• "HR -K•n•u C.ty, Mey ........ , ........ 2 (atT...,_) Clewlend 000 110 111 -5 10 0 Selltle 001 100 000 -2 II 0 Denny, MattlMI (5). er..., (I), Whlt90n (I I 8nd H.-y. Bando (I); a.tie. a.tc en ,.,,.,.,..... (91 and eu.ng.. w -et.Men. l -Clatll. HRa -S.Ule. H9nderlol1 haloel..._2 , .................. , Atlanta 020 000 00 -2 1 2 MomrMI 011 040 OJt -11 1 1 Boggs. Me!Ule (II and Poeorooe; Aoget1. J-(7) and Cart«. Ramoe {71. w -Rc>-oera L -Boggs. Cofleoe SCOfft T~I ..,..,.... Wixonaln 8, BriQham Young 5 Wbeonsln 12, UC Rlv«9lde 5 Brigham Young 2. WUlllngton 1 Slenlord •. Tvt-• (Celed allet nine In-nings. darll.-). htH..he (at .. oteeo) San Diego St. 8, Cal Stet• LA 3 Cal State LA 6. UC San Diego O USIU 11, UC Sen Diego 1 "°"_ ..... _ use 12. Maine 3 USC 7, C.111 LU1,,.,en 3 Community cottege °'MIJe COM! 4, C--.. I Oranv-Colst 000 000 200 2-4 11 1 Cerritos 200 ooo 000 1-3 10 o Reinholtz, M..,,_. {71 and Puekwldl; Oii, DI L• Oau (7). Friedly ( 10) end Roman. W-Munson (1-0). L-Ft11dty. 28 -Hop- kins (Or•ng1 CoHt). Sll•rn1kl (Orange CoHI), Mccarver (Cerrllo11, Rul1no (C4trltoal. 3B -Brown (Orange Cout~ HR -Slwrcn (c.rrtlot). Go6deft Weet JO, LA loutllweet J Golden w..i 250 154 (18)12-30 22 2 LA SouttMat 00 t 002 000 -3 7 3 Hendrlctl1. Croett.it (II, Meyere 1111 8'14 Sctlutz. Morello: GHii, H .. (8) 8nd JollNon. Christina. 2B -AHOC>elli (Golden W98t) 2. trvlne (GOIClen WHt) 2. Foller (Golden W•t). Peopta (LA Sout"-1). 3B -.aQfW (Golden Wee1). 80)'d ~ Wwt), H• (LA Sout'-1). HR -(Golden West~ Altobelli (Golden Watl). San OleeO s. tddhholl 4 Sac!dllbldt 001 000 003-4 9 0 San Diego 030 110 OOX-5 9 2 Brvan1. E\tley (7). Kobel ( 7) and lr•ln; Mattera. Elle (9) •nd Brm. W -Mall«a. L -Bryant. 2B -Elle (San Diego). 2: Comlia (San Diego), CummlnQ (Sedd). 38 -R41d· !lick (Siil OleQol. Rodrtguu (San Olegol. Hlah School eor-del r.. 22, l eddhhall • Corona d4ll Mer 1114 OIO 3-22 21 3 Saddlebecll 100 230 0-• 9 3 Pel.,...,,, Wynn (5), While (7) and Mllbon, Alvarez, Gerllb (21. Ochoa (5) end Bait«. W-~ (2-0). L-A!Yeta 211-Whlle (Corona del Mar) 3, Murphy (Coron• det a.hr). Smlll'I (Saddl•backl. Demien (8addl1b1e11). 3B-Baker (SeddlabaC:kl kR'-Odloa (Saddleblcll) c.... ..... 1,"""""'...,.., • ~ Hert>or 000 000 ()--@ 2 Costa,,._ 212 020 x-7 I I lllltooelnal!: Splllr (5) 8nd Nugent, Tarry; Smit II en cf Fl•td. W-Smllll ( 1· 1). L- 811ooelngh. 28 -Holl•y (Coeta M•N). Fillld (eo.ta ,,._). ~ (Cceu -.).18 -~rung (Coeta Mlea). ........ ........ 1rv1ne 200 ooo a--e 8 o &tancH 000 000 0-.0 5 1 »nme and KJrat. <:over. "°""'°" m -i ""'*-W -Sii'IWnl (3-2). L -eowy; 28 -MCC4flM (£) 2. Tiemey (I). .. ,_ .. ..,.....,. El Toro IMS 100 0-t 12 1 UnlYerllty 000 OM 1_. 4 1 Pller. cievton (IS~,,...,.,. (8). Lomeli (t ) W1C1 Jecobo, Gonzale•; lareon. voalooti 131. ColMrw (4) and Frei. W-l'Mer (3"0). (,,..... Lareon. 8 -LotMlt. 28 -Metr•n1a (II Toro). Pifer (EJ Toro). 88 -.,..._(!I Toro). .... .................. 1 .... . ~on IMCll 110 010 a-. '° a WlltnllnlW 000 200 0-2 2 1 ""'°· llUclll• (Ill) -4Jlllrlty: ....,, -~ w -~ 12.1>. L -1a111y. n -8udl)M (HUlllllWton BMcitl). H -.... '"'* (HUnMotOfl ~~ .... 4.0.-¥WI OoMfl View ooo ooe o-o 2 2 Merine IOO -1-4 7 3 lllfllly ll'ICI Hc*ltn: llfllllft W1d ,..., 38 -~(Mime) 2. ....., .......... ,.,.. ........ ...__ ODI 000 ODO-a I' II ,...., Diii -01' oot-1 • 1 . Oleood • ..__ ...... o..;, ic..,.. &, ~ ~ IJNnlele •• -=~ ~""- -.--: .. -:-.~ .:0..-:::& ....... ., ........ 200 medlly rll8y -1. Edtaon. 1:58.0. 200 frn -1. l>etereon (E). 1:55.0; 2 HOC>klne (M), no time; 3. Rudd (El. 2:02. 200 IM -1. T. Smith (E). 2:08: 2. Sml1h (Ml. no 1irn1: 3. Flel'llt (E). 2:20. SO ttM -1. S. Smltll IE), 23.4 1; 2. Par- llOM (Ml. no time: 3. Malloy (E). 20. OMng -1. Goldlteln (E). 100 bulletft)I -1. S. Smith (El. 57.70; 2 f\lelly (Ml. no lime; 3. Wood (E), 1:01. 100 lrn -1. Matthews (E), 57.72: 2. Malloy (El. 53.21; 3. R. Lyoctl (Ml. no Ume. 500 frM -1. Rally (M), no time; 2. P91· . «eon (El. 5.11; 3. Wedle6gh (E). 5: 18. 100 bid! -1 Rodt (M). no lime: 2. Rudd (El. 1 03 O; 3. Fltller (El. 1:05 100 brHll -1 T Smltl'I (El. 1:04; 2 Sulton (El. 1 12: 3 Lyoctl (M). no time. .00 lrM ,..qy -1. Marina. no time. ,_ .. y..., 107'ft, ................ ..... ,.m2m9dtey relay -1, F-lllln Vahy. 200 trM -I. McC«llly (FV). 1:58.12: 2. Griffith (HS). 1:59 73; 3. JUOd (FV). 2:02.00. 200 IM -1. a.noy (FV). 2-12..80; 2. Pw-~~;::r (HB). 2 14 13, 3 Sehullz (FY). 50 frM -1 Ughl (FV), 22.11; 2. W•n (FV). 25 17, 3. Hotton (HS). 25.07. 100 bu11*11)' -1 5'-*' (FV). 1:0L3t; 2 Roman (FV). 1.0 U5: 3 P"'"'"'* (HB). 10221 100 lrM -1 Briglll IFV). 55. 15; 2. Moore (FV). 55 4S, 3. Haya (H8). 58.57. 500 lret -I B•nlly (FVI. 5.17.49, 2 Welker (FV), 5 23 40, 3 Lenor• (HBI. 5:3938. tOO bac:lt -1. Wen (FV), 1.03.73; 2. lie ~~ran Grlllltll (H8) end McC1rthy (FYI. 100 brNll -1. Huang (FV). 1:08.42; 2. Betro (HB), 1'11 31; 3 Young (FV), 1: 12.0I. 400 lrH reley -1. Founleln Valley. 3 37 211 ....._..,....._.~. 200 medlly r• -1. NewPort Hart>o<, 1'490 200 frM -1. Herrl~ (NH). 1:45.5; 2 Tl'lompaon (NHI. 1:47.8; 3. HlnH (NH), 1'57.5. 200 lndo -t. ea11ac:11 (NH), 2:oe.1; 2. L--. (NH). 2'12 8; a. llar1let1 (U). 2:13.3. 50 fr .. -1. Hlf'ffaon (NH). 21.t: 2. Me-00¥ (ll2U: 3. Jeppe (N+I), 23.3. fOO -1. Molfwt (,.H). 53.1; 2. Woollolk (NHI.. .1, 3. PltQr (NH). M. I. 100 lrM -1. ThomPIOfl (NH). 41.7; 2. Jeppe (NHI, 51.0; 3. Herman (U). 57.3.. 5()0 frH -1. Mollet (NH), 4:41.2: 2. Cartaon (U). 4:52.3; a. Lokoald (NH). 5: 17.8. 100 back -1 Ballec;ll (NH). 57.4; 2 Bartlel1 (U). 11>2 O; 3. Oberg (NH). 1:03.5. 100 br-i -1. ~ (NH). 1:08.4; 2. Woolfolk fNHI. 1·01 3; 3. Kerehn•r (U). 1:10.2. 400 fr•• ret1y -I. Newporl Harbor, 3.22.t IJT-M,~12 200 medlly rlley -1. El T0t0, 1:45.1. 200 "-!Yle -I. llllon (ET), 1:52.7: 2 !Aland (E). f:5"4.5; 3. Yokota (ET). 1:5"4.5. 200 IM -1. Popp (ET), 2:02.1; 2. Web8tet 1n 2111 o. 3. G......,.. <ET). 2:0e.3. 50 tr-1)'11 -1. Soutllran (E). 22.7; 2. NO'Mllll (ET), 23.2; 3. Orell1 (El. 23.3. - 100 lluttlrfly -1. Wlldom (ET). 59.0; 2. B Bero /IE). 1:00.2; 3. Young (ET), 1:01.5. 100 frM•tyte -1. wneon /ETI. 50.5; 2. ,.._ (E). 50.1: 3. Sllorl (ET), 52.11. 500 lreestyte -1. Southran IE}. 5:0t.5: 2 . Wicka IE). 5:13.0; 3. Sovlnlkl (ET), 5:13.2. 100 baeutroll• -1. Pcpp (ET), .1.0: 2. Wlbeiar (E), 5.'92: 3. Barg (El. 1:00.t . 100 bre .. 1atro111 -1'ro111 .. pw (ET). 1:05.0 ; 2 . Yokota (E ). 1:01J.8; 3 WlcM (E). l:ot. 1. .00 medley rei.y -1. El Toro. 3:21.4. c.,_ •..., 1-. 111t•1111a11 • 200 medley r-.y -1. Cofone dll Mar. l:M.5. 200 lrM -I. Taylof (CdM). 2:00.8; 2. Scoll (CdM). 2:Q2.I>: 3. Temple (CdMI, 2.05.0. 200 IM -1. Monow (Cdm). 2:14.1; 2. loofbourr-(OdM). 2:1$.3; S. lmbemlno (CdM).2:21.2. eo rr .. -1. 81n111~W), 24.2: 2. va-,_ (OdM), IU; I. (CdM). 2U. 100 fly -1. Ven-(OdM), 1:02.2; 2. Taylor (CdM), 1:07.t : 3. McGiii (Sadd), 1;08..2;. 100 ... -1. Mofrow (CdM). 53. t; 2. Rofl 'c:l' 13.2; 3 • ......, (CdM). 53.1. hi -'· Looftlourrow (COM). 5:27.1; a. 10011 (CdW). 11:21.7; 3. 8Mly (CdM), l :UA. 100 bee* -1.Aoh (CCIM~!r.:,; 2. 8d1" IOMMllt1 (CdMI. 1:ot.4: 3. (9edd). 1!0t.2. 100 bf.--1. lmOlrnlno (CdM). 1:12.5; I , Whit• (llddl. 1: 14.t; a. T~ (OdM), 1~11.1. •o• trM reley -1, Corona del Mar, u1.1. ~=-.... ......... ,. aoo """"' .._ -1. MMN.i..!;.ot.oa: 20) he -1. "81111 jM), l:ot 11; WV IM - 1. ~_(1)..1:11.01, IO•-t. i. hell ( I), 27 OI; iDt'M1 -1, Kenaflln Cl/I,, 114.tO: tOO fly -1. MeoK11ut• (l • , ... ,: * ... -,, ...... ....,_J..'...•·•: .... _ ...,,..,,~1Ul;-Mdl -1. 0...-Cl>. 1; 1U: 100 ..._. - 1. "'-" ,..,, 1: tf.f1: .......... -'· No ..i.4:bM ~ ..... -.u• •" .. ....... _,,~ ..... t .. ............. ~CMMt.11~--- -'· ....... ..,, t: ... 4; .. fl'9f -1 • ...... M. .... t00•-·1 . .._M '~---1 ........... 1-.1: IOO .._ -1 ....... CMe. t.IUI * ._ -'· ..., .....,.. mt.ez 1• .,.... -1. - ~INHa, t~l4t,4001r•,..,-t ~ ....... 40ll , '=.P ! 1~ ·=·~~" !·04 II, ff .. -1, Ar1t11tr0ftJ9 (' ~ .. -01 ft; tOO IU -1 Clll\ '1°•1. Ui ~ ~I • ...._, .... ,, 1711; °"""'°....;. '· --(M 111 to, tOO 11¥ -1 .... l'VL 1 04 It tOO fr• -l ••0t1Ctl (H~ U 1~,i. 100 irea -f. ArMell0"9 (flV : • IO ~ 100 bee* I n.. (PV). f. 11. 100 ..,_ -Clel1I (FV). , ... 16; 400 ,, .. ,...,_ 1. ~ ..... ... ., .............. ,. 200~~. :iiti· 1~·1=~ 1. Kert cm a:11.1: to• -1. ~en 2t 6; 100 ~ -I. Kerl (IT). •.t ; iOO hi -I. MOie (IT), 17 0: IOO he -1. Barnet llT), t : It.A; 100 bad! -1, AYWlll (I!. 1:0l.f; 100 ..,.... -1. ~ (l"fl. frlt,9; •i>o l'llldll)' raley -1, lttancta, t:lt.4. C.-.... t1,l1M 'I '.ft 200 ~ .._ -1. eor-., u.. 2:10.t ; IOO he -1 ...... (CdM). 2:1U ; ~ _. -1 fllotlb (OdMI, Ut •: 50 trM - I. WOife (leclf), ff.I; 100 fly -1. "°bb ~OdM), 1:011.1, 100 lrH -t , McGahan CdMi 1-00 ti 600 tree -1 ...... ~OdMt: :.a.I , 100 OIOil -1 CaYantilOfl CdM . 1: 17.t : 100 br .. 11 -1 Woll• ( add , tU t: 400 tree ,_ -I. COton. dll ,,..,, 4:I0.8 Cuort ToutNtlMnt ,,,.. ............. (at~ltllj) GuHlarmo VII•• def. Ste1r9 Dll'llon, 1-4, ~. .__..._.....,... MWll Edtne>ndlon Oii. C111oo Hooper, 84, 3-1. 8·3: Brl•n THchar del. Heinz Gun- thardt, 1-4, l-4; San4y Mey« Clef. Erik ''" karllly, &-3. 1-2; Vincent van Patten def. Ille N .. taM.1-!,i8:1.M. ........... ~ 81tn1rd Mlllon·Andr•• P1tll1on def. Tracy Dela~,...., Rennert, a.2. 7-8; Tim Gulllkaon-Tom Gulllk•on def. Andera Jatryd·81efan 81monHon, 1·3, 8-4; Chrl• Ounk-1'1m Wllldrleon '*: JoM Auelln-Petar flemlnO, 1-e, 1-2. Women11 toumemtftt (lt .... Ylftl) ,.,... ....... ...... MatllM Navralllove def. ltetttna Bunge. 1-1, 1-2: W*1'rlty Tumtlull def. Kerlly Jordan, 1-1. W : 8yMa "**a dlf Mime J-, e-., &-1; Anne Smllll def. 8ert>11a P01t«. M .7-e. bNllftloft loumemtnl C•C...-.=: ,.,....__ Bjorn &org *'· ...... . 1-e. 1-2. M ; VllM OerulMll def. Rolf Oehrlng 1-2. M . uc~•~t:. .. , Oulde (UCI) def. SeOtl, l-1, 7-5. Mc,.._. IOl'I (UCO oel. Dolen, t-2, 1-1, Nellofl (IJCI) oel. Cllang, 1-4, 1-1; fl,arnoe (UCI) def Nagel a-o. 1-3; ZolW (UCI) def. Cucelllell•, 6-7, M , 1-4; ~ (UCI) def K09, M , l-1. DMMee McPheraon.lolllt IUCll o.t. ~ ~. l-1: Amor·~ IUCO det. ~K'"oP.' 7-5, 8-2; Cheklan-Rockowttz (UCI) def Cliccflllll1 Neoel. M. 1-2. ...,. __ ....... ""'" .......... Dew1Wr 7~ ........ Gabriel (H8) def. H!llMY. 1-4; def. N-- rete, &.2; !Ml. Chang, 7-ll; def. Ktlnltnen, 8-0; Cramner (H8) loet 2-t, won 7-8. 1011 2-e. won 7·1; &arell (H8) won by default, _., 7-e. I09I 1-7, M ; 8wnwd (HS) 1oe1 +-e. loet by default, -7-t, 1-2. 0.-... AnC1rew1-Earneal (HB) def H Klm- Flellman, 7-1 , l ·O. d•I O Hlveley- Edmoneon, S-4. 1-2: C1rrotl·Oodd1 (H8) _., 7-t, M ; "*-1-1, +-e C:-_....,11", I f? t rtl IV. ...... g._, (CdM) Clef. L•. 1-2. def. Tr11n, l-0, def. Prado, l-0: del YI. M : Propp CCdMI _, 1-2, e-o. l-0, 1-1; Hou1111 (CdM} _., 1-2, l-1, 8-0, 1-2: ~ (OdM) loe1 M , .....-e.2,1-3 0.-... Hoateller·Wllll1m1 (CdMI def Duong- Ph1m, 1-4, 1-3, O.t Agulr•·Vu. fl..2, 1-2 Gwttllam-Cul1 (CdM) IOe1 4-e, I 1-e. 19111 .......... .......... ht..a.12 ...... 8ro•n (El 1011 lo Harper. 4-1, 1011 to Pham. 4-41.: def Shaw. l-0. def. Knight, e.o. St>loer(E). '#Ofl l-1, !OSI 1• ..... 4-1: a.rger (E) loe1 M . 1-e, won 1-3, 7-e, Studabak• (El loe1 4-8, ~-e. won 7 -5. loet 3-t. 0.-... lnedonW-Flagg (IE) *1t. Huang-Fri ... 1-3. 1·1; def. HaMOn-'.ong, M . 8·3; GllCrMI· 8andovel (&I~ loet 1-7, 1-e. IOll 2-e. M . U.-.._..1t.DMl ... 1 Wiiiard (l8) def.':'C.., I-I; def. o.'8t. 1-1, def. Cepozi,oll. 1-3; def. Terry, 1-0; Scllanz (L81 IOat, •·I : won. II· I. 8-3. l ·O: Brandt (LB) !oat, O-•. 2-8, 1-11, won, fl..I : Brumllelcl !OSI, 1-1. won M . loll 1-1 • ..on, 1-1. 0.-... Pwty-f(OllenOa (LB) def. A. ~Hughat. 1-1, 1-3; def. ~ ...... 1-2: ec.i--eon.n won l-0, 1-3, loel o-a. 2-e. ~........,-.c ......... 2 ..... M8crw (NH) dlf W....,. 1-1. def. Pham, l-0, def. Simmons, 1-0. det. Smith. l ·O. Grotllul (NH) '#Ofl. l-1. 1-2, 1-2, W . Ila.al.,. (NH) io.t, 5-7, won. 1-1, 1-1. 1-1, Abel (NHI loet, 3-1, won, 1-1, l-0, 1-1. 0...... Conll9)'·Hay1 (NH) d•f Koga. Tran, 6·0, 1-1. def ~Ryeon. 1·2. a.1. SttnMll· Smith (NH) '#On, 1-2, 8-1, 1-1, 8-0; ~T-1J Gr-(U) Clel T Wallen, 1-3. def CU.. &-1, 0.1. MOllhop. 11·2. oet W•llen. e.o. Martinez (U) 1011. 1-1. <>-41. won, a.4. 1-0. Margolis (U) 1011,2·8, 2·8, won, 1-4, I · t; Venbtelh (U) lol1. 1-8. 2-e. 2-8. '#On, 1-2 ~ O.y.Peu11on (U) IOlt to Kamlnt*l·Mlller. 1-7, 0-1. Clef. Oavl•·HUghH, 8-1. 1-2; Ollvlr-Brown (I.I) io.t. 5-7, 4·8. won. w . 11-2. WOfMlft'I IOftbelt COIMllllTY CC>U.aOI o...... -e.. .. c.nttee a OrM09 CoMf 000 000 200 2-4 11 I c.rmoe 200 ooo ooo 1-3 10 o Oodllon,1 .. .,.,..,. (41 and Mdtner; Culp and Ow. W -OIAp • l -Oodaon. H - Culp (Orang• co .. t). 38 -Brickner (Carrhce). C.....1t,B •• t 1ti 1 Sadill!t1** 000 000 1-I 1 7 CllNI 114 002 11-10 11 2 Locke and Rubalo1v•; Faulkner and Celltlend. 38 -Huckler (Cltr11e), Sliva (Cltrue). ........... , ........ Ooldefl W... 102 102 O-t I O LoeA......._ WIONUO•Y'IMIULTI ~:c-:.·~t !:"':. -4111t) ~· ~ (Crfllnl fuo 1,00 ~ oo ...,,. &ow.o 5ar1c•1 i:i 0 2.40 ,,., Ctlll,,. >J. ~ 40 Alie> taoed. 81gnej. T ~ .l.JrWI. P1x1e1 Wat Cllllf, 'OOllllll Fortune. NOl\1 On R9d, Alclehot • Time: 2.01 11&. • UACT4 lt-31!Nld171.20 MCC*O ~ One mile trot Ml9MY ~ (f'llclllMondl 11 20 6 20 3 40 Twiet~ (T...._) 30 eo I 00 ,.lduOllll <San-> .. eo AIM raced: Toe> C.t. 8oroon Wllllllly, Wiii He Be Good, Gutlger. Jut1 • Hvttler Time. 2:07 2/5. TMRD IUCL One mile ~. L.aplio::J:~20-eO I 20 4 20 8lci (V . I 1 llO 420 AMY• Wlnaton I •I 3 10 Alto' rllCeCI: Miii lnllnlly, Mon Ami Ma· leetle. F1t1way Biii. June Affair T. Howdy Scot Time: 2:08. • UACTA (1·7) paid Slll.40 'CMMT'H IUCL One mile trot MMliell (Wine II) 23.20 9 40 •.40 Flying Squad (Hyman) 5 80 4.20 No e;,t (8allwgeon) 4 ao Aleo raeed: Tanllno, Oreeden Star, Storm M~. UPI* Crull, Oetett Ouchlll Tim« 2:1le 215. ,.,,. AACI. One mlla paoe, Reuben Froet (Kumelet) 10 80 5.80 2.80 Titan lrlth (Tremblayl 7 40 3 80 Ananlat (Kueblerl 2 40 Aleo rllCld: Joe Lord. Pan«way Blly. ThrM Sltp, DMc;ing 8-lx, Star a-le, The Punk Time: 2:04. 12 UACTA ( 1-81 paid $78.00 '°'™ llACE. One mlll ~ Gebudet (Gouctt.ul S.20 3.40 2 20 Slfl08 Rou (Grundy) • 3.20 2 40 Oranparlc Mayfly (Copeiandl 2.20 Aleo ~ SparlcJe Argo, Nlllve Sutan. Kelly Komer. l1me: 2;00 215 KYOtTH ltACI.. One mlle ~· King'• Oovble (Roeln) 1 eo 4 40 2 ao Huntlt'• Hunt• ()(ueblerJ 1 eo 4.eo Montariy Or..n (Shemln) fl 40 Alto rae.d: Gen"• Guest, Sot«o Clllef. s-s..e. Rilky °"8nce, """"f• Sc:amper, w~?-oe 12 IEXACT4 (2·11pelO $42110 12 "'9Ctc It.JC 1~ 1-a.1. 1 -21 pe10 S9.oee oo with l'#O winning 11e1te11 (five llOr-1 S2 Piek Six c:ot1•ol•llon peld H 1 40 with 88 •Inning llcketa (tour llorMt) S2 Piek Six ac:ratch con1ot11lon paid S75.00 •Ith 20 winning lk::itell (11\fee hOr-, one 1etatehl UOHTlt IUCI!. One mile trot Chlel Guy (Copeiandl 4.80 4 00 3 00 Bold Stt'llll (Witllard I 4.80 3 00 NOble Vlc:lory (Pwt<wl 4.00 Alto raced: Andy's Meteor, Noble Rule S.itot Blwlre. Dear S1r. lkenos. ~,· Timi: 2:02 . • llXACT4 (1,21 paid $47 20 l9fT)I MC«. One mile pace. PW'llng (Sherren) 10 60 4 20 3 40 J-Hondo (Kuebletl 3 llO 3 20 IWtlly Lord (Parl<et) 3 00 Alao raced: Kiwi Berry. Don Cara Siar ::u:elk, Trlbu1e. Sllg111 of Hend. Totr1ci Time 2'02 315 12 UACT4 (2·5) Paid S50 80 TDfT'H IUCE. One mile P1C9 Poderoeo (Pwtletl 27 •O 11 20 1180 Big Sc>tlng (Willlwnlj 3 00 3 20 Blue ~ (longol I 20 Aleo rac.d: Bon Blue Le Patron. Ricky Direct, Gypey Sim.. Seminole CIMI Time 2-04~ 12 UACT4 (~11 p.ioS5880 A uencsenc. •. 4 11 Santa Anita ftl>eEIOArt MIUL Tl (llttl .. ....., -"'9) Fl"ST "ACE. Iii. rurfong1 Bright late (MeCetronl • 80 3 20 2 50 Joe'• Tribute (Pedroza) 9 80 5.60 El T~.(Bl«*l 1eo Al90 raced C'Eat Jet. Black,,_ ~eetc. Hot Tracka, Plggy't Beet. Stacy Jo. """"'ed Aoaln. Magle 8roedc:eal, Abe<Oeen eo.,.. Tim« 1'18 315 UCOND IUCE. I lurtong1 M~'• 1n1ent tOlabh)'91 6 80 4 40 3 20 I'm Ful\lonable (Bleclll 9.40 1.IO Brandy'• Aeb (Ollvar•) 7 40 Alto r-i· Sonnet A.QMJ. She'a Splendld, Modeety ElleiM, Studentbody Right, M•le'1 Fut~. 8rMk Out Tl'le Wine. frlplt Madi Time: I~ II DAJf. Y OOUtlLe (6-31 palel S 17 40 THlflO IUCE. 1· 1116 moles Racing 11 AMI (Sllmlcr) 1 00 2 40 OU1 Teus Commetce (McCarronJ 2 20 out BwgMi Balcony IOlivet•I ou1 Aleo rlCld NetlYe S1epper. Time: 1:41-415 '8 DACTA ( 1-31 plld S21 00 'OtMnf MCE. I 11#1onga. Bold MeQ l..._1 4180 11 eo • 20 a-Nanda 0e.c (Castaneda) 3 80 2.40 Th91 Dow It (Slbile) 2 40 Ateo rleld· love Snow, Lovet)' Bronze, e4.uc:lly Camllle. Arldle, lrllll GodoeR. • -CQU91ed. T1mr 1 11 3/5 AFTH lll4CE. 1•11 mlel. ~ (HeWlly) 13 00 7.40 5 00 aeon Time (Toro) to 40 e 80 The Argyle !(Id (ValenNel1) 4 40 Alto r8Cld UMu Mo<o. Phllllflic, Bad Re- ec:el, tngrw. a..u Sold T\moe; 1:47 2/5. IS DACTA (4-61paid'31950 9UCTif MCtE. I lurtongs StrNm Side (McCetron) 6.80 3.20 2 60 Kanul (Oelahouauye) 3.20 2 80 l~f (Almu-) 3 40 Also r1ced: Romeo·a S•oro1 Mv111ca1 St¥"-, Magle Force. Soldlef o Fonu ne. Streit Prow. Time: 1:10 315 MVINTH AACL 1 1118 m1tM Mallltle Court (OllY-l 49.40 11.80 11 20 Ce 81\arp (Slb4h) 1.80 5.00 Kina OI The Ranch (T orol 5 20 Aleo rllCld: Allied lnveder, Senur, Rem llotdly, Cur T ov, Old Rtver Road. Timi: 1:41~ • llCACTA (S-3) peld S89t.50 .. "'9Ctc It.JC (S-t...__., peld s I I, 112.80 w Ith 13 '#Inning tk::itett (five ~~ 12 Pleil Sia COl*>latlon peid s 119.40 with 405 wtn- n Ing ticket• (lour horH1). S2 Pick Six ecratch eontotallon paid 144 oo with six wtnnlng tlclt• (UlrM hor-. -Mnlell) 110Nnt MCI. 8 f\Hlongl. To 8. Ot Hoc (Mc:Carron) I 40 4.20 3.80 lhllort (a.gen) 7,80 4.ici T erreltO't Slftgar (Jlnl 4 IO N«I rlCed: 81M1t!Ct ..... I'm Smokln, Mt Prim. Mlnletw, ~. ~,._ T1INi: 1;02 115 (lracll rlC«d). .ntt MCL One mite. ,..... Skllt (8111Ck) 14.40 5.10 uo NI Nell HM«o...r.) uo uo Agellenn ~ I -~ 3..40 Alo Hondo 100 100 0-1 0 2 ,._. W1d HwMltr: MunOl end Ola.. H -111"41~W.). Allo reoecl: ,...,,., ~. Ring Of Ettn, AlltWr y ......... Ster Mine, 8-1 Adele. T1m« 1;31 alt. .... ICMOOI. .. ,._ 1, """""' • ll Toro 2:10 011 0-7 12 o °"'*"'1 000 000 0-0 i ,. Celllflir1 Ind fr11i; "" 8"CI ~L 18 -Fu (Unl~ly). H" -Tl"'!llllO (II TOtO~ ... • IXACTA ( .. 1) pllld 1119,50 At~U,721. VOl.UYMU. c .... ~....,. t OrtflOI c... •. ..._..IC>. 1J.I, .. 11, ll-7 ..... ~ *'· ~ w.t. 1 .. 17. \K •tB.••11. 1M. ............ Oallll Vlllt*Lttlll• ... • IMclfl. '°"111, .. ,., ... '"''· 1~ ~ M tewtr:•....,, 1~11 • ....,_ ... ldlloft; IM, 1M, 114. I.a 0.-. .... Meter 0..'fl-1, IW ..,.. ..... ""*' • ~- ·Marina, FV • await showdown It may be • UtO. early in tbl IK'uon tor lhowdowna, but Ma· rlna and Fountain Valley higbl appear headed for one Friday mght as both won Wec:in8day In Sun.set League volleyball ace.Jon to boost their recordt to 2-0 in league . F'ountaln Valley b,al West- minster In thr straight while Marina swept Edi.Ion to set up Friday's match between two of the Sunset's unbeatens. Jn other action Wednesday, Ocean View scored a Sunaaet wl.n over host Huntington Beach, La Quinta beat Mater Oei in 11 non~ league match and Orange Coast d e(eated San Bernardino and Golden West was toppled In Santa Barbara in community coUege play. Marina's Andy K.J~man had VOLLEYBALL 16 kill<j in 22 hitting attempts to pace the Vikings past Edison. The Vikings got strong serving throughout the match to claim a 15-4, 15-6, 15-3 wfn. Fountain Valley substituted freely in its 15-12, 15-fl, 15-9 win• over Westminster. Sophomore outside hitter Scott McKeough had eight kills and eight digs for the Barons while teammate Rob Whitehair contributed four kills and sbc blocks. Ocean View rebounded from a first-game loss to beat Hunting- ton Beach, 10-15, 15-13, 15-2, 15-7. Setter Mlke Hix and middle blockers Kyle Vuniga and Jim Gane led the way for the Sea-hawks. ~ Quinta came clcr..e to letting a ~an slip away against Mater De1, eventually winning, 15-8, 15-7, 13-15, 14-16, 15-3. The win puts the Azte<:s at 4-1 overall. "Mater Dei plays with a lot of intt•ns ity," La Quinta Coach Larry James said. "They were pretty hard to put away." At Orange Coast. the Pirates had little trouble remaining un- beaten (3-0) in the South Coast Conference with a 15-5, 18-16, 15-7 win over San Bernardino. Middle blocke r Steve Fried- man. sNter Paul Kubas and out- side hitter Scott Friederichsen all tumcd in sohd performances for the Pt.rates . Orange Coast hosts Grossmont Friday mght at 7:30 . Golden West dropped a tough fi ve-set decision in Santa Bar- bara, 19-17. 15-6, 16-18. 2-15, 15-5. The Rustlers. who host East Los Angeles Friday, dropped to 1-1 in Southern California Con- ference play Ange Iman Series set Saturday By ALMON LOCKABEY O .. r Pllol eo.ttng Wrtw Performance Handicap Racing Fleet (PHRF) skippers will get their first go at P ·hia Corinthian Yacht Club's Angelman Series Saturday. Balboa Yacht Club will be host to the Metcalf dinghy sailors Sunday in a three~race series for the H arbison Tro'J)hy. The 14-foot dinghy was designed by the late Darby Metcalf, a talent- ed small boat sailor a nd is still popular among racing skippers in Newport Harbor. Here's the weekend calendar: Lo. Aflelll•-l.Oftl lllech Buccaneer Yecht Club -Inverted star! race (PHRFI S11urd1y. Al•mlto. Bay Veehl Club -Spring Tuneuo (bay CllSSM Saturday: BHRF end large ~ oeaion•. ~unoay Senta Monica .. , Wlndjem1T1er1 Yacht Club -Senta Barbara Island ·Ship Rook reoe, (PHRF-A) Seturday, Sunday; Point Dume -El Segundo Race IPHRF-8) Saturd•y. Sund8y. C111tornla Yaellt Club -Sante Berbar• latend -Ship ROCk r-(Ovet1on Sar• No. 1. IOR), SatUfday, Sundey King Harbor Vechl Club -,._ Hortzone r-IPHRF) Saturclev; OoenlM Dev AllM-Rldondo BHch Yacht Ctub -Open1n9 Dey, Sunday. · Mar1M Yechl Club -Ml<'lna Sartel, Sun- day S...0..,0 C«onldo Ylldrt Club -Spt1ng Reg9na. all '*-· Satunley, &undly. MINlon Bey Yecht Club -8utlcw ~~ n•I (handleep) Setlirdey: LU«·S•lll>O•rd Circuit, S.tllfdq. Short eour. t_,, ,_ ( .. oiMMI) Sundey. OoNnelde Ylldlt Club -MIMlon Bey reoe (Colstll Serlea PHRF) Salurdey: ErldnO Ugl'it reoa.Sunder. 8outllwel*11 Ylldrt Club -Salft)oe_t Tro-phy reoa (Cltlllna-27). Saturday, ~- Coronedo Caya Yaclll Club -Openlno Dey, Sunday. SM Diego Orul-Al80detlon -Heb ltl-Yltltlonll Pfldk:ted IOg ~. Sundtiy. San Diego YICllt Cfub -Watermen Seriea. 8~. San Diego Handicap Fl11t -DIK 9row Serlea. Sunday. .... .... IMlltd Anacep1 Yacht Club -Sprlft9 co .. 111 Slrlee No, 3 (PHN) Saturdey. Pierpoint lay Yactlt Club -COl11110doie'1 Troprry rllOI (PH"F) Sa~. Wftllek• Vecht Clvb -Sprlft9 ~•t11 (Olf"""8) ~. ten11 hrll•• 8.rllllng Club -~ s.. '* (PHAF) 8uncN!y, \\p J's toting the doggy candies! Con I hove some?" by Brad Anderson "I wonder what the reigning monarch wants us to do today?" Jt:DGE PARKER by Virgil Partch (VIP) "Great to ... you ag1ln1 you old buzurdl" ~ \ • '&Jess WHAT ' M1z MUNGER ~s SICK T~Y SO WE HAD A STEP-TEAC/IEIZ 1 ' ·--=:;m~1firlfiH1:NiNK(;Mw;M'5;brot4T;n-i, COME ON. °""1.lNU' LE~ 6ET INTO LINDA MAY' YOU NEED TO <;ET HELP NOW.' THAT H05PJTAL TON1""41' ! &A,M•e, AND I PWMl&f THAT ONCE YOO UCK THE WAITIN(;J TO CAU. THE DOCTC>ft.' PWOLEM. YOU'LL t'>ECOME OHE Of HOt..l.YWOOD'5 u ltEATE5T 5TARb/ JIOO~ Jll'LLINS ~~~ WILL IE, J TOL.D YOIJ ioG~T READY FDR IH~ LUNCH CROWD. WIDNllDAY'I PUm.E IOf..VED, by Jim Davis THANK VOU FOR THAT LAP.GE. ROUNP OF INPIFFERENCE 0rtnge Cout DAILY PILOT IThutldey, Marett 25, 1M2 bY Ctiarlff M. Schutz I ..,.. __ ......,_~,...i:::r-~in SPREAV 1J.tt: WORP: 1l4~ Flf(Si' ,.~-,--,-----.... ----..... -. tJAAVe 10 S'Tl=AL.. MeA ST}:e/( WILL <1fT 1l:rJ OF MY PONte5! ,..fiJIC•lll/f ;JU3'~1u . ./!!.C.,. I' LL FEED MY c-.--. . ._""' PLANTA DOSE OF THIS PLANT THAT\VAS QUITE A BIT--- ! WONDER IF I by Ernie Bushm1ller I DON'T BELIEVE IT FOOD -----'1 GAVE IT TOO MUCH 6'.£EPl/.JG mE D4¥ AW.A.'/ •OAJ OO:ZEN!) OF LAP~, •TNK l' "IN"ERBEA~ r tAMT m REM!~ t,l(X) nw IMMEOtRTEW Af1ER ~.~'5 Ht'U. BE JUO&IN& m£ '(.Pf(l 5A6AN SOONO -AUKE. I C001E.5T ... ~ 10 ~ COOU9l'Ti00 '" BRABBLE ~'"' ttw ,,. OttE ~~ ~ ~AM \ f.1'£.R c,o,14c, 'fo ~I'll£~ Al.l ~ 1'\1.£.M 9'of W)lQA'I ~ ,__ __ ,..., MIC.HflE.L ~D DEANNA-~ 8CHOOL ,, .,. \.li1~,eu, 69.o1'11£~, I.AME~ I \l.A'Jf. A 'fES't A'f ~~.I Jl)S'f l(U.f A tbs\1'1'Jt 00'1'· lOOK,A~lOtlf10!t(T ANO QO Mi ef.'S'f~ AKO I Au>A'fS bET (.1'PJ C.(AQE S, JU?{ LUC f. 'iOO 11)1\..L ! --~ M~M#-. iOU'Rf (lb\1.1', fl1'1t1C.I< ~ 1'11~1-llCS fOR \laflHb Mt 10 'fll1Nl< ~t1h1E.t by Kevin Fagan M.1'~.~u~t 'kx>, )f t &\.OW AM E~AM , M'I Ettt1flt ~>1\'U OOE~'i ~ IMlO 1'~£. 'tl~S\I. ~1oR ~ by George Lemont HAVE!N'1' YA eveA HE!ARP OF A CORPt-ess SHAVeR?! by Lynn Johnston , j ' .. •I 1 I I , I I . i I : I . ' ~ r . I I • •• t r ' . 1. I' .,, ,, . .... l't). I i"' ,'r •• *'' ~CT .. t-ro· . "" i''•' . ... ~f·~ "' ,,. .. . ,., .... - ,, , .. It's cl-owdeCI atop Sea View •From P"fl!.C1 SHEFF'S COLUMN • • • CdM, Co~·ta Mel·u triumph 10 join Saddleback and Uni phone already. c.orona del Mar, Cotta MMA, ~and In three Sea Vle~.JamM thu1 far, the .~Utt<l. BUDDING SPORTSCASTER - Univenlty h.lahl all mowd lnto a tie fOf' tv Mrly ltaff hall allowed JUI& one eemed run. Bud Tucker, whoae Ctl\dld view• of tM people I haw talked to ii tha &My ~pe he t.U. flat on h1I tac:o. But 1 don't think eo. The ""J::. cool. lt'1 unlikely he'll~ lead ln the sea View Leaaue bateball race Wed-II T I. U ""' tti a come your way twice a week in ~ netday, tollowtna a wild day of leque action. ~-Wt':I ::!th-lnnlna raWet to win thelr Dally Pllot, hu joined radio station tha\ fabulow 1981 ....,.,, but will be few bool •t Dodatt StadJwn Corona del Mar erupted for 2"2 runa to ~at lut two aamee, the Trojans were denied despite KMPC u a 1pona commentator. S.ddleback whlle C.O.ta Meta bNt Newport Har-tll.U.na the a,._ ln the tlnal frame. He can be heard each tnOrn.lnc from '82. I FAVORED FIVE -I'm picklnJ North Carollna to win the NCA} basketball champlonahJp. No pa.rUcu lar reuon. bor, El Toro handed Univenlty lta flnt league to., El Toro p&tcher Mike Lomeli worked out of the 5 to 9 on the Robert W. Moc1an ahow. Costa Me .. downed Newport Harbor and Irvine jam with a cwo-out atrlkeout aa the Charger• Tucku .. )'I he'll be dotna tome Sun- knocked off F..tanda. earned their tint Sea View ' ...... -..... .t..t,_, ....... 1 ... 1 day mornJna talk 1how program1 Here'• how lt went:. two la.ea. .....,. ..... ·--~ ...-.-from Anaheim Stadium when the Corona del Mer 22. a.ddlelNlok I El Toro jumped out to an 8-0 lead over the hoet BIG DAY -Corona Ansela and Rama a.re in town. Every_. player ln the flartin8 lineup joined in TroJana and did not allow a University hit until the del Mar Coach Tom BLOCKBUSTER -Comment o ' the Sea !Ung hit parade u the wt.nnen pounded aixth lnnlna· Unfortunately for the Chargers, t.hetr Trager had to be haf.:' MEXICAN STANDOFF -The the Angela' trade of third baaem oul 21 hita en route to thelr eecond l~ win. p&tchen allowed 17 walka on the day, allowtnc Uni PY wl th hi1 team s general view on Fernando Valenzuela Butch Hobeon for pitcher Bill Castro Chris White had the btaest day at the plate to acratch back. hitt:ina Wednetday. an~ his contract aquabble from most Who cares? forCoronadelMar,going4:tor-4withthreedou-r;::::::::::::::::::~::::;:::::::::~;;;;;;;;;;;;-r.::;::::::;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::::;:::::::~::~;;;;;;;;;;;;;rl;-;;;;;;;;;;;-;i:::::::J' blea and seven RBI. Whf te'1 baaea·loaded double I waa the big blow lp an elght·run CdM fifth inning. Deve Rohde was 4-for-5 with three RBI for the Sea Kings while Gordon MO.-went 3-tor--6 with one RBI. 1 "It was just a matter of us sitting back and getting our pitch," CdM coach Tom Trager said. Kurt Petersen was the beneficiary of the of-. fensive outbunt,/itching the first four lnninO to record his secon win. He was relieved by Greg Wynn in the fifth and White went to the mound in the aeventh. Coet• MeM 7, Newport H8rbor 1 Junior right-hander Austin Smith struck out nine Sailors while" allowing just two hits as the Mustangs upped their league record to 2-1 with the win on their own field. Kirk Peurrung provided the big bat for the Mus tangs with a double, triple and three RBI. Teammate Tom Sullivan also scored a pair of runs. Smith coasted in to the sixth inning with a no-hitter, but Newport Harbor's Ken Terry hit a two-out single in the top of that frame. The Sailors' Terry Kolina added a single to lead oU the seventh. Costa 1vfesa tangles with Estancia Friday night at 7 at TeWinkle Park. lrvlne 5, E•t•ncla O The Vaqueros recorded their first Sea View win as starter Pat Simms went the distance, allow- ing just five hits. Irvine struck in the top of the first inning to give Simms all the support he needed. Singles by Mark Webster and Mark Bondi and a walk to Jim Gasho loaded the bases, then Rich Kiral hit a run- scoring sacrifice fly. A fielder's choice by Jay Scott gave Irvine a 2-0 lead. The Vaqueros added three runa in the seventh, the key blow coming on Mike Tierney's two-run double. Jim McCahill provided most of Estancia's of- fense with two doubles . Simms struck out only two and had two walks but managed to keep Estancia from 9COring, some- thing Irvine pi tchers have made a habit of of late. Bucs survive; Rustlers rip Orange Coast College survived a 10th-inning uprising to knock off host Cerritos, and Golden West College unleashed a 30-run, 22-hit attack at the expense of host LA Southwest Wednesday to highlight community college baseball action. Here's how it went: Orange CoHt 4, Cerrito• 3 Pitcher Robb Munson turned what could have been the w inning hit into a game-ending double play to give the Pirates a 4-3 victory. Munson, pitching with the bases loaded in the bottom of the 10th, stabbed a hot grounder destined for cen ter field and started the double play by naiJing the runner at the plate. The Pirates had snapped a 2-2 tie in the top of the 10th as Scott Darling and Darren Puskarich drew walks and Rick Hopkins doubled to bring both home. Cerritos' Matt Sferrazza started the Falcons off in the 10th inning with a towering home run to slice the OCC lead to 4-3. The Pirates, down 2-0 'since the first inning, evened the soore in the top of the seventh as Kevin Sliwinski doubled to left, Jeff Brown tripled up the alley in right-<:enter and Scott Groot delivered an RBI single. The victory moved Coach Mike Mayne's squad into first place in the South Coast Conference, one-half game ahead of the Falcons (3-1). Golden WHt 30, LA Southweat 3 Just about everybody got in ori the fun for the Rustlers but the mo6t interestirl;c contribution was provid~ by John Altobelli. The freshman out of Newport Harbor didn't get. into the game until the eighth inning, and before the game was over, he had gone 3-for -3 with three RBI and three runs scored. The Rustlers, 8-0 and sitting atop the Southern Cal Conference standings, scored in every inning but the third, including a 10-run explosion in the eighth. Mike Wagner went 3-for-7 for the Rustlers with six RBI, Bob Grandstaff was 3-for-5 with (our RBI and Roberto Villarreal finished the day 3 .• for-6 with three runs scored. Ron Hendricks and Mark Crockett shared the pitching with Hendricks picking up his second vi.c- ~ against no defea~. C•ll 642-5678. Pul • few words to work for ou. .BOYSCLU8 Of FOUNT AIM VALLEY Spring Ba9eball For Boys & Girls ~ne Age 7·1 0, '11.,3 QJ8t '20>0 ~Aleo Needed Tryouts March 27, 1982 ~1 1 a.m -12-f p.m. , 968-5252 • D.E. nB EITRY DOOR WITH BUJDlllGBIRD LEADED GLASS llSERT 12997 A swelegcmt door that eYen your foofoo neighbors will rcne about. I mean who could not like little hummingbird? 3'x6'8"xlV4". BEHR CLEAR WOOD PRESERY I ti YE 6!! This stuff penetra1H down through the wood and makes It water repellant. Helps prennt dry rot. warping. and termites. ILLTRIDE 29 PC. DRILL BIT SET 18~.n I'd MHr let my drill be without a Mt of bits (•~ of bits. I could UM some new atuff). 1116" to w· x 1184" with tum down shank. CAL TERM SOLDERLESS TERMDllL QMCK KIT 2!so! Put terminals on those old frayed wires. then you won't baYe blinking Ughts or fading radios. PllflSOllC BATTERIES =••1 C. D. OR AA I 5 4£A. 9 VOLT 294£A. U you n-.d batterlea. we got 'em. Cb9Clr out the ol' radio befoN heading to the beach and don't forget the flashlight. BENTWOOD f IPESTRY ROCKER 4988 Next tlnw JOU get up tlgbt or out of sorta. alt down and rock a apell. It'• Nal shoothlng. Walnut Unlsb. you a aM.mble . ENERGY SAYER WATER BEATERS 30 GAL. 11997 '°GAL. 12997 50 GAL. 14997 GAS ONLY 52 GAL. ELECTRIC 14997 ONLY MOSS ST AIRLESS STEEL ./6 EITRY LOCK I'll take my bagels and lox with cream cbeeM and onlona. Back to the other locks. they come with o 5 year warranty and 3 keys. Hey We're O pening Soon In Palm Springs C athe dral City 4!! SUDEIM ELECTRIC MOWERS 20 INCH SINGLE BLADE 11 INCH DELUXE TWIN BLADE 137!.? You won't ha"fe to wony about 1r .. plng gas on hand for these mowers. (lf a yard is 1upposed to be three f .. t. how come lt takes ao long to mow?) Both ha"fe EZ height • adjustments. QUAKER StlTE MOTOR OIL 30WT.OR 79c 20/ 50 WT. QT. The Brooklyn kid eome1 through again with another apeclal on oil. He aays change your own. lt'a the American thing to do. TURTLE WU CIR CARE PRODUCTS DP Wll CU WISB I !~z. SUPD lllD DELL IJIVIDCUWU 1 88 ll oz. mutEWU 3~~2. CAL CUSTOM WIRE WBEEL BUB CIPS SINGLE 1188 SET OF 44752 Triple chrome plated. claHy lookln', and the beat part la they're eaay to clean. In 13", 14". and 15". . GUii PRODUCTS E"QllfE BRITE. Clean• cllrt. gNQ .. and grime. ll OZ. FOAMY EKQIKE BRITE, Clint• to ••rUcal eurfoc.a. 11 oi. YOUR 99• CHOICE u; I /~L l~E.. BIRDS€€[) /HANKS.' PU TOTAL FOR LAWNS 10~!. Juat lllre grandmother'• chicken soup for the lawn. Besides feeding this stu.ff takH care of 24 annual weeds and crobgra11. ROSES I~!. IJ you wanna be happy loreTer. grow roses. Looking at art or poetry ls nice but roses are your own creo1lon. such beauty. RUBBERMAID CERAMIC DESIGN PLlllTERS 6 .. 1•• s .. 2 59 10" 3 •• 4 •• 12" All have remoYable matching sauceri so after the plant bas bad a drink. t' ,e lrltty can ha"fe some mlllr. Four colors. THERMO LITE CELLULOSE INSULAnON 5~!BAG To get an R-19 rating juat blow one 30 lb. bag of this •tu.fl 5.1'' tblclr. CoTera approir 29 aq. ft. The higher the R-Yalue the more lnaulatlng power. ASPENITE 11•· S!r 7/16" 7!r Constru~lon grade stuff that'• stronger them plywood or particle board. For lntertor or exterior UM. SUllGIRD DfSULITlllG WllDOW FILM 24~.FT. Cuta down on the sun's beat cmd glare and gins you SOIM prl•aey. Comee ln 20", 2'", 38". and '8" widths. Eaay to posltlon. 2 X3 9•7 21 4 I I 9 7 2x s I 3 97 Keep. the i.ou .. cooler • aane aome buc:ka oa the -.rgy bill, alMI lrMpa out the ..U aplrlta. Rine panel ........ ..,. Ormtoe come DMY PIL;OTtnt\nday, Mlreti 29. 1112 South Gate GM plant closes -. B----·-------.... ·· OM w orkers and executives ~atched_ 11 th~ 4,4S5,$87th car to be produced at General Mot.ort Sa.~ Gate plant rolled off the auembly llne. The 46-year-old lacllity then cloeed, Idling 2.~~ workers. lt ii the aecond GM plant in California to cla.e in three weeks. Earlier th'8 month, more than 2,100 work.era at the company's plant in f'Wmont w~ 1aid off . . . Safeway Stora lac., tlCCUled by the Martinez di- strict attorney o( overcharging Contra Costa County customers who buy advertlsed sale items, has been Investigated statewide for lbe same al.legations, ofCl- dala said ... Sec:arlty Pacific Natloaal 810 has signed a $70 million term loan with Electrobraa, Brazil's largest electric utility company . . . Pacific Gu and Electric Co., which raised Its naturaJ gas rates in January and recently asked for another increase, has urged California's congressional delegation to fight for lower natural gas prices. Tele- grams from the utility went out Tuesday, the same day a fede ral agency approved rate hikes of $550 million for a natural gas company that serves PG&E e1 •• •.miilill .... ~~ ...... ~, ............... .. Westen DlptaJ Corp. of Irvine has restated ita second-quarter eamineJ. The restatement was made to reflect the lncluaion of proceeds from the sale of tax benefits, net or income taxes provided during this period. Net sales and other income for the second quartet ended Dec. 31 increased to nearly $10 million from sales and other income of $9.5 million announced earlier. Net earnings for the second quarter increased to $384,000, or 3 cents a share, from $231,000, or 2 cents reported earlier ... Bank of Newport reported net income in excess ot $4! million and totaJ assets of more than $200 million for 1981. TotaJ capital not.es and stockholders' equity reached $17.6 million . including $14.6 million in stockholders equity. 01111 ~ ... ____ _ Arcble R . Boe has been elected president of Sean, Roebuck and Co. and Donald F. Craib Jr. was to succeed him as chairman and cheif executive officer or the comapny's Allstate Insurance Corp. ln addition, Phillip J . Purcell waa elected senior vice _president- corporate administration and planning; Charles F. Moran, vice president-corporate planning; and Eric D. Saunders, vice president-operations for Sears Mer· chandlse Group .•. Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp. said it will spend $200 million to modemi1.e its Trentwood, Wash., aluminum rolling mill. Approval of the capital spen· ding program follows agreement with the United Steelworkers of America to completely modernize the plant's work practices and manning requirements at the same time. STOCKS IN THE .-:SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES AMERICAN LEADERS UPS AND DOWNS NEW YORI( (AP) TIW! to4lowu19 1151 .,_ Ille -Yorll Slock E"CNflOe -ks -.... ..-. '""' ....... QOfW .,., h ITat -dowr\ I,_ lnlSI !»Md on ~W:.<Nn9t <99i1rdlti' of volume Ni> MCWflift lradi119 !!Plow \l are incl· udlcl. NII ..,., pe<cenlege chenQes are ,,.. di._ •-,,.. er•"'°"' cloilng ll"ICI -WtdNtdly'• price u" LMt,,,. •°"'I UpPcll2.5 1v. .. 1• Up 11 s 1''0 • ~ Up II.I 14''-+ 1°" Up 11.S 6''• + " Up 11.1 tS1'• + 11• Up Lf 3'• + Up t.1 16 + 1 Up II 1J'il + 1 Up 11 '"'-• '> UP I 0 ~ + V> UP 1 0 1 t Vt Up 1.1 761)\ • Wt Up U II ~ .. Up 1 l ~ • '• Up 7.1 11/'1 + \; Up 7.1 11'1e + IV. Up 1 1 WI + 'II Up 7 0 IM • UP • t DOWNS • I.At! Cl"IO Pel '"· -'"' Off ''·' ~ -1\\ OH 10.1 GOLD COINS I~ -111• Off 7.t 2714 -I V. Off 7.6 UV. -114 Off 1.5 "' -" OH ?.s ~ -... Off 7.J m~ -1 Off u ' -" Off 1.0 ,, -.. Off " 1611\-1 .. E •. , IW.-a t.7 1~-1 u ~-1 Off 6.l 12 -_. Oii H ==1~ gi; t·: n'h-llj, Off u , • ..., -.. Ol1 u 121,\ -"' Oii $.1 N~ YOAK (AP) -Prton late T""° dey ot gOld coin•. oompated with Mon-dly'• pnoe. K,.._,reH, f lfOy 01., 1343 00. Up suo ..... le•t. 1 tror oa .• 1343.00, up IUO . ......_ eo s-o. ; a troy OL, 141 i.oo. uplS7S. A11atrteft 100 crown, .9102,lroy 01., a23.00, 119 12.16. NEW YORK(AP> FINI Oow·JoMs •"9S lor -·Mar. u SlOCICS JO ,,., 10 Tm 1S Ult ~ 5111 ,,.,.. a... Hi"' .... a.a ~ .._., a::ir 11 t1' .i 17J,. J J3 :m n ~, ~ :m.o 331 21 2 13 1ca ... 109 47 101 .i 1ca., o oa m .. m ~ m_oe l24 " 1 ,. T,., Ullls 6'S "" WHAT STOCKS DID lllEW YORK IAPI Mar 14 -~ 66J DKllntel 1 .. ~I:'. 4lt 1-.S -!llGhl ,, --. n _,AMODIO NEW YORI( (APl Mar. 14 -lit:Nrod 174 °"'""'° ,... ~ JU T-1-1'IJ -hl9'll 3 --. 16 METALS -.w1.y 4.1114.'IOO U17.!00 .. l.10C I 014 S0t Prtv ~h n• •1• "" l3 1• Prev "".J. 191 11' 7'11 4 ' Copper 76-78 c:ents • pound. US destine lions Leed 28-32 cents • pound Zinc 37-<IO cents a pound. delivered. Tin S8 7645 Metals Wffll c:omposlte lb. Aluminum 76·77 cents a pound.HY. ~ $395.00 per lluk ~ $305.00 troy Ol. . N.Y SILVER Handy & Herman. $7 285 per troy ounoe GOLD QUOTATIONS --y London: morning fixing $333.00, up $375 L.ondoft: afternoon llx.lng S331.75. up $2.50. ,!Ifie: 1334.29, up $3.64. .. ~ 1335.01. up 17 53. Zwtollt Late fllllng $331.00, up $3.oo bid: $334.00 Nit.cf. "•"•' a ... , .... ": only dally quol,e $331.75, up 12.50. I.......,.! only daMy quote $331.75. up 12.50. SYMBOLS . ... ,. Used to be, every man's wife zvas entitled to an opinion. His. You've come a long Wa}$ baby. 1. Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your· Health. · 9 mg ''tar:· 0. 7 mg nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC method . . ' '/ .. ) • ' Orange Coat DAILY PILOTIThurlday, March 25, 1982 I •FREE 2-YEAR/24,000-MILE MAINTENANCE P.LAN ON T~TV AND LN7 For2fullyearsor24,000mlles,whichevercomesfirst, .a...i. .l" A • virtually the only thing you have to pay for is gas.• • 5o/o OFF THE BASE VEHICLE STICKER PRICE ON T ~TV AND LN7 Apply it to your down payment .Lai. .l" ..t\i.. • or get a check direct from Uncoln-,Mercury. • CONTINENTAtS S2000 INTRODUCTORY OFFER. This special invitation meaq_s you can get up to a $2000 cash bonus on any new '82 Continental. If you order or take delivery of a Continental between March 17 and April 3, you can choose either the cash bonus or the free warranty/maintenance program. • A S750 CASH BONUS ON ANY NEW CAPRI. Apply it to your down payment or get a check direct from Uncoln-Mercury. • A .$750 CASH BONUS ON ANY NEW COUGAR. Apply it to your down payment or get a check direct from Uncoln-Mercury. • A. S750 CASH BONUS ON ANY NEW ZEPHYR. Apply it to your down payment or get a check direct from Uncoln-Mercury. / MERCURY LINCOLN YOUR LINCOLN-MERCURY DEALER HAS IT. THE PROGRAM WITH THE BROADEST RANGE AND VARIETY IN THE INDUSTRY. Cash ·bonus offers limited to one per customer. Dealer participation may affect customer cost on Continental, Capri, Cougar, and Zephyr. Cash bonus amounts lower in Texas and Louisiana. See your Dealer for complete details. Seat belts save lives-buckle up. •Accidents, abuse, tires, and fluids are not covered. LINCOLN-MERCURY DIVISION -- •• ' I ' ' ·----- I . i ' i ' I c r l'lalTIOUS •llMMIB NAMISTA~IMT Tll• followl110 P•tSOll IS dOll\O 1M11IMues: , RONALD HAAltEl.L ~ COMPANY, J001 EHi First Stl"Mt, Sle. 204, Sellta AN, Calllomla tt1QS. Ronald J. Harrell, 42'7 Elder Aft-. Seel e .. cll, Colllomle 90740. Tllll llUSIMH II -ted by Of\ lndlvldu.I. A-ldJ. H•,,•11 Tlll1 sto....,_t was moo wltll IN Couflly ci.n of 0r.,,.. eoumv °" Mor<ll 1, ""· .. , ... Publlilled Or ... Coelt Dolly f'llot Marcll t t, !.I. &LA.lf.lll...Ull JDiY1. fftC1TnOUe ....... ..,..ITA'-T Tiit IOllowlng ~ .,. cloil'lll 1111.i -· FlfllST t~SSIOH ENTV'PfllUS.. $054 Jollnaon, Colla Meh, Ce11101nla 02t2t 0••• M•~Donald Hughe•. 2115 MOl'ldoU. eo.I• -. CAMOtf\le 92e21 Ptter Gl•n Flom, 3054 Johnton, Cot11 Meu. Colllofnlo 92626 Thia buelnea .. conducted l>y • llmtted pef\IW9!\lp Devld HugNs Tiii• etolement wu lll•O w1111 lh• Coun~ c;ler1o Of OrMQO County Oii MMCf> 18, 1982 • f..,. -P-ulllflll\ed Ot•"Oe Cootl Delly PllOI'. Mecft "· ts • .,,.. '· •• 1912 1212·12 PIC'TfTIOOI eUllMUI NAMISTATIMINT Tit• foll•t111•"t person h 601111 bldlllOHot; ltOYa.t. PRESTIGE HEWPOlllT, 40t w. CHU Hlollwn. Newport Bt•cll, CA.,...,_ COLETTA M WAHOEL, 4421 W c;oe1t Hloflwty. H-POf'l 9Mch, CA .,..,, Tiiis builnen 11 conducttd by .,, llldlvldual Colet!• M W8"dtl Thl1 ~ltment wts 11100 wllll .. County Cieri! of Or•not Cou11ty Oft M•rch 3, 1"2. --· #saate --- -NU-- PICTITtOUlaUtfNIU -· •• ,...w NAMSITATIMaMT ,._ IM Tiie lottowlflt .. rMl'I 11 otlnt -------------:-...,'C'c)~~R ENOINHlttNG, 10SO tTATIMINTO .... ITN~"AWAl ':Z:.~~~=:· ... , t<tt•ll•. Or•noe. Collfornl• f'AltTNlltt:~:-r'oPlltATIMO Thel*"'"'9•MIOOfl• .. •Oolnt boltl ..,.~~ DoM .. ei.11, Caoili • fl UMHlt -,:: ~WPOl'IT HOME LOAN 0•1 tl>t Tfllluto '''"· ... o. 90• a.1. T••llll< •tCTITIOU$•UllNlnNAMI N£WPORT HOMf LOAN •111. lca NEW• ~-llfofN ftlJf The I~ ,_fton II•\ wlllldr•wn PORl HOMf lOAN •2ff. ldl NE~PORT CMVo"·...... • ... 9eneret P•rln., from "" HOME lOAN •290, t•I NEWPORT HOME T"I• ..,.,,.. .. I• collducltd llY •11 P.,lnertlllp 0111ere lln9 under Ill• LOAN •111. (II NEWPOltT HOME lOAN IMlvlewl.TNodote 0-.. lt•ll 11<1111..,t ~!nest ll4lfM of M A M 12tt. w NEWPOAT HOME LOAN •83: Tlllt ........_. WOI filed Wiii! MAINTENANC:l $ERVIC!. •I )00 flll Hf POAT HOME lOAN •2 ... 11 NU- • "ICTITIOUI eUllNHS .NAMI tTATIMIMT Tiit followll\9 lllerlOI\ II dtlf!O l>u,IMun· Olt AN GI JULI tHAA 8VROl!lt, UOO Hartt r oul•••ro, t ool• ,..., •• c;o111orf\ • tU?I I JOH P AffJ, 40t NOf'lll Hll Or•f\99, c.tllomlo '*' Tllll llUSIMU I~ CAHldYCt.cl by lndlvldutJ I JowA•ol 1 Tlllt JU-I WOI moo Wl\11 ... County C .. rk ol Or•llOO County •" M•rcll J, 1'11 I "'"* Pul>lllNO Or-. C:-1 O•lly Pl ... Morch•. 11, ti, u, 1• 1001~ ~ • .. t ' , Cwnty ei.r11 of Or•nte C-nly =:nell Rd., C.to ~. C•lllornl• eor,::r:1~t 8ucl>, CA ·~ .-.rcht,1•. Tiit fl<lllloua bullnn• neme NIIWPOAr HOME LOAN •NC. e f9ll 1911( 0 '1~191 ,t ... rn ... 1 tor IN porlnenftlp w•• llled Ctlllotnla corpor•llOI\, 11 Corporal• ··-------..-----~ '°'*IJlllll Dr8f\Oe Cot\I ell~ 011 Aprll IJ, ltle In Illa Cou"IV Of Plu•, !Mwport 8Acll. CA U~ A.,._.1J ,,.."., •• "· t&. u . Itta ~ Oro11ot. ,.;'.: ~· •• COllCIUCleCI Dy • toroo-T .I. MO."'" F ult Nam• ono AddrtSI ol lh• .....,_, "°""' LO*I, Inc MOTtcl OP Ptrtof\ Wtthdr-lft9. Corl iuoo.e. Pr.-i TltutTIRI' IA La Merl•11 EllHbelh K-dy, J0C Ka-t1e1iP Oft Aprll t, 1'9t ot 11:00 •·"'-Fllt't .. ICTITIOUS•USIN•U Bucknell Ad . CAKI• Mew, C1lllornl• AUi l/ic.P•-<lflnl AMERICAN TITLE INSUAAN6£ N-IESTATa MINT 91616 T111a sUl•m•nt w11 11110 "''" tne COMPANY, • Colltoml• c~•II 1 I l l M•rlen E K-y County Clef~ ol Otano-Couttly on Mwcil el Trutlee, or Su«'.tMOr trvst.M ~C:~wln9 perton• ••• dong ""uu ·~ •M? Subtll1"1*1 Tru1tee, of tllot <ff'I Vl$10NAllY MAltKETl!JjG Pubtl\lled 0r•"9'Cot\IO•llyPllot, F,.51 .. Dud ol Trull .. ocultd l>y JOHN COffCR"S, M10 Ctrrilot AvtnJe. M•r. 4, II, II, U, 19'2 Ul·li ... :.~~h1a8~·2~ 0:;:111~ io~;~2D••:~:,·~:J· MICHAEL SIMPSON, I 11nole '""' V"il e, s.-, C•lllorlll• -.o. and reGotOOCI February U, "" e1 •~..,..~sco1u.uc1tci., llMllJC •""£ 1n11rumen1 no m11. In -'"*· to1-e, ~ 8Nc'll, Collfo•11I• rv '"' NllJC -~( P•O• llM2. ol Offl<l•I At<ord• t .,.._ 1-------------Or•not County, C•llfornl•, • o Oonelcl Moyett, atl l!rOOkVIO (_I,., of Ille c~ PUf\U•lll lo 11111 <•rt•ln NoilO C MeM c llf n1e-21 ... -·--• ..%• . .,. .... .,._._.._. ___ -f-_Mull Of\<t-El-H'tlo,.-1..-S-rtl •Y, .... ' • or_ ,.,. j '1_,,,......,,...._ Ne. PSC..m7 1nereun<Mr recoro.d Hovtmber •. '"'' ~ ll <oiiClu<lff ltY • of .. 1-.d...... On Apr~ 22 IH? ti 1030 •"1 PACI· ,.,, H IMl,_1 no >Gill, In - __, ...-rot~M--. Wt1EREA~'"::'ta.,::O~·~~tdenc:• llH FIC SENTINEL CORPORATION.• Cell· IOCM, p ... ,.., of Offl<lol A«orOJ ti PubllsllOcl Or ... Coell D•ll'r Piiot. 1-------------M•rcll •, 11, I&, 2S, 1tl2 tJl.82 ..,....,. COURT Of TMS Tiii• tlale..-t .,., lllto wllll the _, P'-ltd to tnt ComplrOfter Of Int to""" corpor111on. o Ouly eppo1n1eo s•IO Counly, wlll _, •no IM'~.c:r: -.,. ........ _.,. .._ ISTATI Of C.,.._., County Clerk _, Or•"9f Counay Ol'I c;wrency "'81 PACIFIC HATIOHAL BANK Trual" under 1110 pu1tuan1 to OMO ot 10 ••kl o-ct _, Tnat Wit 81 ~ ,..,-. ..._ ... ,-. -----Morch J 1--In ~ Baecti, Slatt ot Cel· Trus1 r9CGfO«I .M'8 9 IHI .,, tM1• No auttlon to< <8"', l•wful "'°"'' of ':!: Nat•t•I .._ , __ ,. ' -IOfnla Ilea--... wtlh all ovWona ot 1416$ -10093 PllQ'I 811 OI OftlClal .,. " .. Oii -l'1M2'1 -·...-I>' Reco1d•. ••tcuted by C11r1a1op1111 J United StatH of America, •I Ille m•" NOTICE OF DEATH OF NOTICE OP DEATH OF NS-tHU c:--.Attlt9r Publl"1ed 0r.,,.. Coesl Deity Piiot. Ille •taCUIOIOf INVrtlted Stal• required Pinoo aoo Denise M Pelton. hueoano entr•nce lo Flf\t Amerlc•n Tiii• VERONICA ALLGAIER BLANCHE M . CURTIS, alla NOTICE OF DEATH OF MOnCIOP-.a Merch•,11.11,u ,1"2 ti.t2 :::::m~"J:'~°'au~: anow11t as1ru1tors in11>eo11~01111e tntur•nc• compony loc•t•o ot t • 'B .. ~AND OF PETITION BLANCHE CU RT I S L Of llllAL...,,...' County Recot-°'Orange eo..r.1r St••• e .. 1 Flltll s1'"'· In ,,,. city of S.nt• 0 "' • a• I VI R 0 JN I A CARR 0 LL _,,,. -tr king u • Nellonal "**"'9 -tlon ol C1111orn1a Will SHL Al PVBUC An•. C1lllomlo, •II \Ml rtoht, lllle • ..., ro AD R F.sTATE NO. BLANCHE MARIE CURTIS MEIUUM.AN, eta VIRGINIA P. T MVATI MU ,._ -·--1.!1~:· ·T=~=·~:~~c~:;::. AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIDDER rOR 1nletutcon .... 1ed to-now htlOby,I A·llHSI. AND OP PETITION ro ADMI· MERRIMAN AND OP PETI· lfOlA ~ lhOllloO 10 commence'lll• bualneu ol CASH IP•V•I>•• .. Jim• 01 HI• in l•wlul vnoer Uld Deed of Trutt In Ill• To ell hel,.., beneficiaries, NISTER ESTATE NO. AllH41. TION TO ADMINISTER ES· A ,.__,00 ' l'ICTITIOUS •VSINESS ~1"9 u • Nttlon•t ll•nk1ng A•...c••· money ol th• UM.id St•IHI ai in..Oe '"' P•OP•rtr situated In wlo CounlY Of\O --·•• hot M NAME STATEMENT lion M•1n IOOOt ot ~""Y"'' Tiiie lnwrtnce SU.It O..Crl111<1 as creditors and contingent credl· TATE NO A-llHIS NOTICI IS HERUY OIV~ 2_,.-~ Tll• tollowi.... ~rtons •re dolno IN TEST'•.,..,.. ~R~"". ~~ -CorPOt•''°" 1eoo Norlh llto..,.,,•y Santa Loi 1 OI Tr~i No.~ 11 -rm-f VERONlCA ALLGAIER T Ith I '--fl I I • • . 111••1111Dnocl,•c-wilor'" ... ....._.. .. ., ,_,.,,., """ ,..,... .. m-.. ., •-·Cati ·•t h It-A ,., .. , --~ -Ion o o a e r1. ucne c er et, To ell heirs, benehclar1es, ... Ille~_,.., c:-v-. w11... blnlness as: alollat"'9 -..., OI oHlol tllls 29111 oey ~-1 orn111 • rig 1 111 -~ "' •e<oroed In -"°· 1>89e• ~ •nd u O'BElRNand ho ---'j nd in t---'I "' -.. ~t THIE NAIL AFFAIR,,<IDO 811,<ll o(J.,,.,.,..1982 conyty..Oloenonow11e1ob)l1tunottslid I I I persona W may "'""' ton a cont (en '''~ • creditol'1 and contingent Credi· ti pr!llolo .... to lllO fllO""I .. ,.. --r• 0..0 ol Trull In 1111 P'-ly l•luateO 111 n<1111 ve ol m H elleneous MIPt. be otherwise Interested in the tors o f Blanche M Curtis and ton o( VIRGINIA CARROLL t>lcldtr upon th• lermt and conlllllon• Strut, Suite tot. Newport BHcll. CGl'nl>tt-Ol lhe CW1ency .. io County.,,., Stala -•IMO u recorotof Or-County, C•hfom11 will and/or eti.te: t:= who may be olherwile MERRIMAN, aka VIRGINIA P. ~elllr~.!!~ 111,!"!'.!.M!~u=: C•llfornl•t2MO Cllll1• Number 11186 Lot 7 ot Ir.a No 46:19 u -'"Ill' 'T he ,,, .. 1 •OOreu 01 olht• fit _ _. b •-~--' ·L-.... ,. __ _., -· ,,_,_ ., -,.__ J•met Morton, UT 11111 Strfft, M:,~1~'h·~·o.;.·.~~•.;.o,~1.i>:.1it.P!t~~ iec:0t<led1n8oOfOl l60 Pao-O•nd••ot common °"'91\ttlof\ of ..,10 prQPtrty A peUtlon has been .,... Y _._In """" .. "" llDUIOI' _. MERRIMAN end penM>nl who Apt U , 1112. et t;OO AM. or_...,.., Hu11ll"9\0ft BNcll, Ctlllornl• ,,.... ..... Mt~I Mtpa. 1n the omc. of the is PUtPOned 10 oe: m Sunrise C.irclt , ROBERT K . SALL 1n the lat.eA: . . ._ __ ,_ __ -fl'ed b may be otherwbe Interested in ~~"::or=-=~~:.-:.:. Teri G•rr•ll, 111 ""' Strul, I, lllt2 l324-82 Covn•v~0<de<olwo0County Coll•Mew.C01ttorn11 Superior Court o f Orange petition ruu ...,.,n " y the wW and/or estate: STANFORD E. SHAW, 902 HOttll Mall! Huntington a..ch,C•lllornl••~ _.,. -( T"" st•M111001esa -o•-~mon S•tO s.ato wlll be m•de wltllo•I County reque•ting I hat RO· Ronald Huber end Guy Curtia in A sm1it1'o·n .. __ '---n f1'l-.. by s1-. •-1a .. __ c.lttorlllll t21'01... Lindi Ctnetnl. 217 lllh Slr•tl. ~ -·"' Ot••QnlhOn 1! any OI ,,, ••••• prOP•••y CO••n•nl or w•tr•nl,, npreu or , ... """" .,... ·--· --HuntlnlQtOft 8M<h, C•llfornl1 t?MI OH<l•MO 11>o,,. 11 l>Ufl>Ofl.O to IW 771 lmplled, •• to hllt, POntulon or BERT K . SALL be appointed as the Superior Court of Orange TIM · y PAUL MER.RIM.AN riOfll, title. 1111-1, Ol'ld •91• of MIO Tllll bliSlneu Is cond1Kl•d I>• 1n NOTICE TO CO..TMCTOlll Brll<ltWOOO Piiie• Cotto M..a C•k•orn11 en<umbt•rKH 10 wtllfy Ille unpeto penional representative tu ad· County requesting that Rona.Id in the Superior Court of Orange ~;·~~~= unlnco•PO'•led UIOCl.atlon olllttr th.an CALLING 1'011 •tot ,,,. un<1trJ19ned ,,.,., .. d1sc.i.1n11 any bt1inct due on Ille noll or noi" mlni1ter the estate of VERO· Huber and Guy Curtl1 be ap· CoJNYl r~u·•=ln that TIM· lllle end 111i.r• -llOr • P•rtM•ShlP !?'!~~ ~~c=tys...~:n•;f.r~' 11•0•1itv tor""" inco.,.ctness °' 1"" ,.,..,, wcureo b¥ wto D8CI ot Trvs1. 10 w11 ~ by~ o1 Lindi Ctn<.,., .....,..._ ..,._.,,... .._ .OO• .. • "'° ot..., common °""9"~'""' ~ s~ US 51, plus Ille IOl-'"9 ttllm11eo NICA ALLGAIER O'BEIRN • ~inted as penonal repretenta· OT PA L RIMAN be :::-or"':~~ tho ltllon ot Tiiis stoltmef\1 wa1 lit•O with tht ::' ~ tO OOock>Cli .._.., Ol tllt 6" °"~.~.":~bl mao• Du• wllhOul «>tt1, ,,._ e'1d OCIYllt>< .. •• ,,. Irvine, CA tunder the lndepen· Uve ID adnunlst.er. the estate of eppolnled H per1onel reprt· Cofi-vtiortMp -• ...-. 111Ol'ld10 County Clerti of Oren;e County °" doy °' ~~. 19112, COVMenl or w.,,.,...,, •l!Pf-or imptled. tlm• of the tnlll•t 11Ubllce11on ot th~s dent Admm111tration of EstalH Blanche M . C urlis (under the tentative to admlnbter t he ea· tllO tollowlno 6-tlbod,... ~loo Morch 3. 1'112. Pllce ot Bid Aacetpt Orano1 Count) rtQaroinQ """ pou•o•on or encum Nollet of Slit S7.11L90 Act). The petition ts set for lndependenl Administretion of tale of VIRGINIA CARROLL C8ltd In Ille~"!...°' :-.:r..:1a1~: FIMJJJ Dept Of~. Room 2138 1300 S 1><incn 1o pey ,,.. •em••nlnQ punc1p1111 DATED Fet>n>ervH. ""' hearing in Dtopt No 3 at 700 Estates Acl). The petlt.ion ia tel MERRIMAN. Coeta Mesa, CA ~otnlo, -..,,_...., .. Publlslled Or-Cotll D•llV Pltol, ~~.A:'.!'...~.~!·1~~~ a~-1·~ """Of'"" notOlll M!$uC•• Dv UK! Deed o• FIA!>T AMERICAH TITLE ,..._ Ori W "'·-n... No 3 700 ...,.... M•r. •. 11. II, 2$, 1"7 tJ6.11 ~·~ -·• -~· "-·-.._,._ -~ Trull *''" .nt1<HI U.-u provodeo 1n INSURANCE COMPANY. Civic ....,nter ve est, .-nta for hearing ln ""'PL at (under the Independent Ad.ml· Alt unclMdtd-"*' .,_...In eftCI to c11uroom Bull01ng• Pe•k11d• Elem M•O not••>-aovaOCH. 11 .,,.,. undtf in• 1 Colltotnla corPOullon Ana. CA 92701 on Apnl 7, 1982 CiVlC ~nter Drive. West. ln the nistratlon of Esta tea Acl). The Loe 51 o1 Ttect ~.•per Map 1-a.d ScllOOI. 12151 s Y0t1>• St., Orin;• CA term• 01 MUO o..o 01 Tiu•• tees cn•re-s Don 0rrnero0. at 9:30 a .m . City of Santa Ana, California on petition ia set for hearing In ~~~~~~ tt.!!• ~~'0,3..'..!! Piil.JC M01if Pn•'-,.,,,PlonP ~•300"•N°"-'~1TlltBl-Blulo C:::.k:00 11:, ""° eapen-ot 111e Trustee""° 011"" Aut11ort1ec10Hktt OU OBJEC T h I 982 930 --...,... -...... • ~ • lru111ueateoOy~()eeoolT•u>I IOf 11•E"1Flttr1Slr•t IF Y t o t e Apn 14, 1 al : a.m. Dept No . 3 at 700 CiVlC Center Cou..iy, Clllomle l'tCTlTIOUS aUSIMIU Beacll CA 111•1 673-0300 the""'°""' ,...,,.,el>IY .. 11me1.o lo be Sorll• An•, C• .,101 granting of the petition, you IF YOU OBJE CT t o the Drive West, Senta Ana, CA Commontyk11own oa2t711Allcallte NAMISTATRMINT NOTICE •S HEREBY GIVEN tnat tn• 56763293 l1l•ISSl-l2n h Id . h t th ' f h t h 9 30 Orl'te, MIMIOn va.io. ~ Tll• followlllQ person I• Ooln9 al>O'Ve-,,am•O ()!sine• ot Oran~ County Tne Oenehc11ry unoer •••O Oeeo OI Puoilsll•d Or•n9e Cont 0 1t1v s ou e 1t er appear a bj e granlldng o l e pe Ion, you 92701 on April 7. 1982 at : A.P. 1714-204-01 Cot1lotnll l>treinitt•• retened 10 u T•utt ~etotor• e•tteu•~ -~ 0~, •• ,.., hear mg and slate your o CC· shoul either appear a t the a.m. .._or....,. •• -'°' MIO~-buslf\etS OI: OiSTAICT ... ,11 r..:•••• up 10 11u1 not 10 1,,.·:,.,.,,tq>ed 1 .;:;;.;;De;'.,.,'°" Piiot Mar " ••. H t"2 .10M-C uons or file wriltefn ob,ech llhons hearing and slate your ob.lee· IF YOU OBJECT to the ol~~ ... · "'~ ~ -'1'-~~ we;tHllNGttllHSAt'r•R•e,•. Lc~!::T!~:!'. 1a1 .. 1han ,,,. •-·t1a1eo ,,.... ......, 01Detau111nd o.mano tor S•I• 1no 1 wit t e cou ore e e~· uoos or l e w n 1om 1rant1ng of the pet1lion, you •or ti Ill• olflo• of a ANFOl'ID E C•lltomi.n.v. •bO.,. p<o,..:1 s... Th<1 unoerl!QM!d cauMd sa•O No•ict h h rt be t · fl ril~ ob~· .,_ ... ·-..,. ---• b+O• tor tllt 1w110 ot • contrac1 tor ""' ,.,.,, ... Notice 01 Oet1u11 and Etection •c nng. Your a ppearance may be II\ with the court before t e hea-1hould eltht'r appear I\. the SHAW, An~_'!'~· to2 NOt19'~ M•rti w. CN. 11• Orlole Drift Bto1 1nell 1>a recelY•d 1n 1ne p11ce of o.i...,1 .,.., EltlCtlOI\ to s.ii 10 1>e rc -PUlllC MO~E penltln or by your atlDniey. ring. Your appearance may be in hearing and 1t1te your ob.lee· Street, s-:~~llltornl• •210 1. °' Cosio Me.u, C.lllorniem:i.. t0en11111c1 abOYe ""° enoll oe ~ ono o<OeO 1n the county .,n••• 111e ... , o•o o• ANGE COUNTY tU,.E 1110• IF YOU ARE A CREDM'OR penon or by your attorney. lions or flle written obje>ctiona :::.!: ~~:;-toe-:;: Tiiis businft• I• c0f\d1Kltd 1>y •" r.::,.1>11C..Z,•:-::.,a1ouc1 •• tM 11>0Y•·et•ted -•• .. tou•ed COUAT or a contingent creditor of the IF YOU ARE A CREDrrC>R with the court bt!fore the hea· -IO Mid~ ,,._.iiy, tt lndlv..,.._I Mottt w. Clll Tiier• wlll °' • s10 oo oepos11 rtQUired D•,. M-P~c1~1C·::~11Nn CDJ:lr JotCl•k ~Or. Wost. deceeaed, you must ftle your or a contan.gent creditor of the ring. Your appearance may tit! In .,.., 1lmt en. twt putlbllofl of WO No-Tillt 11-1 wM flltd w1111 tlM tor .. en •tt ol bid document• to 11u•· •• se1d rrust" Pt..AI N~F~·s~.:'E~t WEIS~ cl.aim With the court or prellt'nt it deceased , you must (Ile your person or by your attorney. ~~~~:.::.:,:., C t Clef II of Or•noe CCl<'nly on r1<1tee the retu<n "'QooO cond•tlll<I "'11"'" By~ "ellr ROllE AT c LUNOEGGER -~A to the per.onal reprew ntatlve claimwithlhecourtorpresentlt IF YOU ARE A CREDM'OR o1111eUn11oO~T.,,._,.t1~01 M4:':C:10.1t11. '"::-:.:O~;.~:':.:::r:;~:~ Fiv~ ~~!9~~cie.5.:"'C:"..=:.t KOJIMAos Eaocut.onof ttwEstatu ,. appotnled by the court within to the penional repreaentatlve or a contingent credilOr of the ,,,. emount olllr9d -~ lllO l'llMIJI oottan t$5 001 must ..:company th• ae ,, 13111r..1701 M M MOSEt..EY. ' four months from the date of appointed by the court within dec eaaed, you mual file your ~':,: :'o.:=:.O..'*:r*ui."":; ,...~~1~1.~~~~~~·11~~: ~~~~ i,~~·~~:.'~~~:':m ano b• ,0 .,.;u~~~~s~ ,.<;;·~~~ti~"" D3'1i2~~ pg,;;A~~o:S~I A~gs,~~ F' (irst Issuance of letters as prov1· four months from the date of claim with the court or pn!llenl it OOld a..por!or cwn Ol'I -r.,_,1a -------------_......, 10 1111 contrac• o~tt corpo,.oon PETER TtNTURtN '"' ded m Se<'uon 700 of the Pro-first l!lluance of letttta u provt. lO 1he personal reprewntatlve _....to 1119 MIO,. ••llllN SUponor W •TICE E.cn btO llNI t>t ouoin111,,..., oy '"" PUIUC MO~( WELt..A TINTV RtN. JACK A lONG ~~= fo~~il~~gc:i~.f~~n!.°iilTn~~ ~:C:e1c::~n c'.~f~~~~a~ ~~; efopupor 1mntoednthbsy fthroemcoluh~tdwa1t~hoinf ~:;.;,:" 1>o _,. llPOft IM -------------·i ~tr'~•,or~~11~~9f"~01'~' ';;;' P~~~~do: :':,~~~;RP~6P~~~~ .~~.~NT~~ ' " _ _.._ STATaMllrTOFAUNDOtOiYNT ·~· -NOTICIO .. TltU$TEE .. SSALI MARGAR ET HOWE, BARRY V expire pnor to f.our months from time for fiUng daiml wllJ not first issuance of tenen u prov\· JACI( •· l"VlE OI' u• o., l'tCT1T1ous Tho OtSTRIC" r~• ,,.. "9h• to re-"-..... Ma5"KAT we 1 N s T oc K el Me R "0 x the date o( the heanno nooced e.xnl .. pnor· ID four monlha from ded in "-t.i'on 700 of th· P·r~ ~.. .. ... IUSINUS NAMI 1«1 any or•" b+O$,,, IO ...... eny irre T ~csT HE IMER • CO .. PANY .• ·~ ,,,... °""' ~ v-....._.. T ._........,~ h ~~ Qularit'M"' ontormekh ... on~ !>Id•"'"' .S. Ne.,__. .., "' • "' above lhedateoft.hehearingno~ beteCodeofCallfornla.The NOLAMAMCUSTtR. flt..,. __ ..,__, os•-·~-.... Oldd"!Q TD SEAVICECOMPANY Hduty 9•"tr•I porln•rshlp, F BRILi. YOU MAY EXAMINE the above. time for filing clelma will not , ... ~ • lllOuwoftllofklltlousl>Uslnennome The DISTRICT hH obtained trom '"" •PC>Olnt..i TrustH under tr. foltowtn; c AL 1 FORN t A REAL EST ATE n k b h url If YOU MAY EXAMINE th .... ~·-ACCENT Ofol NAILS, 27111 Forbe1 0.rKIOf ol lhe Otponment ol tnOuSlrilll dtl<rl--OI truSI WILL SELi. INVESTMEN'T TRUST, I Du•1neu I e ept y l e co you are e expire pcior ID four months from fTAl9'CMIO L IMAW lto•O, Suite 0 , L•ouna Nlou•I, Re1111on1 ,,,. v-aJ f)lt•lllinQ .... OI • T PVllLIC AUCTION TO THE T r u ' I v • L L e y .. 0 I L interested m the est.ate, you may file kepl by the court. u you are the date of the heanng noticed ...... .... ...... CotllonMo'2671. pet d-. ... ages111 thel0Calrly1nwn1Gll tht1 H 1Gt1EST llOOER FOR CASH EN(; I NEERING CORP .. RETAii. fl ftle a request w1t.h the court IC interested In the estate, you may •bove. ._..T~ ~14, _.!!J!' Tll• Flcllllou• Buslneu Nern• work" 10 be perte><mtd le>< eech cr111 or IPO•l>I• at llm• 01 HI• In l•wlul M e D 1 c ,,. t.. col L e c. T , o N receive special nottce of the in· file a req!Jftt whh the court to YOU MA y EXAMINE the ~d Ot•no••:c;:., Dally Piiot, rtlerted to •bo .... wti fllod In Or•"9f ~Y~t•o•'ct~~.":'.~.'~~~u~~ :::: money of IN un11.o s111n1 au tlofll, "'SSOCtATION, INC., • corporetoon t { tal 4 SM!ts d o f I ...-1.1 •'-f th In u Coulll\I Oft Seot-r 2', l'77 Fiie ·~· lllle •nd 1ntere11 COf\ftYed to'"""°'"' 0 b. ALL s TATE FI H ... c I At.. ven or yo e• e an receve1,.-.-.no"""'o e • filekeptbythecoun. youare Metc:llU.2t,Apl1,1M2 1,....2 No ,..,.,0. OiSTRICTonieetoutl01t1300SG<ano htlOl>y rt -rsalOo..d OITrull ln SERVIC ES. LTD , GC SERVICES the petitions. li«ounu and re· ventory of estate -ti and of lnterested in the estate, you may Terna Pu1ull•, 10 North AVit S11111 Ana CA COPtff ••• iweotoble Ille prOPertY rwr•ln.tter OH<rlbt(I COR POAATION, FIRST CIT tZEN~ ports descnbed m Section 1200 5 the petitions, accountl and ,.. me a request with the court ID -Sycamore, LosA1191les.C•lllOr11I• ~~:;yo:n,•:.:!'~,~~~~:.~ r~~:-.~ .~ TRVSTOR; !CASSEM MESHKAT, B. N K & T RVS T COM PAN y of the Cahfom.ia Probate Code porta dtlcrlbed In Sect.ion 1200 receive special no~ of the In· NllJC -·~ T11l1 ~WM c....Suc\ff l>y °" -/01> 1111 en unmenlOClm.,. 6ARBARA JUDY, O• &AA BAA A SALL &r HENRY, Anon11ey al o{ the Califon\la Probate Code. ventory of eatate UMll and of 1""1"'~· 11 ah1ll b• mano••ory upon •he CON-II ENE F 1c1 A It Y o Ao ,. LEE Ju O Y. o E I o It• H " Law, by: Rlc .. ard M. Reary, J~-'" E. O'C...., Anontev th• rv>tluons, ~un·· and r·· NOTICE OP DEATH OF T_ P.,NllO 1 ~ TRACTOR 10 10 whom•"• con111c1 •• co R PORAT ION. • Ott •w•r• CATRICONE, s J DAVIS, MERIT ·~..-I ~..--~v .. a U.t.D.OLDR BRAYTON-.. -Tllhlle-w•sflloOwl"lfle••••O•O.anoupon1ny1uDCO"""CIO• COfPQ<lllon CONSTRUCTION C:OMPANY, nUt Pasto De Alicia, Sal It at Law, P .O. Bel l!U, 1511 porU dtlcribed In Sect.ion 1200.5 DAR' • ._ County Clerk of 0••"9' County unoer 11nn. to pay not .... '"•" the ...a Recor-Oc:1-r 30. 1'80 as lntlr LLOYD'S BANK OF CALIFORHIA, • %18, La1aaa Hills, CA 9U53; Roaee raa1, Saa Dle10. C A of the California Probete Code. HAR 0 L D RUSSELL MOrc111, ttl2. -ifl«I ratea 1oe11"'°'k••*"""°Yeel l>J No "m In -1•11, -ms of co r po, a tton. GVA RANT EE (714) 855-1%95. l!IH: tel (1) lU .. SH. Jamn A. Ste:anll•• At1«11ev BRAYTON AND OF PETI· Pr11t111.-0r..,.,.1c1oe1 111 D•ll',!!'!! ''*""'the ••ecution ot tne cont•«• Otfkl•I RKorOS "' tl'le oftk e of lfl4t co LL E c T 1 o N c OM p AN y . •, -# MO <II 11.1 .. u,.... . tit UW"OC No -....., WllllO••w"" b+O IOI. Recorder of <K•"9t Count,: told -(OrpOr•llon, ,,, £ M llEPOATING It Law, HM N. Raner BJv•., TION TO ADMINISTER · .,..-ioo °' '°''Y 11ve1•~1o•rull1< the date 01 ltu11 ducrlbu 111e fottowlno AHO REFERRAi. SEltVICe. INC., S1lte tH, Flllertea, CA tHH: ESTATE NO A11%718 ,. .. _.•""tr Mtl0<t1>e-tng0fb10a P•OPtrly Ob• McC•ulty ~MAHN ING , Publlahed Or•no• co .. , 0&11) P1101, Publlalled OrltljlO COHI Oally PlloJ, Morell 19, 10. 25. 1912 12'~·12 -It, 18, 28, 1"2 t304-a DllTH IDTICIB Tel. (7U) 171·85fl. • • -I~ ~::".!"r'.!:~ :::,,•,:!~':::'!.':~ OHCAIPTION CL IN E · 8 UC KN EA, IN C . a Pul>ll•ll•d Oreno• co .. 1 Delly Pllol, To all heirs, bene.fidaries. the conlr•cl Tiie l>onds Ill.it l>e'" th• PARC El I Fe. simple 1111• to corporahon, COLDWELL, BANKER~ Mllldl , •• 19. "· 11112 1211.e2 creditors and COlltingent l'l(TITIOUS auSINESS '°""""°•mount•"' IOt'lll ltltMcontrac1 Co11oomlnlum Unit HO. HO Ith• c 0 Mp AH y . s AM My LEE. creditors Of Harold ft. Bray· NAM•STATIMENT ooeumenta "Unll"I. II shown upon Ille AOSALINOLEE endMAS.RtCHARO Purau1n1toandlnthem•llf*Nllorth Condominium Pl•n lenlllled IMAGAWA,OAANGE C:OVHTY TAX ton and persons who may be Tiit lollowlno P•rson Is dolno in ~' c-s.cuon •$00 •.cu-"Condominium Pton 1or LOI t or Trect c o L L E c To R . ST AT E O F olherwiae Interested ln the l>u•1:;i:~~~ GARLAND MUSIC, JU •Ill•• ,,,,., D• aubslltuted IO• money• No 10517"1, C-y of Or-. St•I• of c AL I FORNI A IE M PL 0 y Me NT will and/or es•~te·. c•'1 •1 "''Meld l>y DISTRICT to ensure c~ Cllllornl• (ll>t ~p1.,."1, recorded on DEVELOPMENT OEPARTMl!NT ...., Uncl Strfft, C051• MIWI ~ •• lton ol lht ptOjec:I July 11, 1'7'1, as Qocu'"""I No U610, AND At.. L 0 THE R PERS 0 NS TRICHLER Society is PlaCUlB a plaque in her NS.tiMt MARY C . TRICHLER. age memory at the newly restored NOTICE OF DEATH OF 86. a resident of Huntington Newland House commemoraung WALTER DOUGLAS ENGEL· Beach. Ca Passed away on her long service to Huntington HARDT. ab WALTER D. EN· Tuesday. March 23. 1982 at Beach. Beloved mother of Betty GELHARDT AND OF PETI· Huntington Jntercommunlty J . F1covic of Costa Mesa. C. .. TION TO ADMINISTER ES· Hospital. Mrs. Trichler was a beloved grandmother of Linda TATE NO. A·1UM9. member o f the Hun ling ton Confer and Terri Flcovlc. both a'o all heir•. beneficiaries, Beac h Rebekah Lodge #2360 of Costa Mesa. Ca. and I slater creditors and contingent I.Tedi· and American Legion Auxiliary Evelyn Pike of ~mont, North tors of WALTER DOUGLAS Post 133 and also the Huntlng-1 Carolina. Friend s m ey call al ENGEL~ _!ALTER ton Beach Senior C1Uzens, the Pierce Brothers Smiths' Mor· D. ENC penona Hununglon Beac h Historical 1uary from 12:00 noon to9:00PM who may~ otherwise Inter· A petition has been {iled DAVID BENTON GA ALANO, By Rowi Pele<IOn ln-k lnlt, p_.1.to llSlncluslve, VNl(NOWfll CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, by Geraldine F. Hammer (n No. " ~lllet, NewPOl1 Beecll. Otangt County Suc>erinteno.nt Olllc l•I Rtcordt, 01 H id Orenge T IT LE EST ATE, LI EN 0 A CA '1MO OI Sc'*"t County, wN<h Plen Ptrtllnl lo 11181 I NT E AES T IN T HE It EAL the Superior Court of This buOIMs• h con01Kttd b-Y an Puo11s11•00ran9e CoHtD••1vPitoi prQPtrtY-rlboOtnTra.:tNo 10511, PROPERTY OES<;AIBfD IN THE Orange County r equesting ln0lvt<1uoi. Merell 11• 26, l982 12110-'i recor-In booit .wt, p-s s •"° •. co MP l A 1 NT Ao v ER s e To that Geraldine F. Hammer This :!t"!!,0:~~ • .., wltll 1rw Ml1<tll•-""°"'·In the office of PLAI NTIFF'S OWHEASHIP Olt -II'·-llle countyrtcordtrohalOcounty ANY CLOUD UPO .. PLAl .. TIFF'S be appointed .. perlOnal re-County c i.rk ot Ol•119e Counly on nraA ""' PAACEl ' An undivided 00)11 TITlE TH ERETO ANO DOES 1 presentative to administer F.o 22• '"' l'tWM percen1 1nt•res11n •nd 10 the Common THROUGH 10, INCLVStVIE. the estate of Harold R . PuDllsheclOl•fl9"C01t1D•lly P1101. NOTICL~:.'=~:,IALE :~:~· •• -n •nd O.tined on,,.. ~~. Brayto n (under the lnde-Morch •• 11• II," ,.., •7M1 T.I ..... 7'712-t EXCEPT THEREFROM ... Oii, 9as, NOTICE• You ...... --Tiie d I f I D SERVICE COMPAMV H duty llP· mlntr1ls 1no other llydroc•rbon1, court m•y OK~ eoolntl you wllhoUI pendent A m lnistrat on O Piil.iC •TtE ::,:;:: ;~1= ,~.: .. w::1 ~~~°i'."~f ~: below • del>lh Of soo 1 .. 1. wltlloUI the your 1>ei09 l'leard unless you rtsPOf\41 ;:t~: h~~::rne ~~~~~. ~ -------------I rol£ ~'fsi~::!~~! :.~~~JI~~ ~!~i~u:~=~· H tete,..ed In :.:::i )0 ct.IVS R1eel tM lnlotmetlofl --------------.on Thursday where funeral ated In the will and/or estate: services will be conducted on A oetltlon hu been filed bv PBCl..Ontml IMITNI' WOITUAIT 6Z7 Main St. Huntington Beach 536-6539 'ACIAC Y•W ...,llAL,All Cerretery Mortuary Chapel-ct'.ematory. 3500 Peclf1c View Drive Newport Beach 644-2700 M&Ca.MK:I WOITUil•I Laguna Beach •94-9415 L~aH1lls 788-0933 ~ Ju.n C.pistrano 4gs.1ne H•ll09 LAWN-MT. OUYI Mortu.ry • Cemetery Crematory 1625 Gi11er Ave • Coeta Mesa ~~ " RAYMOND W . ENGEL· Fradey, March 26, 1982 u HARDT In \he'Superlat Court l:OOPM wllh the Rev. 0 . l..cnn f Or Co • u ti I at 700 Civic Center Drive, l'M:~.,_11 tawfvl money ot the Unnoo s1e1~1 ell PARCEL> M Hclutlw rtollt olld AVISOI vs1ec1 ,.. lldO clen'I•~ •igflt, htlt ...o .,,.,911 ~ to ...o •nement to uw Ill• b•l<OflY •re• El Trll>unol ~ dl!Cldlr conlr• Uo. West, ln the City of Santa ..,... ITA~ Mw held"'" II """-aakl Deed ot Trull 1n <tesl9n•IOd S.U> on tllO Pi.ti ai itelng sin •udl•ncl• • me11os qut Vd Sangree pastor of the F lnt 0 •nae ' un.y ~uet n C hrlst1a'n C hurch ol West· that RAYMOND W. ENGEL· mlnst.er Cemetery. Pierce Bro-HARDT be •J>PO'.nled • peno- thera Smiths' Mortuary dlrec· ~PJ:e•=~·~ ~AL~ ton. 536-6539. DOUGLAS ENGELHARDT. The fOllowlng perton 11 dofn; DU-..., Ana, California on April 21. ... • ... TRP'VOf)efST•ty ~0£Lr1N""'p CleKBOHrUI~..,.. JR eppurtt'*11 IO tlleVnlt '"pond• dtnlro "" JO ..... IA• I• 98 9 30 SILICA (}(l Ol.StCCANT PRODUCTS OR r '-""" f'AltCIEL •• All taclvtlft r191tl 81\d l11lormeclon -~. . l'tc:TtTIOUS euSINISS NAMIE STAHMltfT Tiie foll-ln9 ,..-IOllt ere dOlno bUSlllHt•S: OETAILS VNl.IMITEO. r11 tl>~lfk (Mtt Hl9ftwe,, Hunllnttofl S-11,Calltonli.n.o. Tom A • ...,,,..,, 111 l"Klfk c .. st H),llw•y, Hll"tl11910" lto<ll, ~tornlOftM? ~rk It. kllutta. ltMt ,..._.ftO 1.-. Hlll'lt,,...,.. loet ... (Ollfonll• ~ 1111• IMISINH It CtMlltctH a. e 1"911tH..._..,. T-~ '"'k ..... Tllla ........,.., w• fll .. WMfl IN COVlllY Clefi Of °'"'" C_...., Oii ~r<llJ,l'lll ~1 ..... P\ll>lltll9d OrOllO!t c .... Delly f'llM, Mor<ll 4, 11, 1t. U, Ult ...... a.ta M-, CA (under the In· dependepnt Admlnittntlon of &tat9 Act). The petition ii Ml (or ti.rtni II\ Dept No. 3 at 700 aw Ceniet" Drive w-. s.nt1 Ana, CA 9270 l on April 7, 1982 at 9:30 a .m. • . IF YOU OBJECT to tht grantln& of the pellllon, you 1bould eltbtr appear at the 1 2 at : a.m. COMPANY, 1112 PeltHOe °''"· Hunt· a..a WENOY IOHVLANO hutbenO 1nO eOMl'llefll lo utt lllO -111fte -· I TO THE OEFENOAo .. 'T A clvR IF YOU OBJECT to the tngton 8Ncfl. c.1orn1a ;2~1 wtte" '°"'' 1.nents Ottlon•ttcl °" lflt PIOl'I •• P•rtilno compl•lnt 1111 1>ee11 flied by 111' • f h • j F1a11k M•rhn Krtwtnek, t tOO St>lll BENEFICIARY POSTAL FIN ANCE Spoct No. PS-Jo.. ptolnllff e(lllntl you 15" loot-') granung O t e peut on, you A ........ 1~ Cehl0<n<1 90305 COMPANY.• Iowa corporeu"" •JI 101 SN>tti Plate NewPOrt 8tOCll. 1 11 YoU wls!I to o.flencl this l•wwll, should either appear at the Tllll t>uiln-It c0f\OUC1ed l>y an In· 3'~-~2~j,:ee-; :-1dt.::. C•llloml• '°" m.nl. wlthlf\ JO Mn efltr tlllf hearing and 1tate your ob-dNldulol ,,...,. Merlin K"-"" Atcioroo 1n 1,.. -01 111e Recorder Of .,.., •ummons is SlfWCI °" .,..., "'• wltll t.....tlonl or f '1e written ob· orenge county; Hid oeed ol lrutt de· "tll ~ "'"' address or common thl• <our! • wrllle11 •l••Olno 111 ~~ U Tllll tl•temenl wu llltd wllll the ecr;t>es Ille lollo<olng l)fop«ly dul9n•llon h shown •l>ovt. no re1ponse lo Ille compl•lnl. Ill • jectJona wUh the court be· Cf>unty Clerk ol Orllf\99 Couniy on M•Clll lo• 2 Of T•ac1 Ho 1060. 1n ,,.. c11y 01 w • r r • n 1 y '' 9 1,, • 11 e 1 1 o 11 s Justice CCIU'I. "°" must Ill• wlttl tM fore the hearing. Your ap-18• 11112 ,~ 1 .... rie ... ""°"'"°"•map r.cordoO 1n compleieNUorcorrectnenl." court• -nten lllMcllnt or~• WI be I Pvbll•h•d 01'•".9• co .. I Oelly Piiot, 80111< 21• Peges 41. •• •f\O 50 ot Ml•· Tiie benefkl•rv under wld o..cs Of out Ple.01119 to be o"'9reo In the pearence may n per90n .,._ 11, 211, AClf'l I, a, 1112 131142 ce111neoua M•P•. A.coro1 01 011n9e Trust, by,...'°" ot • breocll or dtleult do<kell. Vnltm youdt '°•your dtfeull Or by your attorney. County. Ctlllotnlt In Ill• Obll9•llolls $0Curt4 \M,.by, Wiii bt tf\lttwcl _, ~lloll of IN IF YOU ARE A CREDI-4021 Setlord Cl<Cle IMM Ce111oma htretotot. •Hcu1ed •NI dellv•recl lo Pl•lnllft, -11111 ceut1 mev ••r • ...C .TIC( Ill • s1r .. t ldd<•ll or common dt lllt u~ • wrltton Oocl•r•llon JUOOm•nt ._.Ml .,... fW "'9 relief TOR or a contingent creditor tiOM1'°" 11 "'°"" •bOw no werrt11l1 It of O.toUll -'*"-for Siie, oncl O•meneled In the comalel111, wlllc'1 of the deceesed, you mu1t l'tCTITIOUI au11N•u t:,•,:c':..::,:~ 111 com 111•1 •nu• 0' w•ltten notk• Of brto<ll•ncl 01 eltctton could "'"'" I" oern1111-. of .... ,, htarln1 and tta&e your objec· file your claim wl\h th~ "AMalTATIMIMT The D•n•llc1.,1 uncl•r H id OHd 01 to coute.,.,. IMClertltned llO ... , uld tokl"9 of -Y.,.. "'..,...,or t1110f Uorll or W. written objecdonl Tllo follOW~ persons •rt dOln9 Tru.1. by,_ of • 1>reacn or dol0\111 '" P"-IY IO Mtl•f\' sold obt'90tlolll. rellef r~tO In Ille <MllPIO!f\I. wJtb the court befon the hM· court or preeent I\ \o the Mlflffut. • 111e °""ll•llOM secvroct •-tb'f.110re10 •NI tMf'Mfl.,. t11tu-~ couMCI 11. 11you""""111 _. tt1t ..,,,.<•of -'-, Y--·--....... '-in ........... nal repre9ent.al.lve an-INTIMUITIOHAL ACOVISITION IOI• n ecuted Ind delovtred to Ill• un· Nie notice of br'NC.11 •nd of •IKllorl '° °" •llorney"' 1111$ ~you lllov ... ·--.......--•-.. ""' ,..--" ANO LICIUl°"TION CO,. J!O INdlOl'O, oeulQnecl a w.-111.,., Ootl.,.lloll Of OtliUll 110 rtCOl'll90 Novemllilr ts, tttl aJ dO to iw-omll(ly to w..t ~ Wflt .. fi ,..,n Gr by your aftlll'ftey. PDiMed by the court w lthln Ort1110,C161for1Met1MI. -o.ri-11 tot a.. elld ,..,Nl'l llOl!Ct '"'~·Ho. taodl1111a11t11UOO,HOt "'· ,..~M.lhrry,moy•fllWOl'lllMt Ir YIKJ A.RE A CRl:DlTOll lour rnontha from the dat.e ol it-.n J-~. uo .....,cl, o• l>roach tno or t1ec11011 to cau .. the of"" Offklol Roe-. Ottod. DK--..•. t• tt'tdl f tN fl l f l DrafltO,c.l......._9*1. 111_._IOd lo ... -~to Ml S.lcl ~ wlll be,,,... but wlll0o\l1 L•A. •tW'll.~ or I CIOftUnetnt IOr 0 rat •uance 0 tUera &• Yl1teo11t ~ttr M<Orelll, • 1 1111y NliO 61>1fOOtlona. tnd lllOrOtll., tllt <O~tMllt or '""tnly ' upreu or M.trMy• """"• °""" d~•NdfYou must Hie )'O\U provided In S.Ctlon 700 of ~A.,...,C..•IM.C•. o.rov. ::::,-::;:-:.~~ 1mp11od,~t111•.•tt•slofl.or 1. suMMOHS: ,,. ..,... .,.. ..... cl.llm wlVl the mun Oft prwnt 11 the Probet.e Code of c.ll!or-..., ,,.._, • '"' .. tnW HO 10730 04 uicl Olftclol •M.um1>r-'° ,., Ille ,.,.._."1"' ottltfl ~ _, ~ root to the pef'90Ml Nl•••tuatlw al The tl-e for fllln1 Tiii• --.. I• coMolt-""' • """""" ..,1M1pe1 .._ e4 '-"" lle4ehl -woe1 ~· -..-.. ..._ _•4141111 1.-..ini.ct by UM eoun within • • -...... ....... ••kl .... Wiii" ...... t>ut wllllOUI lt'I' Yid DtllCI .. TNJt, with llltefttl H ... ~......, .. "-~"' .. Or-.. --f .. dat I 't:latml wW '* apln prior • ~J.L.Mll ~-~r=°'l!!ljlloel, l11t•ld~proyi.,aov_...,lf•11v. Co1111ty Su"'I°' CMrt-. 11*'9'1 !~~of~•.,!!· iofQ(u-mcaU.fraathedate n11e ......... -.,._ •9'fl • ,...,,.... .. ..., IOfl.Ot-~t:llOtormtolulclOoodotTrust. Wtlu, ""9rt c. L--...... It.el ...------• ,..,..., of ... _""-""-~-~ c.• (llftr ., 0.-.. CWMy .. ~le,.,, ......... ..!'J~ 1-. C!WtM _. tll.""4'• tf t:llO t<ot+tM .. ~fl/I -...... ti ... ln~700Cl«tbePro-VW•-... -_.... Mel'cll9'.-----------,,_.._.., ... ..._°" .. _, MM.~ ....... I alt --~--------.bat9 C-. of Caltftrlall. Th. YOU may eullll .. tt.e tne ~ -' '!!!'..: wn11111tot1M • .r. .. ,. "°'' .... o...,Tnat. 1ttel11tltft --.. 11111 .....,..""° " .-.. ·-att ~ • .01 "°' .. _\ b the coun. u ·-.......... Of'liltll c... o.t1y ""· ,,o ....... ld•llllOOte :'1 t11e ......... ""' • IWkl ... ,,...,, ....,.,,°' .... 1 • ..,_.... .... ~ .. -..... ~ • _., Y fO'l-• ,._u.c.s.-.1.~ ,... ... =:-..:=.°:".: ...... c':Y: Aprlt 2. '"" •• 1·oe , .... et•~ 11t1e., .. e11 ....... n. -------.... ~~~':':'t ........ co ...._..,,_ ~ .... Itta'-, )'OU -............. ~.n..-.... Qllfll\t!IA __ ............ CMI a1lOUefQrM,_~....._ - 1111-. ot 0.. ........ ...,_. may tu.• ~Ida the W .. ,.,.. ........... ~. 1t11• ~ • •• c...... 111 or .. c:-ty, c .. ~ ...... allOn. .. court to ..... W ... t.--;-;;=;;;;a.;;;;;;1.~-, t00P11t tt tllt~A~uo-A .. flll•, I• lllt Ctty of Otell .. , ~tl'*I .. ~' na .Y~ MAJ_ ~!lllu'!?. ~ of •h ... tn..._._ of --·-r '~=!!'!'!"~· 11-.. 11111 °"46 ~ .....,., aoo cait91fllit "Let 11 .... • 111 ai.11 tM., ·u.e ttft ~ :t-_.. 1_ -• • • ,.-~, ----••-'"' f oll Ch•Clflllll Awen110, 1111" C:ltf el Al W.. ""'9 .... Mia.I ... k ... ffM:t, .......... loedl,' la .. atr .. ·-••II ---_ awta llld ..,..... peU...... ne.Je•aalltl ttt-• It -... • ., _.. ...n .• ._. ...-" .. ....._. ~ ~ ot Otwlea. Met1otOI._._..,..._. .... " --~ ----.,....._ ........ ..tlllllie .. tltNMMl~OI 1111eett1 NltllU .. tllt _... ...... Stttt o« Calll•t11le, e1 por Mep ClMAll.JOttMeTIP~,_ ftle a ..... with ... --' ~~~f~ .... of ... _ . ;;••oMA" INOV$Tttlat, "" ----tlMl-Olllle....-i tte11rtfW\llt ...... tt,._. ...... rtcortlff I"._•. ~ U, of CllTA ...,...,. ..,,.aaa ftOdo9 ti \M beet &a _...,... 16 vv -._.. ,,.._ ..,...., ..._ AM. 11 ...... M .. "t1t•t1011 •ecurod ':l tNtt Ml ..........,. coott. ...-.ot. 1t1tetol..._ ._, 111 ... 9"ko., ""*Yof..W..-tawl eam..~, ~.... = ............ ~"-~, .... .,. ..c-......, ..... o-ity.M ~~...:r~Wl:°'~ 11w ,.ut1ona. -..ouau Md,...&.,.. c. c:: ......... ,... ... Wfi-r:~ ~'""V'O ~:,~.::..---.... .,.. :..:::..--:-.:.:.,= "" -....,, ......... ,....,.. .. -dlmillld In,.._, 1300 II LI• 117 I u... • ...., ""' ' •1 oew· Mercllt. •• ....... ......,.....,~ ............. _, ... :r. :i7th.CdlomU .,,..Ood9 .1 ... N ,_,_ •• '1... .. C<*f'ANY TO HltVICICOMlt.ANY ~-11111 I ... ... .... .. ··~=°'=IV . ... ..... •OLMD DC ........ u. . ..... I • ..... • .... ,..... ., r ~~~ •• -:; AH•n•r e• L•• aiH,. .... ,,CA 111111 tel. ' · c::lillho . ...,. e,.v1e111.1 ........ ~,._..-:.-::s...... ................ ..,.... ............... ~~ -=:::=:..... -.. Ciiiw.'C~I':' CA._•.a; tflf)llUIU Mllhed °'*'De COilt U' ... c;l .. 0r...,-~ (t,.,";;A°"-=~~-_ • ~l!!ll~~lfl ,......°'91We "El'LJ, ~°'-.c..10111w.._ 09Ay •'9'°" Merdi N, 11, ""o ~ ..... eo-Ooi9•t1ot • .__~._..c..°""....._ ....,. ........ ._.1,t,tt, a:.=-'4tMf .....,_......... ~ 11,:ffll _: ,...,. ~~-:....~ ... tt.11.',.,!,-fnMI ~.H,M,IS;"9 t•e MerctlU,• , r ' I ' l ... , .. ...... .. Wt HeiMthrWt ........ Wt CLASSIFIED ~.~ .......... . ........................................... .,,, .•..•.•....•.............••..•.•.................••••.........................•.••.•............. , .................................•••••••••. l1Mrll 1•2 llMrll 100~ l1Mrtl IOOJ ...._..._. 1006 C.W .. M• IOJJ L.,_llllCll 104' tW_,.rtllect. 106' 11-' 106t 'INDEX ......•.•.....•.......•......•................ 1•••···················· .................................................................................................................. . t.wo.tlolls PMn'ASTtc HOMI -,,,..,. ... Cil 142·5171 .... ll.l ... Remodeled, decorated 8 bdrm, S beth, matr bdrm with ocean view $425,000. Owner will conaider trade. AvahliJZili'if~Some Trade your T.O.:aorpro· IYOWMll/AGT lH dea otean views 01'8UAT/SUN l 1·6 dlatreu altua tlons. eerty In an~ jtate tor 11/J .. ,~t• 3000+ and custom ... New3story'beurh h<Me 100/o~ASH DOWH '181).116'11A&l JMlboa IJland Property. rooml4e •!'>'nta2I on wrmidewlo/t2. Omoa~r51mveet llkvlltnc ~ernm . ;.,_Bay l ocean views Super view property on .-Sflliir '"' .. .. Ul:eanslde/Balboa IJlvd larae lot w/exiatln1 -~tfy,ltltr. Allum. loans t owner formal dining , ro1y 1911 CourtAve nrl9th duplex.Uvelnone-rent ~-. ·= COZY 171-11'' tlnand111. S347 .000. fireplares, pool, spa. Lg 675-2291 or848 3133 I.he other or build a new Great be & l n n In a m-ret area. $589.000. AF1..R!wrk1ng 1n rear ho~ +guest house. Et!'t? $ EQUAL HOUSING · ti:,.,_ ,. : · OPPQRTUNITV WeatBay bayfront.Sllpe l or2boata,re· home -2 Bdrmd ..... , ...... 1001 c.-Mete 1024 L...-VlllacpR.E Almost lo t v ulu ~ UAI•<> UC' L~E/OPTJON •-wi-1 1051 uar ea communl y. W/\TI HIHON1" modeled 3 b\lrm. 3 bath $1,200,000. ~.•cNee, a'runtdehect1a..'1h ........ •••••••••••••••• •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• • G llGd CAMYOMt , •. 112,000. Oc• ,,._. -or-.,..,..... ' Beaut 3 Br 21 i ba home \ • Lwtwy lower duplex. 4 SIOK dwn. Sl .000 mo. •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• w/mirrored 14alb. lots HOMI " '-· ... Ill.I_. ,UlllllOOf tf()Mfl bdrm. Oar. 11400. Bob g~ea si6 Side, 4 BR + bonus rm . ol marble. J tar gar IF" REALe5TATE, r=.:t. = ·,. -.• . c;: . =:...... : ~I ~te ad· Prime Lido Nord bayfronl ~ bdnn, 5 bath. Realton, 675-6000 :;:1 da, 7Sz.9442 eve, · ~t=~~tJ~~um 000. Call 644·0448 ~----·l7Mt00-... _ Lge L.R. 2 boat slips $1,500,000. ....__ .. vertlaed i n this :.: e:' :: newspaper ii subject to ~ .. the Federal F1ir Hous· 1:-.c.,o.u-: Ing Ad or 1968 whkh 13~o AN~Cl~G s..-.. makes it lllepl to ad· C.UADT IUY ........ _ I 2 t:.8:'~ ~ vertiM "any prtrerente, Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath + i ........ rec. nn. This ~really priced OM THI POIMT • na 1 1 ory me' ~.,interest in a main·i--------• tenance free 3 Br 21, Ba S-Ca.-• I 07 6 condo. F'rplc both in OCUHFROMT ••••••••••••••••••••••• .-....,;:;:;-Nii limitation. or dis· ... &"' TAKEVOUllCHOICE · h~t made ror the active ....__..... '* "riminaUon based on beam ceilings. $4.20,000. riaht! Large family •Excellent 3 Bdrm. 3 family who needs lots of au1 [ST'n ' boim w/4 Bdrms, 2 Ba room s b111 bdrrns. J mstr Br & living rm DUPLEX S.th ~ I 016 Close to tountry t lub. ore. FRI 1-5 ••••••••••••••••••• .... -11 race. color. religion. Ind hie. biB bonus room. bath, exceptionally nice baths and enormous ~iv· =.=::-w. :: aex, or n1t.lonal origin. ~ Ill.I llYFlllT Owner will assist in property. ~.000. U\I room with massive gotr. tennis & swim 506 L Ocea.frottt Upper Three ~rch Ba y ming. Walk to shops & Pano Ocean View. 2 BR ._.~-l: or an intention to;rnake Lagoon view from 6 bdrm, S bath, play-financing. Full pri ~e •"'---r-a-"lnd 2 Bdrm. used brick fireplace. ~~.. •• any such prererence, dark den *l 350 0001 VllC'V .. w lk t h 1 h banks. Ownr Agt lolboaPul11. 11. ba $.128.000. 15'1 dn . 770·23 17. 495 -3202 . 4 bdrm Ut,>per unit w!th CallPaulYoderAgtartS ?--f::':zt'' {: 11~1.tatio~: or dis · room. rm, · • • • · dining room , with .a .0 sc oos. 5 op-~ ll111U1o1t • .. cnnunation. charac.'ter $339 000 pmg. city park and ten· "'-"" 11-•• UH• llYI _. _. · n.is. Asking S165.000. Ca II panoram1r \ lew Ex ~ cellent investment pro ~M 714-498--7~ =.i"Ct. :: This newspaper will not S ular ba •Quaint 2 Bdrm + S40-llSI LAke forftt I 055 perty. Owner will t·on WnhMlster •••••••••••••••••••• ••, sider all ofrers. IOtl Lmlllf .. · . · · _ k · 1 t pectac yfront view 4 bdrm, 4 bath, bonus room ca.Pe Cod. ' ---·Tttt "" -nowmf y attep any 2 boa sll * 900 000 -...o-i.•...,. -advert sing for rea I t Pl .1. ' . great location, S3~.ooo PARK PLACE ~~~.. : estate whith is in viola-. E~" : ....:tion=°'=-=the=.:.:1•::..:w:...:..·-· -~ YID VllTU mllll VIHI :~c1=t~P1:ftc~e+n~ -------4El,Tt.!\~. ...,'"'-•-: --------New French Normandy 4 bdrm, 4 bath, May trade! 1289.SOO. 2174Sq Fl. ~~ l.. lllORS: Adverttstn guest house, pool. $795•000· 642-5200 MISA VEIDE BE1J5glrAN ---• ............... -L....-L .......,1.... d 3 Bdrm home , 2 baths. HAS EVERYTHING ?TT!;;'. --• =~.:::.·-..-0~ 111!11111 UB dbl garage. all in A I Cul·de·sacstreet Ct· -... -_, -··-C t b f t 1 t 85' bo t d k Pl condition. $1 29.SOO . Sun&Sail II Club =~ : rws i-. Tile us · ay ron ° · a oc · ans Sl9,SOOdown Owner 14111 20 min to Newport fi~l': : DAILYl'tLOTnws avail. $4.2:S,OOO w/terms. $120,000 assist1nfinanc111g Center --Jiii-......._for ... flnt for this lovelr; 4 Bdrm ---------1 RoyMcC.r•,Rltr. S2l0,000 14 ithSl60,000 ·-~ .. -·r ho I · 541 7729 at 1211 fixed rate & fully .:;.;.--•u"' -correct l•sertia• ·, ~-t s a arham at • ~ : -,. I ~s.:Jtice. Ca now CoraM .. Mw 1022 --------NoPo~~~~~!1fr)ml? ~---!!!_:=,·-------•·~~~~=~~~=~~~~~~~·A · "l>liPi:a··9·vow0NE·R· Price Reduced! no.0347 v--. -.., I ££$'rATE Tius 3 bedroom ranch· Owner Agent if.l,"':'.: : HwsforW. -------------· '"' MUST SELL! style rcrov1des a dining -------· •.· HERITAGE m :ALTCRS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Owner Jmmar JBr J~•ba. s.ep mo ther-in law qrtrs Spac back yd, ·RV access. Will t·arry lllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I S2 0 . 0 0 0 . I 0 ~ f I p ~.soo. No agts. ~ -1~ ll<;CANYOH Md .. ain Greenbrier sphl level c:ondo 14 1th fJ>I/ course \ 14.'14 Pool spa.tenm:.·set•urtl) As sumable loan Ai.king ------Olcl.. but Goodie! 3 licfrm home. 2 car garage, sep. rumpui. room. nice yard " lots of fru1 I trees & rose bu~hes Much, much rrorc' $80,000 wSlS.000 dn owe balance LOQK PROPERTIES WALT 846·3336 ------=..":::!. :: ...................... ~ ~ I REALTORS ~~~~~J:r ~~e:s~~~~~r~e~::!. Htwpot+ leach 106911iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• = ta ~ I 00 fireplace and 3 large •••••0 •••••••••••••••• ._ ~ lllY(SJ. : ... HBE:SYOUR.. ' hoA Cmes~1rtEh~e~tfarJ.Lm! arm,. ~=~·~:.1 ::~~ r~t~I:~; ~n~~~-T~I~ ~u~~t~Mand NO DOWN OR ~For <.....1.~omts ml FllUCE _ wlll Fi.t.clftJ ner lot m a great area' errotion in this stunning ~ 1100 -~· -YDlou ~aAMve ,.Ht oa.llUhSeEre' bmole,!rpAlnrXlaOnuds o~·unrehr 3 Br 2ba or 2+ gu st ml ~er w11ls1assssooo1sl ~F·1th ClbeifO!FOa\•Re~,hoLmel Fro'!1 TRADE . . . • •••••••••••••••••••••• .•.•..•••.•.•....•..•.. _ ... ...._ -, hi . ... ~. " owners unit . also 2 Br 1manring. . or t "A 1vmg IY p 1 ct u r t' ~ q u t 2 bdrm. I bath. oe-. ::::=;_~' 1e1i Charm, English tudor lookin g for anxious rentalrottage /\llintop rroreinro call,979·2390 dtningareatotheden FALLBROOK £1ANCll l'arpet & drapes ._, .. '-: style, lovely tree lined • UIYll ~y... burier. Only Sl29.SOO. cond . exrel !oration TARBELL patio room & POOL 15 arre~. lovel~ homt Beautiful adult park =:!..~. : s t reet . Pride o f Magnificent location o'looklng 8th green of Ca 19'79·S3'10 Owner will carry lg 2nd area. NEW on market at with 4soo rt + tenni~ lg" space r~t_646·861__2 -..COIENTS, ~i~i:,~ sAnhd, ia:. golf course. Majestic Colonial custom by A. ££$'rATE T.~OWONLVS2G9.SOO By Owner. Mesa Del S 3 4 9 · O O O · R A I-: court, pool. nd1ng trails Newport Beach De Anza POSIW.S & sume $74.000 loan. Fu ll owner/builder. 5 bdrms, lge formal din rm, I,.. Mar, 4bdrm . 3ba. lrg Trade for smaller home bayrront Park Mint LIST&fllll ~~on this J Bdrm 2 fam r m, bil lia rd rm , refr igerated 1 CAl644·721 I ram rm.S14S.OOO.SIO,OOO in Orange Co Full pme cond ·111 dbl wade , th d II ho i I & 6 REALTORS • below ma rk et \'alue. S995.000 WHkend~ fireplace. brick patio, --.. )llO o use s on Y wine rm. ~ ba . Marble, Clnest wood ·· · Will help finance Ca ll 64S-SOOO. ext 110 or S6l .~ Also 2 br . 2 ba . :=.= 5 Sl04.too.Call 6"·1l?I paneling, air cond., +.Many custom fea-OCEAHFROMT ~7·!>467.Noaj!s please 6449513, weekday~ call double 14 ide. rorn er lot -· 1o111t tures $2,150,000 including land. May sell Like-new duplex-3 & 2 RK-MwU_.a .... -d Canal Front . Newport ~I 1400or644 9Sl3 $39.000 8111 Grund~ =~· :: furnished. Bdrm 2 Ba earh unit-0n ----.... TL"_...'.!&?.:... rt_. Shores. 4 Br. Den 675-6161 SEMES •111 ._ .Le.......&.. .. •·.J lhe sand,willtake small OCEAN VIEW 4 BR. ~ S25.000down,Owne'rw11l GET READY --., -6 ......--downortradeandcarry motivated S37S ooo MmltlceloTwnllH carry .Must sell! Make FOR SUMMER Mobile Home. dbl 14•1de. ~~r& •111 .. 1•1N1-n,.mta,1.L 144-4111 t he entire balance. Prin.only iooo Se~ Ln 157 Yorktown Ln. off dfer!Tennis,pool,walk Steps tobeach.pool.ten Sl72 mo space rent. '::.~"!'::-$I 0,000 $750,000-best deal on the ~ fa1rv1e14 bet W1lson1. to beach. Agent 646·1044 n1s and racquet ba II adlt.s pref. sm pet OK· ~111U..u111111111 ,. 1r ... u1:5 • SftECI •L water. Falr Lrg mdl of J Br 2 or645-2.lnS I courts JBR 2ba. p\ t qUJet H B rorner lot -1---"' "' •-------•I J .. COISRE&LTY Gotsomethingtosaybut Ba dbl "~r pool ABSO. lUJf rommuntt" Sl92.900 84S297.900~or best 014ner ,,..._. • 100) MOYe ri""t in to th is 4 "' 5A • • .. " • • ' ••-1t•r ,,. .,. c.111 ~ not sure how lo say 11 rlubhouse Assume loan 675-1771 ~ Bdr. No q_ua lifying htTit. ._ PIOPEITY MGI Call us for (r1end l>. or new at belo" current B d bl d -Freshly painted. New . -,en m•zrwt. . .'71LU'7~ belpfuladvice 642·S67!. SJUL!! } owner. OU e \Al e ==:.,. _ carpet s. dbl gar. tBr.S.A. $72,000 ... t L ~J..l-!1.--rates Asking SI02.SOO U. adlts no pets. ne" cpts -1tU Ownr/Agt. Priced to sell 1 Br. Irv S77.SOO ) Owner transferred out or 1 slake my reputation 0 drps & Akan s1d1n,I! lo = : at SUO,OOO. Call Diana. 3 Br. C.M SI 13.000 87S.SS11 area ()pn Sat I 5 the FACT that this 15 th spare rent 714-893-3377 ~~'t"I"... -&3112166 3 Br. C.M SI 14.900 °" ~ I SH TO IRIEVE BE.5T BUY in Ne1A por 714 77<J..™$ fl!"a. -• 2Br.E.side C M.Sl19,SOO •• ..~ f-.... St Rltr Be h If ii. : 3Br.H S. $129.900 LUXURY DUPLEX I rMHto ••er, . · ac · you are ~.J~~~~~~~~ Oh Royal Lanrer Lnple =v• -J Br C M S129 900 SO OF HWY 64HJ'6 legi!Jmate buyer-CAL top H R adult park B~ c.,,..-;. -· · · · · 1 ~EO!RECTLYand\O ol4ner9680626 :=:...c.. -~II h.ave excellent JTwo apoc:kMn 3 Ir 2 1 BTO('O 1032 will be 1mpres~ed "u-"*' ; 63 la+ dttl -'ts. Uwr ....................... GREAT BL'.Y ' OCEA. IYTHE SEA 10\'.50 flt11.ood. ideal for -.. Find out about the high· I ,.,.. Vt:. LRG 4 BDR. PROF BUY THE SEA reurement. Hemet. Ca :=-::: eamingrealestateseles haa llilii "11 of ace•. BToroCa7on DECORATEO.pool.sp· For sale or tr.ide =41 SltJ2 rm mr ind util =-:::::4 : career opportunities I i....dry lpOCe In each RES'DENTIAl REAL ESTATE SERVICES 2 bdrm~~·b~O rondo. 6 & like nu all for ooh Luida Isle l.o<'Jled on Carport & end patio orn..r.,.,..-.. ~ .. , -with T H E R EAL Hit. A.d4aacct11t to -$376.500. A trade 14 Ill b-\'ery lip or 1.,l,JDcl llei.t fum & cl n S8500 firm ...,.. -ESTATERS. Licensing I I rronths new High as "Ons1·darad. \'ou "on't I t d ~-4452 =~= : school fees completely "' u err a c • • IAYSllll:S su mable loan. Byo"ner believe<il<unt1I you s"ee 11. t~~: 1~~r~r '~711°~al'k~ --------• == ...... , : refimdable to school of --------S44t,5oo llll,MO 21:1.-49J·ll5I or 7~·4589 Ca I I P A t R J C: K two 00' yarhts. '" 1m up ,..,. •. your choice. Eictensive OP£.1o..1HOUSE COLIOf'NDPOAT Thi.., home has a flair for livina with 4 ~ le h 1040 TENORE Direrth bar. game room "'"e ~.•-HJl'u1a... sales training. For in· '"" R•"'L-• ,,., ·~"O ·-""'"I'°" ac 63 2 · 11 UATS&lllAllNE rormatlon,call7S1 ·6191 IMSPYGL•ss -,..,... BRs,JargeFamRmoverlookingthebay. ••••••••••••••••••••••• TdolY6'.6 or 760 870 ~~wpoartr's Ff~nu·~ .. ,1:~ntt·~rl [QMIEJIT --------I Fanta.stir tXean"'& sun -21~!.c:~•· 0 All the amenities of a guard gate com-J3,000 Mo 9ual tamment ho~ bu~lt for • ,. set vus. upgraded _t75·SS1t munity. Good term.5 are available. 4 rm.2ba. go6d lor a mo\le stu Mo\! : AISOlUTE STEAL Capehorn owe S400K . 536..:3286 romant1r ma Mer bdrm 5 Rtdirced $150,000 ~ t~. ~.~. ~~~ El Toro starter. Lease· IN NEWPORT CENTER MAGNIFlCENT POOL I ~gl~t~~r~l'l4~~;{1:C~ -MOW $525,000 i-7~~~0297:;;:..:......._.___ option or sell. 2 Br 2 Ba ~~tl~j ~:::ad':s· t;:ud LEASE/OPTION exe~ Sep maid qrtr'l & ~ep SftYGLU S --------I condo like new $6000 644 9060 out Just S137 SOO Bkr I ~· NB Ocean & bay guest qrtrs Can <'lose IY OWNER dwn. A · 760-0297 -848·071!_ ' · :;e ln~~ c~ud:~j.~~ f~l Eas~ terms Pnred OWNER FINANCING ltlDUCEDTOSELL •-'--10 .... ~e_vs~·---tosellfarbt'lo14 market 6br/4.,.,ba. 4100 sq ft Delightlul new 4 Bdrm PR E E SIDE ,...,..... .... -I ~r 760-7292 258odega Bay w/tradillonal design. IM E/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------.-------- *EXCITING• &tat, Sale With or without furn . 24x64 Greenbner Home 111 La1wna Hills n1rest S • park. Young adlts 14elrome Gr'fttftof Paril Btn 24x60 Keywest Hm. 2Br. 28a This 1s Lhe bes t buy ID lOIAD CLASSIC MOllLEHOME Callowner, 7Si9-0737 library & den. formal LOCAflOM! DISTINCTIVE WATllFIONT I dininj!. bay view. corner Personality and beauty DESIG.... HOME l~lion in Old Corona are round ID this 3 Bdrm --a ·NI"' .... .,... OCOlllOT " USTILUFF SALES Marro bw It 2 stor. uni 27 Harbor. Ste 206 A ..... ~Ams.ISO ...... AJIC =-c:...... ~ g:' ~~· .. ' ... : ~ ..... . =*,'"" 0 '. ~ ....... . -' ........... ----., .., --.. -------= = ., -- •IAY~OMT• IOATSLIP $555,000 WOW! Lowest priced bayrront home ON BALBOA CO~. Large 4 bdrm: 3 blith. double fireplace, covered patio plt&S much more! Will AITD or trade ror F..utbhlf · Baysbores or ???! ! W.O.loyl'rop. ..... •'75-7060. de1 Mar. SSSS.000. OWC. 2 bath home Assu~ -n1 II ... .....,L IVES The dramatic design of l'RJVA.TEIEACH 5" .. r~;illlllllltllie~rm~ or this great 12•.~ loan this home will be perferl Sensational 4 Br home que ramll) home 4 540.5937 bedrooms. 3 bath~ J nd 1---------• and aeller will carry a C N Ill 0 A R C 0 T H 8 S H 0 C H C L T for the entire family. 4 smack on the water'! 2nd TO with low down %~ ~ ! i ~ ~ ~ C 0 Q I A l O 8 E W K bdrms. 3 ba BBQ and Featunng French doors. large custom de~1~ned payment. full price ~ enclosed patio 1.-:x frplr. profess1onall) de Sl48,SOO.Callfordeta1ls. H I T 0 I 8 GR HEIT 0 cellent loratton near rorated & SANOYi family room M a11nif1 cent \ 1ew WI r1ie lo14 m terest assuma hie loa n avatlable Askm11 nnl~ $299,950 113 • T 0 l E E H W E V l E II T 8 S A A E 0 schools, tennis and pool BEACH Only S.249.000 & U S T W H C P B L R I H S H 0 T T A H S2S2.000 and you own the seller wall carry AITO: '1•1:am1. 1'31}*' EA 0 E L II H 0 KA E "M 0 Ly E L I land. 7Si9-1501or7S2-7373 i11t1 ~-~~ X H 0 S 0 U H S Y R A S P A I P II 0 E RCTaylorCo LUX PENTHOUSE ON WATER ................... ., .......... ...... ............ ...., ............ . ., .. 11.2 .................. ...... .................. ,. ..... , ... , 11"'4. .................................. ilt. "'' 11 .. ,, ,., ....... ,1.t11t111 •. s1-.. ... ,. · · wt\TEJifiONT HOMEs~.Nc. ltfAL EITA Tt • w...~~"ra,. IQ6 YI. C011C tMw. 315 M11ttM >..:._ ~Buch 8111aei..ld .,....... 67J.6911 0 T E C N C H E H T A A H P 0 A T 0 P A A A U N I M P E X Z T R V A C 8 P B I F A C R J A Y E L J A V R T I E A R WEEEK CR TX CJK CC IF ACP S R A A I K E H H R S H 0 E 0 I H E G 0 W 0 F A A W U I U 0 0 6 N N I I 0 I S 0 J I E 8 H E I I 0 R N T W C 0 A 8 A C 0 C J T T E L L A M N U P T R I Y RU Y S U I' I I I A I L E 0 I I I r ""' .... ........ ~ 104' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ALot I acre 'rbfct~. gent· ly 1\opln& parcel ahorl dlltance from tennis l btach. Own r hu in· tluded plans for tuaton1 viii•. sus.ooo. Spec· tatular views! Ml~IQN REALTY 4N.aT31 ---------Walker & lee $6000DOWM! Versa\lles studio Pen· thouSe condo. Take ove h.igh aJsumable loan a 11~.~ Owner will ('OD· sider late model car a down paym 'l. Act fast !!! Only S89.900. Cal Jim Agt. 979·5370 o 96'2-9:597 L'40 <)C)O() <>PIH SA.TISUH 1·4 (DAILY B\' APPT ) Charming JBr. great vu 2627 Bunya S232.SOO Ted Hubert Rea It\' 7!2·0777 . $20,000 Price Rtd!M:tlott lmmaculate J Br 2 Ila Close to beach LO'. down Sl49,000 Agen t Mr. Cll!!,,k 642-JBSO ··Dii: UllM --4 II + Llfl, Beauti- fully dtc0rated "Kensington" w/v'aew of city lites. Loft Ideal for study or den. Lovely spa in entry. 3 car garase, formal dining & more! $695,000 Darlene Herman 752-14 14 (E5 1) .... , ... nun. Semi-custom fXecU"'uw home w/ 6 BR, 4 BA. 43' by ·19• Grecian pool, 1pa, 111ebo, kot pond, children'• Mpetate ya~. over· liztd bolt or RV stonae. 3 car praae. \it 1cre lot bordertna nature park. $5681000 Seller w/carry ftnandnc. '" and. Joyce ldlund 842-8235 (Da) By Owner. 24x60 . S star park, Westmrnster. sp 51 $49,500 SJI 9561 Older mobile homt>. 8x24 add1t1on Best offer S41!_9230~flSP~I COl'nlftl re ial l'roptrty 1600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Co11do111l11iu111s /T OWR· hotMSforsai. 1700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• COftdo S-ciolst. Agt _ ~·-229..1__ lftcon11 ,,..,.rty 2000 • •••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA TRI· PLEX-S189.SOO Owner motivated. Has owner 's '!!!LJ!!t !.:... SJ6.0123 __ _ L.AGUMA IUCH Comm'l1111d11&. 14 units 9 J tunes gross. Owner fut Asking SSS0.000. By o~~....:34;..:.77'"'----­ HUNTl NG TON BCH TRJ PLEX-all 2Br. hvy shake roofs. twnhse S\)'.le Sl92.500. 20'l down ~ BkrSlS-0123 Walk to beath, beautiful lri-plex. 2·2 Br. 1·3 Br. Patio. rrplt. $499.000 Owner will help (in1nte. Agent Heddi 64"1044. SUPa TUSHB.Tll FOi IMVISTOI! San Clemente pride ot ownership. Modern Sptnlsh style. rour unit apartment house with octan·h.ills & aolf course view, close l.O evtr· 1'hirlJo:11 lhree 1eara okt, hilt MW, Will sell with u cellut ~'zt!ti.* tqul· tJ.for I tteaa ritw I« or ..._. or Nmmrtlal ,...,.rt1. PllNCIPAl.I ORI.YI! Call ••ltr (1U ) • • NEif!&Y/Pft~cH O.C. Airport Area Deluxe olfice in custom designed Lawyers Suite now avail. ~ mo in· eludes f u r nis h ed &«retarial station, con - ference room. Library. Share cost of recep- t 1on1 st . p r ivate telephone system. and colfee expenses. Xerox avail. Call 714-833-l!HO UDO IUILDIHG Economy singles. S8S to Sia>. 2 rm ste. $300. Sec'I serv. avail. 3355 Via Udo. 673-4156 ~-~~ .... ?~.~., ..... ~.~: .... ??~! ..... '!!~ .......... ?!~! ~~!~.~ ..... ?!~0~~!~~-~ ...... ?!.~! ~~ .. ~ ....... ?!~ ~~'!!~.~ ..... !!.~! ~!.~~-~ ..... !!~ ..... '!!~-.. ?!!! .... !!!I!~ ..... ?!~ r:c oomaakeh~r:e p~~t Loll Tiny Toy Poodle, .,_..Atlk.... "&~:Tfe~Ori\~~i&. ~ ~AL ~·r I MCllla'tw.llf NW'Slllg PHOTO LAB needs ~g'°f'C ERM AN don't have a down P•Y· f~le._ cre.mJ.,a-22, vie ~JT941:'10M: Newport Be~ch. 4 dal area. Cooking. It. hskpg ~fe::'ernc:x andfn' Corporai . Executive CllTIAID driVtt, reli1ble car & In· BUSYBOYS & OYSTER ment? Paul 9SJ..2872 art. V1ctor11 & wall ace, A_mbtt1ous boys and week. Expe~ d. or pro . ror 4 priests. Rd's req. restl 'fous ~ew o~t needs ~Ip !ft wholesal~. MUISES AIDES suran~ a must V1lld BAR Apply in raon C.MaidFam lly pe t. g.trls 10.13 yean old, Lo school training pre-1 ftel>lyto:Classfiedad # tachf.wflrm.Mu~tbe retail diatnbut.ion b!JSt· 7.3:3o. Sm. conval. CAdriver11lcenst. ~lso btwn 3•5. The ~usty Pri•• MoMy Nfr3365 ~ one or two even-fen'ed. Me.as.3S 1013, Daily Pilot, P.O. selC·starter. Mag Card neas. Personal interview hospt. nr C.M. Fair-various I ab duties. Pelican, 2'735 Pacific $~0,000J _,_, 0 P Found: F Shep. mix ings a week tetti.ng Dental back orfice ass't &>x 1560. Costa Mesa. n, System 6 exp. Real only. 7141984·~ ground!. 549-3061. a.oo7 CAt. Hwy. N.B. omor eanne beiae puppy, M Husky n_ewspA,f.er su scrip· needed to continue CA.112626. estate bukground ~H..ctw_.. NJNTIMG Route Person w/car for 642·8852 mix blk. wbl & brn, F hons. ransportatlon growth. Pleasant Npt HOOSEKEEPER helpful. Sirlary open. Part time help . Perlect OfRCEMAHAGEI/ Plate room person. wicker basket lunch 2nd T . D . • s Dobie~&brn,Fcboc. and constant •.dull Bcbgrouppractice.Ex· MUJtbereliable&have Send resume to: Ad fortheretired.CallDen· ACCOUNTANT p/tlme.Mon,2:30pmto service. Mon-Fri. $20,000-$150,000 fully ub & sqlpiet. 644-3656, supervlsi~n provided. per. neceuary. 640-1122 own transportation ; N98. Daily Pilot. Box nls. 673·3533 ExceTlent career .OP· approx 8pm. T uu. S.l800. armrt. to 20/yrs. Other 12SMesaDr., C.M. Call 3 to S.30PM. ask for S/hn pr day/S dys pr 1*. C.M. 92626. Medical porturut_y for the Rtfbt l:30pm to approx 8pm. ~"'-='"""------ 2rldstoSl,000,000. Apyts, Found · DobeColli M Andrea, 642-4321 , ext. DINfM.ASSJ wtc.Rerar-'d.640-6962 •IU!.Al.SEC'Y . ~offlce ~1·1.. .... PersonmaProgresStve No exper. nee. Apply SALES CLERK -Costa comm'I & non.owner -' I e ff :w:J , E1perienced, h &bly ~.. ......,aT -... Company . The in-Pennysaver, 11160 Mesa St.atiooers. 270 E. programs. No bkrs. -111e~vic. PC molivat~. Fast-paced days. Genera pra ctice time, uary open. divldual should possess PlacenUaAve.,C.M. 17th St.. C.M. Full & llrftlt:MS-21811. ~~ Babysitter Mon-Fri &eneral practice. Mon.· IMME DJ ATE Orange County Airport SendretwnetoP.O.Box strong Acctg. Ir Ad· · partUme Lost: Male Silky Terrier, 8-6Pll. 8 mos. gir l. Thurs. Laguna Niguel. 0 P E N I N G . area. S/yrs. legal e.x· 2932, Mission Viejo, Ca. mlnlstrative skills. Real tlstate -"'"""'""'. ='"'-·----- MMllll1artrtia9•11•11SS. Trwt blacki_sllver, _gray le NB/Fub. Isl. Natalie 49M677. CHALLENGING SEC. ::=·~~rite~:~~ d~:: 91211111. Pleuant working en· TO TME TOP ~ C1TI)htiwd DMdi 5035 lan. r.a1t Bluff area. 640-8950 ext 114 or n-.-• •--•-•--t t-.. POSITION! Hrs. 8:30 to i d Ir t t MedJcal viron.ment. Send resume Commercl&l real estate . II or ~rt ll1me. Gdr~w-....................... Rtw!ld-*'7880. 640-fl39eves uaaa1 ,......._. wan""' S:30NontoFri,requires can se ae ·Sar er. 10: Perrorma nee firm seeks investment inc nahona rea 101 s.fller'Mt&Co. Found : Sml dog. BEAUTY :f~· Costa Mesa, statistlcaltyplog.Speed 85~1·1733· ~y~l~t~1fe~~~':-1::Y Sailcrafl Corp .. 785 W. trainee to fUI existinc =·~:!ii!ip!i~~J. All types of ilaf estate F.ulbliif or Bluffa area &SWPM, S/H lOOWPM. t CA from May IS for approx 17th St., llF, CM. CA. property sa I es & compute W iJlvestmentulnce 1H9. Call to Identify. 644-MlO · Pi ttfllll1iil S.. DENTAL ASSISTANT· Bilinaua1 pref., but not pr 0 b a t A A 1 fi A r 2rm. S.3903 931127. manacement position. = ou{ programs. e C-cJ4+=.. LoaltinJ fO add-t0-0ur cbalnlde. eiper req. nee:. l\JU Benefit Pkg.. ... ... ,. OFnCE Penon. Variety No e it p e r I e n c e b&e outgoi.n&. persona· ..,...•-...1TD.....,s ~Golden Retriever, st 1 ff sever a I N.B.MC-003:2 ulary open. OpJ>tY t necessary. E1ce lent Model needed. Interview oldutieslncludingbkpg. necessary. Attractive peopletopresentour -lichl coat. Vic. La&una manJcurista. Richard grow with Org, Contact typlq and SH skills rt· Mardi 31.Jt. Wed. 6 pm. r b compenaation/beneflt unique speed-readtnc '4le2111 545-0611 Be~ Cerritos Dr. Ouellette Salon. MO ~ Mr.ByrneS$6-3110. quired. Call Mrs 3rdFloorTiffanys,N.B. tte typing, ans. usy pacltage.Cal1Mr.Bo1ce cowwwaretocomputer •1lW. Newport 8 Center Dr.. LI v e In , c oo It • !,!_n 1 !J,._ow for 1 ppt S ._.EEDED phones. Able to work un· 675-6700. stores. Industry and Lo. 0.7 FOi.Del small wblte 11!Jle N.B. bousekee~r. com pa. _, ,_ MODB.~ " k prasure & maintain schools. This ii a uniqu& MM4C.tlt7 PC>Odle. vk Atla1tta & Dion to elderly lady. IMMB)IAn 1 __ ._.WoSCTIY ;.wucfiriiinl printwor~. •pleasing personality. lecat/'"'910ff opportunity to make Real £state money )(amolia Ii B 962.-9568 IOOK.lllPB Reft. nq. Call 731·°'43 OPlttlMCH _._ ~ + photos + 1200 m Part time. Call for appt. positiod with small elec-1111' $$$ for the right available2Ddor3rdTD . . . . Exp'd. Pt/time. H-20 11ll4:30pm. ,._ITIR"'CH ToSUZO. ofeetoappli-lolhes att.lOAM.979--0747. tronics Mfg Co near woman or man. Call l.clens on reslde.ntlal or ,......... 5350 bn/wlt. Ny borne. Hunt. RW::r";s~tatlv~ from cant. Mary Hickle Agen· c · Orange co Airport. 1714 )898-2658 for in· Income proSfrt1es. We ••••••••••••••••••••••• n..1 ... N-·mo .. ar. J:C~ .... ~~ ~.. cy. 19712 MacArthur •Fduhion shows, ~-$65 OFffCE ...... •-new .. __ ,,, l """' ui. ..... .... ~ " Slop N' Go Markets will Blvd. ""·'•-200 lrvm· a • •Y Sha~ g1·r1 good w1'th ™-~ •-~'"" ·~·""------........ e a Cu range of ... 111-.aL M-~ 9D-1261 (213)665-5201 d OCI •PP . agic be ·at lhe s~ N' Go • iJUOU> • ... •Summer sports line for • .,_,_ rmrtiage ~".erage 1t ~hn-d ·-. or lt.and·"P comedy to &f).2820 nit'I mag. Aloth•s & num ers. MacGregor RECEPT/OFCMGR ~girl, outgoing and very compeUUve rates. <>Dell QO a a "' Market at Pacific ..aw..-' '" Yachts, 1631 Pl1cenU1. So. Oranie Co. Call !rieodl,y. l8 yn or older. Courtesy to Brokers. 'rdaysaweek tSAIPITC&.W EI carry Interest at Coast Hwy. N.B. on LlflG.UAIDS "'"""" . C.M. 6111·1658 JIS\ior Sportswear, full 714·760-l55l ask for •Gorgeous girls t.o ~c.·tf.A~~ O~~ria semina.r.3hn,$100. Thursday, March 25th 'lbeCltY -ol Huntington •Jaudancersfordanng orpartUme ""-· Du pam-r you Jacu111 'ft.... 1-.a.. r-~ .. · from 9am-3pm to talk to . Beach ·has immed. Vecas-tyoe s bow. OfflCE/P·Tlm RECEPTIONIST. CdM. .r--..1r-•-- .._.eor ane SauM:'Locati u well as yrs.S48-!137Hl4 .;.;-.ar7701~l you about Immediate emp~ment opplys for females S'"S"·S'lO", R.E .. office nds Ptr oC· IDS phones, mall. It typ. --• 35% YWd tour is ts . Ba n It Cill41EI & em p Io y me n. t op · certiCied lifeguard & $1500/m>. +expenses fice he.Ip, ideal ror col· ing. neat appearance a 675-33' I $16,735 5Us00ecfl1l TD America rd , Master H<Xf~E-WAJ\E~ALES Experien«d live-in Aide portunlties 1n the watersaretyinstructors. Many morehstings legestudenl.10-2daily.S ..!m!!!us~t..!67~5~·11521~0~---l--------on 13.33 acres at Adelan· Oiarge, American Ex· Appl,y m person. Crown & Housekeeper, best Newport Beach area. For further inro call No exp. nee. All types I day wtc. MUST be relia-Sales to, San Bernardino Co. prus, D i ners all H~rdware. 1614 San conditions & salary, Full time pos itions 9a)..8884. TheJobSOtlf'Ce . ble. resp .• gd phone ~~t 15% int only monthly welcome. 714/MS-3433. Miguel, Newport Beach. must have best of re· avall., no exper. nee. We LOOKING FOR manner, well groomed. f'rontd rt' e persohn with MAllmHG llEPS Due 1 yr. 20% discount. 2U2Harbor Bl. CM ~ 97 train. For more in-ft9777 mam-7pm) non-smoker. Call Jackie I 0 0 e I e P one 714 .15 l · 48 2 7, e v Qleda would love to party Ci.SHIEi erences. 7141499'1 2· ronnationcall: 774-9210. People who want lo or Li.nda for interview ~Uty, general Of· Progressive O.C. Com· 714 -493 -1153 o r with you. Leslie or HOUSIW~ESALIS ....._c ........ t EqualOpportunity m1kem>ney. 894·2755 llwn9-Sdaily.675·23ll lngwi~?i5r~~~~;:~~: pany seeking self n 4-$52:7191 Sy Iv i a . ID y ti me. F\!Il -oTP/Ume. Apply: Wel-i',--aeil' s how Employer M/F Maids needed, ex per. 0 /R Technician. ex-,_.,_.A at11'I. JUICE m>tiv1ted tndividuals. 761-8036 ~wn Hard'!are. 1024 Beeline fuhioos. Choose necessary. Apply at: NEEDED l d f b LCl•uuu .., .. Franc bis e or dis . l.rvine (Westcliff), N.B. own houn. Manacement 1be San Clemente Inn. per ence . or usy TREE. 12151 Monarch. tril>W>rthlp background CATERING bel~ needed. opportunity available. in... agency !leeda C/t self· 2600 Del Presidente. San DPBIEHCID p!aticsurgeon. 640-8576 ~4~l~n G r o v e pref~ Must eossess Experieoced with cater· Car" phone neces11ry. startesr. M111. 3/yrs ex· Clermnte uJ~ .OfrvS p~ A•. ~CUI~ • strcoi sales aptitude & . tr ... 1 d d Cal1Wr7411tor646-0382 per. in Personal Linea.1-====·-----1 ,, , 111-ho =...,•ST ~euion&Tr-'-'~dgemeuor. ma •YI • 111 e-· Alsiat in It. Comm'I. Manacermnt 111• .or v w rorucs •rm ne "' """'" ....... corations. Light baking ,000 ....... ..., •• EI Duties. incl rating . T•COllU. areconfenial,funlovlng trainee to package •P· for salon.So· •~laing· Lilla & Vicki's ....................... duties. Sal•rv open. Hts. IOUIU'A -... .. t nig, A rr pon "' fr mot vated to help ptiance.s. Some lifting Ir ID!GOe enjoys peo-•"-'-1._,. flexible. LO"rh Kitchen, ~!;r/~ ~t~r ~~fp~ ~e•'te!tp~ne:~ Pre: 1-• i. celebrate the Big 40. record keeping. Clean. pie & can handle busy .ti;:~wions m.<r747. Olflceworlt.Huntington employment testing. ManiilrTrir::e. We Mustbeabletoeatllkea qlietenvironmentover· phones.Mu1tbefashlon •No Investment or 4-1mn•• 51 00 PHoro MODB.S BAti~ER ....................... nlANEVER! MHRS 669-0207 c6utcill) CmLDCAR E I I n-b 8 1 s a 1 1 r y 0 P e 0 . are lookin!ll for 2 ag. horse, drink like a fish & looting ocu:n. review. conscious. Oprcy !or ad-Uceme D-uired. : ovng .... ac area. en or 17 •1752 ...... k f -~veln1v1·du11s~bo &otiealln~t. Good-t.rypos1't1'on.Call van~a-nt or lght • ..,.. mature woman to care citJ,aens welcome to •PP· i.. ........,, as or II'~-.. .. A9PLYJ PERSON .... "·U"" r Call m.oue Mr. Keith. I bomU .. • .. pcs lYCall .......... 8 u : •• G ....... n can ... ecbarge.make ...:645-;.=.;3632=:.;.·-----person . Ri c hard A+ RE Ca reer iornew · ..... ·· eves,,,.... .... , · ....., '""" · decisioos & solve pro-SUNDAY MAY 2nd Ouelette Salon, 200 · · d)is. Upm. Must drive. 11\iU Charge Bookkeeper J.w.tn......,a.a blems. Day or nicht BETWEENSfl9PM PAIT /TIME Newport Center Dr .. 1_0ev_e1op_..me_n•t•. ---Musician new In town attb female compa-niomhip. David. 646-0729 CdM.64U564evea. for part time position. cttativd1ijtl"verwlnt-shifts. You wUI receive NANCY&WAYNE Noweelieft41-. Cashier fr N.B. aert needed immed. to u hrs per day. nexlble ed ror expanding buckle c:ompl«e training. Com-k It c be D be 1 p f 0 r SCUllETS ANSWEIS A•enue-Uau.ry - lde&l -Adroit -SUNDIAL Wltneu to car accident, 3/20, War:ner •Nichols, HB, please contact J im Sims. 964-9815 wort drive-tbru photo echtdult, ror a CPA of· company. Must be able ~· n ~en e f Its . sandwich shop. Apply booth. E1per. helpful nce.SXJ.8084. to work with German anc . Interview-'~a and selling at 1 :1onY_.f'ri1-10_ •amt·. 15'2125·4J>fimr· but~~-Call for in: Gardener & H.tndyman silver. Help us growl Ina Mon lo-5. 699 Coast reasonable price-that's St temew. (714)874-70IO, 2-Jdlve per week. Must we'll help you grow. Cal Hwy, Laguna Bc h. what clauifled is all inidale,H.B. !bet. Bosa sa.mo r• DOW. 681.Q89 for appt. 4'7-6700. about. 6'2·50'78 •McFadden). · have references . --~ S«l alim, attr, W/M-mid OOOKS full & part-Ume, 7141•1172. i>'a desires slim attr. apply ln person The ,..""""'"_....._""""",rv'""n=c-e ___ _ Part time auto parts de· livery, $300-5500/wk. Call Steve: 646-5781. amsuaJ fem. mld 30's ac· 11 R ~ .. .,. l~/Tw.lst SALIS n~IME F r o n t o t tr h. e a p . Experlence refttred. pearance. Laguna Hiiis Pro~· J Wa)'lle Lec.•I Firm. Requires Tennis Club. 1171 Jam- gmeral office skills. ac· '""""bor=•=·------ cur•te typist, SO WPM Salelpenons 16·2S perf. minimum. Call Mrs. eam$40. ctar fr up. Sales Wlnalow for a P pt. for Zino's Pwa, N.B. lf 837-1080 Interested call 175-3101 The old cod1er bad bdn around for so loog1 that wheo he finally redred, the comu:y cave him a SllNDI ~oeaUDdvacto Brau 81 oon est. Sm.2personofclnNwpt Puerto Vallarta M.ei. 30100 Town Ce-Iler Dr.. requires 3rd part-time Apr. 15-295-ibmit recent IAfun•NicueJ.'95·3102 person. Varied ofc PAIT /TIME S110P at home . It'• euy liwn t-llAM. Ask for Elm exce11ent money withclaulfied6'2·5e'fl Cwt. balblnc suit photo & Cciemetidan d\.tlea, Including typina. brfef pere. d1ta: lit MAlloW Al.TIST A1Jprox 18 hrs per wt . name• tel t to 2005 W. Needea for -full/time Salary necotJable. Call ....,,,._. 5300 Balbol.Ste31S,N.B.Ca. =Won in~ Newport 8'1S.1Ml ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. Call . -=:.==------. {2 )274-IS7S. • ..... OfffCI 'J::;:'i! e~~ llHtMce fir• a. m1111n Inf ....................... SMACllNDtbruWJCH. CPEtR Coit• MtH ... kt r'"""' IUN ~W.eH, 7075 ... . oa a ,...._ wltl ........ AIE FIEI ....................... S45-4N7 tflc.t 1 1t11t ....... v=.uu:!'~jJ. '!':e~ omer Help, Ptr u-3, ....,... ..,.... IKW-Cll • wbnd1. Can do a lloo.·Fri. Gl!l'• Deli ... Accc•t• P.,.W. MJ.1611 variety or band1man Oollt Hwy, C41M. c.tl & t111•t1 hcftf• -liliiliiillilii.-.-•I ~-l'Tz.<1125 eves: uk torwt.m.ms Wt.~·=--,... • -s .. t ''' 1 em. . C•bll• ..,... ,....... .-t: aut • a re· OIRll Lad1 WOllJcl like to Por New~rt leach CelMO-t2'4. ;!~:~. t::;•2~;11: dauyourllome. a.eta. aPM Lo UPll. · YALOI lutblltffa area . 110-4MI 1'lll Uim. Call Cbuclt •w;J'IOllCS .... IRW 1nlned nune, ,~ duty m•. llOl·Frl ... s. Ltl&: 14 balrtd / blkl ,.,r. b•lll xlDt 1ota_J Gr~er[ i:b~nle!! •1Lcat,.,,\7,.n. l!ll.ir1.-aXiOi. CUSTOt• rffl"b St.). U /hr. lwYd·~ HllpW.W 7100 .... ~!-ii _..• ..... m7=--·----i.t: 11md \Ndlt Pit _ .................. ~ ~4/a.c. Halt.Cllblu•Cook 111. Mi Ylt. Orlllft 6 A P ART 111 NT A S • t.nlllkl a ludial etec· THI eooD IAITM MQ,_.... SISTAm MANAGER tromes' cllltrtbutor for IOUND· 8otdtr Collie Oouple lw IS tlllit Apt Wridul wbo II , MW· ~I ':'rJ ~-~., .. ,.p. T --~ I a H · B' motl~ted1 b~t ,,,ood 1:.t:;"'fo/~1 a1lll~1~ ,..~St;Jfm · :.....,.U.:.:tod: ComtHY l1nranee. Diii . ' ••••• , ,.,,. • vlCIOm I Hlllible. Ix· .. ...._ _____ , "J _ w n r -t r a ID • &1111. lr. Collel• educa· ctlleDt pay. APPb' lo LOii·~,..._ cat 11aCJrt1or Yecbt.a, ltll tilln P!....,..; Mt not pmoe Friday llard I •Cnaro, l1M91M.C.1. ~ ..... to1tact m 6 ._..1 Ilardi .:.."!°,,.am. cl~n, A .. w e• for Laclr ill · •...._I-~: llO _. __ _..._. __ L.Ul,;j_m111.._--I dHlellolr, ••· lln ....... c.ttf J)rtvt, I : ;:•llJI Cl11t I& Dd..,Ue. •I* DllJVllY PlllON, lf.L·-.. ,,..._.. .._..._ .... lnfae ..... 6 lill&all •P· H ' IJ• _... far at ,... ... --~~· II netW •• .,_, ~-a. AiilmOll ~~.,, ~-,.;,'g:lj m:i.~, .. ---,, _,_.._ Plll llM I • 'tf ewspaper Carriers for. -l'OUtes in Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley & Newport Beach • Good ICl iilCJI •rT~ &riaf Ptms CALL • C1RCULAT10 N J2.EP.AATMENT . ...,_, 142-4121 aeWna Un1erie at home · ..:..::::..;:.;.. _____ _ parties. 675.4273 f.tp1lf.!~= youth coun1ellna firm bas opealnp for 3-5 sharp ~' mature people to motivate ambitious l~IJ yr oldl. Call 2-5pm. eci.-1. ext. 343. Aak.for Andre&. ~~~~an atablilbed re1laurant dlalD.. lw IJI opening for u totry level payroll /lilt c ''1e;t.11r'<:::i;;;:_~~" wort In • 4 penoo ~- N . ..t-.-~ WJ(~?"' hyroll ~per. llelp(\11, but will trala an In· clriduaJ wbo lw llrolttd taper. 6 a cle1lrt to learn. Salar1 com · nmuralt with exper. .\*1 In penoa bet•• llm·Spm or 1e11d rt· ...... JOLLYJIOGIR INC. l'IOGGW.U. AH. trvlat. CA. fl7l4 <n4)Stf.GU1 Use AlllffrM ser vice wh e n pla ci n g y ou r ad . . . a Daily Pilot ad number w ill appear in your ad ... we take you r m essag es 24 h our s a day ... you call In at vour convenlence dur ing offictt hours and get the responses to your ad ... th is serv ice ts only $5.00 week. For more information and to pl1c1 your id cell 642·5611. 1r;:!li5:t!!iE:~!5~ .. ;:~3 .......... WlliW • ~ ..... =~!-~~ ... ...................... ...i--..... -.-........ 1!!1,~!IM ~ .......... '11 II' WILLCIAPT •-• ......... ••••• WllUY ......... , .... . 121 ,.,. .. -I LtA ._.. s.mtarial NOVA IL wJttlt. ID• ... w-.._ A ... PU Q•il:I C ••1 -'II ewe rt =. llrd/ou&brd Volvo .... • .,.. ._ _. •t~a co••r U. CllM. Walaut a.. no u.. Ub .... ••t co_~.l•fl•, IJO A•TIUCll ~-~·t lhMW It f!JI. llWUl ~· ~!! ::$.:1C3, - -·.-~ii::i··· _.._ ............ . ,......, . PlltOfY• lllrW awe -1 II b1ay It. Typewriter !led, .Port 119"_m A tood In V .. Cbtvy .. ~c~~~MIHJ~~~~~~~~I •/cue. Sean Smllh • 11' Rl&.ubou&, v Hull with fticifte, _. OtOAMTICSAl.£ Qinu, Ptrf. cond. SUO ·a • HP Evlanldt OB. --~~· .i=---1 Pipe, awal11a. tv'a, +9brnmoorin1. $500or • to)'I, 1tmo., ataln]tu bellott!(. !ZS.7fl4. ..._ fw Wt 1tH1. 154• Orchard, NB modtl home: Detk, 40, n..--r-.. •u 11 ...... ••••••••••••••••• C.M. Sat/Sun 9·5. crtdtoui, ellair, oria. ~ aw 111• Vt· IMFORTANT m.rm NOO.,.u•.tTA~ aboard allp avall. Ca~ NOTtCt:TO Judy or Har vey . READERSAND WOID PIOCISSOI fg:*'4 btwn tam·5em. ADVERTISERS Xuoa· Uo tyfln1 The price of Item• f'lef!'1, INllUlll, 1pe1 ,79 2'f~f\ 8AYLINER 1dvertlaed by vehicle •"Ppu•. Under w1rr. ''Vlctocia". ny brldae. dealer1 ln the vehicle Make offer. 833·2122 VHF radio, bait tank, cla1111led 1dvert11ln• lhaDed 1 11 d ~ dellth flllder o trlnert columna doea not In· boeid.. m m>r on ea · Sil, Sun lOAM . 221 crnce Deak • pale lh1bt wllh trailer. uWlll aell elude any applicable •o'eo 6SM7'7 alle Aft!thrat, BalJ1l1nd. =ee n w / p u 11 out blJanceofloan. taxe., lkenae, transfer h. art · . · writer at•nd. $'70.00. Call 6412843 Ifft, finance charges, ... PARK1li:WPORT . Wtttlnlbolllt 61hw1hr, H•••••ld6oodt IOH ,&M-8008. • ree1tor1lrpollutloncon· . APTS Harv:!. colo'Ss b:·ln, I IUY MMITUlf ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wal finish desk $50 trol device certlfic1tion1 -...1900 · · l· 75 La 9$7• 133 ANSO IV CARPEtlNO eredetui ..,5 exec chair or dealer documentary Wayta( Electric Dryer . Dileoollnued Une. sell '50 limp table ,20 loth, W 9060 Pf'tPat•Uon charcu un ~ Ptr llon·Wed. Worbllkenew. '6$. New hall·slle mattreu belowC01t. 5S1·2141 ~lei M·Ft-S · ... •••••••••••••••••••• 1.-otherwlae apeclrled r o ... ,.f,' _di" II 'l ! T .,. "' a 111 or n,-.. - w..c.w. ftrll llf-Md•• IMWll UU1L1 ',4b I JOO ---------IUY• · a:.i:"n =~~ ToP cJoitari for~Sporta ll7t BMW 2002. Ll1bt Can, Bup, Cam~rs. blue eaterlor •ltti 4 IJSJ tl4'1. Audr1 tpeed tranamlulonl 1\ln· Allt for U/C MOR rool and air cond lion· y~~:1:~ ~MiN~).r~;~.e~I~ MODELS 1871llleach Slvd Marino voTr.waaen HUNTJNOTON BEACH :,1~•Cb Blvd .. H.B. SAVE 'IO Red BMW 320i, alloy whJt , aunroot1 atereo, AT ~ M!v "/.:::-.~ HONDA IOwp~non ofnc., gu,.7912 tet. llO. New queen·slle. J . I S'I • DIWGHY .~the advertiser. Irv. Rdrtaerator very clean, flOO. n~sm .~ .......... !!?.~ (3) s· atw dilplay cases, Fiber1,1ued 4t with ._,... 9510 L'miiii.iaillli!5ii;~1iljll · '·t• -T'"l:L 1o~ mll·•. , ·f'r'oet free li\:e new 20 Sotu oew. $91 ea. 10 Diamond 1 75 ct wrap counter ' reg. oars ... call494·3202. •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• -...... •• ..., ui .. " SICllT A.IY . W . 113-aO . loveleata, • ea. Mat. Emerald rut.' E VSi : f~t:s;.~~rost new ' S 0 L I N 0 R a c 1 n g is Jeep Waaoneer, v3, °" 3100'-W. Cout Hwy. • ::. c::.. w~rhok!~ 1~ 'SANTA I ANA ll~iecretarlalop· Stove bJlo I bwesp&.957•5708 USOSI apprahed .-· · ~pped. 3 sell nils auc.o, P/S, alr. Am/Fm NNJ1Qrt8each teratral41 Call Anthony llOltunlt.la. Pleue tall wort. ~iJ. 0~=~ c n~~:: Rollaway bed. used twice $34,000; n~ed cuh: 1bJ~~~t~~e~!i!'~t rrlr.J3ll0064M474 · ta P/P. 6'·l4lt. "2·N05 daya &42-5767, evea ' . ·b~\ment. la$414m pd 11• Sean, wlll sell $13.800. Oya . S.2·5140, deik•115 m........ 81l ··"'-~ bot t d .W-1/ w• .... TED! wknda831430 MalY Hickle A1ency lorP>. S36-I019 eve1/wknda : 842·8421. ! . ~ ---.WI SI wane . er_.._ 9"'20 A ...... _. ff112}1u•rtJI 81 d Refri1 $75. Washer $9S Pih 1017 Private arty. ---• • ..,?'11 200ur v · Dryer gas HS Ali Formal oak din .. rm tbl. 6 t.d.lee ClrtJer Ilk. cold 831·11198 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Late rmdel Toyota1 ind -. e · I • · matching wicker back watch aella ror SUOO ••••••••••••••••••••• •• MOD .. V o I v o s . C 1 I I u • ·No~to.CAA.mH 15 : ~ work 1ood .. chairs. 2-leaves. New will iell ror 11000: ~o~alntllel1m1 tpr Pll1e~!s· '79 Downea1ter 38' Cul· Shay repM'a~A. P,~ltupa TODAY!!! rw PP cant . 12000 Sell SSSO OBO Papers Inclu d ed . ... ua se ..., ter1 auto pilot1. VHF. 'coupe•. 4 lo choose ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SEWJtiG MACHINE m.a71 Mer cier Blum sold 2e'!"e · NS-95e5, S30·7858 raoio. clean. K 6.000. from! (OOS7. SS > CStk. --.. -----•I ~erl almost oew, 2 sect f watch aell1 for 13000. 7"14 . 6 2 8 . 8 4 3 8 . A.!03). Price• 1tartin1 caD. :4!M-7382 G~I · sot~sbwri/4 will sell for SlOOO . UmbrellaCockaloo.STSO. 7l4~,T14-499-47s. at SEC.Et'' Rl~aJei.... alicer. ·~r acemen 1 c. 675-4117 Red Lord. $3SO. Very Ati'l' I 15.9C-3282 t.ame .$48·5"0. _....._ SH I OHLY Sf,HSI E x p • d i o R D . · "IQ.• ee · Couch 9. good condition Diamond aolitaire rln1 ---.. ,. . \PROCESS N.G t1plst, · SlOO. .45 ct. Appr. at $2195. GUU.FINCOCKATOO Doc:b 9070 , 'J)(tfer-Qy~ t 4: Order Hotpolnt aide by aide 966-S232 Best offer. Alaolavender With beautiful black ••••••••••••••••••••••• : proce11fti1 ' i>b~ea. rflri1/fnr YI/auto ice NB -del ho d j~~~O~lnlesvtal~,1e~~ or~thotf!eronr."'~2~&7e~6~ ~.~~~~~· r2u:~in~~~ ~ Furp, II.fa. c-11: DUr. .•148 .. 73() .,_, me: eCOr. • ug I .,. 8 • 846-3818 E.H. 5(0.88N . G"" Al, COND DRset,Supbol.chi:s,lge 644-2064. --.......&"'----1090 ~~"------• THEODORE I ROBINS FORD ''"....._ .. , c ......... .... U'-fHJ w 140.tUJ Premium prkts ~WMB>IMW'1 Maroon ... 1r4801 '19820 Anthdt, anrf XZP358 'Tta:!a ~~aded !M7XZM Salarl, al. cu•. ZCZ802 SADDLHA.CIC aJJ'W,~~~wy . Mlulon Viejo 831·2040 Pana• Service Open AU Day Saturday 301 W Warner Ave (l bit. wat ol Matn ) Im H~DA Civic Silver exterior with black In· terlor. In lmma cu late condition! lluat see. <JaSXUB >. JMS. Jim Marino Volklwaaen. 11711 Beach Blvd .. }f B 142-2000 'IZ Honda Accord. Need ' • · o. " J 115V, leal,'700.875-0092 ~ _...,_.a N 8 II t 38f .11,000 BTU. llae new ,. .....__ .-.C1I••-1010 ....................... · · 5 P up 0 t. .'01.i ltAkflUIC I I\ 11 (()\fA Mf\I\ fJ·•J ''"'f ;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-.-........ -.-.-.-,'I .NS-7112 u pc ~Viator bdrm set. ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• Antique Upri1ht Piano. ' wtr~wr. $1 0 per ft . REFR.IG Hotpoint, lae. ~. !.'!'uaooo· sell for LOYI IAUOOMS SSOO 673 l avail Apr l. lt4' • ..._,._,. SICllTAIY bottom 'ireeur, no frost, ~ u•-Hell um-'ffo u q u et I 540-0942 2 .... ...... 4 DOOR. ricJio-:-heater. p_ald for any uatd car (foreian or domestic 1 In toOd condition. . - See Us First! ,715 rtl. pty. No back pymts, oo contract. !OS9590 > 6)4.-0111 ~-uraoCda1-a firm OO.NS-7MZ NB mo"el home : ofc Delivered. Perfect for BRINKERHOFF Oak one up lb S4 ft .' COM auto trans. complete. Im iJnrmdlate os;ienln& W ti b G Id desk, credenza. chr. tveryOcca11on.673·4419 player piano, all oriit. Area Sii ft. Call 'Peuy needs repair. $800 Best for a secretar.y to the ea aanouse o ~· 11600 sell S800 d k Pattison 714.9c5.2473, oerer.54.5-1019 -Director or De::Ji D 6 R«fri1 .. l'rst/fr ·-c/f. . ' . REMINGT, ON ' ~~4'.,.! wor $800. ~ ~ ~ wkda8·5 Mualanc 9T co n vl ComtnlcUoa. G typ· DOO. C.11 S4S--Oi5f2 aft. n:-•-t F p Elec. Typwnter. xlnt dualc cond Rare find ln&, 1bortll1Dd , fi1ure ~1 .se . r. rov., cond,1130.493-0981 ~,,__ BOAT SLIPS AVAIL .!8118 llarbm Rlvd ro:\lde 4t I solid birch 11 pcs dot -Ne.~rt B, ch .• 20',· 2.5',• ·Hurry. 962·7788 '720 ta .. 111 comm.un1 cda· W.......M......_ ...... IOJS cond..11181.645.9442 Computer TRS-80 level 1920s u right a rand. ..., 33 ... •" 50 Costa :ilt'~il};IQ0330 ............. •••••••••• • • OA •• • requ re . -._, _.. -one 4K RAM w/baslc I liter oak excellent ""· • · ... • '""• · a.cn.tla.11 .,_ We>rd. proceuin g " ....................... Kini u water bed. hdbd, ~4 ame~ $500 ' cmd. Must 'sell. $1250 or ff/'. 642·4644, g..spm YeMdtt 9530 Wf IUY "''o DATSUN 810 4 Door. ~ta~rant equip~nt · MOW 36' /r:T 8 draw. en. beater, liner, f:szu best.147·7449 or 842· 1036 Side tle Back Bay, lo 32•, ••••••••••••••••• •••••• USED CARS & TRUCKS Sbdc with pwr . •~rinc expenence • definite Redwood 216 flecltln1. CIOOlP'.$350.893·2118 . pvt party, $160 mo No 71 GMC ~ .. ton truck & COMETN OR Imma culate inside • pli.w. Cotfgenial, small 4-2IO' long; also redwood Slroller, genwne Enalish Elec. f'.ender Rhodes 73 liveaboard. 645•781A Dreamer 8~. self con· CALL FOR out' (822BZP I l399S emce located ID :tbe ren~log. Lowest price ESTATE SALE Pram. comp I. $45 key piano $800/0BO. NB SLIP g lo 20' laaoed ca mper , lint --... -."'ISA.L J I m M a r I n 0 arvlne lad·ustrial auar. J im or Keo Dltirebousebofd-offine Airline dog ahipplng Also Fender tube amp . u cond, loaded. $9875 best nugi;;~r-• illo Volkswagen 18711 . Comp.Ju. E:tcelleot anytjme,775-14lll. furnishings : beds.sofas, cratellS.581-0618 , $250.6'73-4417 2-6PM Marcus C annel , oCfer846-76221flSPM Cornuer-DeLi o Bea ch Blvd . H B med It" a I/de at a I TV . Brown Jordan. 4hp '-d shart outboard 100/rm. 673·814S e es . 182l~HEBEYIA~ OLBETVD -=142-~·-2000.,.__. -----... peckaae. Please contact v., Sick gas· power ce· desk. t.mjJI!. dreuers. 2.1 c':ir side/side refrig 4 W1ltef DriHs '550 :ACff ll.'1 . -~ . ¥s B)'rne, ()ran.1e Coun-ment mixer, 2 mo. old. etc. J.2.5 FM. Sat, Suo. dbl bdrm set 831·1230 Ww Gr.ct PllllN> T rf...&1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HUNTlNGTON BEACH ty Restaurant Services. . 751-0383 1326 Mariners Driv e Watnuf rutisli Wfth Ivory r-.arcntOll * ... _W 'ti ca..·yv 147-6087 or • Ml..s732. . ·ic-res& NwptBch.842•4116. ' Weddin1 dreu·Never Keys. Excellent cond1· ....................... 4w....tDri:e' 549.3331 · ~..-.. I030 Antique 1920's Mabog. ~·~~i: a ~0i:~P~~~i~ Uon. s~Wr-6329 LUY ,.clumt Top Oolla Senior ciliiens to do sew. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dining room set w /6 962·Sl59 9120 Loaded! (21115'/6888 >. f ing at home pa·rt·time. 500mm /F8 mirror lens chairs & buffet $'700. An· ••••••••••••••••••••••• S'/298 less $500 rebate. p 'd .· Stl-6466 . · . $175. tique Chinese Lamp Ta· ADLER SE l~ self cor. Sewl!.g Modt6M1 IOU Camper for Datsun p1rk Met '"u S67fl al 968-9462. ble $350. 559-8664. rectlnl typewnter. $650, ........................ up. S300. David H~ • ·~Crf1•-•-"' For Your Car! SNPPIMG /IEC 'Ci -excel cood 731 ·•445 N s · · 2 o o 1 540-0051 "'"'-~ u t 30 &6w·sf1 k S T A R T V O U R 4 pc sofa. brown. almost r nu 1 n g er . Dove/ al Sts. JONl4SOM & SOH tk.0 nex. E~r~~~· DARKROOM TODAVl new$250; 6 antique solid· Use ab 1. e J U n Io r Memory, touch·tronic, NEWPO T BEACH L-.. M A.PP>IY at: Medical Mart Beseler 23Cll enlarger, back oak dining chairs Wheelchair $2.5. Call 714 Uprgt cat. xlol. Must Holoriud libs 9140 26216iiirb0~ I '70 2401 ~F'arad,.C.M.. enlaraing lenses , $350;42inroundformica 951-4676 sell,j!SOofr.960-1316 ....................... Costa Mesa S40-5630 First year colfectors' salellght Ir filters. elec· dining ta'ble a nd 3 .UU acla bed. 1100; ki.n1 ~ IOtl Puch moped. Xlnt cond '70F 100 car._ Com,ftlete~ rebuilt tronic timer. various molded chairs l2S. hdbrd walnut, $40; bird ....................... +extras. $300. 4 X 360 Y8 4 spd. S92S or Alllol. ... °'1ed engine. ew t res and Student Jobs easels'& every type of 646-762.8 ca e . 760-0344. Skis. K2 . 244 s hort ~-1543 best offer ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~!'~~~t&~;::s:!~ HEY! d~ accessory Im · Queen Anne desk S300 tS>cm. Marker binding. ...~OTOBECANE ~·0948 AHoto.o 9705 Included. SSSOO Eves IOY~laU a1J,Dable & !"UCh, much coffee tbl S200 lo boy 2 Etaeeres. walnut. ~.Chris645·1864 mvOPBEOD. runsf~.6889 Tnicks 9560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• andwedlends&S9·1770 10 Accord, 5 ap. 32K ma, 50,000 ml walTanty. air, amlfm cass stereo. new braltes, 1Jnt rond Ask· ~· /'40-3225 La.rn:_ 77 CMc 1.2100 GH1.37ev/6'~ll51 dy i9 Civic, 36K m1, clean. 40mpe, S3BSO 962.-2297 '79 Accor-ct Hlchbk, auto . AC, beiee. ~bit eng, xlnt cond. 48.000 hwy m1 SSSOO. 776--4021 wkdys. 645-7157 eves. 9730 1979 JAGUAR XJ12L. .UU power, maroon with matching leather in· terior. Must see to •.J>- precl 1 te. (375WYG> SteaJ this one for only Sll,995. Jim Marino Volkswafen. 18711 Bearh B v d .. H.B. 142-2000. SAC.tFfCE '71 XJ6 .• mint cond . re· built rmtor. new paint. Runs superbly S6.000 67S.3&14 How .wOuld 'yon Ute lo mo~ .. All m. excellent _,,. 5• Salem maple c bro me & g I a s s .,.., ... EW & USED I ...... u m·-b ... ,..,.._00 a condit100 Will sell IS ~""· ,, •• "'•42 ........., Goods 1094 · · -.................. ••••• " 1 Special Ed1t1on ~u .... .., .,., ~a.ckaoe. only. '"600 . cbest$100.9S2·3S97evs ea.,.....,... ~ ~ 1979 FORD FI SO R "'1 "'~OMKO '76 XJ12L. I d week' [)Q lik dri • • _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ycles/ anger ~ ,. a. y.-11o. x DI con , mmi)vies;:~ic:.pi:~ l~ves. E!eganteartbtonesofa• Lawnmower. fr o nt Buo yancy Com . Scoohn 9150 Atrconditionang, power Orange . ntys oldest -AMi•enwy S0,000 onf mi. C211 > parties. beach parties. . . loveseatm polished cot-throw, l'ffl llSO. Lawn 9 ensator /backpac k •••••••••••••••••••••••steering. automatic & leading dealership 210ll 337.Q515(71 )641·l291 ~many other thin~? "'-8040 ton. xlnt cood. S6SO/bst edger $7S Both excell combination. Scubba 1974 HO~D~ lr~nsm1ss1on, and low Bero re yo u buy Beautllul car. Red and •79 S . 111 XJ _6 -or oCr m.mo 8C7·990S Mdl 570 SllO Tom " mtles SAVE SS Ideal anywhere. come an & see black. one of only 600 eries . · you would proba Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• · ~ 2706 · Slreet legal. ~t o fer for foreman F1nancin1 us. & the GTV6 and the originals All options. showroom! 91 m c,o~d l2,47s . i:irobtbly enjoy workink KE~~D Pups. AKC. Walnut Coffee Table Moving out of State · Call494·3202. 1va1lable llR61816). SpiderVeloce! $16,000 213 ·493 · I ISi ,_:,,....,mo eRit tonlsex - lorus. Oiampsare. M/F. Pet & Beautiful f urniture Refrig sadeXside s75 NEW SA IL BOAR OS I Ask for Jim Blair, 11:•cH IMPORTS daY$ ...,.,_.., wsrr e aa at QUAIJFICATIONS: s how . P. v t P t Y . Best Offer 731-3951 Coffee. 2 end tables ITS. 1111<> Call Bill 998·9SSO '71 HOHDA 350 Theodore Robins f'ord ~ . $18,000; make offer l.Over l2yearsohge. 213/897.IJ4Saft6pm. ,, . (SP ) •-di . MPlanls up to S20 5122 Eves8Z7-28S4 · Dlduro . 6423338 Call642-00lO 841!DoveSlreet.N.B 7t240Z· Xlntcond.sun · (714)S37·29IO. 2. Neat honest and de· u Ylllg rm c ..-oang aple !Terrace I Irv ------75~0900 root. amlfm cassette. pendab(e Doberman pups, AKC. 9 rm ad S250 all. <Grn. 551-0424 Surfboard 6'7"' Russell '72 HD Spor:tster Chop Long· Bed Trurk !9111 Harbor Blvd . C.M air cond $3500 OBO. 973' :t.Work~er schooland wits, male. ears & tail yellow, brwn) 673-9318 N Be h T $65. Wat ersk i 66 '' per,voferyerq.U.:.c.k_07~51SOor rampershellS350 6._1•7170 _,___ 962-7346 ___ _ SalurdaJI. cropped.@ 964·3654 all7pm. ~:l:°~em~~hip.e~s O'Brien "Es pecial" brin m ,,_. .,, _ 9M-27_86da s All -~------ CALL TODAY ! Beagle Pup, Fem . AKC. Qu. si water bed w/htr 644-0239 • 110. 1194·1276 Honda 350. $400. Yamaha 79 Oat.sun Pickup. long a 1&00 S37·5836orS31·52S7 91rm's SIOO, gentle, all ~ frame. ped.: New Stussy s urf brd 80sl bike. r~cent tune·UP bed. 5 spd. air. c:ampr Yetoce COftHrsJott? 8AMtolOPM shots.Call775-S215 ~.$12S.6(6·5398 Superscope Tafce Sfl8in. s wallowtai l. $100. Suiuk1 400, Baker shell xlnt cond Lo mi I All parts to convert 101 S ,.._k ~i I I 1 Recorder. used tw re Cstm. airbrush artwork! frame dirt bike 1200 ~·. 979-7660 · ' 1~00 to Veloce, exc """ er an e . ma e, House full or furn for sso. Library or 40 8 M k r 751-0383 ---. ptStoos. Sl400. 979-27411 yrold. wlchjldren. sale: 1901 Galatea.Ter· Track Tapes, n ever a e 0 f er Ca 11 'T3 EL CAMINO aft 6 k d TRAVEL AGENT-Min 2 flSoCfer.64-4-0481 race, <Intine Terrace) used, variety of music, !':.t~n &pm & 9pm . '78 HONDA. 750-F, blk. 4 Runs good new paint er pm orw n s. · .yrsuper .. muslbe com-Germ. Shepherd Pups. CdM. $7S. Cuisnart f'ood · · 1111Ker~erh~r rhron:ie . 2000. ' 979·5182 IMW 9712 puter trained. 552·1995 AKC. Exce) disposition. ElegaDt teak wa ll Processor. like new ISO TY,aaclo. 8.000 or1f miles .. Mint '78 CHE V LUV -L-••••••••••••••••••••••• a1t5PM. . . $150,ev l..Ql3.1190eves. shelves/ cabinets, a Un· 63l-4389 tlR.S...-.0 tot• ~~~J.:s lSSO firm mileage. prire, ·$3~ Waitress: Experienced, AKC Springer Spaniel 7 its, 157S; custom uphol. For Sale: 2 Rod Stewart ••••••••••••••••••••••• --Showroom cond. 645·6898 1 ·~wages, n'O tips. mo. s, liver & white, ~ mattressl w 2 b11ge ti ckets . S20 each BEAUTIFUL 2s•· RCA '78 Yamaha 400XS. very aft m. 7730 I •100 '""9107 ""'''--$l2S Must sell """_, color 1V sale. 2 yr wrn-lo ml, new tires, l int . · ma e, •. ·....,. :;;t;;;,fer.Ms.a6l9 ' .....,.._. ty. $148. f'r'ee delivery. con d . S 8 0 0 I 0 B 0 80 Toyota SRS Long·Bed WAJTRESS /WAITER Exceptional German Bm.COUC?b,likenewSl75. 1VJohn's646-1786 7a>-0239. P/U. 5 speed, sun roof. w/car for wicker basket Shep. pu111. AKC, see S. 1055 Jo11in1 ma ch. $150. chrome wide wheels. "ll.llChaerv. 9:30-1:30pm. parents. XIJlt tempera· ••• .. ••••u•••••••••••• 831-1077aft6. Teac 4 channel Simul· MototHo.1, S•J AM·fM stereo cass w Man.·Fri.Eaml~$l7~ ment. 7 wb. $125 up. 8ft Nau1ahyde couc h sync tape recorde r, lat/Storoge 9160 equalizer. Windo w witty. Must be neat. 90.s92 s125 Portable dis-$400/bstorr.67S·7870 ....................... packaee. fender nares. penonable & energetic. SW.AP MHT b b 185 Both Al lntellivbion. 3 cart .. S230 R t n t · 2 2 · I u x side mirrors. 34000 mi. m.cr747 aft. IOam for DOlllW•M""'9ES Every Sunday. hm· wu er · or make offer. Call rmtortlome. sips 6. self. Uc "OORMLOO" S5600 apP. Blaet" tan 3pm, Orange Coast cond S4MI01. Ans.....,r Ad 1572, '"2·4300 cont. $295/wk + IO'lm1 ODO. (714) 963-4881 Eves -..,S ·-,,,..,. CoUege, Fairview • Ari· n..1 • "' ft Wh · t 1 woo .,. for appo' t nt t •-W~nted fo r Newport " · ,,_ . ....,. irlJlon. Costa Mesa. Ad· ':7~w ~5: He!d 'gk15 34 houn. 64(}.8585. 111 me 0 see • Beach Company: Dis· La.bndor Retriever masaion free to buyers. 175'• never used S75; Manchester hm spkrs, RENT 26 ft mot.or home. -=dri~ve ..... _____ _ bunemenll Clerk with ~· 6/wlts old, yellows Se 11 er R es er v a . Ruacraller kit with lool Walnut cabinets. very Sips 8, fully loaded '79 ford ~ ton. su~r cab. minimum.of SS wpm, 10 ~~lacks. 1200. Ca II Uons/lnfo. and frame. never used nice 12" bass. STS ea. 645-8616 lo ml. ps, ~b. air . 8 trk. key. touch !t. Jenera! 964-141; 759·5089. 556-5880 $40; lg antique chest S4S. 546-2011 73 Motor HOMt 8' bed , s arp ' S6SOO .. clencat abrlttaes, fe· Ycrtahire Terrief M pup· 03-0129 ev Barzilay HI-Fi cabinet. 4 star, low mil. excellent 546-74116 · ··=~~&;~m~~~01~t f;ldcbam~~IO wks HARBOR VIEW HILLS Sterlin& Sliver Reed & walnut fin ish, 2 JBLcond1'7.SOO. y ll art S '78 Ford Co urier . 752-1400ex.t2317. · GARDEN CL U 8 S.rtoo's Lark 10 place Dl30 15in spkrs $300 PMS40-8379 loD1bed. radio. low Golden Retriever pups, GARAGE SALE March lttting + many serving 846-9687 1....,., lllU&A.. f U miles. good cond $3300. W.wdf'Nastor withsbots. 21, 27, 9AM .. PM . lS20 pcs. Sac. $1.SOO. 641·6126. 2 -•or 1V's 1 wiremote ..,,,.,, _962_·1&__..1 ____ _ ODetat.or.Lanier nopro· 754·7883. Keel. CdM. Haebld S4S-7298aft6PM. w• ' •••••••••••••••••••••• "se Ford Ranchero. ~ I h bfem. Lal\lll. a Hllls·La'w v ........... , T ri items, plants, Euter oont.tol.SlSO ea. Utility trlr. new.all -.. .f1rm-typina wills and ........ u.re er er puppy, bulteU. li\lll family membership, 675-4117 melal, 5xl0, ramp, brks, eng, runs, needs work . trwta Muithaveatrong n11le,AKCCbamphnea. . . John Wayne Tennis Stereo tun d k .642-8915 fu ~or use for parts. , · typini and grammu lhotal!00.54H124 Art work. livtng room Oub,11000.64-4·"301 lncredibl/~0::.': 14~: . 51·8876 . lkilll.Cal1Mf1.Winslow .:HOAGIE" 11 mo. male lum,Anaweringservlce BOOKS FOR ALL OC· ff/5-4117 AllloSerYlce;rortl '58 CHEVY PICKUP . . • fchpl)t837·10llO Sprin!er Spaniel needs (Pbone Mate) propane CASIONS·lf you are 19"AdmlralColorTV &Accnsoriet 940 Runs good. $SOO. Ph --•-· I I tank etc 631·21800 •••••••••••••••••••••• """"'27"" aft 5 u.... • • . IUYe act on, x nt com-• · bored Ir like to read call. w _,.. »» · · -[ • M · pan'lon. Sac. $100. GARAGE SALE:Lota of SN-76411 have what you orksgood, S75neg. Y-'570 .............. ~ ........ 754-1611 IOOd atlif, 2'702 Hillaide need. Educational cook fl46.53lll/M9·6S24 A.TTIHTIOM ...................... . ........ iOOS I>r., N.B. (Off Ford Rd). books. encyclopedias ' Walnut stero combo, 8' Ma '75 Dodie Conversion. •M••••••••'•~u·•••••P hteY 1045 Thur, Fri, Sat. 1714) didiooarieaavall. allow cablnet.L...::.llnt tone, loaded w/every xtra · ·• ladder ·back chain, • •3804 ..-umnceww. 751·8472 OWM&S avail , clun. $41 70 $ZOO Oak dresaer 5 d r -·••• .. •••••••••••••• ...-.. -TONf'lEAlfCOVER ~IMS tUS. 0 a II c. r ¥: d German Shepherd ml~. 2 ..,, •• clothillg, fllllJ, .nli· For Ille: Long IOfa, twin 19" Sony Trinitron $390. Flta wo·s. •71. '81 ~-'-'--------- dreuet. szso SCottlalt ~1 ~lood bome, lov· q11e11 IDd power lawn bed, bike frame. bird Call all6PM, Never uaed. 175 Dod&e '71 Conversion . wall CIOci, lilS. Xlnt. •cnuaren. lllM977. mo"er. S.U·210T. Hl cqe, lllll).J9. 646-5339 Miria631·7797 Ive ma Van. a 000 mi. on rblt Tf0•JH7 .or.·collect Black Female Doa1 I DltrtllSt. offWllloG SbeU ror ton1 bed full u IHh&Mstlte ~~!4c,/:tean S3 7 oo. (ZU)271 ... Nwpt Bell weeta old, Llb/Goraon aile Sat·Sun Mar pu tn.tck. $3110. Ex cood. ......... UTE BODY WORK• , · Seroiled ltcn ·headboard Sdter milt . ..,,..,... ~~Icy, etc 2U tM-32111. ....................... paint.up to 50% off your 66 F.ord, lon1 body. $1C5. Type Id tray ."5. RETRIEVER llLX F ~Pl Cl.. Mllk4lll _,... 90 I 0 bocb est. 536-1832 =er:: well. $500. lned c*ch maker 915. 2 Yl"I. w/ahoU, fl"ff to OomeOne-0>1ne All! .... • ·tOIJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ! broltu violin HO. @Cfbomt,53S-T8 GilatlbaaJD11eSale -IS~fl ALFA ROMEO PARTS ...,. '590 • .... ::..:· lltb St. (VeU --.............. FIBER BOAT All parta to convert 101 .................... u. ~awr,ctrt111MO. Pa .. , HIO Frim.r~H;!nenf'r· ~~~,:,~~~1~:: 04.3202 lfOO to Veloce.:. uc. WIMm>YOUI i elec. rnovemut, SIOO. •-••••••••••••••••··~ n · or med 1 yr. S2$0. sst·m II' Sevylor PVC Raft ~t.ona. ll400. uennls, GOOO USID CAii l6091154=10il0 -1 C.M.TteaCe!ter. Upm w/lallalrpump,llZ5 2'748 after 6prn or Anythillrcoulderid: Wnn QtMea a --N ...... Lov· arqe Sale Sat Only I Clll 49.1.ot11'7 wkndl. "t.hru lteO r~•becl1• A'f°lttolre, =~~A~R~::r.;,r~ ~~l.our11m.: '1:;~51rar~~~1~::~: Boat, 12 . Inflatable ·a VW Paatback front · ' • ' ....,, fuu·lenltll llllt· · · · Top cond. SU5/oj)o. Ac II 111 u w / 18 h .P flOIL New rotora, ahoc;kl, • nn •:a-~;.;=~ Miu 1&1• IMO IOIO f7Md tvlnrude mtr, IUO. ::~ana, both llOO. ~.II ....................... .. ............... l KllRom JI. 85 Wilt ball .......................... .__ ____ _ amp!lft« wtth one 18'1 ........ M*il•••ctt/ I•------• ,......,, 1111, 1 Guild ~ f028 ~i~ (jllllDet w2 LJ1r.BL U" ........... •••••••••• .. ~M "' b bod" Iott' ·--MarlllfElectrlc1an .. aolf 1 'AI #1 .. °'9lp c...., ..! aaliutiiW·11vd. OOISTAIHSA ,...__. ... & '=/lnatall/re~lr truc .,._l>elt er. to _....... rWi L.U t mlK \AJUfttf parta ,,,, "' .... wort Mt.-..... . ----...~--i.--.-1 ....................... ,~ ........ CJftlce fwdun (or HI• at dluouat prl cH.i 111.t HH v .. car Ii nalet>ll an MA -................. ••l•ablt-••lllcle It••• OD La• rn u PQ1llTY ta p_ttceleul llJal "'"1f:&.. t(· 811,ud Wladlua. U. .. .....,. •• .n. ..... . . ra=. llerillft. Yr.':'!1.r.::,i::. '!!a,. ....... -·Ifft IAIL IOAIDI ...... Nl-~---·~1 -. c.11•--. ·-, ••• CREYIEI BMW n.11~··2 IMWa~ ! A few remun ng '81 Models & Demos are still available! Wt specialize in: European delivery and flawless ~wned BMW 's. Where Customer Service Comes Isl! Sales·Service·Leasing 2(111 W. Isl. Santa Ana (71,)835"3171 Cloled Sund a Mooas . IN STOCk HOWi • Chell ••r t••4 ,..._.._ ef DINO. .. 4 9UALITY PDOwte-..W.• ••II H et•er fl1t 1 ~ f tlL C4•C..fa ' TODAY! SAUS••Y1C1 LIASM SADDLEIACK IMW aMU...._,, PIWY. ......,..""° AvwY ~. olf 1•5 131-IMO ~ Open Sundays '73 DalluA 240Z. auto. new tires & brks, xlnt --------cond. . 963..et7S '72 Pick-up Good condition 7fMalditU7 Loadecl wrtli utras . IOO. 752·2619 ----=SS"'-7;...;·.5:;.;:l;,;:;'3:;,,:.. ___ '74 RX-4. Not running. Sell for cheap. Ca II tbe Window man. MS-1392. '80 211YlX. bit wired int. 21.000 mi Sl400. 975-9289. ~ 9721 •••••••••••••••••••••• MEW DELOREAN <•060S7) $24,950 HONDA I f7'MAZDA Q7 Low miaies, all ·options. like new. MUST SEE! 1 ! !421UZE) SADDUIACI . IMW/SUIAIU lll-204b 4tS.4Ht Mlre11•1a.. 9740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• s~~~~,. ::ec: . HO.ZOO toe MW ~ ........... !?~! Coolpa~ld.:~t Im · '81 Ferrari 308 OTSI ports Dired lease ind 80 960-1323 days. 142-9282 rm~. aenalble pymts. eves K lth D ia l 213 o r · e 714/MERCEDES 11 213 fW or714/U'7·2333 I I ATTIMT10M Me TON~-~VER F\ts MG's, '71· 'II Never used, $'15 Maria 631-7'797 Ive ms MEISTER PORSCHE/AUDI 13631 Harbo &fvd. Garden Grove Wts-Senlce-f.tot"'9 714 636-2333 • ATLAS CHRYsuu-LYMOUTH 2929 Harbor Blvd .• Cotta Mita. Tel. 546-1934. 3 block.I eouth of San Dievo FrMW11Y oft HerbOr Blvd. Complete; ,body thop. Sal". Sefvlc.. Pw1a. Servlc. Dept. open Monday thru Frldmy 7:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. and 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. on Saturday. • ' llACH MOITS 'l 848 Dove Street. N9WPQr1 a.ch. Tel. 752--0lb> Call us, we're the spec1allat1 for Alfa Romeo, Peugeot, Saab & Maseratl • THIOOOll tall IS PORO Modern .. i... Hrvlce, ..,_ body, oelnt & tire dept1. Competitive ratet on .... & dllty ,.,tals. 2060 Hart.or Bfvd.; Costa M .... ~Or.14CHS21 1. • JOHMSOM & ION UMCOLM ti9CURY 2828 Harbor Blvd .. Co9tl Miia. Tel. &4CMl30. 51 YM(I of friendly family HtVic9 -Or-. County's oldest Lin· coin-Mercury deei«lhip. I D7 MATCH THE NUMBERS OM THE MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES • MIWr<>RT DATSUM •Dove Street. NMport Beach. Tel. 833-1300. At the trlengle of Jamboree. MacArthur & Bristol behind Vlc- tofta Station. Sain, Service, Leulng & Part.a. F1"1 dis- counts to the publlc. •• HAIRS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. S40-9100. Orange County's Largest Cadillac deller. Sales. Servlc.. Leas- ing. DAVID J. rt1Lurs IUICIC.flONTIAC-MAZDA Sales • Servloe • LMSlng Laguna Hille 24888 Allcla Parkway 837·2400 CHtCI IVllSOM PORSQ6AUOJ.VW 415 I!. Cout Hwy., Newport Beach. 673-0900. Th• only dNlerlhlp In Orange County with theee th,... great INlkee under one roof! ~ ' ALAM MA6......J.. POMnAC.IUIAIU ._, *'bor Blvd., ~ MIN. Tel, $41 4300. s ..... 91Mce, L"9ln9 .. "Mr. GoochrltllCh." • • IOI LOMGftRE PONTIAC 13600 Beach Blvd . Westminster. Tel. 892-6651. Orange County's oldest and largest Pontiac dealership Sales. Service, Parts SAIL CHEVROLET 900 South Coast Highway Laguna Beach "a..y •... It ......... ,.., .. SALES HOURS· Mon.-Frl. 9-7, Sat. 9-5, Sun. 1C>-4 41M-1131 546-9967 COSTA MESA DATSUN 2&45 Hart>or Blvd . Costa Mesa Tel 540-6410 Serving Orange County for 16 years. 1 Mile So 405 • SUHSET FORD, IMC. (Home of Wllhe ttle Whale) 5440 Garden Grove Blvd . WestminstM Tel. ~10. • • SAMT A AMA DATSUM 2001 E. 17th Street, Santa Ana. Tel. 558-781 1. Your• Original Dedicated Datsun Deekw. • MIRACLE MAZDA We've movedl Our ne~ location it 1425 Beker Street, Costa M"8. Tel. 545-333-4. Stop by & visit our br1nd new thowroom and see why we're the '1 Mazda dealer In Southern Callfomla. Sale1, Sefvlc., Parts encl LNSlng. • AMAHllM MAZDA "o.lr o.c. ...... h4lr ... Pn.~Le9C..." ll01 S. Anaheim Blvd., Ana~m 956-1820. Jutt north of Santa Ana Frwy, on Anaheim Blvd. Call u1 first! ''WE ARE HARO TO FlNO-ftUT WORTH ITl" • SADDUIACI IMW~U 2&402 Marguerite Pkwy , Avwt P!nwr. •• Wt ofter what no bank or leM comptny can: 1 lxl*""f ltaffad, moat modern Mrvlce & J*19 dlPt.: 2. 0.-of the 9outttland'1 moat expenenced ••a ie.lng ttaff; 3. Ellmlnatlon of the middleman by leeetng daeiw dlfelt. 13, ·2CMO Mtl9iOl'I v DGM LUSIMCi, IMC. 730 W. 19th St .. Costa Mesa 642-1944 You're In for a surprise at CGM Leasing • COMHIU CHmtOUT .2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mela. Over 20 years serving Oran~ County! Salet.J _lealng, aervlce. Call 546·1200: apeclal parts line; 5.46-MOO; body shop line. 754-0400. • IOY CilVH ROI.LS IOYCMMW 1540 J.mbor" Road, Newport Beech. 64o-6444. Sallta, Setvlce, Parts And Leasing. COMSIDH IT IOI.DI Ulad <*I are In demand and Mii qulckty when 8dVerllsed In ct..ifled. To place your pnvat• !*1Y Id, can Sally L• II 842-5878. • -,. - •• nsational , . 1 ·Shutters by Sherwood 1 · Custom designed and hand finished shutters by Sherwood craftsme n add sensational beauty to any area in you r hom e ... and frees you forever from tho e pring hou sekt>cping chore a11d ex pen!-.es inherent with other window treatment. At Sherwood th e word custom is taken seriously. Each phase of the work is truly c.:u~tont. After ,_ carefully measuring your shutter needs our craftsmen custom de ign to t·omplimt>nl earh indi' idual area ... Living Room ... Kitchen ... Bedroom ... Closet Door .... Pass Through~ ... or other. Louver wid ths range fr om l 'A" to the dramatic 4~" tyle and are u~ed in a variety of ways. 'ome area · lend them ·elves well to the movable louvers on th t> upper half of the pa11<'I and a :-.olid raiserl panel below. Clo ct doors are an ideal plare for louvers, they allo .... frc~h air to Oow through · kc<'ping ga rment_ fresh and ready for wear . .... The arch window above is a perfect exampl e of how shutters can folio" and enhance th E' • architectural design of your h~me. Oosed these shutters will provide total privaC'y and ac t as excellent in ulation from heat or cold and greatl y reduce any ou t!-.ide noi!.E'. If you feel like inviting a little outside in, simply fold back the panels and take fu ll ad va ntage of the view. You are in control, open as many or as few louvers as you wish to please the moment. The photo at upper left de.pic'ts a charming dining room area which overlooks a <.Jerk wi th a panoramic view. hutters were selected here to capture the view and were fini::.h t~d to <'ompliment the room with long lasting beauty and flexibility. The lower left photo gives you an example of how custom shutters can add an c·xtra dim~nsion of light and a view to ~ somewhat diffi cult area. Sherwood is a family owned and operated company with a reputation throughout Southern California for reliabt_lity and product perfection. No sub-contractors are used. All wo rk i~ done by our. highly skilled and dedicated personnel ... from the custom design. to the final installation by our bonded staff installers. Factory showroom and administrative offices are located at 3655 West Mcf adden and are ope n for ~ · your conve nience Mon thru Fri 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sat. 10. a.m. to 4 p.m . Call today for a free carefully measured in home estimate. 3655 West McFadden (one-ha)( block east ol Harbor) Santa Ana, Calif: (714) 839-3360 • . . . , J' ~I I 1111111111 DI /flllllll llWI rtHmsoA Y M AJ;' 11 H ' ,, /\N L t ( OllN IV CALIFOflNIA 25 CE NTS &tlmated ,,.._.. of ftuorocatbon• Into en11lronm4W'lt dettrmlned by atmoepheflc data. Code violated? 500 THOUSAND H B trustees protect some teacher layoffs 400 THOUSAND ---.... Chemical Manufacturers Association's estimated release of fluorocarbons Into environment. 1970 19 75 O~one shield periled? UC/ scientist says danger of fluorocarbons continues By JOEL C. DON O('tt. Deity Not at.ft Despite earlier warnings that fluorocarbons in the atmo6phere could increase rates of skin can- cer or produce genetic mutations and even alter the Earth's climate, emissions of the man-made chemicals continue to rise, according to a UC Ir- vine scientist. UCI 'Irvine atmospheric chemist F. Sherwood Rowland, who first warned of the dangers of fluorocarbons to the Earth's protective ozone layer, reports that the total amount of these chemicals in the atmosphere has tripled in the last 10 years. And because fluorocarbons remain in the atmosphere for as long as 90 years they might pose a hazard to the environment well through the next century, he said. Dr. Rowland's findings will be published in the April issue of the Geophysical Research Letters. His research team included UCI chemist S .C. Taylor, Derek Mo ntague of UCLA and Yoshihlro Makide of the Universi~ of Tokyo. l Their results differ sharply from data on ~early fluorocarbon emissions compiled by the ,Chemical Manufacturers Association (CMA), an industry trade group. l Rowland said yearly emissions of Fluorocar- ioon 12, the most common of chemicals known generically as chlorofluorocarbons, increased by 20 percent from 1974 to 1979. 1 CMA reported the release of Fluorocarbon 12 into the' atmosphere has been reduced by 19.6 percent during the same period. In an interview, Rowland attributed the dis- crepancy between his findings and CMA data to the different sources of information. CMA esti-. mates come from chemical production reports from 19 manufacturers, representing 95 percent of the total world production. Rowland's investigators used atmospheric data collected from the South Pole to the island of St. Lucia in the West Indies for their calculations. ''The chemical industry has reported reduction in the overall production and release of fluoro- carbons; however, the atmosphere tells a diffe- rent story." he said. · Dr. Joseph M. Steed, a chemist with DuPont and chairman of CMA's Fluorocarbon Program Panel, disputed Rowland's findings. However, in TOH8 Of' f\.UOflOCAllaoM-12 ACCUMULATID IN ATMOPHIUll WOM..DW10e (MMeund -h .i-.ry) I I I / 091 fully etf.CllYe 6 Annou~t ol pl1111 10< ben /" MILLION on UM U -OIOl pt~lllll I 1 • In I,.,. United let .. ,.. 5 I ~ . MILLION / __.. 4 v MILLION v 3 M~ v 2 MILLION 1 MILLION 1170 1 1 7 5 111 0 a telephone interview Wednesday, Steed would not cite specific objections. He said he wouldn't until he bad aeen a full copy of Rowland's new reeearch paper. Fluorocarbons are ev~r-present gases used in industry and by private consumers. Aerosol sprays using fluorocarbons as propellants account for about 50 percent of their use. Fluorocarbons also are found in auto air conditioning syste~. refrigeration units, foaming agents and industrial solvents. Rowland said more than 95 percent of all flu- orocarbons produced eventually find th.eir way into the atmosphere. Fluorocarbons have been used since the early 1930s, but Rowland noted half of all chemicals produced were manufactured within the last decade. Like nuclear waste that remains radioactive fo r thousands of years, fluorocarbons are stable molecules that persist in the environment. The life expectancy of Fluorocarbon 12 is 90 years. Fluorocarbon 11, the second most com- monly used chemical will last as long as 50 years. (See OZONE, Page A%) Valley couple found dead ·Pair in Oregon apparent victims of barbecue fumes A husband and wife from Fountain Valley were found dead Wednesday in a camper at an Oregon i)ark, apparently .Jic- tims of fumes from their barbe- cue. A Josephine County Sheriff's 'spokesman said Jerry Schultz, 45, and Irene Schultz, 47, were found dead Wednesday morning , by the woman's daughter, who had arranged to meet the couple at Schroeder Park, just west of Grants Pass. Deputies said the couple had used a barbecue the previous WORLD night and had taken It inside their pickup<amper overnight. Officers said the barbecue's charcoal either reignited or was still burning when the two fell asleep, and they were asphyxia- ted. Funeral arrangements were incomplete early today. S putnik launch ed MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet Union has launched a Cosmos-1344 Sputnik exploration satellite. Jerry Schultz was a native of Newport Beach who worked as a commercial fisherman. He is survived by his daughter, Mary Kay Schultz, and his pa- rents , Ernest and Frances Schultz, all of Newport Beach. Irene Schultz, a native of Wi- sconsin, worked locally as a real estate agent. She ls survived by her daughter, Sheila Komatz of Lackland Air Force Base in Texas; her mother Clara Filtz of Long Beach; and her brother Wayne Filtz, al.so of Long Beach. STATE Trustees of the Huntington Beach Union High School Di- strict are giving special protection from layoffs to teachers who aerve as varsity coaches or direc- tors of after-echool programs. Declining enrollment has cau- sed hundreds of teachers to be laid off in the put three years and district oCficiala say the spe- cial protection is needed to keep qualified directors in charge of what they say are important ex- tracurricular activities. However, Lance Jacot, presi- dent of the teachers association, Robot arm OK; flight in 4th day CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -Astronaut C . Gordon Fullerton successfully exercised the grip of Columbia's 50-foot robot arm today, lifting a pac- kage of ac.entific Instruments from the ship's cargo bay as the shuttle bummed along on the fourth day of ita week-long mis- sion. The grab-and-lift was the first test of the robot's capacity to do the job it was built for: depositing and retrieving satellites in apace. The ship was in the miJat of a prolonged thermal teat when Fullerton donned binoculars to maneuver the arm into position to grab a 353-pound peyloed with Canadann'a wire-snare finaers. The procedure WU Uythinl but routine. Sharp eyea and a firm grip on the controls had to substitute for guidance from a failed video monitor. After capturing his target, the pilot, working by remote control from a post at the rear of Col- umbia's cockpit, flexed the spindly arm's metallic muscles a nd gingerly li-!ted the 353-pound payload from its berth, moving it around the ca- vernous bay, careful not to hit other experiments stored there. "The PDP has been unber- thed. It has been talten up, it's been lowered down and we're ready to reberth it again," said Fullerton. Thia initial test with the arm took only six minutes and it was executed perfectly. The captured instruments -a Plasma Diagnostic Package - measure the ahuttle's electro- magnetic field. A television ca - mera captured the maneuver and pictures of the test were received with satisfaction in Mission Con- trol. Fullerton and commander Jack R. Lousma, "feeling a little bet- ter" almost half-way through their mission, had to delay the exercise -first scheduled Tues- day, because of the failure of the camera o n the wrist o f the Canadian-built mechanical ann. "Fullerton reports that for the first time we have executed a grapple and capture with the arm," Mission Control reported shortly before the lifting exercise took place. ''The spacecraft is demonstra- ting to us that it's a pretty sound piece of machinery," flight di- rector Neil Hut.chinson reported. The ship's third flight was to end after 116 orbits next Monday in New Mexico. Columbia's second flight was cut short ln November by fuel- . cell trouble. 1 7 kidnappers con victed . VERONA, Italy (AP) -A Verona court today convicted 17 members of the Red Briaades of kid- napping U.S. Army Brig. Gen. James L. Dozier and sentenced them to prison term s ranging from Below-cost gas studied 26 months to 27 years. - NATI ON Nancy Sinatra back . . Aft.er \aklna M:ven yean off, Nancy Sinatra la beck in show bUllnem. and plans a nationwide tom opening for her father. Page A!J. Cooper l oot unluclcy Short-lived fame 1urroundtnc the d.bcovery of mystery hljKlc.er D.B. Coc>W• loot bu led to noUUna . but ml8ery tor one family. P-ae A.8. . . MODESTO (AP) -A temporary ban on selling gasoline below ooet in Stanislaus County has been kept in effect until a judge decides whether to make it permanent. Prices for reauJar fell as low u $1.039. C OUNTY Releren~um controversial JUlt over a week aft.er its •tart. there are reports the Bannin g Ranch referendum drive in Newport Be.ch ii running out of pa. Page Bl. Canada to tbe rescue C&nada appean ready to bail out finandally- troubled, Newport Beach·bued Golden We.t Atrlinel. t>..ae a . says the board's action Tuesday violates the state education code whlch-h.e says mandates that layoffs be based baslcallv on seniority. Jacot aaya the association will challenge the special designations at layoff hearings next month before an administrative law judge. The hearing is one to de- tennlne if 76 layoff notices mai- led to instructors on March 15 were properly issued, say district officials. Assistant Superintendent Glen Dysinger says if the district's special designations are upheld! five varsity coaches will be saved from layoff.s next tenn, bµt that five regular physical education teachers with more seniority could be laid off in their place. School board president Brian Lake says one reason the special protection was approved waa to ensure that only full-time em- ployees head the major athletic programs. He says parents of Ocean View High School had complained earlier this vear that some part .. (See SPECIAL, Page A%) Panel OKs HB man for CYA chief post SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Senate committee has approved Antonio "Tony" Amador of Huntin~ton Beach as head of the California Youth Authority, saying opponents didn't provide any evidence that he mistreated blacks when a police o(ficer. Opponents had sent the com- mittee letters which ''called into question his fairness in dealing with blacks in particular," an aide to Sen. David Roberti, D- Los Angeles, said. But the Senate Rules Commit- tee voted 5-0 Wednesday to rec- ommend to the full Senate that the appointment, by Gov . Edmund Brown Jr., be confir- med. Said Senate President Pro Tern Roberti. who presided, "The commlttee asked for specifics on the.e charges and specifics were ·not forthcoming. The committee . . . has no fair course but to vote for confinnation." (Amador has served on the Huntington Beach transportation commi.Jon as well aa on a com· mittee that fi e lded questions from citize ns abo u t c it y problems.) Amador, 38, who spent 13 years with the Los Angeles Po- lice Department, said he had "never bn4talized anybody." "I don't know what they are talking about," he told reporters after the hearing. The CY A is the state's prison system for young criminals. Brown appointed Amador in APPROVED -Antonio Amador of Huntington Beach has been approved as head of the California Youth Autho- rity. 1979 to the Youthful Offender Parole Board, and named him c hairman the next year. The governor appointed him last De- cember to succeed Pearl West as director of the CY A. The only specific allegations came from Mary Henry. execu- u ve director of the Avalon Car- ver Community Center in Los Angeles. Coaches rescue man hurt in -Mesa crash Police in Costa Mesa are cre- diting several athletic coaches at Estancia High School with hel- ping save the life of a 20-year-old man whose sports car spun out of control \nd crashed through a fence in front of the school Wednesday. David Livingstone of Hunt- ington Beach is reported in se· rious condition with multiple fa- cial cuts at Fountain Valley Community Hospital where he was taken following the l p.m. accident at 2323 Placentia Ave- nue. Police said Livingstone was driving at an excessive speed when his red Corvette converti- ble failed to n egotiate a curve and tore through 40 feet of chain link fence before coming to rest upside down n ear the school's INDEX At Your Service A4 Erma Bombeck B2 Business C6-7 California A5 Cavalcade B2 Claalfied 04-7 Comics C5 en.word C5 Death Notices D2 Editorial A6 Ent.erWnment B7-8 Goren B2 SPORTS tennis court. Glenn Sherry, athletic direc- tor, said the car's engine was on fire by the time the coaches rea- ched it. "We thought he was dead,'' Sherry said. "One of the students ran and got a fire extinguisher. It seemed like an eternity." After the fire was out. the coaches then pushed the car up- right, so that paramedics and fire officials could free the man trapped inside, Sherry said. "It's a helpless feeling when there's three of you standing there and there'it a car upside down,'' he added. Police said that Livingstone may have been involved in a speed contest when the crash occurred. No one else was inju- red. Horoecope B2 Movies 87-8 Mutual Funds C6 National News A3 Public Notices D2-3 'Sports Cl-4 Stock Marketa C7 Television B6 Theaters 87-8 Weather A2 World News A3 Red China s roup in area . Sportlwriter John Sevano interview• a Red Chlneae gymna1t (with a little help from an interpreter). J>.p Cl . l OrMge eo... DAILY Pt LOT /Th\nday, MltOh B, 1112 ------~----------~--------~ ....... ------............ ------------------------------ SPE€IA~ JOBS ... · Urot, walk..on coachee were un- qualifted and that one freahman coach waa phy•lcall)' abu•lng athletes at practJce. That ~ch wu fired, aay dl- 1tr1ct offldall. Lake aaya the added job secu- rity in the, designated poeitlona also 11 Intended to encoura1e other teachers to apply for the poeta. Potlttona granted layoff pro· tec tlon include: boys varsity football, basketball, baseball, track, and alrla vanity toecer, buketball, .ottball and track. Directors of the Model United NaUona, International beccal~u· reate, adVanced placement, thea- ter, band and music or drll1 te8ln prosrarm aim are protec:t.ed from layotfa, according to the board's actfon. Varsity coaches also receive l>art-time pay ran1lng from ,1,000 to $1,'100 a year for their extracurricular work, say dLtt.rict offidala. Absentee ballots eady in 2 • • c1t1es Ablentee ballots for the April The comple1ecr ballots mUlt be 13 City Council elections in returned to the City Clerk'• of- Huntington Beach and Fountain fice ln Fountain Valley by 8 p.m. Valley are available from the dty April 13. clerks of the two cities. For Huntington Beach voters, Any Fountain Valley voter the abaentee ballots are available who will be abeent from his or from the City Clerk at Hunting- • her precinct during the election lon Beach City Hall 2000 Main 0 or who ia unable to vote because~t. ' 'Jo~,physical disability can obtain Huntington Beach absentee abeentee ballot until April 6 at ballots mUlt be returned by April 1 unta.in Valley City Hall, 10200 6 in order to be valid. .?Slater Ave. Also, anyone wishing to be a on dolphins 1" write-in candidate in Huntington Sh I t d Beach must file a declaration of 0 w s a e intention with the city clerk by March 30. ' ~If\ • DellJNet ........... WOW! -Terree Rola of Huntington Beach said she "shook all over," when she heard her name drawn as winner of free airlines ticket.' Free airline ticket victors flying high By JERRY HERTENSTEIN Of'ttt.Dellr ......... Their feet are on the ground but some 176 people, many from the Orange Coast, were flying hiRh today. lfhey were winners In a free Republic Airlines ticket drawing Wednesday. Films and discussion on human encounters with whales and dol- phins is scheduled tonight by the · Orange County Chapter of the American Cetacean Society at Huntin,gtoq Beach Civic Center. , Erruny-winning filmmaker and scienti!t Jim Hudnall will discuss his research and show films in meeting room B-7, at 7:30 p.m. tonight at 2000 Main St. near Yorktown Avenue, according to Jazz festival set at OCC Tickets are on sale for the 14th annual Orange Coast College Jazz Festival that begins tonight,> with a performance by the Bob Florence Bia Band. The drawing took place at the Westminster Mall. An estimated 5,000 people crowded the first floor site and lined the second deck and stairways. Karl Kirk, of Costa Mesa, ap- peared momentarily stunned when he heard his name called an hour into the drawing. .. "a group spokesman. ·CJ Hudnall won an Emmy award "-~' for his underwater camera work · ·in a documentary film on hurnp- The Gerald Wilson Big Band will perform in the Costa Mesa auditorium Friday and the Louie Bellson Big Band will close the three-day festival Saturday night. "I feel wonderful," said Kirk, 25, an unemployed heavy equip-men t operator. ''l'm going to Washington D.C. because I ha- ven't been there." tii back whales in Hawaii, the spo- ')''kesman said. Tickets are $8 at the college ticket office and $9 at the door, with the entire series offered for $21. All performances begin at 8 p.m. He said the experience made his recently being laid off from work "a little easier." He said he would take his fiancee on the trip. " ~~ 'Carnival' slated Mary Halstead, 65, a 20-year resident of Costa Mesa, appeared nervous as she accepted her ticket. ~· ·'· to aid Boys Club Ii. Bus shooting •. A "River BOat Night" carnival '1!1 is planned Friday from 6:30-9:30 'H• p.m. at the Boys Club of Foun- ,,.. tain Valley, 9840 Talbert Ave. Carnival games, food, drink and a prize a uction will be in- cluded in the evening's festivi- m lies. DALLAS (AP) -A man ar- rested in the shooting of four people on a city bus Wednesday was described by police as a religious fanatic who had been living in caves and was carrying "I'm thrilled to death. I've ne- ver won anything." She said she would fly to Green Bay, Wis., to visit her sons and daughter_.. a trip she had planned to take in May. It will be the first time she has seen them in three yea.rs. bn . a machete, a voodoo doll and the jawbone of a large animal. ~::~" fi~~~' ~A \\\,•. --Chance of sholVers ., 20 to 40 mph In the eftemoon. • Mostly cloudy through Frldl) morning with • 20 l)«C9nt ch.ooe of ~ thla afternoon and • 70 1>9rc9tlt chance tonight end Frldey morning. Partly cloud) Frld1Y afternoon wtth d41cteulng 1ho-rs. High• Frld•y 83 to 81. Lowa 48 to 55. Huntington· Newport ., .. temP41<1tures ran· L":° from • low of 50 to • high ot Thund9'1hower• 111 f«-t for loa AngelH, coaatal and Intermediate valley1, the .San Fernando, San Oabrl9l and San 89fnardlno valleys, north to the coutal •r•• of Santa Barbare County and eouth u far .. tti. Orange County "*'QPOllt9n ..... -'Y l=rklay n;iom•no. • Temperatures_., NATION EIHwhere, lrom Point Con ~ptlon to the MeJ1tcan border AlbuQue end out 80 mllea: Night end mor· Anc::llorege AaheYl!le nlng ve<lable winds, weeter1y 10 Atlinta to 18 knoll. Westlr'ly swelll or 1 !Atlante Cty to 2 teat. Mostly cloudy tllrougti Baltlmore Friday with a ct\9nCI of "-'t IBifmlno'lm tonight. V.S. summary l~. Cheirttte NC Cold Canedlan air WU l)lnNng ~In SC acrou the nation'• mldMCtlon. •Chartttn WV today, 1 .. v1ng behind 1now and Cl\eyen wind• l'l,.parta of the centrer jCNcegone Pletna. "'•-~---I Rain and 11\0W f9ll fJVfJlf -tern I """"'w,.t Karieu, end 11\0W wu fatting In IC1e¥91and eutern N1brHk1. Scattered IColvmb\IS 1ho-r1 and thunderttorm1 hit Dal-Ft Wth lM IOU1h Atlantle OOUtal Ital•. g:v:o. Light tnOW 1911 lo 1119 Lake ~· I Oetroll ,,_ nor r.glon. E p TM Nallonal Weatlle< S.....loe 1 I uo pr•dlcted 1hower1 and thun-HartlOt'd d9nllow9rl elong the eouth At· Helena lantlc cout. with 1howera over .~~lu tM Ten"""9 and Ohio valleys • """"'°" end th9 mid-and UPl*·Allantlc lndnaplll coUtat tt•t-JllCQnlllle A l•w 1now 1hower1 were ~VClty 1or9C81t for the Gr.et l.ak• .,._ ...-91199 Clear elllft ..,e exl)9Ct.0 OV9t Uttte Rodi th• Rocky Mountaln1 •nd lh• ~ PlatMU nlglon. T91n!*llur• ..,e HP90ted Mi.ml to r•acll only the 20• end 30! ·~~ from th9 north9rn Plalna to the I NealWlll9 • OrNt l.akN. New Or!Mn1 Tem~atur" around the na-, New Yorti tlOn Ml'ly todey renoed from 10 In Oki. ,.,... 8h•rldan, Wyo., to 10 In Key ~·· w•.A& Orletldo ::::::-~ PtMnd, Or-. =City Ak:twnolKI Salt lMI• S..ttM ~·Louil .. Lo 88 29 36 27 80 38 59 52 49 38 eo 29 71 50 34 29 ::SIP-Tampa 81 57 30 Spok-53 5e 33 TUC80ll 14 53 30 Wlllhlngtn 12 80 48 Wlc:Nta ea 57 s5 c..,ONt!A 89 30 Bak91'1t191<1 78 53 47 23 Blythe 80 54 45 E"'9ka 57 48 87 38 F-70 48 eo 30 l.ancia9t• et 53 85 ~ Maryevllle 71 51 89 32 Mornerey 58 58 ~ 78 49 32 OMiand 8' 52 50 30 Paao Roblee • 83 40 n 43 A.a Bluff 89 47 58 a Aedwood Ctty eo 47 35 28 Sec:remento as 49 79 • Sallnu· 81 45 73 eo s.n Diego ea 57 83 38 San F<ancilco 51 48 e8 59 Sant• ~· 83 44 l5e 32 • 8ain1a Mllf1ll 81 72 <t 1 8todrton ea 48 72 .. Tiletmel 82 .. 40 Ulli.tl 88 71 47 8eretow 74 51 79 12, Big... 50 15 51 40 ~ 87 21 88 B«muO• 32· Bogota 39 •. CUrec90 3e ~· 32 Guedel<>llP9 HIMllll KJngaton I Mont9g<> Bay Mcutlen l=ctty Monterrey NMMU I San Juan, P.R. II 72 .12 T~ T~kt.O .V«ecn4 71 59 ·" 71 45 le 75 17 48 70 72 90 72 87 88 79 59 101 88 82 52 ee 81 le 59 88 72 .12 18 &4 90 73 .01 85 73 Extended ·forecast COASTAL AND MOUNTAIN AREAS -Verlabt. cloudlneu Seturday. Fair end wwmer 8""'" day and Mondtly. HlgN In co.tel ., .. , U to 75. Lowe 45 to 115. · HlgN at mountain_,..-. .a to 64. l-21 to 38. ~ tt CetallN .._.... ~ :: 74 ... ~· 78 43 s· mo' g 55 39 .... 'W1llOn 70 40 ... .. .s 31 ~ 8Ncfl es so I .... ,_.., 71 43 Tiie S6uth Coeet Air Quallty : : =IOI 81 52 Ma11•0•1Mnt Dletrlct pr.ctlct9d 78 !! Sen .. r•dlllO ~: :~ =air =•~or the 8outfl 82 •v s.n.-. 86 4t TM~D~=-· 48 n Santa Me 12 48 stancterdln61o! ~ 100tor1M s.nl 81 ;; s.nte CNI 87 63 Oabrl•l•.PCHnOl\a v~. 71 few : 25 Telioe v.., 56 25 tlle 'Uverelde·l•n l.,n•rdtno 81 14 ar•• and..,. ffernllndo4ent11 ,... ,.... PM ... -911JQ;1/tlf1R ,Olartta ~ IO '°' ~ eo 4f AollllUloO -~ II Ian Lo. Anoetel end 42 for lh• 88 48• ~ • • 73 ··°" ~~;~·.?.':i~o~~~~ •. ~!:'~~d~ Mefl 1-1•. ~· .. .,... end t ,.;i~~~~~~-~-~~~-~ -~=--~--~~. "!.. ... L..-e. • • IHf llPll1 ' ·~ul],_moo~ tide fOOAY lecofld low S:15 p.m. ... -' I • I ... ..._ 11 12 11 11 lecofld ...... t:M p.m. ,..., .... .... .... flllrtt io. ue a.Mo A.. -Dir ,.._ tlllll 1:41 a.m • t I IW ~low Me p.lft. 0.1 1 I IW __,., lllDh t:M p.m. I.I 1 1 aw lun Mt• todey at 1101 p.111 .. 1 I 1W • ,._ ,,.._ • l:At e.lft. ~ .... .._ .. l!IO .. -. ,-..1u1 .. -· ... . Mesa honors Babbitts Chamber fetes famous couple for community service BY '°DI CADENHEAD .,. .............. Boop boop, dlttum dottum, wattum chu. ~:"who wu honored Wed- y nfCht by \be Costa Meu Chamber of Comroerce. the coveted ffMrt AWVCL Coata MeH Mayor Arl•n• Schafer and Newport S.ach Mayor pro.tern Evelyn Hart MCh preaented the Newport Beach couple with IWOlutiona honortnc them for their contributions to the community. If that little ditty makes any leNe, xou pl'Obably grew up ln the 1930'1 and 40'1 llat.enini to the crazy lyrlca that were made ~by the now ailver-h.a.lred U the name Harry Babbitt im't exactly a houlebold wont to the under 30 aet, he proved to be a love.b.le ~ to the more than l~ l\Mllta whQ ~d $20 a aeat to aee him and hit ~ 8ettr receive By the met of the eventna the stack of rnolutiona and awardt covered the table ln front of the beaming couple. Suspect captured after freeway chase Qul~ped the 68-year old ain- ger, 'Betty and I are going to have to build another room." The Orange Coaat College Chamber Singers Balll nostalgic sonlls in memory of Bett\> ~b­bi t t' s 11 years aa accompanist WeatmilUlt.er police said they tbwaned a $14,000 clot.bin& atore burglary early today by chaaing a getaway van on the San Diego Freeway until the vehicle crashed in Long Beach. break-In at the Dorman Win- throp men'• clothing store at 16575 Magnolia St. with the. music_ group. - The driver of the van, identi- fied u Johnny Lanotta Winston, 19, of Los Angeles, was not in- jured ln the crash, aa:ording to \Vestmimter police officer Earle Graham. He said a gang ot burglars had smashed the front window, cut a padlocked gate and removed $14,000 worth of men's suita and shirts from the store. An aide to Congressman Bob Badham admitted that the New- port ~h politician WU greeted with blank stares from hJa young staff when, after signing a reso- lution honoring the entertainer, he walked into the ofJice a1nging Babbitt's lefenda~. ''Three Little Fishes.' He said Wi.naton was placed in Orange County Jail on SUBpicion of burglary, poeaesaion of stolen property and evading arrest'. A description was given by witnesses, and the alleged geta- way van was spotted northboun" on the San Ulego !''reeway and pursued by a Westminster offi- cer, Graham said. But if the lawmaker's staff was mystified by the tune , the audience jumped right in Wednesday night when Babbitt delighted them with a surprise performance. According to police, a burglar alarm and a call from witnesaes alerted them to a 4:47 a .m . He said all the clothing 1aken in the break-In was recovered. Several other men who partici- pated ln the burglary eecaped in a separate car, Graham said. From.Page A 1 OZONE WARNINGS U industry release of fluorocarbons each year has dec:reaaed, as CMA contends, then the total amount or those chemicals in the atmosphere should be increasing at a rate much slower than it has been, Rowland said. But his atmospheric studies show the amount of fluorocarbons continues to rise more rapidly than CMA estimates. From 1970 to 1980, the total amount of fluorocarbons in the atmosphere jumped from 2 to 6 million tons, he said. Fluorocarbons ~dually rise into the stratos- phere -7 to 30 miles above the Earth's sur- face. When ultraviolet rays strike the molecules in the upper portions of the stratosphere, ozone-destroying chJorine atoms and chlorine mmQPUnds are rel~. Ozone, which con1aina three atoms of oxy- gen bonded together, shields the planet from the dangeroua effects of ultravio- . let radiation emitted by the sun. An initial effect of in- creased ultraviolet exposure could be more akin cancer. "There is no way we will be able to attribute the in- crease in ultraviolet rays to skin cancer," Rowland said. "It appears the overwhelming cause of skin cancer is due to a change in lilestyle." AOWLANO But be predicts a 1 percent loa in the owne layer may eventually lead to a 3 percent rise in skin cancer rates. However such predictions are difficult to prove since cancers often have a la- tency period of 10 to 20 years. In 1974, Rowland predicted specific levels of the 01.0ne layer might be depleted by about half a percent a year if fluorocar~ continued to be releaaed lnto t"1e atmosphere. That prediction was proven true last year when Najional Aeronautics and Space Admini- stration satellites di9covered a 5 percent drop in the 01.0ne layei: from 1970 to 1979 at the 25-mile altitude level. • • • The CMA still believes Rowland's ozone- depletion projections need further study. In fact, the trade group has suggested its own theory -that most fluorocarbons are trapped in the troposphere, the atmospheric layer closest to the planet, and are removed before they can diffuse into the stratosphere. Eight years ago, Rowland and UCI colleague Mario Molina proposed their theory about the potential dangers of fluorocarbons to the envi- ronment. After extensive study, the federal government instituted a ban on fluorocarbon-based aerosol propellants in i919. Canada and three Scandinavian countries al.8o have clamped down on the use of fluorocarbons as aerosol propellants. But Rowland emphasized that the threat of Huorocarbons is a global one. "The general belief is the problem was solved l>y banning aerosols," he a said. "But that's not what happened. "All of the other uses of chlorofluorocarboos have not been banned in most countries and have continued to increase. The net result as far as the envirorunent is concerned is there has been no change in the past six years. "And most U .S. manufacturers," he added, "w e re free to seek other outlets for their product." Measurements of fluorocarbon concentrations in the atmosphere taken at sites throughout the world show no more than a 10 percent diffe- rence, he said. "It is a regional emission that \fl a short time becomes a worldwide problem," Rowland asser- ted. "The amount that is in the atmosphere over North America is the sum total of the amount released everywhere in the world. "It is a little disC'Oncerting for a scientist, from an environmentalist point of view, when you are on the island of St. Lucia in the West Indies and they have the same amount of chlorofluorocar- bons as we do in the United Stat.es." OxfordOoth . Pullover Storekeeper Monte Pries is wearing our all cotton oxford cloth shirt in a ticking weave stripe. This shirting was originally created by a Scottish mill in the late 19th century, and still remains a tradition today. Available in blue, burgundy, pink, lav- ender, and yellow stripings. A store that offers fine traditional sportswear for men, womtn and boys. .. . Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thul'lday, March 25, 1982 H/F .. • Two railroads gain approval to consolidate . ,, AP~o MONITORING -Todd Nelson, 18, a high school student in Adams, Minn., sits in the hatch of a space shuttle simulator at the Johnson Space Center in Houston watching a television monitor replay of his experiment conducted aboard the orbi- ting space shuttle Columbia. The study was conducted to show the effects of a gravity-free environment on flying in- sects. LA-to-Long Beach trolley line eyed LOS ANGELES (AP) -The county Transpona~io!1 Commi~­ sion approved prehnunary engi- neering studies for a 22.5-mile streetcar route between Los An- geles and Long Beach the onlv one of four hght rail projects with strong ~litical backing. An initial report said the line could be built in five years for between $192 million and $254 million and could carry 21,000 passengers daily along a route once run by turn-of-the-century streetcars. But officials still must negotiate a right-of-way with the route ow- ner, Southern Pacific Railroad. Supervisor Kenneth Hahn. who supported the line that would run through his district, conten- ded some of it could be built be- fore the 1984 Olympics. LONG BEACH (AP) -Offi- cials of the 19-campus California State University system are an- xiously awaiting letters detailing what will be cut under Gov. Ed- mund G. Brown Jr.'s spending freeze -and worrying about the pcmibilities. "Scores of questions have arisen for which there are no answers at t'his time," Chan- cellor Glenn S . Dumke told trustees meeting in Long Beach Wednesday. SACRAMENTO (AP ) -A blue-ribbon panel seeking ways to cut Medi-Cal costs wants to tighten eligibility standards and allow hospitals to hire doctors as sal aried employees . The 36-member Coalition on Health Cost Cohtairunent, organized by the Legislature, turned in its re- port Wednesday. Other recom- mendations for the $5 billion-a - year program were to crack down on fraud and abuse, and r equire the state -n ot the Medi-Cal recipients -to choose the doctors. LOS ANGELES (AP) -A second autopsy on the body of Ron Settles, a football player who died in Signal Hill Police custody, showed injuries mi8sed by the Los Angeles County Co- roner, district attorney's spoke- sman Al Albergate said today. The newly discovered injuries included "something on the thy- roid cartilage of the larynx," but the four pathologists who con- ducted the independent probe "did not draw any conclusions as to how he died," AJber~ate said. LOS ANGELES (AP) -The water d eliver yman who saved Theresa Saldana from a knife- wielding attacker met the actress in her hospital room for the first time since the bloody assault. He gave her roses. She gave him a trophy. "To my hero with much gratitude, thank you thank you thank you forever," the inscrip- tion read. Miss Saldana, the stri- king brunette featured in the film "Raging Bull," s pent an e motional hour Tuesday night with Jeff Fenn, 26. The delive- ryman pulled the assailant off her as she ·was being stabbed o utside he r West Hollyw ood apartment March 16. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -It may not be as American as apple pie, but the teen-age pa.slime of getting into CJCS and "cruising the strip" has 'been preserved by, a state court of appeal. The court ruled Wednesday that cities can't ban the practice of cruising be- cause existing state law preempts local ordinances on the issue. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat CleHlfled edvertfelng 7141842·5871 All other depertment• 642..-321 Thoma& P. Haley P~ 9f'CI C,_.., E•ecuh-..• Oft•c•t Robert N Weed ,._ Thomas A. Murph1ne (OotOt L. Kay Schultz ""'"--O..oe10< 01 Clpe<ll- MiChael P. Harvey ......... ...,o.-•o< Kenneth N. Goddard Jr Charles H. Loos MilftlQlno [dllO< MAIN OFFICE DO WeJI 8rt St.. COlla MHa, CA. Mall IHldt'eH: Box UMI, C•te Mesa. CA . .,,.,. ~,..,.. !Wt OrMtt CMtll PIAlllsl\11111 ~ Ho -.-tn. lffllttretlofls, eclltoriel ""'"""w .. .... 11 .. -b _.... _,. lie ·~ wftflout _ .. , """"silwlof ~-··· ~. VOL 75, NO. 14 WASHINGTON (AP) -The Interstate Commerce Commisaion today approved the merger of the Southern Railway and the Norfolk & Western Railway as promising increased efficiency for the two rail llnea and enhan· oed competition. The new carrier, which will operate under a hol- ding company to be called the Norfolk Southern Corp., becomes the fourth largest railroad in the country in track mileage and the third largest in amount of freight revenue. RALEI G H , N .C. (AP) - Three knife-wielding inmates complaining o f prison racism surrendered to authorities today, releasing their last three hostages unharmed after striking a deal to be transferred to a federal faci - lity, thus ending a 42-hour siege. But shortly after the inmates were driven away from North Carolina's maximum security in- stitution toward the Fede r al Correctional Institute in Peters- burg. Va., the state correction secretary issued a s tatement saying the inmates would imme- diately be returned. WASHINGTON (AP) -The sponsor of an emergency energy allocation bill, vetoed with S e- nate concurrence, says President Reagan "had better pray" there won't be another energy crisis during his term. Senate Energy Committee Chairman James Mc- Clure, R-Idaho, said that.only a heavy, last-minute lobbying blitz by the presiden t e nabled the Senate to sustain the veto of a bill that would have given Reagan the authority to allocate crude oil and impose price con- trols in an emergency. ln a roll- call vote Wednesday 58 senators voted to override Reagan's veto, while 36 voted to sustain it. But opponents of the veto needed 63 votes -a two-thirds margin - to reverse the president's rejec- tion. UNITED NATIONS (AP) - Nicaraguan junta leader Daniel Ortega appears to be softening h is stand toward the United States in the face of U.S. offers to discuss differences between the two countries. Talking to repor- ters here Wednesday, Ortega said he won't seek a resolution con- de mning the United States in today's U .N. Security Council debate of Nicaraguan cha rges that U.S .-backed forces are planning to invade his Central American nation. SAFE -A man identified only as a Salvadoran refugee named Alfred o received sanctuary at a Tuc9on church as part of a nationwide pro- test against tough U.S. im- migration poJldes toward re- fugees. .......... ....., / ........... We're Listening ••• Whal do you Uke about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call tf'e number below and your me11a1e 1>Will .,. recorded, transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. : • The same ~-hour anaftrin1 Hrvice may be usedAo ~cord let· ten 4o the editor on any topic:. Mal Ibo• contributorJ must Include . their ~me and tel~phone number for vertflcatlon. No clrcula~ion call1. pleue. • Tell ua what's on your mind. I WASHINGTON (AP ) -A House subcommittee hu given final approval to a rewrite of the federal Clean Air Act that wu immediately criticized by envi- ronmentalists aa a "drastic wea- kening" of the national commit- ment to polh.1tlon control. The House Energy and Commerce subcommittee on health and the environment approved the bill 13-7 on Wednesday, sending it to the full committee. MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -For some reporters and editors at The Minneapolis S tar. the layoffs that will accompany the after- noon newspaper's merger with the Minneapolis Tribune are a familtar story. John Ireland, Star assistant city editor, says he will be among about 100 employees laid off when the Star merges April 5 with the morning Tri· bune to form an all-day paper. ., ......... BELATED FUNERAL -A Navy honoT ·guard carries the casket of Lt. Cmdr. Nich.olas Brooks during· the funeral for the Newburgh, N.Y:, pative at Fort Myer,'Va. Brooks was shot down over Laos more than 12 years ago, but his remains were not returned until earlier this year. · Bangladesh controls relaxed Two gun battles erupt in troubled El SalvadQr DACCA, Baa gladetla (AP ) - The country's new military ru- lers, one day after seizing power, today rela.xed curfew and allo- wed people to return to streets patrolled by hundreds of troops. ·stores. offices, restaurants, banks and scfioola -cloeed since civi- lian President Abdus $attar was ousted Wedne8day in a bloodless coup led by Lt. Gen. Husaain Muhammed F..rahad -reopened with the daytime easing of cur- few. the Press Trust of India said. SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) -Governme nt for ces battled leftist guerrillas early to- day near the Central Election s Council in San Salvador and on a mountainside overlooking an air base nine miles from the capital. There was no immediate word on casualties. Residents said the guerrillas approached to within a few hundred yards of the Elec· lions Council, and that there was spor~dic fighting that inteRSified then broke off just before dawn. the occupied West Bank ·of the J ordan ·today, and Arab pro- testers in the occupied tenjtorles reacted with a grenade ambush, killing one Israeli soldier and wounding fhre e others'. The GUATEMALA ~ITY (AP) -military command said Sgt. Pin- A political leader whose party has Grossma~k~ .30, wn killed iost the recent election says this ~d th~ BOldiers were w~ded w ee.k 's mi )j tary coup gives . m t~e grE'.nade at.tack OJ? an·army . strife-torn Guatemala a brea· · ve ~1cl e an the occupied G~za thing spell to reform its political Strip._ Gro~m.ark was the fa~t institutions following the alle-Israelt to die •ln a week ~f v10- ged l y rigged ballot1ng three Jenee that ~as ~esulted an ~he weeks ago. Vinicio Cerezo, spo-d eath ~ of five ~rabs and t.he kesman for the rightist Christian wo~nd';'\g of 21 m the occupted Democratic Party, said Wednes-terntones. day that the takeover opened a "promising political future" for this Cen tral American country while giving it a chance to "Cmd the peace it so d espe rately needs." NABLUS, Occupie d Well Bank (AP) -Israel dismissed the top two Palestinian mayors in NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP),....:... Iran and lraq. reported heavy ground and air fighting for the third day in the southern Iranian oil pro- vince of Khuzistan .. Each side said it shot down· two warplanes Wednesday. ki'lled thou~nds of enemy troops and· seized large quantities of arms. Annual Inventory Red~c\i(>n SA ·LE 1/2 OFF This Is Selected Merchandise From Our Own Stock -Regularly Sold In Our Own Store • T Chains • Watches •Rings • Bracelets •Pendants ~ Necklaces • Pins • Charm• • Earring• •Mountings Sale Last.s through Satur~~y March 27th U•• rour YI•• or M••t•rcarct No HOUM Chara•• . AU Salee Flnal CHARLES H~ BARR ~ . ' .. ' ~· H/F Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, March 25, 1982 . '• ... • Seal Beach merger a loss for Huntington If the Seal Beach School District disbands as ls proposed the aftershocks will be strongly felt at Huntington Beach High &·hool. The financially troubled Seal Beach K-8 district plans to be an- nexed by n eighboring Los Ala- mitos Unified School District. Problems !acing Seal Beach · are familiar to other school di· stricts -declining enrollment, inflation and reduced state fun- ding. But Seal Beach officials say their 750-pupil district is too small to continue operating efficiently as a separate district. Los Alamitos also is expe- riencing declining enrollment and welcomes the additional Seal Beach students. The Huntington Beac h dis- trict, o f course, faces the same problems as other districts. It has 17,500 studen • .; but also has a declining enrollment with uncertain funding formulas. The proposed annexation would eventually mean that bet· ween 350 and 400 Seal Beach pu- pils will be assigned to Los Ala- mitos High School rath~r than the 3,000-student Huntington Beach High School where Seal Beach students traditionally have ·au.en- ded. U the annexation is approved by voters this November, it would take effect in July 1983. Junior and senior students could continue at Huntington Beach High School but the rest would be ~igned to Los Alamitos High 'School. The loser in this proposal is Huntington Beach High School., The proposal wouldn't be a serious financial blow to the dis- trict. Teachers will be reassigned lo Los AJamitos according to the number of students who leave, say district officials. But it would take away hun- dreds of students who through the years have made worthwihile contributions to Huntington Beach High School and have been part of its traditions. Valley voters happy? Three seats -a majority on the F ountain Valley City Council must be filled m the April 13 e lection. Thus far , the council cam- paign, involving 10 candidates. can best be described as unexciting. There have been no harsh char- ges. a nd no public mud-slinging by the candidates. No strongly divi- sive local issues have emerged, and no ma.JOr proposals. At a candidates Corum this w1>ek , the contenders expressed unanimous concern over the fi - nancial problems facing Fountain Valle y . All want to maintain a high level of services m the city. but few offered specific sugges- tions on how to continue paying for them. Most candidates said they oppose imposition of special as- sessments to pay rising street- lighting and median maintenance costs. particularly without appro- val by local voters (The rnuncil has the powN to levy such as- s e~sments without ballot approval.) The candidates all favor ad- ditional "Shop in Fountain Val- ley" campaigns because the city benefits from local sales tax col- le<:tions. But the fact remains that the city has no major s hopping centers or a uto dealerships, and persuading residents to spend more dollars a t the local s trip s hopping areas may need more than sloganeering. City finance problems ctre not the type of issue that traditionally captures voter imaginations, and the turnout at Tuesday's Corum was modest (about 70 people). Thus, there is little to indicate voters will converge on their Fountain Valley polling places in record numbers on city election day. In one sense, this less-than- volatile campaign might be a sign that most residents are relatively content with the way things have been running in Fountain Valley. But if some of the financial concerns voiced by the candidates eventually begin hitting local vo- ters in th e ir own backyards, Fountain Valley's future political cam paigns are Ii kely to begin generating a little more excite- ment. Dump harmony welcome • State water quality officials have approved continued dumping o f oil drilling muds on a 13-acre site in the Bolsa Chica wetlands near Huntington Beach. The decision to grant Aminoil USA Inc. a five-year permit to continue using the site to dry oil drilling mud isn't that surprising. But that the dec ision was supported by the Amigos de Bolsa Chica environmental group is a surprising reversal of that group's long-standing opposition to the disposal site. Aminoil has operated the sit.e since 1973. The California Regio- nal Water Quality Control Board extended that right after revie w- ing independent laboratory stu- dies that stated the mud wasn't toxic and was confined to the 13-acre site. The board also ordered that Aminoil establish a $700,000 fund to restore the site to a natural wild life habitat when disposal opera- tions are concluded. Amigos spokesman Pete r • Green was at the meeting and he commended Aminoil officials for ordering the independent tests and said the detailed results of those studies persuaded the envi- ronmentalists that the dump posed no long-term hazards to surroun- ding marsh. Board Chairwoman Carolyn Ewing in turn thanked the Amigos for causing interest and closer scrutiny of the disposal si.te. Aminoil officials say the in- dependent tests confirmed what they had been saying all along. that the disposal site is operated efficiently and poses no hazard to the wetlands. They agree to eventually restore the area to a natural condition. ~ while continued operation of thl'disposal site is nothing new, the chain of constructive actions that found Aminoil ordering the indep~ndent studies and the Amigos supporting the disposal site is a unique development in this type of confrontation. Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex- preso;ed on tn•'> pc1ge dre lhoo;e 01 their dutnors ano artists. Reader comment.is 1~v1t ed Addreo;!> The Dd1ly Pilot, P 0 . Box 1S60, Costd Mesa, CA <r26'26. Phon1t'1714l 641·43'21 L.M. Boyd/ Sense of humor Which sex lends to have lhe better sense or humor, the male or the female? Studies at Wesley and Smith colleges once wound up with the conclusion : "The tendency of men to laugh at anything labeled 'joke' strongly suggests that their sense of humor Is les!: well developed and discriminating than that or women." If a woman doesn't marry until ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat she's :.>, chances are the man she eventually does marry, if any, will be al least 12 years older than herself. Question arises as to how old you have lo be before you can wear contact len_s.es. No age llmit, evidently. At least 40 babies have been ntted with contlcts at the University of California In Berkeley's Infant Vision Clinic. Even FBI can lose evidence WASHINGTON -The glamorous side of the FBl's work has been chroni- cled on television and in the movies. But as an y FBI agent could attest, there's a vital part of the G-man's life that will neve r make it to the screen, mainly because it is b-o-r-1-n-~. That's the seizure and safekeeping of property against the day when it will be introdu- ced as evidence in a federal trial. Pro- bably not even Nonnan Lear could make the Top 20 with a show titled, "FBI Property Clerk." MUNDANE AS IT IS, the custody of evidence is a crucial ingredient of any successful prosecution. And an internal Justice Department draft report charges that the FBI clerks could be blowing some cases. The nub of the still-secret draft, pre- pared by auditors in the department's management division, is that nobody keeps proper track of property that has been sei7.ed for evidence. Things are so sloppy. the auditors complained. that evidence could be lost or otherwise dis- appear and no one would know it. In their low-key, bureaucratic jargon, the auditors put it this way: "The systems used by the FBI for the hand- ling of seized and recovered property are out-of-date and lack the specificity to effectively meet the responsibilities and requirements imposed by regulation." The audit.ors noted that "we were told a number of times that 'we (the FBI) have never lost any evidence,'" but ad-p · -JA-Cl-Al-D-fR-S0-1 -~ ded coldly: "In our opinion. the system now tn use would not disclose the loss of evidence if it did occur." The basic problem, the audit.ors con eluded, is that property taken into cus- tody by the G -men is "not effectively supervised by either agents or Support Service Supervisors." As an example of this distaste for im- portant but dull detail, the draft report cited "extensive time lags" between the seizure of property for possible use as evidence and its ultimate recording in FBI logbooks. In the Detroit field office, the investi- gators found many 11ems of personal property that had been in FBI custody for more than eight years without bemg entered in the record. Time lags in the Philadelphia and Atlanta region.al offices exceeded a year in some cases. "Once personal property is taken, the FBI becomes responsible for it and ac- countability is mandatory," the draft report points out, and adds: "Delays such as we found (in recording) are unwar- ranted and unjustified." IN ADDITION TO the agents' casual attitude toward seized properly -pos- s1bl y because of 1t -the subseQ uent handling by property clerks "is neither proper nor adequate," the auditors <.'Om- plained. The reason for this, they deci- ded, was inadequate training and a poorly written manual of instructions. The Justkc Department investigators found some ridiculous examples of pro- perty that had been retained long aft.er it was useful -like the mink coat that had been stored in a cardboard box at the Philadelphia FBI office since 1972, even though it was involved in a case that was closed in 1977. Evacuation plans delude the people To the Editor: The "crisis relocation" plan on which the federal and state governments are working would evacuate populations from areas experiencing the dire effects of nuclear war. This plan is a hoax, ac- cording to Beverlee A. Myers, California MAILBOX Director of Health Services It is unfair. deluding the people into thinking that there can be an escape. The state O ffice of Emergency Ser- vices, working with the federal govern- ment, has stated that we would have three to five days advance notice from the Soviet Union. This is utterly falla- cious. for surprise is an effective ele- ment of attack. A miscalculation almost triggered a n attack a few months ago. For neither the well calculated firing nor the impulsive release of a bomb would have there been a warning. HOW WO ULD an evacuation take place? During peak traffic periods, such as we now experi~nce on popular beach recreation days, or at times of special events, such as the Pasadena parade, traffic is so congested as to be practically immobile. Our highways would be enti- rely inadequate to enable a terrorized population to flee from a threatened area. Where would the evacuees go? With the U.S. and the Soviet arsenals armed with thousands of nuclear warheads an explosive power approaching more than a million Hiroshima bombs could be re- leased. Over thousands of square miles the air, water and land would be blanketed with deadly radioactive con- taminants. The earth could become a.a devoid of li!e a.a the moon. Survival? No. The nuclear anns race la not confined to the U.S. and the Sovieta. Great Bri- tain, France, China and probably India have nuclear weapons. Several of the less stable countries. are intent on acqui- ring them. The nuclear anns race is a matter that should be of concern to all of us. MARY SCOOT Support indexing To the Editor: 1 would like to extend my genuine thanks for your editorial support of my permanent income tax indexing·legisla· lion. The three-year long battle has en- ded. We succeeded ln getting legi.alation to benefit the wage earners of California for two years and now the only hope left ls for the people to understand that ther.e wlU be an lndexlng measure on the June ballot. It is now up to &hem. IT IS IMPERATIVE that this Jorvis·sponsored measure receives an overwhelmtna support vote. Tht wordlna la tdendcal to my firat lndexina bill, Alf 276. Althouah lam unhappy with the in· d x Wied. lhe California c.on.umer Price Index. I feel that it ts necetNry to have ... indexing of personal income taxes to al- low the wage earner to keep pace with inflation. We can work together to see that the CPI flaws are changed by the Federal Bureau of Labor Statistics. It will conti- nue to be the thermometer that does not give the right temperature until the housing CQSts and other luxury elements are recalculated. I hope you wall continue to support aU permanent income tax indexing. MARIAN BERGESON Assemblywoman, 74th District Likes the log To the Editor: I wish to congratulate you on the new Pilot TV log which you started last week. It is by fl:lr the most complete TV guide of all channels and makes 1t easier for the "addict" to know what Is prog- rammed, thereby eliminating going through three or four separate logs. The format i5 excellent, and I hope this will be a permanent addition t.o your Cane newspaper. ROBERT GUGGENHEIM Comparison To the Editor: It seems to me the situation in El Salvador is very comparable with that in Poland. If we object to the Soviet Union's support of an unpopular government in Poland, then the U.S. shoUld stay out of suppo~ the unpopular gq.vemment in El Salvador. If we believe it is legitimate to support the unpopular government of El Salvador, then it seems hypocritical t.o blame the Soviet Union for its role in Poland. BRIAN H. KLEINER Good work To the Editor: The California Coastal Commission should be commended for its decision to delete the extension of University Drive from the Newport Beach Local Coastal Plan. The extension o! this road, if built acro11 Upper Newport Bay, would threat.en the nesting grounds of the Light Footed Clapper Rail, an endangered species of bird native to this area. It la a fact that the Rail ls s~J:~ble to extinction; two species of Haw Rall now no lonaer exist. The Global 2000 Report to the Pruident, a U.S. Govern- ment study, predicta • staaerinl l<* of ~.000 to 2 million species of plant and anlma1 Ille from the earth by the Yeti' 2000, a tn&ic predkUon bMed on the ra~ of lo. of ba&ltat due to urblnJzed de- velopnent. WHILE MOST of th1s loea is ocxurring in t.rop6cal aNM, we lee lh1I phenomenon hap~ rtaht here 1n Southern C&ll- foirila. wfiere the ~pper Rag, Califor· n1a 1-t Tern.. and Beldin(• z:tavanNh Spanow are endanpnd .pea. becaUR • 1.tlMrtflMI ...-.serw .. IO•M Tiie titM .. <..._ .. , Ifft i. flt "'9Ct et t MllllNltt h ... II ,-..... Letwt .. - """' et !ft) "411 eie """" ,, ... ,_,, All Miner\ _. lfto (l\iW •11Nfllr• ..... .,,., ........ _ .... ,....., _, .. •II~ tfl ,..,.\t It illlftt(l"'I •-I• ........ ~' •.. , -.. ,.....w.. ...... , -· .. , ............ .... "'-.. ......,. -· .. ""(lftltttv•~ .. --.. . ttflltC ..... ~ ,,. of the loss of their living space. Roughly 90 percent of the original coastal wet- lands that these birds need for their survival have disappeared under urban development. The pr~ures of coastal development are just too great for local governments to handle right now, jud- ging from recent actions of the ()r:<}llge County Board of Supervisors vis a vis the Bolsa Chica wetlands, and the propensi- ties of the Newport Beach City Council vis a vis the University Drive extension. We need a more responsible, less my- opic, view of the precious little coast.al wildlife habitat that remains in Southern California. The Coastal Commission. mandated by the Coast.al Act of 1976. is now fulfilling that need. I hope they continue their good work. JAN D. VANDERSLOOT MD R emember inflation? "ro the Editor: It wouldn't hurt if you would remind your readers that scarcely a year ago. everybody was wringing their hands over a high rate of mflat1on. This, Wf: were told, and I believe rightfully so. was our biggest problem. Look at us now. Inflation is down and has been down to a single digit number these past few months. Now everybody wants to increase the money supply. It seems our biggest problem is high inte- rest rates. So, start the money presses and bring back good old inflation! Our President said long ago that licking inflation would not be easy. How qulcltly people forget! J .W. REID How dare he? To the Editor Once again it becomes "us" vs. "them.'' "Us" being the ones who elect "them" often to our sorrow and detri- ment. I listened t.o Sen. Williams the other day as he crawled back under his rock. His statement to the effect that he tlad not done anything contrary to the stan- dards of the Senate should anger lhe remaining Senrttors with any Integrity. rm sure it does the electorale who chose him to represent them. How dare he try to tar everyone with the same brush? And how dare he blame the FBI for the fact that (to quote ftom "Lady in the Dark") "In 27 languages he couldn't aay NO"? 1 MARY JANE WOOD rm beglnNna to wonder 11 \he "M«aJ Majority" (1 (waa ever) really \he (•) majority. B.B. • • 11 Orange Cout DAJLY PILOTIThunidey, Merch 2!, 1982 H/F 7 NYSE OMPO ITE TRANSACTION ..,DTATH*t•Nn11oa , ........ , ....... Y!>•l,MIOWHT, ... ( .. IC. ..... ""°"' OIT•O'l ANO CINCllOIATI noc• t.llCMA ... llA"D •INeTID l'f THI ""'0 ANO INtTt,.,f ' , • • Will listings suit LOS ANGELES (AP) -Three real estate orp- nir.ationt ~ve won their copyrtght infrlnaement •ult apinst a finn that sold Multiple Lilting Service meets to the public. Attorney Moses Lasky of San Franci9CO, rep.re- aen\ina the plainU1ts, said Wednesday that U.S. Di- strict Judie Mariana Pfael.zer returned the declaion agalnat Supermarket of Komea Inc. in Northridge. with damages to be decided. The pfalntiffa are the California Aaociation of Realtors, the San Fernando Valley Board of Realtors and the NaUonaJ Asaoclatton of Realtors. Airline m erger due LOS ANGELES (AP) -Texas Air Corp., which won control of Continental Airlines as the California carrier was posting a $60 million loss. announced plans to comblne Continental with Texas International Air- lines. Texas Air, a Houston-based holding company which owns TIA and acquired 51 percent of Conli- nental's common stock last year after a fierce legal struggle, said Wednesday it plans to combine the companies. Telephone earnings up SAN }'R.ANCISCO ~) -First-quarter earnings for Pacific Telephone were 50 cents a common share, up from 33 cents a share for the same period a year ago, the company announced. Net income for the 1982 quarter was $124 million, up $50.8 million from the same period 1981, which was one of the lowest earnings periods in Pacific Tele- phone history. Board Chairman Donald E. Guinn said Wednesday. Housing aid proposed WASHINGTON (AP) -Senate Democrats are proposing a multibillion-dollar program aimed at reviving the nation's housing industry from the deep slump brought on by the recession and high mortgage interest rates. The program, announced Wednesday. is designed to stimulate construction of 600,000 new single-family homes and provide 782,000 jobs. It was formulated by a task force under the guidance of Sen. Henry J acksotl of Washington. R egan raps panels WASHINGTON (AP) -Treasury Secretar y Donald Regan has criticized the committees of Con- gress for rejecting President Reagan's call for new budget cuts, and predicted "even larger deficits" will result. "I've been rather dismayed to see that many of the committees now have not gone along with thoee cuts," Regan told the House Budget Committee on Wednesday. Tarzana firm prode d LOS ANGELES (AP) -The bankrupt Tarzana Equities investment company apparently sold more than $4 mill.ion in unregistered securities to about 200 investors, says the state Corporations Department. Corporations Commissioner Geraldine Green or- dered the San Fernando Valley-based firm and its top ·officers to stop offering for sale any fractional interests in notes secured by a trust deed, and some other types of securities. • STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES AMERICAN LEADERS """""""'• 1 uor oz .. nao.oo. Ufl lf..00. ........ ,, 1 troy oa., 1380.00, vp 17.00. -..,_., 1.!n,toa..,M1e.tt. 11111•n. ~ 100 O('O'M'I, .... f Ooy OL, PIO.ID, 11111 IUO • NEW VOAKIAPI Final Dow J<WW\ ·~ for Wltcl.. ~ 1' SlQCKS JI Ind 10 Tm I) uu j6 Siie ll'llU T-Ullh °1:61 :r.., I~ g-e).0-~ I 331.n >o. .. m c m n -t u 1(11.tlJ IOt.O ICll '2 IOI 0 0 GI JIS.14 JZ7'• m GI JU 14-1 » u Sttl WHAT STOCKS DID NeN YORK tAPI ,,,.., 1• -AdWIQd '6J Olcllnld , .. ~='-•• 1a s -~ ,, . -'°""" n WHATAMU OIO NEW 'l'OftK tAPl Mar 14 -~ ,,. Fi~ * 22) 7IJ ,;:: :::: , •• METALS -.-..v '·'°'·* 1,sn,soo .. 1,100 7,01'.SOO PrtY cs;h s:ra •1• 1919 33 19 ""'" ~i:-. 19.J m m • 1 Copper 76-78 eenu • pound. U.S. dwtlnatlon1. It> Leed 28-32 centa I pound ZJM 37-40 tellta I pound, !Mltw."9d. "" te.7645 Meteta WMk eompo11te ~ 78-77 ceota I pouno, tl.Y . ..._,, $395.00 I* llult. ~ S305.00 troy oz.., N.Y SILVER ~v 1 Hendy & Harman, '7.285 per troy OU,_. !GOLD QUOTATIONS I ....,.., ~ motnlflO fbdna $328 00, oft t s.75 Lon••n1 allernoon nx1n9 $327 75, Oii.. a.oo. l'1ll'lel '338.45, 14> to. 19 ,,.,.twti '329.94, on H .07. i...... Late ftxlnQ 132t.00, oft SS.00 bid '329.00 atltad. H1ndJ a HarnHn! (only dally quote) 1327 7~ Off '4.00 ,,...._. 1on1y oe1y quo1e1 s:m 1s. on ... 00 ........,. (onlY ~ quote) tabricateo 1344.14, oft '4.iG SYMBOLS I l 1)r;ANGE COUNTY . C ALIFORNIA 25 C ENTS .. ShuttJe arlll Work~ ' ,. 500 THOUSAND Astrona uts test robo t's grip in space 400 THOUSAND 1971 ..... ---Chemical Manufacturers Association's 1975 estimated release of rtuorocarbdns Into environment. Ozone sh_ield periled? # UCI scientist says danger of fl uorocarbons continues By JOEL C. DON Of the Deir ..... ""' Despite earlier warnings that fluorocarbons in the atmosphere could increase rates of skin can- cer or produce genetic mutations and even alter the Earth's climate, emissions of the man-made chemicals continue to rise, according to a UC Ir- vine 8Cientist. UCI Irvine atmospheric chemist F. Sherwood Rowland, who first warned of the dangers of fluorocarbons to the Earth's protective ozone layer, reports that the total amount of these chemicals in the atmosphere has tripled in the last 10 years. And because fluorocarbons remain in the atmosphere for as long as 90 years they might pose a hazard to the environment well through the next cent~, he said. Dr. Rowland.a findings will be published in the April issue of the Geophysical Research Letters. His research team included UCI chemist S .C. Taylor, Derek Montague of UCLA and ~oehihiro Makide of the University of Tokyo. Their results differ sharply from data on early fluorocarbon emissions compiled by the .C'hemical Manufacturers Allaociation (OMA), an indtmtry irade group. Rowland said yearly emissions of Fluorocar- 12, the most common of chemicals known erically as chlorofluorocarbons, increaaed by 0 percent from 1974 to 1979. CMA reported the release of Fluorocarbon 12 into the' atmosphere has been reduced by 19.6 percent during the same period. In an interview, Rowland attributed the dis- crepancy between hts findings and CMA data to the different sources of information. CMA esti-• mates come from chemical production reports from 19 manufacturers, representing 95 percent of the total world production. Rowland's investigators used atmospheric data collected from the South Pole to the island of St. Lucia in the West Indies for their calculations. ''The chemicaJ industry has reported reduction in the overall production and release of fluoro- carbons; however, the atmosphere tells a diffe- ~t story," he said. Dr. Joseph M. Steed, a chemist with DuPont and chairman of CMA's Fluorocarbon Program Panel, disputed Rowland's findings. However, in TONS Of' ~UO-.OCAMON-11 ACCUMULtnD .. ATMOS'"'M WOftLD~ (..._,,_-" ....._.,, I I I / ~Mly .n.ci .... 6 Announoerr*11 ol pl1na '°' ban V "' MILLION on UM u -OIOI pr~lll'll I In Ille United lat•,.. 5 v ~ MILLION __,,,,,. .. v MILLION v 3 M~ v 2 MILLION . 1 MILLION ' 1170 1175 1 1 10 i telephone interview Wednetclay, &eed would not dlte specific object.Ions. He said he wouldn't until be bad aeen a full copy of Rowland'• new research $)8per. . Fluorocarbon8 are eo.r~-j)resent pees Wied in industry and by private conaumera. Aeroeol sprays using fluoroca.rbons alJ propellants account for about 50 percent of their use. Fluorocarbons also are found in auto air conditioning aystema, refrigeration units, foaming agents and industrial solvents. Rowland said more than 95 percent of all flu- orocarbons produced eventually and their way into the atmosphere. Fluorocarbons have been used since the early 1930s, but Rowland noted half of all chemicals produced were manufactured within the last decade. Like nuclear waste that remaill.!I radioactive for thousands of years, fluorocarbons are stable molecules that persist in the envirooment. The life expectancy of Fluorocarbon 12 is 90 years. Fluorocarbon 11, the second most com- monly used chemical, will last as Jong aa 50 years. (See OZONE, Page A%) Sycamore Hills lawsuit heard After four years, Laguna issue nearing action By JOHN NEEDHAM Of'"h Deir .... ..., Nearl~ four years after its fi- ling in Orange County Superior Court, a lawsuit charging the former owners of Sycamore Hills in Laguna Beach with malicious proeecution is now being heard. The suit, filed in 1978 by at- torney John McCarthy, accuses Rancho Palos Verdes Corp. and lts parent companies, Great Lakes Properties, Inc. and Great Lakes Carbon Corp. of New York, with unlawful harassment in a lawsuit filed in 197 4. WORLD That suit, since dismi.saed, was filed by Rancho Palos Verdes Corp. against 43 leading Laguna Beach citizens for alleged con- spiracy through politicaJ action to deny the firm's right to develop Sycamore Hills. The land development firm dropped its suit agai,nst the La- guna residents in 1976, but gave no i-eaaon for doing IO. Plaintiffs in the current suit, being heard in Judge Allcemarie Stotler'& courtroom In Santa Ana, are Arnold Hano. writer and former chainnan of Village La- guna; the estate of former Greenbelt President Jim Dilley, who is deceaaed; Bea Whittlesey, a longtime environmental acti- vist; Ralph Benson, now a resi- dent of San Franclaco; Michael Schley, former board of adjust- menf member; Victor Bellerue, husband of Mayor SatJy Belle· rue; and Paul Egly, a r etired judge of the Superior Court in Loa Angeles and Greenbelt member. McCarthy_ said Wednesday (See SYCAMORE, Pase A2) STATE CAPI! CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -Astronaut C. Gordon Fullerton aucce:Mfully exerclted the grip of Columbia'• ~0-foot robot arm today, lifting a pac- kaae of 1dentiflc in1trumenta from the ahip'• c:arao bay .. the shuttle hummed alo~n day four ot ita week-long on. "l'm very lmpreeled With that piece of machinery," Fullerton reported after an initial teries of testa. "The operation went very smoothly." The grab-and·llft wu the first test of the robot'• capacity to do Saddlehack to discuss hospital · Saddleback College officials will be negotiatina with a group of community leaders regarding lans for an Irvine hoepital being Cunt on the college's North Campus at Irvine Center Drive and Jeffrey Road. Saddleback trustees adopted a resolution Tuesday designating the Hoag Memorial Hoapital- supported Irvine Medical Center group as the agency best able to win approval for oomtruction of a hospital. Irvine Medical Center la pu- shing ahead with ita oommunity- baaed drive to establlah a hospi- tal in Irvine, despite warninp that Orange County caWd have· too many llospital beds by 1900. A recent report l.ued by the County Health Planning c.ouncil aaid that by that year the county could bave 170 unneeded hospi- tal beds and up to 1,473 exoets physiciml. Another propoeed lite for hos- pital construction is on the UC Irvine Campus. However, there ls an extensive approval procea before hospital corutruction ii able to proceed, which i.s prima- rily baaed on the need for addi- tional h<>1pltal bed.a in an area. Leaders of the drive to build a hospital in Irvine concede their plans could be held up becauae of the excess bedding iasue. But Ir- vine Medical Center has a Los Angeles architect drawing plaN for a 200-bed hospital. Alao at iaaue in the drive to establish a hospital in Irvine la whether it will be a teaching facility affiliated with UC Irvine or a community hospital. Saddleback officials say if the proposed hospital were to be built on the diatrict'a North Campus, it would be the only such arrangement between a major hetllth care facility and a community college in the coun- try. ·The land propo1ed for the construction site ls currently ow- ned by the Irvine Company, but ls available to the district under a phued purchase agreement for expansion of the North Campus. The North L:ampu1 currently conaista of 60 acres. The district has until August of this year to purchue 40 more acres from the Irvine Company at $4~.ooo an acre, a figure far below market value. 1 7 kidnappers convicted VERONA , Italy (AP) -A Verona court today convicted 17 members of -the Red Brigades of kid- napping U.S. Anny Brig. Gen. James L. Dozier and senten ced t h em to prison terms ranging from 26 mon ths to 27 years. &low-cost gas studied ' NATION Nancy Sinatra !-ck After takin& aeven yean off, N&ncy Sinatra la back in 1how buslnem, and .pl.ma a nationwide tour QPeDina for her father. Paae .. A4' Coop'er loot unlucky 1 Short-Uved fame •urroundtna the d~ery Of . m,wtery htjldcer D.B. Cooper'1 loot hM led to notb1n1 . but ml8ery few (N family. p .. AJ. MODSSTO (AP) -A temporary ban on 8el1ing . p1e>line below cost In Stanislaus County bu been kept in effect until a judge decides w hether to make it permanent. Pra. f« felU).ar fell M low a $1.039. C OUNTY Ref ereadum controversial Just over a week after le. start, ~ are reporta the Banning Ranch referendum drive ln Newport BNch la rwmina out pf pa. Page Bl. Canada lo the ~ue Canada ap~ ready to bail out ftnanctally- troubled, Newport Bw:b·bliled Golden Wiit Ab'UDel. PlpOI. '{. the jOb it waa built tof: depo.iting umbia.'a cockpit, flexed the and retrieving satellites ln apace. spindly arm'• metallic mUJICles The shuttle wu ln the midst of . a n d g i n g e r 1 y li f t e ~ t h e a prolonged thermal test when 353-pound payload from ita Fullerton donned binoculars to berth, moving it around the ca- maoeuver the ann into posiUon vernoua bay, careful not to hit to crab a 353-pound payload with other experimenta stored there. Canadarm'a wire-an.are fingers. "The PDP has been unber- The procedure was anything the d . It ha a been l t' s but routine. Sharp eye1 and a been lowered down and we're finil grip on the controls had to ready to reberth it again," said subetitute for guidance from a Fullerton. Thi.I initial teat with failed video. monitor. the arm took only six mloutee After capturing his target, the and lt was executed perfectly. pilot, working by remote control The caotured instrumenta. cal.. from a post at the rear ol Col-(See SBU1TLE, P age A%) o.llJ ..... IWIPMto QUALITY CHIP•-Terry Kafader, San Juan Capistrano fiesta volunteer, points out the good and bad points of a cow chip during Wednesday's cow chip tossing contest in the Mission City. Let the chips fall 'Perfect' specimens end in toss-up By STEVE MITCHELL Of'"IMOlllr NeelWf There's an art to .electing the right materials for a cow chip to.ma contest. : Just ask Terry Kafader, orga- nber of the San Juan Capistrano chip throwing competition held , Wedneeday as a part of the city's celebration of the return of the awallOW11 to the Mission City. 'To find the perfect chip," says Kafader, ''you ftnt have to find the perfect COW." He said it took himaelf and a few frienda thtee days to find the perfect cow on the ranches sur- rounding San Juan Capistrano. "Once we found the cow," h e smiled, "it waa only a matter of followina it around for a few da ." ~fader, dressed in cowboy hat, vest, jeana and boots, was sorting cow chips from a large bag shortly before the contest INDEX At Your Servk:e AS Erma Bdrnbeck B2 Bu1i n t!11 C6-7 Cavalcade ·B2 Clallined 1>4-7 c.omlca C5 era.word C5 Dlath Notices D2 A6 B7-8 beaan Wedneeday. More than a d<...en younpters lined up in the mini-park across from the El Adobe restaurant, grimacins all Kafa,der pulled half-pound patties from the bag. Grabbing up a large, Frisbee- sbaped example, the contest or- ganizer outlined what contestants should look for in their chip. "It can't be too soft or it will adhere to' the hand when it's toaeed," he said. "And if it's too dry, It will break apart in the air, reducing the distance it will travel." Once the choice chip is selec- ted, there's the matter of how to toss it properJy. Kafaders ad~? "T088 it qu.icltly." But there were a number of styles employed by the young contestants Wedneeday. Girls tended to utllize the (See CHIP, Page AZ) Horoecope B2 Movies B7-8 Mutual Funds C6 r National News A3 · Public Notices D2-3 Sports Cl-4 Stock Marketa Cl Television B6 Thea ten B7-8 W•ther A2 t'=nrnent Gann B2 JVodd News A3 SPORTS . . Red China sroup in area I ' \hat = to call ftCh of the ~ ff• to the 1i.nd du· ~ ~ He added he wUl ~r Iii .\ny. financial award to proof. 11~ ·aai. eult we are chllrJJlng that 'Rftho Pab Verdell corp, WU not..eki.nt a letitimate fe.. medy ol • arievance under law by flllbl t&e suit," McCarthy aaicl ''W.'maintaln that the lAguna remdenfll \4-e~ be.iJ?4 purpoeely hareaaed to compel the clty to •P~" llancho'• development plam hr 8 . mu.." He •d ~11 action was intended to lntJmidate and frigbten. ~ reaidents, members of the Lla\O'Ul Beach Greenbelt, throuab the filing of a $28 mil· lion damage suit to keep them q~!'-: . ~y said he ~evidence to s~t that former Mayor Jack MSIJIOWell, a metnber of the pla!D)iN commission at the time of tbe Rancho suit, offered to help the d eveloper prove its charge of conspiracy against the 43~. . . ,. Th• Claremont attorney said -subpo:en"ed written correspon· "dence by a now deceased Ho· a ward Miller, then an employee of 2Newport Investment, Inc., says McDowell approached Rancho attorneys and off4rred to provide 'dence "'\t ~time Rancho filed suit agaln•t the Laauna Beach Greenbelt memben, 1t abo had 1uita pendlnl a1alnat the city, • "What eee~y lnteret· ting la that appean to have been oUertna ..iatance to , the party that WU aWnc Laguna, '" tbe while holdln1 office on the Plannlng Commlalon, •• Mc· Canby uJd. The City of Laguna Beach ~the 522·ac:nt Syca(DOre 1iWa property in 1978 for '6.75 million to end the flurry of Rancho lawaaita. The land purchue hu been an issue of on101.n& conttoveay in the city after Laguna foWld 1taelf unable to pay off its mortcNe on the acreage, The city ts currently Involved with plans to .ell off a portion of the property t() pay off its debt. Named as co-deferidants in the seven residents' suit are attor· neys John Pollock and Charles Berwanger of Newport Beach and John T. Harris, a resident of Connecticut. . The three men represented Rancho Palos Verdes Corp. when it filed the suit against the La- gtmana. That suit WU first filed In federal court, but was deemed outside ~e jurisdiction of that court. It was later filed in the California Superior Court. , McCarthy said Wednesday testimony in the auit against Rancho and its parent firms could last a month or more. . SHUTTLE TESTS • • • ' led a plaSrnic dUignostic package, · ·measure the shuttle's electro· macnetic field. A tftlevlaion ca· mer.captured the'Dl8Jleuver for · M*'6n Control, w.here an offJ. • cial said, "We were impreseed." The pilot again unlimbered the ''spacehook" to run through a aeries of tests waving the pac· &ti kage ·around and extending it •0 out.Bide the bay. 29, "If there were any surprises, tt~ they were all pleasant," Fuller· ~; ton·aa.id. Everything ..waa abeolu· :tri tely atraightlorward as far as ·If• <:'Ommand and res~." ~ Fullertor and commander Jack ~·R, Louama, "feeling a little bet· w: ter" almost halt-wal through &~ their mission, had tO delay the ir ex~ -first !ICbeduled Tues.- -o1 diat, because of the failure of the ~JI camera on the wrist of the !tit Caudian·built mecha.nical arm.: btl· -"•Fullerton reports that for the fint time we have executed a grapple and capture with the arm," Mission Control reported ncshortly before the lifting exercise b11 . took place. "The spacecraft i.s demonstra- ting to ua that ft's a pretty sound piece of machinery," fltght di· rector Neil Hutchinaon reported. The ship's third flight was to end after 116 orbit.a next Monday in New Mexico. Columbia's second flight was cut short in November by fuel- cell trouble. Flight 3 has en· countered only minor trouble, and every orbit today added to the shuttle endurance record set Wednesday when it passed the M-hour, 2l·minute mark on its 37th orbit. "We'd like to more than double that," Lousma said. Today, Columbia waa flying with its noee. to the IU1l, its tail in the cold shadows. On Saturday, after 80 hours in that p<>Sition. the astronauts are to fire three sets of engines in the tail to de- termine if they have been af- fected by long expqeure to tem- pera t.ures down to '2'15 degrees below ?.ero. lhllr .............. WINNING TOSS -Rob Wll1on, 11, of San .Juan Capistrano lets loose with his • prize winning cow chip that landed 81.8 feet down the park. . From Page A 1, CHIP . . . ' Frisbee, or discus tou. For the moet part, their efforts were in· effective. Proponents of the overhand or ·sidearm tou were more succea- ful -especially when the toa · was preceded by a short, running start .. Kafader and a friend dutifully marked off and announced the distance of each toss (measured to the center of the fallen chip, of coune.) And the winners? The brother and sister team of Rob and DeP. bie Wilson of San Juan Capi·. Strano. Rob's chip flew 81.8 feet and Debbie's chip landed in the gravel 64 feet from the throwing line. But even for the losen, the contest was a real fling. South Laguna man critical . A South Lag'una man remai- ned in critical condition today at Mission Community Hospital in Mi.salon Viejo after being hit-by a car Tuesday while crc:ming Paci· fie Coast Highway. A spokesman for the California Highway Patrol said Carl Han· sen, 75, was crossing the high. way near the Treasure Island Trailer Park at about 1:30 p.m. when he wu struck. The spokesman identified the driver of the vehicle as Carmen Baca, 69, Of Chino, who was proceeding southbound at about 45_mpb. ra\' 't B ·~·. ·Chance of showers ., ' 20 lo 40 mph In the llfWnoon. Thunder9howwa .,. fc>f9Cut for lo• Ang•IH. COHt•I and lnlermedl1te nlleys, the 3a11 Molitt ... cloudy through Frkl•y Fernindo, San O•brtel Ind Sen ' Bemerdlno vllley9. north to I.he morning with • 20 percent~ coutel ., .. of S1nt• B1rb111 of .,_.. thll •ftemoon Ind • County 1nd 1<>11th u fir 11 th• 70 percent ch1nce tonight •nd ar.,.. Coun~ metiopolltan -• Frid~ mOfnlng. P1rtly cloud) ..ty'J:'rtmy---.. Frtdllf¥. -.n-with dedr ..... 111 ... ~·-..,. • ah~. Hlgh1 Frld1y 83 to eT. _ _,, low• +e to ss. Huntington. Temneratures N9wpo1t .,.. temper1tufW ,_ r .. t,ci from ~ lqi9( of 50 to • high ol El1ewhere. from Point Con eeptlon to tne MHlcan border ,=::-..... lrld 0U1 eo mllel: Night Ind mor· ..,.... nlng V81'llble wlndl, -'etly 10 :ie to 111 knotl. Welterty ..... of 1 Attentc Cly to 2 t.et. Moltly =" thrOUgh IBlltlmor• Frtd11Y with 1 Chlncll ._.. Blrmlngl'wn tonight. 8lernerctl .. s· . lee.. U •• 11ummary: ·5. Cold Clf\ldlen ell ... pulhlng CNrtltn NC "roll the netlon'1 mid NCI Ion_ a.iltn ~ tod1y, leavlng b«llnd enow 11nd wind• lri p1r-11 of th• centr1( l~"' PllN. . All!! Ind ll10W ,.. """'~ • Clnclnnltl K .... Ind ~ ... hllllng In I Clewllnd 111tern Nebruk•. So1ttered J5~ lhowet'I Ind ltluMlent~ hit the toutfl Atlllntlo oameat ....._ UgM "'°"" ,_ In Ille LIM aup..r j~~ ' r1or,,;.ti-, WM1Mr e.vtoe ] B P8'0 predloted 1hower11nel thun-t~ ~ lilOrlg tM IOUttl At-; 11ntlo cout, wfth lllOwer'• OYef· '= the Te11n11111 Ind Ohio~ ;lnctnlCllll wid tM INcMftd upper·AtlMdc 1~ ooeM.111 ....... A few 1now thower1 ••;• :~~ =-:.: '!:r.°'::'~= I,~ Rodi 'th• Rocky Mount• nt end th• ~~ ~,..ion. • T~----~ Mllrnl to reeeh only th• 201 •nd ac>t ia.p from tM northern Plaint to tM \ · ~L--. .... Tempw•t\W• Wound tM na-, I .... YCftl '°" -tr todlly rWlgld from 10 Ill <*Ill Cly lhlflden, W'('O •• to 10 In ICey !Onllltll . w•. BJ.. on.ncto .-..... .. Lo ....... 88 29 (!!!!] 38 27 t o • eo se ~ «•• 59 52 ~ ...... 49 311 eo a 71 50 34 29 Phoenix 7e ~ 30 Plttltlufgh 82 53 ~ Ptllnd, "-41 80 4!! Ptllnd. Ore 89 57 55 =City : 119 30 Rlctlmond et 47 23 I Sfllt Like 59 54 45 . s..tt1e eo 117 38 1 St loult Cle eo 30 St P-Temc>e 111 86 29 Spcllene 63 98 57 Tuc:aon 74 59 32 WMNngtn 82 49 32 Wlc:MI 88 ~ 30 CMJPOMIA se = Bek....., 1e 63 ~ == :41 73 eo F,_., 70 41 113 -~ 9863 18 59 .,.. 71 51 ae n . ...,.,. 51, 72 41 ...._ 71 12 •~ 1452 ee 40 P..o~ .a 40 71 47 Aldllllft .. 47 ~ !!1 =,.c:r : ; " 33· ...._ It 46 ~ 4a 9lfl '*'° .. 57 74 14 9lfl Ff'MClloo 5' ... 65 3' ... llrtlerl u ~ 70 40 ......... ., 45 11.... • ... • ... ,.,..,,.. 12 to 30_..... 15 411 a.mow 7 4 51 28 Big 8Mf 50 15 23 • BllhOp 87 29 46 c.t.lln• 14 41 27 Long 8Mct1 72 41 25 Monrovia 78 43 34 ~t. lYhon 3' Newpor1 Beecifl 86 50 47 ontttto 11 43 45 • Palm Springe Ill 52 Cle Petadene 74 45 32 .... Bemerdlno 72 4 t 39, 8-.i JCM 86 411 38 Santa An• 72 41 32 Senta CNz 117 53 Tlhoe v.,,., 55 25 Extended . ·forecast COASTAL AND MOUNTAIN AREAS -Vt1tl1ble CloudlneM Saturdey. Fw Md ""'* ~ dey and Mond9r. HlgM In.,.... ''"' ea to 7f. low. 45 to 55. ~lghe It mounteln retOft 11"81141 lo 54. lcwt 21 to 38 •• Smog Popular • • 1an1tor aead Th• ld d1 at the TOJ> of Ua• ·World =mawy 8cbOGl ID t. l'IM ..... mlW blm ~." and at a ~ party w the man .wra1 ,_..-CO. tM:Y pb. clalmld b1m their favorite jma..;. tor. Francia 0 Bu.hy" Bushman, who retired to bl1 Borrego Sprln11 ranch laat year, dled T\.aeldAy at the ap of~~. A memorial service for the popular maintenance chief wW be held Saturday at \ 1 a .m. in that cte.s;.~Maps to the 1er-vice aN a at the Chamber of ~erce ln Laguna Beach on Glenneyre Street, in back of the library. ''He was alwaya auch a big part of the school," recalla principal Mike Carroll. "Everyone jult }o. ved hiJn." And the staff and klda showed that love when they gave him gifts crafted in their classrooms d urlng a surprise party at ChristmMtirne three~ qo. nae waa always . . to help. the teachers, and the ki ," Car- roll said. "He took pride in everything he did." Bushman is survived by his wile and four children. • From PageA1 Local workers fill alien jobs By JEFF ADLER ot"lle Dlllr ....... While Oran1e County 1triw· . berry fieldl we being picked clean of undocwneftted field hand.a by Immigration officers, local real"l dent• are lining up for their . ~ . ' Train hits van stuck on tracks A van driven by an El Toro teen·ager was demolished by a northbound Amtrak train Wed- ne1day at ·4:30 p.m . in Minion Vlejo. The unidentified driver was apparently looking for a shortcut to Cabot Hills Road, and drove along the tracb near Oso Park· way, the Highway Patrol repor· ted. The van became stuck on the railroad ties whe n the driver tried to cross the track.a at an unmarked area. The driver and an undentified passenger were unhurt and the train was not damaged, the CHP said. mlntmum-wage )008. State Employment Develop- me nt Department oUlclall In Orange <:.ounty report that llnce immigration raid• on local 1trawberry fields beean earlier thl• week, they have received scores of Inquiries concerning such jobs. And local strawberry growers, con cerned that the raid• are interrupting the strawberry bar· vest, say job seekers have been telephoning and showing up ln the fields early each morning hoping to replace undocunwmted fruit pickers. Meanwhile, raids by U.S. Bor- der P atrol agents continued In Orange County this morning, ac- cording to Dale Muaegade., chief deputy patrol agent for the U.S. Border Patrol. He said 637 illegal aliena had been seiz.ed during the raid's first three days and dispatched to Mexico. He said th~roundup would continue at leait through the end of the week. One local grower, SF Farm'• Bob Harkness, said the harvest at their company's Laguna Hills operation was halted at 8 a .m . today following the latest sweep by border patrol agents. OZONE WARNINGS • • • U industry release of fluorocarbons each year has decreased. as CMA contends, then the total amount of thQae chemicals in the atmosphere should be increasing at a rate much slower than "it has been, Rowland said. But his atmospheric studies show the amount of fluorocarbons continues to rise more rapidly than CMA estimates. From 1970 to 1980, the total amount of fluorocarbons in the atmosphere jumped from 2 to 6 million tons, he said. .Fluorocarbons ~adually rise into the stratos· 'phere -7 to 30 miles above the !arth1s aur· face. When ultraviolet rays strike the molecules in the upper portions of the stratosphere, ozone-destroying chlorine atoms and chlorine comQOUnds are ['\!leased. ozone, which contains three atoms of oxy. gen bonded together, shields the planet from the dangerous effects of ultravto. let radiation emitted by the sun. An initial effect of in- creased ultraviolet exposure could be more skin cancer. ''There is no way we will be able to attr1bute the in· crease in ultraviolet rays to skin cancer," Rowland said. "It appears the overwhelming cause of skin cancer is due to a change In lifestyle." ROWLAND But he predicts a 1 percent loss in the ozone layer may eventually lead to a 3 percent rise In skin cimcer rates. However such predictions are difficult to prove since cancers often have a la· tency period of 10 to 20 years. In 1974, Rowland predicted specific levels of the coone layer might be depleted by about half a percent a year if fluorocarbons continued to be released into the atmosphere. TI\at prediciion was proven true last year when Na~onal Aeronautics and Space Admini· strati.on satA!llltea discovered a 5 percent drop in the ozone layer from 1970 to 1979 at the 25·rnile alUtude level. The CMA still believes Rowland's ozone· depletion projections need further study. In fact, the trade group has suggested its own theory -that most fluorocarbons are trapped in the troposphere, the atmospheric layer cloeest to the plane t, and are removed before they can diffuse into the stratosphere. Eight years ago. Rowland and UCI colleague Mario Molina proposed their theory about the potential dangers of fluorocarbons to the envi- rorunent. After extensive study, the federal government instituted a ban on fluorocarbon-based aerosol propellants' in i9"19. Canada and three Scandinavian countries alao have clamped down on the use of fluorocarbons as aeroeol propellants. But Rowland emphasized that the threat of Ouorocarbons is a global one. "'.fhe s eneral belief is the problem was solved by banning aeroeob," be a said. "But that's not what happened. "All of the other l.L9e5 of chlorofluorocarbons have not been banned in most countries and have continued io increase. The net result as far as the environment is concerned is there has been no change in the past six years. "And most U.S. manufacturers," he added, "were free to seek o ther outlets for their product.'' Measurements of fluorocarbon concentrations in the atmosphere taken at sites throughout the w orld show no more than a 10 percent diffe- rence, he said. "It is a regional emission that in a short time becomes a worldwide problem," Rowland asser· ted. "The amount that is in the atmosphere over North America is the sum total of the amount released everywhere in the world. "It is a little disconcerting for a scientist., from an environmentalist point of view, when you are on the island of St. Lucia in the West Indies and they have the same amount ·of cblorofluorocar· bona as we do in the United States." Oxford Goth Pullover I Storekeeper Monte Pries is wearing our all cotton oxford cloth shirt in a ticking weave stripe. This shirting was originally created by a Scottish mill in the late 19th century, and still remains a tradition today. Available in blue, burgundy, pink, lav· ender, and yellow stripings. A store that ojfersjine traditional SPortsweor for men, women and boys. • -• L Orange Cout DAILY PILOTIThurtday, Maren 25, 1982 ---" Dawson resignation new twist for city Laguna Beach City Council- man Howard Dawson's surprise resJgnation from the council last week was dramatic, to say the lea.st. Some called it grandstanding. Others called it politically motiva- ted. Still others said it shows there is still room for bravado in Laguna 1 Beach politics. · Dawson prefers to term it a I means of "dramatizing my point ii that r don't like what's happening " in our fair city." The four-year council mem- ber is not seeking re-election, and 1 his term expir~ next month. So his resignation last Tues- day hardly leaves the remainder of the City Council in a quandary. In a prepared statement, read before handing in his resignation, Dawson took on political opposites Mayor Sally Bellerue and Coun- cilman NeU Fitzpatrick. He blamed them for every- thing from the failure of the city to solve the problem of Sycamore Hills to blackmailing developers in town by attemptina to force them to provide affordab1e housing. It was Dawson's swan song, and his concei:n• were dutifully_ re~orded in e prea1 -ncl on· ~110. Dld It aecc8pllab anythiQQ? Dawson hoPes so. ffe la ~tiot 100 percent convinced the council election April 13 won't see three more council members seated who think ,a.long the lines of Bellerue and Fitzpatrick. And he believes his state- ment, and resignation, will have more impact than showing up next month to accept the traditional cer amic plaque for his council service. Time-.sb.are questions Laguna Beach City Council -tnembers have given the city some breathing room to consider the · iimpacts of time-share units in town. Last week the council im - posed a four-month moratorium on conversion of existing hotels and motels to time-share use. The move gives Laguna planning officials some time to gauge the possible effects of time-share uni ts on Laguna's budget, population and recreation- al resources. Operators of time-share units, such as Laguna Shores and now, the San Maarten, "sell" time to purchasers who have use of a unit for a week or two weeks per year. Proponents say time-share units proyide an opportunity for people who would otherwise nev- er be able to afford to do so, to "own" property near the beach. Opponents say a proliferation of such conversions would only deplete Laguna's supply of over- • night and weekend accommoda- tions for visitors. That, they claim, hurts res- taurants, boutiques and other shops in the Art Colony. although it can be argued that time-share owners would use the commercial facilities as much as short-time visitors. The council's concern, how- ever, is the impact of time-share projects on the city's budget. What must be studied in the next four months is the legality of charging a bed tax, or transient tax to operators of time-share units. Hotels and motels in town currently pay an 8 percent tax, intended to pay for the costs of services for the additional people in town. Another question is, who is to maintain time-share complexes once the units are sold? A four-month study period seems fair, and since only one po- tential operator currently is going through the city procesa for such a conversion, the freeze will not adversely impact developers. Growth inipac ts safety A recent double fatality in Dana Point raises the question of whether there are enough traffic s ignals in the seaside village to , slow down speeding Pacific Coast Highway traffic. On March l , two elderly wo- men from Canada were struck and killed while crossing Coast High- way in the Ruby Lantern Street crosswalk. According to the California Highway Patrol, the driver who hit the two women swerved around a car which had stopped to let them pass. One woman was pronounced d ead at the scene, while the second died a short time later at Mission Community Hos- pital. During the past year there • have been several other accidents in Dana Point involving pede- strian s, bicyclists and Moped ri- ders being hit by cars. With the construction of new housing in and around Dana Point. both automobile and pedestrian traffic is sure to remain on the increase. In addition, continuing ex- pansion of the offer ings at Dana Point Harbor promises to draw a much larger number of inland vi- sitors into the area. Before there are more tragic accidents, a study should be con· ducted by Orange County officials to determine if more traffic signals are needed in the unincorporated community to slow vehicles on Coast Highway. Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views ex- pressed on tn1s page are mose 01 1neir autnors and artists. Reader comment-:1s 1!w1t·' ed Address Tile Daily Pilot. P 0 . Box ISM>, Costa MeScl, ~A 92626. Phone·(714) 641 4321 L .M. Boyd/ Sense of h umor Which sex te nds to have the better sense of humor. the male or the female? Studies at Wesley and Smith colleges once wound up with the conclusion: ''The tendency of men to laugh at anything labeled 'joke' strongly suggests that their sense or humor is less well developed and discriminating than that of women." Q. What's Alaska's slate motto? A. Has none. It's the only slate without one"'in fact. Name or the London publishing company that puts oul the maga:line called "The Racing Pigeon Pictorial" Is the Coo Press. So valuable are vanilla beans that growers mark them with pinprick brands, but rustlers steal them in the night nonetheless. Major Benjamin Russell was the editor of o newspaper called the Boston Sentinel. Some historical ORA NGE COAST lllilJ Pilat footnotes quote his daughter as insisting it was he and no other who i n vented the widely reported com mand alle1ed to .be the last uttered by Captain James Lawrence of the frigate Chesapeake: "Don't give up the ship!" Thomas Jefferson also ran a nail factory. U a woman doesn't marry until s he's 30, chances are the man she eventually does marry, if any, wlll be at least 12 years older than herself. A recent poi! among teachers reveals that 38 out of 100 say they'd never go into that line of work, It they had it to do over a11in. Question arlsel as to how old you have to be before you can wear contact lenaea. No age llmlt,. evidently. At leut 40 babies have been fitted wtth contacts at the University of California in Bernley's Infant Vllton Clinic. ·Thom11 P. Haley PublllNf' '~£!£!' Even FBI can lose evidence WASHINGTON -The glamorous side of the FBI's work has been chroni- cled on television and in the movies. But as any FBI agent could attest, there's a vital part of the G -man's life that will never make it to the screen, mainly because it is b-o-r-i-n-R. That's the seizure and safekeeping of propert)' against the day when it will be introdu- ced as evidence in a federal trial. Pro- bably not even Norman Lear could make the Top 20 with a s h o w titled, "FBI Property Clerk." MUNDANE AS IT IS, the custody of evidence is a crucial ingredient of any su~ful prosecution. And an internal Justice ~partment draft report charges that the FBI clerks could be blowing some cases. The nub of the still-secret draft, pre- pared by auditors in the department's management division, is th.at nobody keeps proper track of property that has been seiz.ed for evidence. Things are ao sloppy, the auditors complained, that evidence could be lost or otherwise dis- appear and no one would know it. ln their low-key, bureaucratic jargon, the auditors put it this w ay: "The systems used by the FBI for the hand- ling of seized and recovered property are out-of-date and lack the specificity to effectively meet the responsibilities and requirements imposed by regulation." The auditors noted that "we were told a number of times that •we (the FBI) have never lost any evidence,'" but ad-'G.' -J1-c1-11-1-111_1_1 -~·~ ded coldly: "ln our opinion, the system now in uae would not disclose the 1068 of evidence if It did ocx:ur." The basic problem, the auditors con eluded, is that property taken into cus- tody by the G-men is "not effectively supervised by either agents or Support Service Supervisors." As an example of this distaste for im! portant but dull detail, the draft report cited "extensive time ~., between the seizure of property for possible use as evidence and its ultimate recording in FBI logbooks. ln the Detroit field office, the investi- gators found many items of rersonal property that had been in FB custody for more than eight years without being entered in the record-Time lags in the Philadelphia and Atlanta regional offices exceeded a year in some cases. ''Once personal property is taken, the FBI becomes responsible for it and ac- countability is mandatory," the draft report points out, and adds: "Delays such as we found (In recording) are unwar- ranted and unjustified." IN ADDmON TO the agents' casual attitude toward seized property -pos- sibly because of it -the .. subsequent handling by property clerks "is neither proper nor adequate," the auditors com- plained. The reason for this, they deci· d ed , was inadequate training and a poorly written manual of instructions. The Justice Department investigators found some ridiculous examples of pro- perty that had been retained long after it was uaeful -like the mink coat that had been stored in a cardboard box at the Philadelphia FBI office since 1972, even though it was involved in a case that was closed in 1977. Evacuation plans delude the people To the F.ditor: The "crisis relocation" plan on which the federal and state governments are working would evacuate populations from areas experiencing the dire effects of nuclear war. Thb plan is a hoax, ac- cording to Beverlee A. Myers, California MAILBOX Di.rector of Health Services. It is unfair, deluding the people into thinking that there can be an escape. The state Office of Emergency Ser- vices. working with the federal govern- ment, has stated that we would have three to five days advance notice from the Soviet Union. This ls utterly falla- cious, for surprise is an effective ele- ment of attack. A miscalculation almost triggered an attack a few months ago. For neither the well calculated firing nor the impulsive release of a bomb would have there been a warning. HOW WOULD an evacuation take place? During peak traffic periods, such as we now experience on popular beach recreation days, or at times of special events, such as the Pasadena parade, traffic Is 80 consested as to be practically immobile. Our highways would be enti- rely inadequate tc, enable a terrorized population to flee from a threatened area. Where would the evacuees go? With the U.S. and the Soviet arsenals armed with thousands of nuclear warheads an explosive power approaching more tttan a million Hiroshima bombs could be re- leased. Over thousands of aquare miles the air. water and land would be blanketed with deadly radioactive con- taminants. The earth could become as devoid of life as the moon. Survival? No. The nuclear arms race is not confined to the U.S. and the Soviets. Great Bri- tain, France, China and probably India have nuclear weapons. Several of the leta stable countries are intent on 8Cq\li- rina them. The nuclear anna race ia a matt.er that should be of concern to all of us. MARY SCXYM' S upport in dexing To the F.dJtor: I would like to extend my genuine thanks for your editorial auppon of my permanent income tax indexing legiala- tion. The three-year long battle haa en- ded. We succeeded in ,etlinl legi.alation to benefit the wage M.men of Celifornla for two years and now the only hope left la Lot the people to undentand that there will be an ~ mMa.a.N on I.he June ballot. lt ia now up to them. IT IS I MP E RAT I VE that this Jarvi1-1pont0red meNure recelvet an overwhel mln& aupport vote. The wordlnfl te ldendcal to my tint indexin.I bill. AS" 279. Al\houah I am unhlPeY wtth the ln- dt'x \mid, the C..Ufotnj.a Cclnauroer' Price Jrftt· l e.t1 thac lt la ne: ry lo have 1 indexing of personal income mxes to al- low the wage earner to ICieep pace with inflation. We can work together to see that the CPI flaws are changed by the Federal Bureau of Labor Statistics. It will conti- nue to be the theroit>meter that does not give the right temperature until the housing costs and other luxury elements are recalculated. I hope you will continue to support all permanent income tax indexing. MARIAN BERGESON Assemblywoman, 74th District TELE PHONE YOUR LET TER TO THE E DITOR See instructions below Likes the log To the F.ditor: I wish to congratulate you on the new Pilot TV log which you s tarted last week. It is by far the most complete TV guide of all channels and makes it easier for the "addict" to know what is prog- rammed, thereby e liminating going through three or four separate logs. The format is excellent, and I hope this will be a permanent addition to your fine newspaper. ROBERT GUGGENHEIM Comparison To the Editor: It seems to me the situation in El Salvador is very comparable with that in Poland. U we object to the Soviet Union's support of an unpopular government ln Poland, then the U.S . should s~y out of supporting the unpopular •overnment in ErSalvador. If we believe tt la legitimate to support the unpopular government of El Salvador. then il seems hypocritical to blame the Soviet Union for lta role in Poland. BRIAN H. KLEINER Equal justice To the F.ditor: We ~ all taught to believe that we are enUtled to equal ju.Uce under the law. That la my polnt with rtspect toil- lepl unit.I in I...,una Beech-'ftle iasue la not whether or not ~ are aodally de- sirable -if they are let a cllan&e \he law -but aelective enlutwrnent ot extst1nc laWI ti not eq\IN justiee. It .. a IJ'all inequity to enf~ f!Yf!rY facet of ihe IOIUna ordinance. bulldJ.nc bM!th Ind -.fety cm. on a law •bldinc citb.en •ho bu!Jdl or remodela yet de- mand a 8'CMd dtiaen ClOmplalnt to en- • Lttttn from rNIU" art wtk~ Tlw rlghl to· condnttt lttur1 to tu .poet or 1llmitl0.lt' hbfl 11 ~•truH L.ttltrs oJ JOO word• Of' lt11 .OOl bf givn prrftttftCc AU lettt,. miut incl• ti~lurt' and moaltog oddrn1 bul nomn mo11 bt willtlwkJ on rt· quttt 1/ tufltc1tnt rfo1on I• apparent. P~l'J uU Mt b« pubUlllfd. L.tft"'a "'4M b« ttltp#ttwtfd 10 "2-«*J f'iOf'M ONI pMnt 111unlwr ot tM Cottlnbulor ,,..., fJll ~ /'1r u.nftcoliam ,..,.,._. force the same laws on those who flout the law by maintaining illegal rentals. I BELIEVE it to be the duty of a councilman to his fellow citizens to in- sure. them equal justice under the law. Twice council members Bellerue and Fitzpatrick voted against enforcing the law against illegal units, presumably being convinced of their social desirabi- lity: nor did they suggest changing the laws. voting ins tead for selective en- forcement. Their action, in my judgment, is mal- feasance. It was one of my reasons for resigning. I have long believed, and recommended . solving the pro blem by exempting owner-occupied premises on economic rather than social grounds. HOWARD DAWSON Rem ember inflation? To the F.ditor: It wouldn't hurt if you would remind your readers that scarcely a year ago. everybody was wringing their hands over a high rate of inflation. This. we were told, and I believe rightfully so. was our biggest problem. Look at us now. Inflation is down and hmt been down to a single digit number these past few months. Now everybody wants to increase the money supply. It seems our biggest problem is high inte- rest rates. So, start the money presses and bring back good old ii'iflation! Our President said long ago that licking inflation would not be easy. How quickly people forget! J .W. REID How dare he? To the·F.ditor Once again it becomes "u s" vs. "them." "Us" being the ones who elect "them" often to our sorrow and detri- ment. I listened to Sen. Williams the other day as he crawled bade under his rock. His statement to the effect that he bad not done anything contrary to the siAn· dards of the Senate should anger the rema1nin.g Senators with any integtity. rm sure it does the electorate who choee him to repreeenl them. How dare he try to tar everyone with the same brush? And how dare he blame the FBl for the feet that (to quote from ''!Ady in the Dark") "in 27 J.anguaces he couldn't ._y NO"? • MARY JANE WOOD l"m beCiJmlna to WOllCW if the "Moral Majority" la (was ever) really the (a) ~ty. B.B. • . -• THURSOA Y, MARCH 25. 1982 ORANGECOUNTY. CALIFORNIA • 25 CENTS I 500 THOUSAND Eatlmated ,.._.. of ftuorocarbOna Into environment determined by atmoapherle ct.ta. f19spital endorsed! Saddleback College backs Ir.vine facility 400 THOUSAND ---..... Chemical Manufacturers Aaoclatlon'a estimated refease of fluorocarbons Into environment. 1970 1975 Ozone shield periled? ' UCI scientist says danger of fluorocarbons continues By JOEL C. DON ot"'h.,.., .... •ttf' Despite earlier warnings that fluorocarbons in the atmosphere could increase rates of skin can- cer or produce genetic mutations and even alter the F.a.rt.h's climate, em.is&ons of the man-made chemicals continue to rise, according to a UC Ir- vine scientist. UCI Irvine atmospheric chemist F. S herwood Rowland, who first warned of the dangers of fluorocarbons to the Earth's protective ozone layer, reports that the total amount of these chemica.la in the atmosphere has tripled in the last 10 years. And because fluorocarbons remain in the atmosphen: for as long as 90 years they might pose a hazard to the environment well throug}) the next centur?:• he said. Dr. Rowlands findings will be published in the April issue of the Geophysical Research Letters. His research team included UCI chemist S.C. Taylor, Derek Montague of UCLA and . 1Yoshihiro Makide of the University of Tokyo. 1 Their results differ sharply from data on 'Yearly fluorocarbon emissions compiled by the .Chemical Manufacturers .Association (CMA), an industry trade group. =Rowland said yearly emissions of F1uorocar- 12, the most common of chemicala known nerically as chlorofluorocarbons, ~ by .20 percent from 1974 to 1979. · CMA reported the release of Fluorocarbon 12 into the' atmosphere has been reduced by 19.6 percent during the same period. In an interview, Rowland attributed the dis- crepancy between his findings and CMA data to the different sources of information. CMA esti-. mates come from chemical production reports from 19 manufacturers, representing 95 percent of the total world production. Rowland's investigators used atmospheric data collected from the South Pole to the island of St. Lucia in the West Indies for their calculations. "The chemical industry has reported reduction in the overall production and release of fluoro- carbons; however, the atmosphere tells a diffe- rent story.'' he said. · Dr. Joseph M. Steed, a chemist with DuPont and chainnan of CMA's F1uorocarbon Program Panel, disputed Rowland's findings. However, in • TONI °' fl.UOft<>CAMOM-1:2 ACCUMUUTIO IN ATllO.,._ WOflU>wm. (....__Md!__,) I I I / ~ 11.iey effec:tlw 6 AnnouncierMfll Of pl-lot b9r1 /"' MILLION on UM U -OIOI pr=t I In the United tat•,.,. 5 v ,...... MILLION ~ .. ~ MILLION / 3 v M~ 2 MILLION I 1 MILLION . . '1.111 1175 1110 a telephone Interview Wedneeday, Steed would not cite sP.edfk objections. He said he wouldn't until he had 1een a full copy ot Rowland's new l'fte.8l'Cb paper. F1uorocarbona are e\'er-flr'esertt gues u8ed in industry and by private con.umen. Aerosol sprays using fluorocarbons aa propellant.a account for about 50 percent of their uae. F1uorocarbona also are found in auto air conditioning systems, refrigeration units, foetn.ing agentll and industrial solvent.a. Rowland said more than 95 percent of all flu- orocarbona produced eventually find their way into the atmosphere. Fluorocarbons have been used since the early 1930s, but Rowland noted half of all chemicals produced were manufactured within tlte last decade. . Like nuclear waste that remains radioactive for thousands of years, fluorocarbons are stable molecules that peniat in the envirorunent. The We expectancy of F1uorocarbon 12 is 90 years. Fluorocarbon 11, the second most com- monly used chemical Will last as long as 50 years. (See OZONE. Page AZ) Candidate raises $17,685 Irvine City Council hopeful leads 5 others in funds By GLENN SCOTT °' ... .,.., ......... Barbara Wiener, a self-· described "independent candidate," has raised $17,685 in her campaign for a seat on the Irvine City Council in the June 8 election.• She leads five others in fund raising, according to campaign ~xpense statements filed this week with the city clerk's office. "I am very pleaaed about the outpouring of support from my friends and neighbors," said Mn. Wiener. "I am well on my way toward achieving my goal of WORLD $25,000, which is necessary to run a competitive campaign in Irvin .. e. Seventy-nine people have do- nated at least $100 to Mn. Wie- ner's campaign, according to her report. Donors include a cross- section of lawyers, buainessmen, real estate investors and other professionals. Trailing her in contributiona, in order are candidates John Nakaoka, $11,849; Larry Agran, $7,185; Edward Doman, $400; William Pozzi, $400, and Marjorie Keiser, who did not submit a re- port because she said she hasn't raised any funds. Both Doman and Pozzi repor- ted they loaned themselves the $400 to pay for a candidate's qualifications statement to be in- cluded ln the sample ballot. Agran, an incumbent, says he has a policy of not accepting donations from any people who do bualneea with the city. Nakaoka, who is courting the bualne91 oommunity, reported 46 donations of $100 or more inclu- dina $250 from Irvine Chamber of Commerce President Harry Bozigian. STATE Saddle back Colle1e of ficlala wru be neaouauna with • srouP ol community leaden regarding plana for an Irvine hoepital being built on the college's North Carnpua at Irvine Center Drive and Jeffrey Road . Saddlebilck tru8tee9 adopted a resolution Tuesday designating the Hoag Memorial Hospital- supported Irvine Medical Center group as the agency best able to win approval for construction of a hospital. Irvine Medical Center Is pu- Robot arm OK; flight in 4th day CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -Astronaut C. Gordon Fullerton suoceufully exercised the grip of Columbia's 50-foot robot arm today, lifting a pac- kage of acientiflc instruments from the ship's cargo bay as the shuttle hummed along on day four of it.a week-lo~ mi.-ion. "rm very impreeeed with that piece of machinery," Fullerton reported aft.er an initial aeries of test.a. "The operation wert very smoothly." The grab-and-lift wu the firat test of the robot's capacity to do the job it was built for: depolltina and reUieving satellites In mpece. 1be ah\fttle WM ln the J'llid9t of a prolonged thermal teat when Fullerton donned binocular1' to maneuver the arm into position to grab a 353-pound payload with Canac:lann's wire-snare fingers. The procedure was anything but routine. Sharp eyea and a finn grip on the controls had to substitute for guidance from a failed video monitor. After capturing hia target, the pilot, working by remote control from a post at the rear of Col- umbia's cockpit, flexed the spindly arm's metallic muscles and gingerly lifted the ·353-pound payload Crom its berth, movina it around the ca- vernous bay, careful not to hit other experiments stored there. "The PDP has been unber- t he d . It has been lt's been lowered down and we're ready to reberth it again," said Fullerton. This initial test. with the arm took only six minutes and it was executed perfectly. The captured instrument.a, cal- led a plasmic <fiaanostic package. measure the ahuttle's electro- magnetic (ield. A television ca- mera captUttd lhe maneuver for Mission Control, where an offi- cial said, "We were impreaed." The pilot again unlimbered the "spacehook" to run through a series of tests waving the pac- kage around and extending it outside the bay. "If there were any surprises, they were all pleasant," Fuller- ton said. Everything was abeolu- tely straightforward as far as ~mmand and res~nse." Fullerton and commander Jack R. Lou.sma, "feeling a little bet- ter" almost half-way through their mission, had to delay the exercise -first echeduled Tues- day, because of the failure of the camera o n the wrist of the Canadian-built mechanical arm., 17 lcidnappen conricted · VERONA. Italy (AP) -A Verona court U:kia.Y convicted 17 memben of the Red Bri1adea of kid-· napping U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Jamee L . Dods and sentenced them to prison terms ranging from 26 months to 27 yean. Below-cost gas studied NATION Nancy Sinatra '!Jack After taklnt' 11even yeva off, Nancy Sinatra ta b.ck tn lhow bUltr-. aed .plam • naddnwide tour opentna for her fatlMr. l>ap,.A4 Coo~r loot WJluclcy MODESTO (AP) -A temporary ban on aelllng . guol1ne below COit tn Stanialaua County has been kept In effect until a judge decides whether to make it permanent. Prices for regular fell u low aa $1.039. . . COUNTY Belerendum controversial · J\.mt OYM' a week after ltl atart. there are reportl the Banntna Ranch referendum drive ln Newport a.ch II nanning out of .... p._ Bl. > ~ ah1ng ahead with its community- buea drive to establish a hospi- tal in Irvine, despite warnings that Orange County coullt have too many hospital beds by 1990. A recent report issued by the County Health Planning Council said that by that year the county could have 170 unneeded hospi- tal beds and up to 1,473 excess physicians. Ahother proposed site for hos- pital construction is on the UC Irvine Campus. However, there la an extensive approval process before boapitJl con.tructlon i~ able to proceed, which 1a prima- rily baaed on the need for addi- tional h.Olpltal beds in an area. Leaders of the drive \0 build a hospital In Irvine concede lhe~ plans could be held up because of the excess bedding i.taue. But Ir. vine Medical Center has a Los Angeles architect drawing plant for a 200-bed hospital. Also at iasue in the drive tQ establish a hospital in Irvine it whether It will be a teaching (See HOSPITAL, Page At) Deltr Piiot • ..,, PllOto QUALITY CHIP•-Terry Kafader, San Juan Capistrano fiesta volunteer, points out the good and bad points of a cow chip during Wednesday's cow chip tossing contest in the Mission City. Let the chips fall ' 'Perfect' specimens end in toss-up By STEVE MITCHELL o< .. Dllllr Not ..... There's an art to selecting the right materials for a cow chip tossing contest. Just ask Terry Kafader, orga- nizer of the San Juan Capistrano chip throwing competition held . Wednesday as a part of the city's celebration of the return of the swallows to the Mission City. ''To find the perfect chip," says Kafader, "you first have lO find the perfect cow." He said it took himself and a few friends three days lO find the perfect cow on the ranches sur- rounding San Juan Capistrano. "Once we found the cow," he smiled, "it was only a matter o( following it around for a few · da .. k8~fader, dressed in cowboy hat, vest, jeans and boots, was sorting cow chips from a large bag shortly before the contest INDEX . At Your Service ~ Enna Bambeck B2 Business C6-7 Cavalcade ·82 Clalaified 04-7 Comics a 0-0.Word cs Death Noticee D2 Editorlal A6 l:lntettatnment B7-8 began Wedneeday. More than a <k...en youngsters lined up in the mini-park across from the El Adobe restaurant, grimacing as K afader pulled half-pound patties from the bag. Grabbing up a large, Frisbee- shaped example, the contest or- ganizer outlined what oontesta.nts should look for in their chip. "It can't be too soft or it will adhere to the hand when it's tossed," he said. "And lf it's too dry, it will break apart in the air, reducing the distance it will travel." Once the choice chip is selec- ted, there's the matter of how to t9SS it properly. Kafader's advi~? ''Toss it quickly." But there were a number of styles employed by the young contestant.a Wednesday. Girls tended to utilize the (See CHIP, Page A%) Horoecope Movies B2 B7-8 Mutual Funds C6 • National News A3 · Pu~NoUoes 02 .. 3 Sports Cl-4 Stock Market.a C7 Televilion B6 Thea ten B7-8 Weather A2 Goren 82 •World News -A3 SPORTS ~rl -o E:) ,tf tu •9 1 -n Kappa Sigma. one of the five larpst college fraternities in the nation, baa been invited to establish a chapter at UC Irvine. The invitation \VU made by UCI CJiancelJor Daniel Al· drtcla. Kappa Sigma has 9,640 undergraduate membera ~t • Actor to teach Act.or Ted geymo, who bu performed In televillon .. p operu as well aa in more ~ 50 l1age pro4ucUona. has tieen hired to teach an acting clan in Irvine. The class, j'Introduction to Acting," ii de9igned for belZlnning actors !fKI _is ~~reel !?Y the city's cal and tciendtlc reeearch lnaU- tute and a hMlth mu.eum would be built on the lite. Speclflca on the financial ar- rangemen ts proP<>Hd between ~he colle1e and lrvlne Medical Center have not been releued. College officlala aay arranae- ments under which uae of tne land would be transferred to the group -18.le or 1eaee -will be hammered 0 1.at In the negotia- tions. Aocordina to Saddleback'• di- rector of public information. Bill Schreiber, of ereaie.t interest to Saddleback officials ii the pro- spect for new bulldinp ln which to bou.e health education and nursing prosrams. He said it would be poeeible to open the health education buil- ding within a year since approval of construction wouldn't require the extenaive review demanded of hoepital construction. Four other halpital groups are competing with the Irvine Medi- ca Center group to build the hospital. The competing groups must file a certificate of need application with the county's Health Planning Council for re- view. The other groups are Santa Ana's Western Medical Center, Tustin Community Hospital, the, Nashvllle, Tenn.-baaed Hospital Corp. of America, and the Health West Foundation of Chatsworth. 188 chaptera throughout the United S tate• ancJ Canada plus 120,000 active alumni including 900 in Orange County Other aree chapten are at University_ o~ Southern Cali- fornia, UCLK. Cal State Long Beach and San Diego State. in Irvine i'erformlng Arta Vepartment. Tuition for the iix-week coune, to meet Saturaays beglru)lq Aprjl 3, ia $30. For· in0re information, call 754-3643 or 7M-3928. Kryczko bu ap~ on TV's "Ryan's Hope" "The Guildlng Lif,ht'1 and "Another World. ' ...., .............. WI NNI NG TO SS -Rob Wilson, 11 , of San Juan Capistrano leta loose with hia prize winning cow chip 1that landed 81 .8 feet down the park. From PageA1 CHIPS .__ .. Frisbee, or discus tou. For the moat part, their efforts were in- effective. Proponpn" of the overhand or ·sidearm tolll8 'were more auccess- f ul -especially when the toss was preceded by a short, ruruill\g start. Kafader and a friend dutifully marked off and announced the distance of each t.oaa (Jneaaured to the center of the fallen chip, of course.) And the winners? 'lbe brother and aister team of Rob and Deb- bie Wilson of San Juan Capi- strano. Irvine voices • • oppos1t1on to ocean drilling Interior Department Secretary James Watt, Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. and Coastal Commis- sion Director Michael Fiacher each will get letters IOOn from Irvine cautioning against off- shore oil drilllng propoul.a. The Irvine Ctty Council agreed Tuesday evening to .. atrongly oppose'' any oil exeloration on leaaed tracts off the orange Coast that could damage the ecology or economy of·the region. • The city follows Laguna Beach and Newport Beach which hav~ , expr~ varied degrees of op-position. -- FORECAST 74 51 50 15 87 29 &4 ... 72 4e 71 43 86 50 71 43 81 52 74 45 72 41 66 .. 72 .. 17 53 55 25 Local residents line up for work f o_llowing raids BY IE1"F ADLER or.............. -While Orance Cou.n~uaw­ berry fleldl .... bUI clean of undocumented field handl by llnm1araUon oUlcen, local rest.., dent• are Untn1 up for their mlnimwn-wap ;>f». State Employment Develop- ment Department official• In Ora.nae eo-m!)' report tM& lince tmuiTaration raid• on local atrawberry fieldt be1an earlier thia week, they. have received Sout·h Laguna man critical A South Laauna man remi- ned ln critical COndition today at Miaaton Community Hoepltal in MJaaton Viejo after beina htt by a car ~)' while croaln& Paci- fic Cout Highway. A spokesman for the California Highway Patrol said Carl Han- sen, 7~. wa1 crossing the high- way near the Treasure Island Trailer Park at about 1:30 p.m. when he was struck. The apokemnan identified the driver of the vehicle u Carmen Baca, 89, of Chino, who was Proceedina southbound at about 45 _!!lph. From Page A1 1eore1 or t.nqull'tea concerntna IUCb )>Ila. And local 1trawberry srowen, concerne d t hat the raid• are interrupUnc the ttrawberry har- Y9t. •Y Job .-.... have been celephOftlnC and ahowlna up in the flelcla early each morning hoptna to replace undocwnented fruit~ MemwbOe, raJda by U.S. Bor- der P~tTOI apnta continued in Oranae °""'1Y this morning, ac-conlllla to ~ Mu.eo<les, chief deputy patrol -.mt for the U.S. Border Patrol. He Mid 637 llJeial alitN had been lllad during the raid'• first three day1 and dispatched to Mexico. He aald the roundup would continue at least through the end of the week. One local grower, SF Farm's Bob Harkne91, said the harvest at their company's L.aguna Hills operation wu halted at 8 a.m. today following the latest sweep by border patrol ~~nta. Harkness, SF Farm's sales manager, said his office had rec- orded c1oee to 125 telephone calls over the last two da~ from peo- ple inquiring about JObs. He said about 20 people show- ed up at the company's employ- ment office Wednesday, while about 30 job hopefuls turned up at the fiefds this morning. Despite _the large turnout, ho- wever, only 10 local.I 1pent the day pick.Ina fruit, he Aki. Mott did not tut out \he clay. "Primarily people 1•t out there and are diaapldnted in the amount of work plcktnc atraw- berries ta,•· Harknell said. Picken are pald minimum wage, $3.35 an llour, plus a $1 lncentlve per flat for strawber- ries picked, he aaid. State employment officlala said they were s urprised by the clients' Interest in harvesting jobs, but they said they would contact growers in hopes of fin- ding more work for those luter- est.ed. . A d epartment spokea~omr.n said they had 200 picking posi- tions available as of this morni.n$l. Marine 'j ets to fly louder Residents surroundinR Marine . Corps Air Station, El Toro may experience higher than normal noise levels next. week, officials at the base said Tuesday. . Significant increases in jet noise will be evident between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. at the air station Monday, Tuesday and Wednes- day. OZONE WARNINGS • • • · U {nd\i.siry-release of fluorocarbons each year has decreased, u CMA contends, then the total amount of thoae chemicals in the atmosphere shou)d be increaling at a rate much slower than it has ~. Rowland said. _ But hia atmolpbetic siudies show the amount of fluorocarbons continues to rise more rapidly than CMA estimates. From 1970 to 1980, the total amount of tluorocarbona in tile atmosphere jumped from 2 to 6 mUl1on tons, he said. Fluorocarbona Q;tadually rise into the stratos- 'phere -7 to 30 milea above the Lrth1s sur- face. When ultraviolet rays strike the molecU1es in the upper portion• o( the atratosphere, ozone-destroying chlorine atoms and chlorine oomoowlda are rel~. OZOne, wh.iCh oontaina three atoms of oxy- geii bonded tqiether, ahielda the planet from the dangeroua effecta of ultravio- let radiation emitted by the sun. An initial effect of in- creued. ultraviolet expoaure could t>e more lk:in cancer. ·~ ia no way we will be able to attribute th• in- creaae in ultraviolet raya to akin cancer," Rowland aid. "It appears the overwhelming cau.e of akin cancer ta due to a change in lifestyle." ROWLAND But he predic1a a 1 percent ka in the owne .layer may eventually lead to a 3 percent riae in akin cancer rates. However such predictions are difficult to prove ainoe cancers often have a la- tency period of 10 to 20 years. · In 1974, Rowland predicted specific levels bf the ozone layer might be deple1ed by about half a percent a year if fluorocarbons continued to be releaed into t'ie atmasphere. That pred.lcaon was proven true last year when Naponal Aeronautics and Space Admini- atration aateWtes diloovered a 5 percent drop in the en.one layer from 1970 to 1979 at the 25-mile altitude level The CMA 41till believes Rowland's ozone- depletion projections need further study. In fact. the trade group has suggested its own theory -that moat fluorocarbons are trapped in the troposphere, the atmospheric layercloeest to the planet, and are removed before they can diffuse into the stratosphere. Eight years ago, Rowland and UCI colleague Mario Molina proposed their theory about the potential dangers of fluorocarbons to the envi- ronment. After extensive study, the federal government instituted a ban on fluorocarbon-based aerosol propellants in i9""'19. Canada and three Scandinavian countries at.o have clamped down on the use of fluorocarbons as aeroeol propellants. But Rowland emphasized that the threat of fluorocarbons is a global one. ''The geneAll beilef is the problem was solved uy banning aeroeols," be a said. "But that's not what happened. "All of the other uses of chlorofluorocarbons have not been banned in most countries and have contin.ued to increase. The net result as far as the environment is concerned is there has been no change in the past six ye&r11. · "And most U.S. manufacturers," the added, "were free to seek other outlets for their product." Measurements of fluorocarbon concentrations ln the atmosphere taken at sites throughout the world show no more than a 10 percent diffe- rence, he said. "It is a regional emission that in a short time becomes a worldwide problem," Rowland asser- ted. "The amount that is in the atmosphere over North America is the Sum total of the amount released everywhere in the world. "It is a little diaooncerting tor a scientist, from an environmentalist poi.nt of view, when you a.re on the island of St. Lucia in the West Indies and they have the same amount of chlorofluorocar- bons as we do in the United States." OxfordOoth Pullover Storekeeper Monte Pries is wearing our all cotton oxford cloth shirt in a ticking weave stripe. This shirting was originally created by a Scottish mill in the late 19th century, and still remains a tradition today. Available in blue, burgundy, pink, lav- ender, and yellow stripings. A store that offers fine traditional sportswear for men, women and boys . • • I I • Orange Cout DAIL 'V PILOT/Thuf'9day, March 25, 1882 Accident-prone road demands improvement Irvin e officials are on the right track In making mJnor ad- justments to Irvine Center Drive to a ttempt to stop the recent rash of serious and fatal accidents oc- currinl{ there. City Council member s r ec- ently agreed to take steps recom- mended by Public Works Director Brent Much ow and Police Chief ·1 i.e<> Peart to install extra-lar~ 6$' mph speed limit signs, refl~'ive lane m arkers a nd add stricter po- li~ enforcement of the speed Ii- i mil. . · Responding to the recent accidents -four per sons ha\'e been kille d in the past seven months -has been a problem for city officials because the accidents didn't fit with the he retofore low accident rate on the curving, two- lane road. Moreover. officials have been reluctant to conside r costly im- provements to the drlve because The Irvine company already hu scheduled major modifications by next March aa it increa.~ access to its site for a future business and sh opping complex. Some sort of i mmediate h es, however L clearly were ed.:.t;> increiie the uf etr .P~ nly dijlgerous •'1!eMfl o toad. Sinking ci&f &'ldl into ,.jot cnanges tlhen -the-~-al- 'TeadY.;s fickeft!d for n1ultf..;.,\i11Jtbn dollar modifications would have been wastef4l; the agreed-upon measures seem in order. .M;eanwhile, officials s ho uld endea'~or to persuade the Irvine Compan y to make the I rvin e Center Drive modifications in the first phase of their work. Prompt action to promote sa- fer driving is obvio u sly in the public's interest. · Gates and security Irvin e Pacific is asking c ity officials to approve a locked secu- rity gate a nd a second , card- operated gate at the two access points to its 262-unit subdivision off Starcrest a nd Ridgeline, in Turtle Rock. In a refreshing piece of can- dor, a company official recently explained to City Council mem- bers the gates increase the value and "marketability" of the homes, giving the firm better prospects for selling the units. In exchange, the community would be required to main tain its own private street system and ensure access to emergency vehi- cles. T h e gates. however, would only control vehicular access. Pedestrians still would be allowed to enter the n eighborhood or to reach two hiking trails. No fences would be bujJt around the tract. The gates would be the first in Turtle Rock, although two mo- bile home parks elsewhere in the city have security measures to li- mit access. Before deciding whether to approve the ga tes, Irvine City Council members wisely have re- quested a traffic study to deter- mine the extent to which extra traffic and parked cars would be forced onto neighboring s treets. The old saw is that good fen- ces are s upposed to m a ke good neighbors -at least less trouble- some neighbors -particularly with the small building lots cha- racteristic of urban Sout he rn Cal- ifornia. As crime security concerns are added to the snob appeal that once was the principal selling point for guarded en claves, gated commu- nities may become the wave of the fu ture in n ew and developing ci- ties like Irvine. And som ewh e r e d o wn the road, Irvine m ay have t o w eigh the question of whether a collec- tion of closed communities makes a good city. Consider hunian factors Orange C(>unty planners, see- king a route for a new freeway to run north east of Irvine's North- wood Village are faced with a delicate proble m . They need to build the road close e nough to the community to make it practical, but not so close as to make it un- appealing. Judging from comments made during a public forum last week at Irvine High School, for example. most Northwood residents believe ' that any freeway between Rat- tlesn a k e R eser voir and t h eir homes is too close. T he reservoir is about a half-mile away. Extending the freeway be- tween the reservoir and the com- munity is one of many options the planners for the O range County government are weighing. Th ey also could run the freeway as far away as the other side of t h e mountain ridge -so the n ew highway would essentially follow the path of Santiago Canyon Road. Fortunately, there are alter- natives that would neith er send freeway noise through Northwood windows nor plunder the scenic Santiago Canyon route. However, before planners recommend any of th e routes to the county Planning Commission a nd Board of S uper- • visors. they intend 1.0 produce vol- umes of data on the e n v iron- mental and financial conseque nces of each alternative. Once tha t work is completed, two or three possible a lignments will be submitted along with an en vironmental impact report de- scribing each . The supervisors are expected to decide on on e route about a year from now. The planners o n h a nd last week at the public forum seemed sympathetic to the residents' wor - ries about living too close to a freeway. Yet they also admitted that m easuring the huma n res- ponse isn't as easy as estimating the physical conseque nces of an alignment. Without some system for re- cording and evaluatinJl p ublic reactions, however, those concerns can too easily be forgotten. The validity of an opinion would then become based on how much pres- sure could b e brought to bear upon a decision -make r rather than w hether the concern is reasonable. County planners will have to put sociological factors into their calculations along with engineer- ing a nd economic findings. Data on cost :per-mile s hould b e n o more important than the cost of a freeway in headaches. Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex· pressed on tn•'> page are tho!>e ot their authors and artists Reaoer c:ommen1.1s 1~v1t ed Address Th~ i:>a1ly Piiot. P 0 . Box IS60, Costa M ew. CA 92b2b. Ph0t1£-( 7141 b41 4321 L.M. Boyd/ Sen se of humor Which sex tenos to have the better sense of humor. the male or the remale? Studies at Wesley and Smith colleges once wound up with the conclusion: "The tendency of men to l'a ugh at anything la beled 'joke· strongly suggests that thei r sense of humor ls less well developed and di.scriminating than that of women." Question arises as to how old you have lo be before you can wear contact le nses. No aie limit. ORANGE COAST llilJPilat evidently. At leaat 40 babies have been fitted with contacts at the University of California In Berkeley's Infant Vision Clinic. Doctors say they don't know why the incidence of strokes has declined dr amatically since 1945. If a woman doesn't marry until she's 30, chances are the man she eventually does marry. lf any, will be at least 12 yeara older than herwelf. \ FRii'Z£! I Even FBI can lose evidence WASHINGTON -T he glamorous side of the FBI's work has been chroni· cled on television and in the movies. But as any FBI agent could attest, there's a vitaJ j:>art of the 0-man's life that will never make it to the screen. mainly because it is b-o-r-i-n-~. That's the seizure and safekeeping of property against the day when it will be introdu- ced as evidence in a federal trial. Pro- bably not even Nonnan Lear could make the Top 20 with a show titled, "FBI Property Clerk." MUNDANE AS IT IS, the custody of evidence is a crucial ingredient of any successful proeecution. And an inteJ:118} Justice Oepiµ'tment draft.report charges that the PBI clerks could be blowing some cases. The nub of the still-secret draft, pre- pared by auditors in the department'• management division, is that nobody keeps proper track of property that has been seized for evidence. Thinp are so sloppy, the auditors complained, that evidence could be lost or otherwise dis- appear and no one would know it. In their low-key, bureaucratic jargon, the auditors put it this w ay: "The systems used by the FBI for the hand- ling of seized and recovered property are out-of-date and lack the specificity to effectively meet the responsibilities and requirements imposed by regulation." The auditors noted that ''We were told a number of limes that 'we (the FBI) have never lost any evidence,' " but ad- ~11:1 11111111 ded co)dJy: "lo our opinion, the system now in use would not disclose the l~ of evidence if it did occur." The basic problem, the auditors con eluded, is that property taken into cus- tody by the G -men is "not effectively supervised by either agents or Support Service Supervisors." As an example of this distaste for im- portant but dull detail, the draft report cited "extensive time lags" between the seizure of property for possible use as evidence and its ultimate recording in FBI logbooks. In the Detroit· field office, the investi- gators found many items of personal property that had been in FBI custody for more than eight years without being entered in the record. Time lags in the PhiJadelphia and Atlanta regional offices exceeded a year in some cases. "Once personal property is taken, the FBI becomes responsible for it and ac- count.ability is mand atory." the draft report points out. and adds: "Delays such as we found (in recording) are unW11r- ranted and unjustified." IN ADDITION TO the agents' ~ual attitude toward seized property -pos- sibly because of it -the subsequent handling by property clerks "is neither proper nor adequate," the auditors com- plained. The reason for this, they deci- ded. was inadequate training and a poorly written manual of instructions'. The Justic.-e Department investigators found some ridiculous examples Qf pro- perty that had been retained long after it was useful -like the mink coat that had been stored in a cardboard box at the Philadelphia FBI office since 1972. even though it was involved in a case that was closed in 1977. Evacuation plans delude the people To the Editor: The "crisis relocation" plan on which the federal and st.ate governments are working wouJd evacuate populations from areas experiencing the dire effects of nuclear war. This plan is a hoax, ac- cording to Beverlee A. Myers, California MAILBOX Director of Health Services. It is unfA.ir , deluding the people into thinking that there can be an escape. The state Office of Emergency Ser- vices, working with the federal govern· ment. has st.ated that we would have three._,to five days advance notice from the Soviet Union. This is utterly falla- cious. for surprise is an effective ele- ment of attack. /\ miscalculation almost tr,ggered an a(£ack a few months ago. For neither the well calculated firing nor the impulsive release of a bomb would have there been a warning. HOW WOULD an evacuation take place? During peak traffic periods, such as we now experience on popular beach recreation days. or at times of special events, such as the Pasadena parade, traffic is so congested as to be practically immobile. Our highways would be enti- rely inadequate to enable a ter rorized population to flee from a threatened area. Where would the evacuees go? With the U.S . and the Soviet arsenals armed with thousands of nuclear warheads an explosive power approaching more than a million Hiroshima bombs could be re-1 leased. Over thousands of square miles the air. water a nd land w ould be blanketed with deadly radioactive con- taminants. The earth could become as devoid of life as the moon. Survival? No. The nuclear arms race is not confined to the U.S. and the Soviets. Great Bri- tain, France, China and probably India have nuclear w eapons. Several of the less stable countries are intent on acqui- ring them. The nuclear arms race ia a matter that should be of concern to all of us. MARY SCCYIT S upport indexing To the F.ditor: l would like to extend my genuine thanks for your editorial support of my permanent Income tax indexing legisla- tion. The three-year long battle has en- ded. We succeeded in gettin,g legillatton to bene(it the wa,ge earners of California for two yean and now the only hope lef\ la for the people to understand that there will be an indexing measure on th JUN J>allot, lt Is now up to them. I T I S IMPE RAT I VE thai tbla Jarvla-sponaored measure receivea an overwhelmtn1 1upport vote. The wordlna is ldenllcaJ fo my firat lndexfna blU, AB 278. Al\houah I am unhappy with tM In· dex \.-cl, the C..Ufci"nia·<:.onawMr Prtc. ~·I •1 U.t It II nec1111ry '°have \ l indexing of personal income taxes to al- low the wage earner lo keep pace with inflation. We can work together to see that the CPI flaws are changed by the Federal Bureau of Labor Statistics. It will conti- nue to be the thermometer that does not · give t·he right temperature until the housing <.'OSts and other luxury elements are recalculated. I hope you will continue to support all permanent income tax indexing. MARIAN BERGESON Assemblywoman. 74th District Likes th e log To the &iitor: I wish to congratulate you on the new Pilot TV Jog which you started last week. It 1s by far the most complete TV guide of all channels and makes it easier for the "addict" to know what is prog- rammed. thereby eliminating going through three or four separate logs. Th e format is exceJlent, and I hope this will be a permanent addition to your fine newspaper. ROBERT GUGGENHEIM Comp arison To the F.ditor: It seems to me the situation in El Salvador is very comparable with that in Poland. If we object to the Soviet Union's support of an unpopular government in Poland. then the U.S. should stay out of supporting the unpopular ~ovemment in El Salvador. If we believe it is legitimate to support the unpopular government of El Salvador, then it seems hypocritical to blame the Soviet Union for its roi. in Poland. BRIAN H. KLEINER Good work To the Editor: The California Coastal Commission should be commended for its decision to delete the extension of University Drive from the Newport Beach Local Coastal Plan. The extension of this road, if built across Upper Newport Bay, would threaten the nesting grounds of. the Light Footed Clapper Ra11 ... ap.-endangered species of bird native to this area. It is a fact that the Bail ii ~tf!ble to exiinct1on; two spedet of Haw Rail now no longer exiat. The Globel 2000 Report to the Presidm&, a U.S. Govern- ment study, predicts a ataqerina io. of ~1000 to 2 mQllon apedee of p}Mt and a.nirDal life from the e.rth by the YMr 2000, a trlaic predktlon baled on the rate of lOll of n a6itat due to urbanized de- velopment. WHILE MOST of this lo. ii OOCWT'ln8 in uoplcal areu. we .ee \lWa phenomenon happenlna ric}\t here in Southern Cali· fon\la, wh«e the ~~r ~ c.alifor· n1a Leeet Tern. and BeJCl.Lnl'I S.'la.Mlh SpuTOW are endanaered •Ped• ~u. • ... , .... ,,_ ..... , .... ~-,,,.,.,. .. ,....._ .... l••t le f1I ~· 9' t lil!llNlt Ii-.. It r~, """9r\tf - -·\ W I-Wtll .. 11-.,...,_., All """"-'* Ill t .......... eM IMttlflt --N -_. .. wll~ ell,....,.,, 11 Wlftti.111 rN-" ...... .....,., wtll NI .. ..,..,.,... l.ttttr\ Nr .............. ..._ ,._ ... ,_,. ~ ...... , .. 1,....., ...... -'9' ~ ......... ~ of the loss of their livlrlg space. Roughly 90 percent of the original coastal w et· lands that these birds need for their survjval have disappeattd under ~ban development. The p~ures of ooastaJ development are just too great for local govirnments to handle right now, jud- ging from recent actions of the Orange County Board of Supervisors vis a vis the Bolsa Chica wetlands, "'Y'd the pro~nsi­ ties of the Newport Beach City CoW'lciJ vis a vis the University Drive extension. We need a more resJjonsible, less my- opic. view of the precious little ~tal wildlife habitat that remains in Soutbem California. T he Coastal Commission , mandated by the CoastaJ Act of 1976. is now fulfilling that need. I hope they continue their good work. JAN D. VANDERSLOOT MD R em ember inflation? To the &iitor: lt wouldn't hurt if you would remind your readers that scarcely a year ago. everybody was wringing their hands over a high rate.of inOation. This. we were told, and I believe rightfully so. was our biggest problem. Look at us now. Inflation is down and has been down lo a single digit number these past few months. Now everybody wants to increase the money supply. It seems our biggest problem is high inte- rest rates. So. start the money presses and bring back good old inflation! Our President said long ago that licking inflation would not be easy. How quickly people forget! J.W. REID How dare he? To the Editor Once again it becom es "us" vs. "them." "Us" being the ones who elect "them" often to our sorrow and detri- ment. / I listened to Sen. Williams the other day as he crawled back under his rock. His statement to the effect that he had not done anything contrary to the stan· dards of the Senate should a nger \he remaining Senators with any integrity. l'm sure it does the elect.orate who chose him t.o represent them. How dare he try to tar everyone with the same brush? And how dare he blame tha FBI for the fact that (to quote from "Lady In the Dark") "in 27 iangu.gea he couldntt say NO"? ~ MARY JANE W\!{VD rm beglnnlng '° wondft If the ''Moral Majorlty" I.a (was ever) really th.e (•) majority. B.B. 600 THOUSAND Saddleback .College backs Irvine facility 400 THOUSAND -----Chemical Manufacturers Asaoclatlon's estimated re6eeM of tlUorocarbonl Into environment. 1970 1975 1910 Ozone shield periled? UCI scientist says danger of fluorocarbons continues By JOEL C. DON Ofh.,.., ..... s"" Despite earlier warnings that fluorocarbons in the atmosphere could increase rates of skin can- cer or produce genetic mutations and even alter the Earth's climate, emissions of the man-made chemicals continue to rise, according to a UC Ir- vine scientist. UCI Irvine atmospheric chemist F. Sherwood Rowland, who first warned of the dangers of fluorocarbons to the Earth's protective ozone layer, reports that the total amount of these chemicals in the atmosphere has tripled in the last 10 years. And because fluorocarbons remain in the atmosphere for as long as 90 years they might pose a hazard to the environmenJ well through the next century, he said. Dr. Rowland's findings will be published in the April Issue of the Geophysical Research Letters. His research team included UCI chemist S.C. Taylor, Derek Montague of UC~A and Yoshi.hiro Ma.ldde of the Universi~ of Tokyo. 1 Their results differ sharply from data on 'Yearly fluorocarbon emiasioru compiled by the .Chemical Manufacturers Association (CMA), an industry trade group. 1 Rowland said yearly emiuiona of Fluorocar- bon 12, the most common of chemica1a known generically as chloroOuorocarbons, increased by 20 percent from 1974 to 1979. CMA reported the release of Fluorocarbon 12 into the' atmosphere has been reduced by 19.6 percent during the same period. In an interview, Rowland attributed the dis- crepancy between his findings and CMA data to the different sources of infonnation. CMA esti-. mates come from chemical production reports from 19 manufacturers, representing 95 percent of the total world production. Rowland's investigators used atmospheric data collected from the South Pole to the island of St. Lucia in the West Indies for their calculations. ''The chemical industry has reported reduction in the overall production and release of fluoro- carbons; however, the atmosphere tells a diffe- rent story," he said. · Dr. Joseph M. Steed, a chemist with DuPont and chairman of CMA's Fluorocarbon Program Panel, diaputed Rowland'CJ findings. However, in TOMS OP PLUOflOCAMON-11 ACCUMULAftD .. ATMOPMEM WON.DWIOe (...,_.... .... .,,_.,, 6 MILLION 5 MILLION 2 MILLION 1 MILLION 1170 a telephone interview Wednesday, Steed would not cite specWc objections. He said he wouldn't until be had 1een a full copy of Rowland'• new raearch paper. Fluorocarbons are ever-present llleS u8ed in industry and by private consumers. Aerosol sprays using fluorocarbons as propellants account for about 50 percent of their use. Fluorocarbons also are found in auto air conditioning systems, refrigeration units, foaming agent.a and industrial solvents. Rowland said more than 95 percent of all flu- orocarbons produced eventually find their way into the atmosphere. Fluorocarbons have been used since the e~ly 1930s, but Rowland noted half of all chemicals produced were manufactured within the lut decade. Like nuclear waste that remains radioactive for thousands of years, fluorocarbons are stable molecules that persist in the environment. The life expectancy of Fluorocarbon 12 is 90 years. Fluorocarbon 11, the second most com- monly U8ed chemical, Will last aa long as 50 years. (See OZONE, Page A%) Heather: Business from bed Newport mayor promises she' II rejoin council soon By STEVE MARBLE OfhO.-, ......... Newport Beaeh Mayor Jackie Heather, who suffered a stroke early this month that left her confined to an intensive care unit for two weeks, is conducting city hall buSiness from her hospital bed. "I'm working my tail off as usual," the 52-year-old mayor said today. "I feel great and I'll be back on the oouncll 1JOOn," she said, noting that she didn't know when. Mrs. Heather was moved out WORLD of intensive care at Hoag Memo- rial Hospital to a private hospital room this week. She said she has caused her doctors some consternation by di_gging back into city affaira1 talking with the city leaders ana doing some telephone lobbying against a referendum drive ai- med at turning back a develop- ment project. "They don't have their signa- tures yet, do they?" she wonde- red, inquiring whether the refe- rendum group had collected en- Q.Uah names to qualify. She said she has ph9ned a number of West Newport resi- dents urging them not to back the referendum drive against thf' approved Banning Ranch project. "I just hope to God they don't get them (the signatures),'' she added. Mrs. Heather's husband, a cardiologist, reP.Prted that his wife is alert,, comfortable and making swift progress. The mayor said docion remo- ved breathina tubes tlUf week. She said she m atlll having eome (See MAYOR, Pqe A!) STATE Saddleback College officials wW be nea<>tlatina with a ll'OUP of community leaden regarcHni plans for an Irvine hospital being built on the college'• North Campus at Irvine <:enter Drive and Jeffrey Road. Seddleback trustees adopted a reeolution Tuesday designating the Hoag Memorial Hospltal- supported Irvine Medical Center group as the agency best able to win approval for construction of a hospital. Irvine Medical Center ls pu- Robot arJD OK; flight in 4th day CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -Astronaut C. Gord9n Fullerton auooesafully exerclaed the grip of Columbia's 50-foot robot arm today, lifting a pac- kage of scientific instruments from the ship's cargo bay as the shuttle hummed elong on day four of It.a week-lODR mission. "rm very impressed with that piece of machinery," Fullerton reported after an initial teries of tests. ''The operation went •ery sznoothly .•• The pb-and·lllt was the first test of the robot'• capacity to do the job it WU built for: deposltina and retrieving aatellita in. ap9Ce. The .huttle WU In 1be midst of a prolonged thermal telt when Fullerton donned btnoculan to maneuver the arm into position to grab a 353-pound payloed with Canadarm's wire-tnare fingers. The procedure was anythinl but routine. Sharp eyes and a firm ViP on the controls had to substitute for 1uidance from a Called video monitor. Afler capturing bis target, the pilot, working by remote control from a post at -the rear of Col- umbia's cockpit, flexed the spindly arm's metallic muscles and gingerly lifted the 353.l'pound payload from its berth, moving it around the ca- vernous bay, careful not to bit other experiment.a stored there. "The PDP has been unber- t he d . It baa been it's been lowered down and we're ready to re berth it ag.tn," said Fullerton. Thu initial test with the arm took only six minutes and it w• executed perfectly. The captured imtn.unents, cal- led a pl.asnllc ~ostic package, measure the shuttle's electro- magnetic field. A television ca- mera captured the maneuver for Mission Control, where an offi- cial said, "We were impressed." The pilot again unlimbered the "spacehook" to run through a series of teats waving the pac- kage around and extending it outside the bay. "U there were any surprises, they were all pleasant,'' Fuller- ton said. Everything was abeolu- tely straightforward as far as ~and resmme." Fullerton and cximmander.Jack R. LoUSJna, "feeling a little bet- ter" almost half-way through their mlaaion, had to delay the exerci.le -fint 8Cheduled Tues. day, becaUlle of the failure of the camera on the wrist of the Canadian-tk.ailt mechanical arm. 17 kidnappers convicted VERONA, Italy (AP) -A Verona court today convicted 17 members of the Red Brigades pf kid- napplna U.S. Anny Brig. <Jen. Jamee L . Doaer and sentenced them to prison terms ranging from 26 month.I to 27 years. -uelow-cost gas studied NATION Nancy Sinatra JMc'li After taklnl •ven yeua off, Nancy Sinatra la beck ln show b•-•, llnl.p)am a nationwide tour openinC for her t.ther. p_,. ,M Cooper loot unlucky Sbort.-ltved fame s~ the dilcowryof mymry bijacka' o.a ~ lf;Jti("hM Jed to DllWDl----- but rr.Uely for one famOy. Paa9 AL MODESTO (AP) -A temporary bari on 1ellina. . guoline below COit in Stanialaua County hal been kept in effe:t until a Judie decldee whether to make lt permanent. Pnca for tecuJar fell• low• .1.038. COUNTY Relerendum controversial Ju.t over a week after lta start, there are reporta the Banntnl Ranch referendum drive ln Newport Bellch II nmninl out of ... Pace Bl. .... ahing ahead with its communlty- based drive to estabU.h a hotpi- tal in Irvine, despite warnings that ~ County could have· too many hospital beds by 1990. A recent report issued by the County Health Planning Council said that by that year the county could have 170 unneedod hospi- tal becLe and up to 1,473 excess physicians. Another propoeed site for hos- pital construction is on the UC Irvine Campus. However, there is an extensive approval process before hospital construction ii able to proceed, which i. prima- rily baled on the need fo' addi- tional holpi tal bed8 in an area. Leaders of the drive to build a hospital in Irvine concede their plans could be held up becal19e of the exoe11 beddinC i.ue. But Ir· vine Medical Center hu a L<MI Angeles architect drawing plans for a 200-bed oo.pital. · Also at i11ue in the drive to establish a hospital in Irvine is whether it will be a teaching (See HOSPITAL, Page AZ) .,.., ...... ..,, f'tloto TRIBUTES -Harry and Betty Babbitt beam as they hold the Heart Award plaques presented to the veteran entertai- ners by the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce. Singer of 30s feted Harry Babbitt, wife honored in Mesa By JODI CADENHEAD Ot'h .,.., ...... ..,, Boop boop, diltum d ottum. wattum chu. If that little ditty makes any sense, you probably grew up in the 1930's and 40's listening to the crazy lyrics that were made famqus by the now silver-haired singer who was honored Wed- nesday night by the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce. couple with resolutions honoring them for their contributions to the conununity. By the end of the evening the stack of resolutions and awards covered the table in front of the beaming couple. Quipped the 68-year old sin- ger, "Betty and I are going to have to build another room." If the name Harry Babbitt isn't exactly a household word to the under 30 set, he proved to be a loveable legend to the more than 150 guests who paid $20 a seat to see him and his wife Betty receive t.tie coveted Heart Award. Costa Mesa Mayor Arlene Schafer and Newport Beach Mayor pro-tern Evelyn Hart each oreaented the Newport Beach The Orange Coast College Chamber Singers sang nostalgic sonlls In memory of Bettv Bab- bitt's 11 years as accompanist with the.music_group. · An aide to Congressman Bob Badham admitted that the New- port Beach politician was greeted with blank stares from his YOWl.8 staff when, after signing a reso- lution honoring the entertainer, (See BABBITl'S, Page AZ) INDEX At Your Service A5 HQroecope B2 Erma Bambeck B2 Movies B7-8 Business C6-7 Mutual Funds C6r Cavalcade ·B2 National News A3 · 'Cl.-ltied 04-7 Public Notka 02-3 Comk:a C5 Sports Cl-4 Cromword C5 Stock Marketa C7 DNth Notices D2 Television B6 Edltorial A6 Thea ten B7-8 llbWtalnment 87-8 W•ther A2 Goren B2 World News A3 .. WUh UC lrvtnt cal arid ldlnti& t111Mdl lnld- hclilptal. . QM IDd • t.ltb ...-um would oftidU •Y ll tbe be built on U. lite. ~tal were to be lpedftcl on the flnancta1 .,.. illattlct'1 North . RD1emen .. DrODOMd a.tween ould be the only the c:oDe .. aftd lrvln• Medical aue All"ll--~•ment between a Center uve not been 19leued. major" care tadlity and a Coll••• official• aay arran1e-~UQbJ. 'IOllege i• the c:oun-menu under which u1e of the. tr)'. •• • land would be tnnllfernd to the. Tlpt land propoaed for the ll'O'SP -aa1e or 1eMe -will be ate ta currenUy '1W· hammered out in the ne1ot1a- W. Irvine Onpany, but tk!N. ' ... the dinict WMiel' a Accord1na to Sadd.leblck'• di-~ ..,..ment for nc.10I' of pUbljc infonnaUon. BUl ........ .,_ the NGrth c.topua. Schreiber, of .. felt lrltereat to ~ llartb. \..:ampul currently Saddlettack of flclala 1-the pro- ~-al IO acres. 'lbe dJstrict apect for new ~ in which · Aucuat of thla year to to boU1e health education and IUJ'IC~• 40 more ael9 from the DUl'ldni Jll"OlfU'DI. nit Cecnpny at '45,000 an, lie Mkt tt would be pomible to ,.~far below market open the hNlth education bull- "" : dina within • year aince approval Leliden of the IrviDe Medical ol comtruction wouldn't require '-_.... include Dr. Amok! the extelllive review demanded . Be+man,; chairman of Beck-' of holpltal OOOltrUCtion. n ~en ta of Fullerton; · • ~. chancellor of UC Four other hospital groups art com . with the Irvine Medi- cal =r 1roup to build the hospital. The competing groupe. must file a certificate of need application with the county's Health Planning Council for re- view. Gr.fte Rote m of New- . 's ~Memorial Hoepita1;1 =.!_~int Mayor David Silla and . ~Lombardi, chancellor of ~Colleae. · , ·suamea in ttie group'• pro- ~ • ~-~ebaiCko • lmmediate , .• ~~~on of a jolnt-u.e buil- 1 • umg of up to l~.000 8Quate feet to hou8e cla.rooms and an audl- . torlwn on a 10-acre campus site. Later, a 200-bed hospital, community health center, me<li- The other groups are Santa Ana's Western Medical Center.I Tustin Community Hospital, the. Nashville, Tenn.-bued Hospital• Corp. of America, and the Health West Foundation of Chatsworth. 1 !~ .. ·BABBITTS HONORED ... he walked into-the office singing Babbitt's le,endary, "Three Li~ Fishes.' "Down in the meddy in the .itty bitty poo swam the three little fishes and the mommy fishy too." More than four decades after he started the famous "Kay 9'kyser Kollege of Musical ·OKfiowledge." Babt?itt proved he ~ still belt out a tune at the .darop of a hat. bi· Instead of making a speech, Babbitt stepped up to the micro- phone and sang thank you to thoee who~ to aee him at the Mesa Verde c.ountry qub. '•It's wonderful. It's marvelous that you should ca.re for me. It's awful nice. It's paradise. It's what I like to see. "You've made our year a super '82. Costa Mesa gee, we think the world of you." ~I' I t t.'MA YOR RECOVERING ... . ·~~culty talking. She said she is . • s8ble to walk without Mllatance. ~r. SHe aniwered most questions ' °"by ad.lna her own, wanting to 0 d<,now what was }lappening at •tfity })'all and what her council b!fOlleagues were ~P ~· give her the date when she can return home . "They keep waiitin1 to run more tests. l can't aay when I'll ~t back to tbeicouncll. 'lbat's up· '"'to my doptora, but I plan a full, quick recovery." ' • Aliens' jobs filled I Y JrlP ADLEa ............. Wllile ~ ~=-•­berry~ .. belnc .. ot undocumented field hardl by i~tlon offlcen, local reef-. dents are Unln1 up for their .minimum-w.,. jobt. DRIVER UVED -Police credit athletic coa- ches at F.atancia High School with helping to save the life of Davi<l Livingstone, 20, wbo wu .. ......... -. ......... eerioualy injured when Ulla cmwrtible Cl'Mhed and overturned near the a.ta Mesa echool. State Employment Develop- ment Department officials In Oranae C-Ounty A!pol't that alnce immTaratlon raids on loc:._al strawberry fielda began earli~r this week, they have received scores of inquiries concerning such j>bs. • Coaches rescue· man hurt in Mesa crash Fumes fatal to FV couple A husband and wife from Fountain Valley were found dead Wedneeday in a camper at an Oregon park, apparen1ly vic- tims of fumes from their barbe-cue. And local strawberry growen, concerned that the raids are interrupting the strawberry har- vest. uy job .eeken have been telephoning and showing up ln the fields early each morning hoping to replace undocumented fruit picken. Police in Costa Mesa are cre- diting several athletic coaches at Estancia High School with hel- ping save the life of a 20-year-old man whoee sports car spun out of control and crashed through a feqce in front of the school Wednesday. David Livingstone of Hunt- ington Beach is reported in se- rious condition with multiple fa- cial cuts at Fou ntain Valley Community Hospital where he was taken following the 1 p.m. accident at 2323 Placentia Ave- nue. ,, Police said Livingstone was driving at an excessive speed when his red Corvette converti- bte failed to negotiate a curve and tore through 40 feet of chain link fence bffore comini to rest upside down n~ar the school's tennis court. Glenn Sherry. athletic direc- t.or, said the car's engine was on , Jazz f es ti val set at OCC Tickets are on sale for the 14th annual Orange Coast College J~ Festival that begµis tonight, with a performance by the Bob Florence BiJ;r Band. The Gerald Wilson Big Band will perform in the Costa Mesa auditorium Friday and the Louie Bellaon Big .Band will cloee the three-day festival Saturday night. . Tickets are $8 at the college ticket office and $9 at the door, fire by the time the coaches rea- ched it. "We thought he waa dead," Sherry said. ''One of the students ran and to' a fire extingu1sher. It teemed like-an et.emity.1' A Josephine County Sheriff's ·spokesman said Jetry Schultz, 45, and Irene Schultz, 47. were found dead Wednesday morning by the woman's daughter, who had arranged to meet the couple at SchroOOer Park, just west of Grants Pass. Meanwhile, raids by U.S. Bor- der Patrol agenta continued in Orange County this morntna1. ~­ cording to Dale Mu.eaacle9, cruef deputy patrol agent for the U.S . Border Patrol. After the fire w's out, the coaches then pushed the car up- right, 90 that paramedics and fire officials could free the man trapped inside, Sherry said. From PageA1 OZONE WARNI NGS U industcy release of fluorocarbons each year has decreased, as CMA contends, then the total amount of thoee chemicala in the atmosphere should be increulng at a rate much slower than it has been, Rowland said. But hia atmospheric studies show the amount of fluorocarbons continues to rise more rapidly than CMA estimates. From 1970 to 1980, the total amount of fluorocarbons in the atmosphere jumped from 2 to 6 mllllon tona, he said. F1uOTOC&rbona ~adually rise into the stratos- 'phere -7 to 30 miles above the Earth's sur- face. When ultraviolet nivs ftrike the molecules in the upper portions of the stratosphere, ozone-destroying chlorine atoms and chlorine comoounds are ~leased. . Or.one, which contains three atoms of oxy- ~en bonded together, shields the planet from the dangerous eflecta of ultravio- let radiation emitted by the sun. An initial effect of in- creased ultraviolet expoeure could be more·skin cancer. "There is no way we will be able to attribute the in- creue in ultraviolet rays to skin cancer," Rowland said. "It appears the overwhelming cau. of skin cancer is due to • • • He said 637 illegal aliens had been seized during the raid'• first three days and dispatched to Mexico. He said the roundup would continue at least through the end of the week. The CMA still believes Rowland's ozone- depletion projections need further study. In fact, the trade group has suggested its own theory -that most fluorocarbons are trapped in the troposphere, the atmospheric layer cloeest to the planet, and are removed before they can diffuse into the stratosphere. Eight years ago. Rowland and UCI colleague Mario Molina proposed their theory about the potential dangers of fluorocarbons to the envi- ronment. After extensive study, the federal government instituted a ban on fluorocarbon-based aerosol propellants· in 1919. Canada and three Scandinavian countries aJ.ao have clamped down on the use of fluorocarbons as aeroaol propellants. But Rowland emphasized that the threat of Ouorocarbons is a global one. "The general belief is the probleiq was 80lved IJy banning aeroeols," be a said. "But that's not what happened. "All of the other uses of chlorofluorocarbons have not been banned in most countries and have continued to i.ncreaae. The net result aa far as the environment ls concerned is there has been no change in the past six years. · . Mrs. Heather suffered the stroke March 7 at her Newport home and was rushed by para- medics to the hospital. • with the entire series offered for $21. All performances begin at 8 a change in lifestyle." ROWLAND But he predicts a 1 percent loss in the owne laY.er may eventually lead to a 3 percent rise in ski'n cancer rates. However such predictions are difficult to prove since cancers often have a la- .tency period of 10 to 20 years. "And most U.S. manufacturers," he added, "were free to seek other outlets for their product." Measurements of fluorocarbon concentrations in the atmosphere taken at sites throughout the world show no more than a 10 percenC diffe- rence, he said. p.m . • Chance of showers In 1974, Rowland predkted specific levels of them.one layer might be depleted by about half a percent a year if fluorocarbons continued to be releaeed into tb atmosphere. "It is a regional emission that in a short time becomes a worldwide problem," Rowland asser- ted. "The amount that is in the atmosphere over l'iortb America is the sum total of the amount released everywhere in the world. .I Coa&tal • • Mo9t~ doudy through FrldeY morning with • 20 ,-oent cNtloe of .no... thla en.moon end • 70 pereent chance tonight end F~ "'°'"''"'· Pertly cloud, F ellr900li w1tt1 decf .... 1. "'-•· Hight Friday &3 to 8 . Lowa 4S to 55. Huntington· Newport ., .. twnpetatur• ren-t'.° "'°"' • low of 50 to • high o4 EIHwhere. from Point Con cieptlon to 1111 M•.11k:1n bord-. and out eo mha: Night and mor· nlna vllleble wlndt, westll1Y 10 to fe knob. Weetlf1Y ...._ of 1 to 2 ..... Mo91ly cloudy thrOUgrl Ft1dtly with a c:t1en09 of "'°'"'1 1onlgflt. 20 lo 40 mph In the afternoon. Thund•nhow.a .,. for.cut for Loa Ang•I••. eoHl•I end lnl•rmed:111 valleys. th• aen F.,nando. San ~brlel end San &.mudlno vali.ys, nor1h to the COHiii ., .. of Sent• B•rb•fl County and ac>vlh u fet .. the Onnol County IMttopolbn .... .-ty~~ .• Temper a ture&· NATION FORECAST 74 51 50 15 87 2t IM 48 72 48 7S 43 85 50 71 43 81 52 74 46 72 41 85 49 72 48 87' 53 55 25 Extended foreclJllt COASTAL AHO MOUNTAIN AREAS -Y9'1U1e clouftMM Setunley. ,.., end ..,.,., ... day tnd ............ "' ...... .,"' ., to 1r. Lowa 41 to 11. HION et mountain 1W1H1-... 4t to '54. LQ!ft 21 to 38. • . · ' That predlciion was proven true last year ' when NaJional Aeronautics and Space Admini- stration satellites discoveftd a 5 percent drop in the ozone layer from 1970 to 1979 at the 25-mile altitude level. • "It is a little disconcerting for a scientist. from an environmentalist point of view, when you are on the island of St. Lucia in the West Indies and they have the same amount of chlorofiuorocar· bona as we do in the United States." Oxford _Cloth Pullover ~ Storekeeper Monte Pries is wearing our all cotton oxford cloth shirt in a ticking weave stripe. This shirting was originally created by a Scottish mill in the late 19th century, and still remains a tradition today. Available in blue, burgundy, pink, lav- ender, and yellow stripings. A store that offers fine traditional sports~r for men, women and boys. ' • I I • . . 'ii T Wo railroads gain approval ·to consolidate Al Wlr9pho4o MONITORING -Todd Nelson, 18, a high school student in Adams, Minn., sits in the hatch of a space shuttle simulator at the Johhson Space C.enter in Houston watching a television monitor replay of his experiment conducted aboard the orbi- ting space shuttle Columbia. The study was conducted to show the effects of a gravity-free environment on flying in- sects. LA-to-Long Beach ' trolley line e y ed LOS ANGELES (AP) -The county Transportation Commis- sion approved preliminary engi- neering studies for a 22.5-mile streetcar route between Los An- geles and Lor:ig Beach. the only one of fou. r hght r~il .P.roject• with strong I?Olitical backing. An initial report said the line could be built in five years for between $192 million and $254 million and could carry 21,000 passengers daily along a route once run by turn-of-the-century streetcars. But officials still must negotiate a right-of-way with the route ow- ner, Southern Pacific Railroad. Supel'VOOr Kenneth Hahn, who supported the line that would run through his district, conten- ded some of it could be built be- fore the 1984 Olympics. LONG BEACH (AP) -Offi- cials of the 19-campus California State University system are an- xiously awaiting letters detailing what ',\'ill be cut under Gov. Ed- mund G. Brown Jr.'s spending freeze -and woayi.ng about the p<ieaibillties. "Scores of questions have ari9en for which there are no answers at this time," Chan· cellor Glenn S . Dumke told trustees meeting in Long Beach Wednesday. SACRAMENTO (AP) -A blue-ribbon panel seeking ways to cut Medi-Cal costs wanta to tighten eligibility standards and aliow hospitals to hire doctors as salaried employees. The 36-member Coalition on Health Cost Cohtainrnent, organized by the Legialature, turned in its re- port Wednesday. Other recom· mendatlons for the $5 billfon-a· year prof ram were to crack down on raud and abuse, and requ ire the state -not the Medi-Cal recipients -to chooee the doctors. LOS ANGELES (AP) -A second autopsy on the body of Ron Settles, a football player who died in Signal Hill Police custody, showed injuries milled by the Los Angeles County Co- roner, district attorney's spoke- sman Al Albergate said today. The newly discovered injuries included "something on the thy- roid cartilage of the larynx," l:>ut the four pathologists who con- ducted the independent probe "did not draw any conclusions as to how he died," Alberjtate said. LOS ANGELES (AP) -The water deliveryman who saved Theresa Saldana from a knife. wielding attackec met the actrea in her hospital room for the first time since the bloody assault. He gave her roees. She gave him a trophy. ''To my hero with much gratitude, thank you thank you thank you forever," the inacrip- tion react Miss Saldana, the stri- king brunette featured in the film "Raging Bull," spent an emotional hour Tuesday night with Jeff Fenn, 26. The delive· ryman pulled the assailant off her as she was being stabbed outside her West Hollywood apartment March 16. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -It may not be as American as apple pie, but the teen·age pastime of getting into cars and "cruising the strip" has been pre9erved by. a state court of appeal. The court ruled Wednesday that cities can't ban the practice of cruising be- cause existing state law preempts local ordinances on the issue. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat CIHlin.d edVeftilfng 714.442·M11 All other dlpemnenta 142~321 Thomas P. Haley ~ ..... cn..i fucut"'• Olhc.- Aobert N. Weed ,._,,. Thomas A. Murphlne Editor L. Kay Schultz ..._,.,_"' .... °""'°°' °' Opet9tl0ne Michael P. Harvey ~0.'9Ctor Kenneth N. Goddard Jr. ~0.rector Charles H. Loos ........ r.- MAIN OFFICE D W• .. ~SC., C-. Mew, CA. Mell.-..: a.1MO, C... Mna, CA.,_. CeitYt ..... 1112 Or .. ~ l'Wff ...... ~. No_,..... lttutlrMloM, edltonel ~-­~tlwmMts Mfflft mey M ·~ wltlloul SM<lal ,..n•lllort of cenrflM -.. . . WASHINGTON (AP) -The lnt.entate Commerce c.ommill1on today approved the merger of the Southern Railway and the Norfolk & Western Railway aa promising increased efficiency for the two rail lines and enhan- ced competition. The r\ew carrier, which will operate under a .hol· ding company to be called the Norfolk Southern Corp., becomes the fourth largest railroad in the country in track mileage and the third largest in amount of freight revenue. UNITED NATIONS (AP) - Nicaraguan junta leader Daniel Ortega told the U.N. Securrty Council today that his govern- ment, the Cuban..regime ol Fidel Castro and the Salvadoran leftist rebels were ready to beJin im- mediate negotiations with the United States to settle differen- ces. Ortega, rejecting U.S . de- mands for restrictions on Nicara- gua's anns buildup, called on the Reagan administration to "voice its commit.nent not to attack Ni- caragua" and to repudiate "any direct, indirect or covert inter- vention in Central Ame rica." Nicaragua, he said, was ready td sign non-aggression pacts with its Central American neighbors. OAKVILLE, Ontario (AP) - A high school English teacher gave birth today to twin boys conceived by test-tube fertiliza- tion, the first such multiple births in North Ame r ica, Trafalgar Memorial Hospital announced. A boy and girl born last June in Australia were the first set of twins conceived by the "in vitro" technique de vised by British doctors Patrick Steptoe and Robert Edwards. Hospital offi. ciala r e ported both the 35-year-old mother, Kit Rankin, and the babies were in goQd health. WASHINGTON (AP) -The Reagan ad.mil\1atjt'ation baa rehi- red three air traffic contr.ollera who went on strike against the government, despite its previou- sly stated unwillingneaa to return such workers to their airport to- wer jobs. ·Fred Farrar, a spoke- sman for the Federal Aviation Administration, confirmed today that Joan Plummer, a former controller at the Fort Worth Air Route Traffic Control Center near Euless, Texas, was reinsta- ted to a tower job -the third such rehiring since President Reagan fired some l l,500 ille· gaily striking traffic controllers in August. Farrar said two others who walked out, whom he would not identify, were rehired earlier. WASHING TON (AP) -Presi- dent Reag.an ~ha~ked Italian SAFE -A man iden tified only aa a Salvadoran refugee named Alfredo received sanctuary at a Tuc8on church as part of a nationwide pro- test against tou11h U.S. iJJ)· migration policiei toward re-fugees. I '..., ........... ..., ........... We're 1.istening ••• ~~ It -io "°' ,_ 1'1111' .... ~•aoP"' a11~1 •"'"-~""' .......... ....,,_........, .. __ _ ~.~ 0Dtr lltt T All\, Clll =.i.•"' __ °"" .... • Prettdent Sandro l'ertinl today for the release of Bria. Gen. James Dozier from captivity at the hands of "a 1ang ol brutal and inhuman thugs aided and abetted by foreign powers." Welcoming Pertini to the White House at the start of a nine-day vislt to the United States, Reqan told hfa guest that terroriam la u · threatening to freedom and in· dependence 0 as foreign tank.a or nuclear misalles." MINNEAPOLIS. (AP) -For 1t01De reporters and editors at The Minneapolis Star, .the layoffs that will accompany the after- noon newspaper'8-fflffger with the Minneapolis Tribune are a fam1ltar story. John Ireland, Star aaaiatant city editor, says he will be among about 100 employees laid off when the Star merges April 5 with the morninJ Tri- bune to form an all-day ~per. .. ... .·1 . . . .AP• ue ia1 ~. -! BELATED FUNERAL' -A Navy,hQnor guard QUrle9 -~ casket of Lt. Cmd.r-. Nicholas Brooks· d~ the funer'1 ·fDr: · 1 the Newburgh; N.Y., native·at ~ort· Myer, ~a. Broob':w•·:·. · shot down over Laos more than 12 years ago, but his remainJ· ·. . · we~ not returned until e. this:year.· . ., ··~· ·. . . . -. ........ ,. .. . . ~ Bangladesh contrQls relax ed, ... Two gun battles erupt in troubled El .·~alvadf?r. DACCA; Bangladeab (AP) - The day-old military junta was rounding up fonner government officlah today and routing stu- dent protesters from the univer- sity. One death was reported during an arrest attempt but otherwhe the capital wu ~. Curfew was relaxed to allow· businesses and schoola to open ·and the capital's streets appeared quiet under heavy military pa- trol. A 9 p.m. curfew was in force, however, the Presa Trust of India reported. SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) -Government forces battled.leftist guerrillas early to- day near the Central Elections Council in San Salvador an<I on a mountainside overlooking an air base nine miles from the capital. There was no inunediate word on casualties. Residents said the guerrillas approached to within a lew hundred yards of the 'E}ec-the ocCupied W~t Bank -~f tbe· ." tions Council, and "tbilt th~re was jord~ft .today, and Arabi'. ptO· · . s radic fighting tliai Intensified testErs in .the occupied 1erritorjee . ~n broke off just t>efore ~wn. reacted ~th a arenade ~-:· · killing one· luaeli solctier. anct. ' ..Vfoundil\g: three ott)er,:.Th~ . GU,ATEMALA CITY (AP). -miliwy·conanand ~.sci:··~'. A political leader whose party . bu .Grouma~k, 10, wu ldlled,: l08t. the recent election .says this ~ three .oldien were-w~. :: week's military coup gives 11\ ~e.grenadeattac:kon.an.-nh1-. s trife -torn Guatemala a brea-· vehicle iin th~ occup\ed Ga~. thJ,ng spell to re.fowl its polWcal · Strip._ Gr?19marJt-w .. t~ .tint. io4titutions following the ·alle-l!l!aeli tP cJie in.a week..~( .vt~ .. . gedly rigged balloting t hree lence tfta~ ~as resulted),n . ih,e · weeks ago. Vinicio Cerezo. spo· · de~.th~ of.-flve Arabs and.:tJle- kesman for the rightist Christi8.n wo~g of 21 ~ the ~Pled: . Democratic Party, said Wednes--.· temtones. : · · ·. ·'. . day . that the takeover opened a · · · · . · · ' 0 promising political future" for • • • •• I .. • " this Central American countrY. . BOMBA~, l.Ddia (AP)--FiftY · while giving it a chance to "find people, -their motive unclear, .M- the peace it s o desperate-ly tacked the U.S. Consulate Wi9?. :. needs " · . ·rocks and gasoline ~mba.:aqd .. , . · -authorities said pne atiac{rer ._... . . · shot d~C:i by. pQl~ce. · Pdlic6 add : · NABLUS. Occup ied West consul.ate offici&ls said eight C!UJ . 1 Bank (AP)·-ls~ael 'dismiss~ belon~g ~the comulate s~ ;_ · the top two Palestinian mayors in were "burned. . · · ' .. , ·: ... Ann.ual "Inventory ReduC_tio~l,~ ~:: . . . . . : 1/2 OFF ·· This Is Selected Merchandise From ·.Our . · ·. . . '°· .. Own Stock -Regularly Sold In Our 9~ ·sto~~-. . . ... • ,"'•I Io • T Chain• • Watches . .'. : .. . : ... : .: r . • .· .. . ~ . ~ .·... , .,_,. :~. . ... ., .. . . . .' .. .. • R,lng• • Bracelet• .. •· Pendant• .• Necklace•···: · .... ·~ :· ". .·. · .. · . · • Pin•· ,., • Charm• .. :. · -. .... :.: .--'. ' .... · ..... .'' • Earring• •_Moun~lngs · >>;::·. :· . ...: :· • • • • • • "' •• \;lo : Sal& Lai.ts: thrOU9h SGt~rd.~Y/.··::_:· ... March 27.th · . _:: ... · ".~' ::.:~ \. <· .. I u .. rour v1 .. or. M8atercard ·: No HouM'ChargH · • AQ ..... Final .. • c ~Coat DAILY ptLOTIThul'9d8y, Mitch 25, 1982 Mesa condo project stumbles over vote Most Costa Mesa residents probably thought they were get· ting a 1,166-unit condominium complex in their dty after reading about the council's approval of the project last week. What early news reports failed to not.e is that the trustees for the C.OUt C.Ommunity C.0119 Dittr~t. that qwna haH ibe 28 acres proposed for the develop ment, IMi.ve not approved the plan ~ves. Without the trustees' approval of the development adjacent to the intersection of Harbor Boulevard and Adams Avenue, the project cannot be built on district-owned, land. wait until scheduling a 1econd reading to rezone the dl11rlct- owned property. A second reading hat been acheduled on April 5 for consider- ation to finalize the rezoning <?f the 14 acres owned by C .J . Seg- erstrom and Sona, that would make l t pouible. for them to go ahead )¥1th~._..~ 0~$81 units Oil their ~perty. __ ... . S•nlor ci pla1'Mr Perri Valaotine aaicl . t ~ jlall· the project is approvable now and a spokesman for the Segerstrom company admit¥ that there ts a possibility that tlie project may be ltmite4 to Segerstrom property. Th~ concern is how did a project of this magnitude go so far without any apparent considera- tion of the basic premise by one of the major parties to the proposal, the college trustees? The plan approved by the council last week calls for a pha- sing of the project, with the Seg- erstrom property developed first. It's unfortunate that the trustees didn't make their basic decision on the project before it advanced so far so the city and interested residents could have been assured that they were dealing with the entire project. Even FBI can lose evidence This troubles the council, as well it should, since the project calls for the highest density ever approved in the county, 41 units per acre. Several Costa Mesa City Council members said they had assumed that the trustees had al- ready voted in favor of the plan before approaching the city. Since financing between the district and the developer, Robert Langslet and Sons has not been worked out yet the city decided to The plan e nvisioned by the developer, which includes streams, lakes, tennis courts and recrea- tional facilities, looks comprehen- sive. But with only half the pro- ject, all that could wind up as no- thing more than premature dreaminR. Pay offer generous In a surprise move, trustees for the Newport-Mesa Unified School District this w eek proposed a 9 percent pay hike for teachers next year. The pay increase, to be tied to the cost of living, is exactly what represent~tives from the Newport-Mesa Federation of Tea- chers had requested last month in their initial proposal. In the past, district officials and teachers have not been known for settling pay disputes quickly. Contracts for the 1981-82 school year were not reached until Fe- bruary when teachers grudgingly accepted the district's 6 percent pay offer. But with acceptance of the district's offer crone endorsement of a strongly worded resolution calling for the district's 850 tea- chers to strike if all negotiations for the 1982-83 school year were not completed by Sept.ember. We would hope that the di- strict's offer of a one-year contract instead of the three-year contract requested by the teachers' union, will not prove to be a stumbling block tc;> negotiations. Given the uncertainty of state funding and the economy, one year is about all that re~nabl.Y can be forecast. With the district's generous offer made during these times when many employees in pri- vate industry are facing pay cuts or pay freezes, we see no reason that a contraict settlement should not be reached quickly. Perinit denial hits plan Prospects of the University of Southern California ever setting up a satellite campus at a vacant Corona del Mar grade school dimme d with a recent state Coastal Commission ruling. Commissioners denied USC a permit needed for converting the elementary campus to a graduate school for business administration students. It was only the latest in a se- ries of setbacks for the Trojans. The flap s tarted after USC signed a five-year lease for the school with the Newport-Mesa Unified School District, owners of the campus. Residents in Corona del Mar, who claim they were never noti- fied of the USC deal, complained that th.e satellite campus would cause noise and traf fie problems and bring an infusion of students into their n eighborhood during evening hours. They filed a lawsuit which is pending in Orange County Supe- rior Court. Finally, USC was informed that it needed a coastal permit. The private university applied for one and, late last week, commis- sioners denied it. It is now unclear whether USC or the local school district intend to appeal the coastal ruling. Officials from USC have made no secret of the fact that they now are scouting Orange County for an alternate site for the graduate school. While this last fact should comfort some Corona del Mar residents, it is bad news for the school district which would have to waste more time and money seeking another tenant for the vacant campus. The financially pressed district doesn't need that. On the other hand , the district possibly could have avoided this m~ had it made a genµine effort to let the Corona del Mar residents know ahead of time about the USC lease. The district should have ·been aware of the potential problem from the experiences Coastline \..ollege had trying to rent schools for evening classes. . - Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views ex: press~ on tnis page are those ot their authors and artists. Reader comment.ls 1!w1t· ed. Address The ::>a11y Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone·(tu 1 '641·4321 . L.M. Boyd/ Sense. of humor Which sex tends to have the better sense or humor, the male or the female? Studies at Wesley and Smith colleges once wound up with the conclusion: "The tendency or men to laugh at anything labeled 'Joke' strongly suggests that their sense of humor is Iese well developed and dlscrimlnating than that or women." · A recent poll among teachers ORANGE COAST ~Plat reveals that 38 out of 100 say they'd never go into that line or work. if they had it to do over again. Question arises as to how old you have to be before you can wear contact lenses. No age Umll,. evldenUy. At least 40 babies have been rttted with contacts at the Univeralty ol Cal.ttornla in Berkeley's Infant Vision Clinic. T"91Ns P. tt.tey PublllNr WASHINGTON -The glamorous side of the FBl's work has been chroni- cled on television and in the movies. But as any FBI agent could attest, there's a vital part of the G-man's life that wUI never make it to the screen, mainly because it is b-o-r-i-n-Jt. That's the seizure and safekeeping of property against the day when it will be introdu- ced as evidence in a federal trial. Pro- bably not even Norman Lear could make the Top 20 with a show titled. "FBI Property Clerk." MUNDANE AS JT 18, the custody of ev;dence is a crucial ingredient of any successf\tl prosecution. A1.t an internal Justice ~partment draft report charges that the ~BI clerks could be blowing aome cases. The nub of the still-teeret draft, pre- pared by auditors in the department'• management division, is that nobody keeps proper track of property that baa been seiz.ed for evidence. Thing, are.:> sloppy, the auditors complained, that evidence could be lost or otherwise dis- appear and no one would know it .. In their low-key, bureaucratic jargon, the auditors put it this way: "The systems used by the FBI for the hand· ling of seiz.ed and recovered property are out-of-date and lack the specificity to effectively meet the responsibilities and requirements irnpOeed by regulation." The auditors noted that "we were told a nurpber of times that 'we (the FBI) have never lost any evidence,'" but ad- (.) -J.-1:.-•• -.-111-.-. -d ded coldly: "ln our opinion, the system now in use would not disclose the loss of evidence i1 it did occur." The basic problem, the auditors con eluded, is that property taken into cus- tody by the G-men is "not effectively auperviled by either agents or Support Service Supervisors.'' As an example of this distaste for im- portant but dull detail, the draft report cited "ext.enaive time tag," between the seizure of property for possible use as evidence and its ultimate recording in FBI logbooks. In the Detroit field office, the investi- gators found many items of personal property that had been in FBI custody for more than eight years without being entered in the record. Time lag:s in the Philadelphia and Atlanta regional offices exceeded a year in some cases. "Once personal property is taken, the FBI beoomes responsible for it and ac- countability is mandatory," the draft report points out, and adds: "Delays such as we found (in recording) are unwar- ranted and unjustified." IN ADDITION TO the agents' casual attitude toward seized property -pos- sibly because of it -the.subsequent handling by property clerks "is neither proper nor adequate," the auditors com- plained. The reason for this. they deci- ded, was inadequate training and a poorly written manual of instructions. The Justice Department investigators found some ridiculous examples of pro- perty that had been retained long after it was useful -like the mink coat that had been stored in a cardboard box at the Philadelphia FBI office since 1972, even though it was involved in a case that was closed in 1977. Ev.acuation plans delude the people To the F.ditor: The "criais relocation" plan on which the federal and state government.I are working would evtcuate populations from areas experiencing the dire effects of nucle,ar war. This plan is a hoax, ac- cording to Beverlee A. Myers., California MAILBOX Director of Health Services. It is unbU.r, deluding the people into thinking that there can be an e9C8pe. The state Office of Emergency Ser- vices, working with the federal govern- ment, bas stated that we would have three to Cive days advance notice from the Soviet Union. This is utterly falla- cious, for surprise is an effective ele- ment of attack. A miscalculation almost triggered an attack a few months ago. For neither the well calculated firing nor the impulsive release of a bomb would have there been a warning. HOW WOULD an evacuation take place? During peak traffic periods, such as we now experience on popular beach recreation days. or at times of special events, such as the Pasadena parade, traffic is so congested as to be practically immobile. Our highways would be enti- rely inadequate to enable a terrorized population to flee from a threatened area. Where would the evacuees go? With the U.S. and the Soviet arsenals anned with thousands of nuclear warheads an explosive power approaching more than a million Hiroshima hombe t:ould be re- leased. Over thousands of square miles the air, water and land would be blanketed with deadly radioactive con- taminants. The earth could become as devoid of life as the moon. Survival? No. The nuclear anna race is not confined to the U.S. and the Sovieta. Great Bri- tain, France, China and probably India have nuclear weapon.a. Several of the less stable countries are intent on llOQui- rina them. The nuclear arnw nee is a matter that should be of concern to all of ua. MARY SCOI'T Support indexing To the F.ditot: 1 would like to extend my genulne thankl for your editorial support of my permanent income tax lndexi~ legilla- Uon. The th:ree-yeer long battle hM en- ded. We succeeded in getting legislation to benefit the waae eamen of California for two yean and now the only hope left II for the people to undent&nd that there will be an indexing rTlNIWe on the June ballot. It ta now up to them. IT I'S IMPERATIVE thal thla Ja.rvl1·1pouored naeuun ret'elvet an overwhelmln1 support vote. ~he wordlna la kMndcal IO my tint lndexin8 bill. Alf 278. Alt.ho~h l am unhappy with the In· dex u.d, ~ c.allfomia ~Price Index. 1 (eel that it ii me I E")' to haye i t indexing of' personal Income truces to af-• low the wage earner to keep pace with inflation. We can work together to see that the CPI flaws are changed by the Federal Bureau of Labor Statistics. It will conti- nue to be the thermometer that does not give the right tempera~ure until the housing costs and other luxury elements are recalculated. I hope you will continue to support all permanent income tax indexing. MARIAN BERGESON Assemblywoman, 74th District Likes the log To the Editor: I wish to congratulate you on the new Pilot TV log which you started last week. It is by far the most complete TV guide of all channels and makes it easier for the "addict" to know what is prog- rammed, thereby eliminating going through three or four separate lof. The format is excellent , and hope this will be a permanent addition to your fine newspaper. ROBERT GUGGENHEIM Comparison To the &litor: It seems to me the situation in El Salvador is very comparable with that in Poland. If we object to the Soviet Union's support of an unpopular government in Poland, then the U.S. should stay out of supporting the unpopular government in El Salvador. If we believe it is legitimate to support the unpopular government of El Salvador, then it seems hypocritical to blame the Soviet Union for its role in Poland. BRlAN H. KLEINER Good work . To ihe Editor: The California Coaatal Commission should be commended fo~ ita decialon to delete the extension of University Drive from the Newport Beach Local Coastal Plan. The extension of this road. if built acroaa Upper Newport Bay, would th.rMten the nest1na grounds of the Light Footed Clapper Rall, ln endangered species of bird native to 1h1I area. It w a fact that the Rall Ja "*:.f.~ble to extinction: two aped• of Haw Rail hOW no longer exilt. The Global 2000 Report to the Prelldent. a U.S. Govern- ment study, Jndlcta a staqertnc km of 500,000 to 2 million ~ of plant • animal life from the 8u1b by the ywar 2000, a nak pediction a..t on the me of le. of liabliat due to urbanir.ed de. velopmenL W111LE MOST of this loll II~ 1n trap6cai arw, we .. th9 phenom9aGla ~ t Mn In Soutblm Call· f w --=~ Dia Ttm. IDd _.,..s ~ .................... .. • LIPlttrl,.._f'HIWl.,,, _ _.. T .. rlllNtet--IM• ........... ., ... ,..._ .... ,.-~---··. ·-...... """' ~·· "" ....., _.!ft· , .............. -"'9111111· ...,_ -_. ...... wltlllleN ti\ "Witt ti wtflti91111 ,..'91\11 ---.,,., .................... ~ _., ................ . N•-.. ,._ _, .. -~-,...., ....... ..,.lilt .-,·~~ of the l~of their living space. Roughly 90 percent of the original coastal wet· lands that these birds need for their survival have dJsappeared under urban developmel')t. The pressures of coastal development are Just too great for local governments to handle right now, jud- ging from recent actions of the Orange County Board of Supervisors vis a vis the Bolsa Chica wetlands, and the propensi· ties of the Newport Beech City Council vis a vis the University Drive extension. We need a more responsible, less my- opic, view of the precious little coastal wildlife habitat that remains in Southern California. The Coastal Commission, mandated by the C-oastal Act of 1976, is now fulfilling that need. I hope they continue their good work. JAN l>. VANDERSLOOT MD R emember inflation? To the Editor: It wouldn't hurt if you would remind your readers that scarcely a year ago, everybody was wringing their hands over a high rate of inflation. This, we were told. and I believe rightfully so, was our biggest problem. Look at us now. Inflation is down and ha5 been down to a single digit nurnber these past few months. Now everybody wants to increase the money supply. It seems our biggest problef9 is high inte- rest rates. So. start the money presses and bring back good old inflation! Our President said long ago that licking inflation would not be easy. Bow quickfy people forget! J.W. REID How dare he? To the Editor Once again it becomes "us" vs. "them." "Us" being the ones who elect "them" often to our sorrow and detri- ment . I listened to Sen. W~ the other day as he crawled back under his rock. His statement to the effect that he had not done anything contrary to the stan- dards of the Senate should anger the remain1na Senators with any integrity. I'm sure ft does the electorate who cl>08e h1m to represent them. How dare he try to tar everyone with the same bn.ish? And bow dare he blame the FBI for the fact that (to quote from "Ledy in the Dark") ''in 27 languqes he ClOUldn't 18Y NO"? _ • MARY" JANE WOOD 500 THOUSAND Hospital endorsed· Saddleback College backs Irvine facility 400 THOUSAND ------Chemical Manufacturera Assoolatlon's estimated release of flUOf'ocarbona Into environment. 1970 1975 Ozone shield periled? UCI scientist says danger of fluorocarbons continues By JOEL C. DON o<tM 0.-, Plot ..... Despite earlier warn1ngs that fluorocarbons in the atmosphere could increase rates of skin can- cer or produce genetic mutations and even alter the F.arth's climate, em~ions of the man-made chemicals continue to rise, according to a UC Ir- vine scientist. UCI Irvine atmospheric chemist F. Sherwood Rowland, who first warned of the dangers of fluorocarbons to the Earth's protective ozone layer, reports that the total amount of these • chemicals in the atmosphere has tripled in the last 10 years. And because fluorocarbons remain in the atmosphere for as long as 90 years they might pose a hazard to the environment well through the next century, he said. Dr. Rowland's findings wm be published in the April issue of the Geophysical Research Letters. His research team included UCI chemist S.C. Taylor, Derek Montague of UCLA and Yoshihlro Makide of the University of Tokyo. Their results differ sharply from data on yearly fluorocarbon em1ssions compiled by the .ChemJcal Manufacturers Association (CMA), an industry ~e group. Rowland said yearly emissions of Fluorocar- bon 12, the most common of chemicals known generically as chlorofluorocarbons, increued by 20 percent from 1974 to 1979. CMA reported the release of Fluorocarbon 12 into the' atmosphere has been reduced by 19.6 percent during the same period. In an interview, Rowland attributed the dis- crepancy between his findings and CMA data to the different sources of information. CMA esti-· mates come from chemical production reports from 19 manufacturers, representing 95 percent of the total world production. Rowland's investigators used atmospheric data collected from the South Pole to the island of St. Lucia in the West Indies for their calculations. ''The chemical ind~ has reported reduction in the overall produc · n and release of fluoro- carbons; however, th atmospht:re tells a diffe- re~t story," he said. Dr. Joeeph M. Steed, a chemist with DuPont and chalrman of CMA's Fluorocarbon Program Panel, dlsputed Rowland's findings. However, in TONI Of PLUOROCAMC*-t2 ACCUllUUTEO .. ATMOIPttlM WON.OWIDE (MeMured Nell ,J.,._.,) I I I / B~ fully etlkll~ 6 Announcement of plane fOf' ben v MILLION on UM U -oeol Pf:t I In Ille Unlled ta1 .. ..,. 5 v Ii"'" MILLION __... 4 v-MILLION v 3 v Ml~ 2 MILLION 1 MILLION • "' .. 1170 1875 1810 a telephone interview Wednesday, Steed would not cite apecific objections. He said he wouldn't until he had eeen a full copy of Rowland's new ~paper. Fluorocarbons are ey~r-present gases uled in tnduatry and by private consumers. AeroaoL sprays using fluorocarbons as propellants account for about 50 percent of thcir use. Fluorocarbons also are found in auto air cond1tioning systems. refrigeration units, foaming agents and Industrial solvents. Rowland said more than 95 percent of all flu- orocarbons produced eventually find their way into the atmosphere. Fluorocarbons have been used since the early 1930s, but Rowland noted half of all chemicals produced were manufactured within the last decade. ~ Like nuclear waste that remains radioactive for thousands of years, fluorocarbons are stable molecules that persist in the envirorunent. The life expectancy of Fluorocarbon 12 ia 90 years. Fluorocarbon 11, the second most com- monly used chemical, MU last as long as 50 years. (See OZONE., Page AZ) Heather: Business ·from bed [Vewport mayor promises she'll rejoin council soon By STEVE MARBLE o<IMo.IJ ..... IWf Newport Beach Mayor Jackie Heather, who suffered a stroke early this month that left her confined to an intensive care unit for two weeks, is conducting city hall bu.Siness from her hospital bed. "I'm working my tail off as usual," the 52-year-old mayor said today. "I feel great and rll be back on the council 800n," she said, noting that she didn't know when. Mrs. Heather was moved out WORLD of intensive care at Hoag Memo- rial Hospital to a private hospital room this week. She said she has caused her doctors some· consternation by digging back into city affairs, talking with the city leaders and doing some telephone lobbying against a referendum drive ai- med at turning back a develop- ment project. "They don't have their signa- tures yet, do they?" she wonde- red, inquiring whether the refe- rendum group had collected en- ouszh names to qualify. She said she has phoned a number of West Newport resi- dents urging them not to back the referendum drive against the approved Banning Ranch project. "I just hope.to God they don't get them (the signatures)," she added. M.rs. Heather's husband, a cardiologist, rep.,prted that his wife ls alert, comfortable and making swift progress. The mayor said doctors remo- ved breathing tubes this week. She aaid she ia still having 90n>e (See MAYOR, Page A!) I STATE Saddleback Colle1e of flclala will be nea<>UatlJ\I with a ll"OUP of comm. unity lMden reprdlng p1ana for an Irvine hmpltal being built on the college'• North Campua at Irvine Center Drive and Jeffrey Road. Saddleback trustees adopted a reaolution Tuesday designating the Hoa1 Memorial Hospital- supported Irvine Medical Center group as the agency best able to win approval for construction of a hoepital. Irvine Medical Center is pu- . Robot ar1n OK; flight in 4th day CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -Astronaut C. Gordon Fullerton successfully exercised the grip of Columbia's 50-foot robot arm today, lifting a pac- kage of scientific instruments from the ship's cargo bay as the shuttle hummed along on day four of its week-long miaaion. "I'm very imprested with that piece of machinery," Fullerton reported after an initial aeries of tests. "The operation wert very smoothly." The grab-and-lift was the first test of the robot's capacity to do the job it was built for: depositing and retrieving atellites in ~· The shuttle wu ln the mkllt of a prolonged thermal test when Fullerton donned binoculars to maneuver the arm into position to grab a 353-pound payload with Canadann's wlfe..snare fingers. The procedure was anything but routine. Sharp eyes and a firm grip on the controls had to substitute for guidance from a failed video monitor. After capturing his target, the pilot. working by remote control from a post at the rear of Col- umbia's cockpit, flexed the spindly arm's metalli~ muscles and gingerly lifted th e 353-pound payload from its berth, moving it around the ca- vernous bay, careful not to hit other experiments stored there. "The PDP has been unber- t he d . It has been it 's been lowered down and we're ready to reberth it again," said Fullerton. This initial test with the arm took only six minutes and it was executed perfectly. The captured instruments, cal- led a plasmic diagnoetic package, measure the shuttle's electro- magnetic field. A television ca- mera captured the maneuver for Mi11Sion Control, where an offi- cial said, "We were impressed." The pilot again unlimbered the "spacehook" to run through a series of tests waving the pac- kage around and extending it out.side the bay. "If there were any surprises, they were all pleasant," Fuller- ton said. Everything was absolu- tely straightforward as far as ~and resPQnse." Fullerton and commander Jack R. Lousma, "feeling a little bet- ter" almost half-way through their miasion, had to delay the exercise -first acheduled Tues- day, bec::auae of the failure of the camera on the wrist of the Canadian-built mechanical arm. 17 kidnappers convicted VERONA, Italy (AP) -A Verona court today convicted 17 members of the Red ~rigadea of kid- napping U.S. Army Brig. Gen. James L. Dozier and sentenced them to prison terms ranging from 26 months to 27 yea.rs. Below-cost gas studied ·I_ NATION Nancy Sinatra back Alter taklnc MVen yean off, Nancy Sinatra 11 back in show tM•=w, and plam a nationwide tour openi.na for her father. P.a. A4 UAW panel backs pact CHICAGO (AP) -The Ui.ited Auto Worun• 290·member GM~ voted anrwheJ.minlly tDday to nt'OllllMnd that the rank ·and file rati6-1 cane.. lkJlw conll'act wtth General Moton C«p. MODESTO (AP) -A temporary bah on eelling guoline below COit ln Stanislaus County hu been kept in effect until a judge decides whether to make it pennanent. Price. for resuJ,ar fell u low 81 $1.039. COUNTY Belerendum controvenia1 JUI& over a week after ltl Nrt, there are repona the ~ Ranch referendum drive in Newport a.ch it rilftnlna out of pa. Pqe Bl. Canada lo tbe re1eue Canada ap-"an ready to bail out flnanclally- troubled, Newport 8-ch-bMlid CJo1dli.rl W• AltJSn-. ~ce. . ahlnl ahead with ill community- bued drive to establish a hospi- tal in Irvine, despite warnings that Orange County could have too many hoepital beds by 1990. A recent report issued by the County Health Planning Council said that by that year the county could have 170 unneeded hospi- tal beds and up to 1,473 excess physicians. Al'lother proposed site for hos- 'pltal construction is on the UC Irvine Campus. However, there is an extensive approval process before hospital construction i9 able to proceed, which is prima- rily based on the need for addi~ Uonal hoepital beds in an area. · Leaders of the drive to build a hospital in Irvine concede their plans could be held up becauae of the excesa bedding issue. But Ir- vine Medical Center has a Lot Angeles architect drawing plans for a 200-bed hospital. , Also at issue in the drive tQ establish a hospital in Irvine i• whether it will be a teachin1 (See HOSPITAL, Page At) o.-, Not llaft f'tlot.o TRIBUTES -Harry and Betty Babbitt beam as they hold the Heart Award plaques presented to the veteran entertai- ners by the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce. Singer of 30s feted Harry Babbitt, wife honored i'1 Mesa By JODI CADENHEAD couple with resolutions honoring o<IM DllMJ Not It.tr them for their contributions to Boop boop, dittum dottum, the community. wattum ch~. . By the end of the evening the If that httle ditty makes a~;,ty ck of resolutions and awards seme, you probably grew up m vered the table in front of the the 1930's a~d 40's listening to . aming couple. the crazy lyncs that were ~d Quipped the 68-year old sin-f~ous by the now silver-haired ger, "Betty and I are going to singer who was h onored Wed-have to build another room." nesday night by the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce. The Ora.nge Coast Colleg.e If the name Harry Babbitt isn't Cham~r Singers sang nostalgic exactly a household word to the sonszs m memory of Bettv ~b- d 30 t, h ed to be bitt's 11 years as accompanist un er se e prov a . . -loveable legend to the more than with the_mUStc_group. 150 guests who paid $20 a seat to An aide to Congressman Bob see him and his wife Betty receive Badham admitted that the New- the coveted Heart Award. port Beach politician was greeted Costa Mesa Mayor Arlene with blank stares from his young Schafer and Newport Beach staff when, after signing a reso- Mayor pro-tern Evelyn Hart each lution honoiY-i\ the entertainer, presented the Newport Beach (See BABB , Page AZ) INDEX At Your Service A5 Horoecope B2 Erma Bombeck B2 Movies B7-8 Business C6-7 Mutual Funds C6· Cavalcade B2 National News A3 a.a.tfied D4-7 Public Notices 02-3 Cornlea C5 Sports Cl-4 Cromword C5 Stock Markets C7 Death Notices 02 Television B6 Editorial A6 Thee ten B7-8 l:ntenaintnenl B7-8 Weather A2 Goren B2 World Newa A3 SPORTS Red Cbina group in area Sportewrlter John ~vano lntervleW. a Red Chtneae 1ymnaat (wtth a little.help from an interpreter). Pap Cl. I I I •-.... ~-~ Permit denial may leave school vacant Proapecia of the Univenity of The private unlwnity applied for Southern California ever tettlng one and, late laat week, commit· up a .. telllte tmnpua at a vacant alonera denied it. Corona del M ar grade sch ool It ta now unclear whether d i mmed with a recent state USC or the local school district Coastal Commlsaion ruling. intend to appeal the coastal ruling. CommiMioners denied USC 8 Officials from USC have made no permit neede<l for converting ihe secret of the fact t hat they now elementary campus to a graduate are acoutina Oranae Cwn\Y for an school for business adm.lnlltraiion .,lteiate for h&araduate -.iuci.ts. • ~ .I. 1 · . ..was onl)' the ~~f19e! :'\ · hlla. 1 lalf"Utt 'fhould nes Qt ~tbacki for the · · o~lort 101Sie Co ona.;dti M.,- . 1'he f~ap started aft USC. r"etUdents. it ta bad ~1 to, the signed a ~1ve-year lease for the school dislrict which would have school with th~. N~wport..-¥-esa to waste mo e time and money Unified Schoql Distnct, owpers of seeking another tenant for the • the campus t Th f · · ll Res.d · ln Co d 1 M • vao~n ca°'pus. e manc1a y ~ ents rona e ~· J>te$lled di.Sttict dOesn't need that. who claun they were n ever noti- fied of the USC d eal complained On the other hand . the that the satellite ca~pus would di~trict ~ibly could have avoided cause noise and traffic problems t.his mess had it made a genuine and bring an infusiOJl nf students ef f~rt to let the Corona del ~ar into their n e ighborhood during residents know ahead of time evening hours. about the USC lease. They filed a lawsuit which is The district should have been pending in Orange County Supe-aware of the potential problem rior Court. from the experie nces Coastline Finally, USC was informed College had trying to rent schools that it n eeded a coastal permit. for evening classes. Pay off er generous In a surprise move , trustees for the Newport-Mesa Unified School District this week proposed a 9 percent pay hike for teachers next year. The pay increase, to be tied to the cost of living, is exactly what r e presenta t ives from t h e Newport-Mesa Federation of Tea- chers had requested last month in their initial proposal. In the past, district officials and teachers have not been known for settling pay disputes quickly. Contracts for the 1981-82 school year were not reached until Fe - bruary when teachers grudgingly accepted the d istrict's 6 percent pay offer. But with acceptance of the district's offer came endorsement o f a strongly wo rded resolution calling for the district's 850 tea- chers to strike if all negotiations for the 1982-83 school year were not completed 'by September. We would hope that the di- strict's offer of a one-year contract instead of the three-year contract requested by the teachers' union, will not prove to be a stumbling blpck to negotiations. Given the uncertainty of state funding and the economy, one yea/ is about all that reasonabl.Y can be forecast. With the district's generous offer made during these times when many employees in pri- vate industry are facing pay cuts or pay freer.es, we see no reason that a contract settlement should not be reached quickly. MenJorial elf ort muddled It's nearly impossible to de- termine who should b e blamed for the John Wayne m emoria l mess -the Newport Beach City Council, the Newport Harbor Jaycees, the artist or the citizen committee charged with keeping tabs on the art creation. It's likely that all should share equally in the blame. The bron ze bas relie f origi- nally was e nvisioned as a simple tribute to Newport's most famous citizen. It was to cost $17,500. But somewhere along the line the art project doubled in. size and price. Artist Chris Matson m ain- tains that he received permission from the City f'.-ouncil-appoin ted committee to expand the piece. The memorial, now completed ~and sitting in Matson's garage, still has not been fully paid for. The Jaycees, who raised the original figure, do not have the additional m oney a nd have s uggested the city pay off the artwork. The council, meanwhile. has hinted it is unwilling to put up the • money unless the Jaycees agree in writing to pay back the city. And the Jaycees say they don't want to sign a legally- binding contract although they would be willing tb continue rai- sing funds. Finally, to bring a dose of reality to this whole mess, artist Matson says h e is close to bank- ruptcy due to loans he took out to cover the cost of the project. It would seem, in summary , that w hat w e have here is a gross case of lack of communication. The council should have kept a closer eye on this project while the steering committee sho uld have tried telling the council what was going on . The J aycees, to go on , should either have complain ed loudly when the price tag shot up or prepared to pay off the expan- ded project. And the artist should have done some double -checking before expanding his work. The memorial was a good idea. It was a simple idea. It's in- credible it became such a mess. Oplnlons·expressed In the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex-' pressed on lll1s page are those ot the.r authors and artists. Reader comment.i s 1"1v1t- ed Address The Dally P1101. P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Ph~ ·(7141 6•1·4321 L .M. Boyd/ Sen se of humor Which sex lenas to have·the better sense of humor, the m ale or the female ? Studies al Wesley and Smith colleges once wound up with the conclusion: "The tendency of men to l augh at anything labeled 'joke' strongly suggests that their Rense of humor is less well developed and ~lscriminating than that of women:· A r ecent poll among teachers reveals that 38 out of 100 say they'd never go into that line of work. U they had it to do over again. Africans who do not live in the" cities on that continent for some m ys terious reason never gel appendicitis. Question arises as to how old you have to be before you can wear cont.act lenaes. No aie Hmit.. ORANGE COAST llilJPillt evidently. At least 40 babies have been fitted with contacts at the University of California in Berkeley's Infant Vision Clinic. Q. What's Alaska's state motto? A. Has none. It's the only state without one, in fact. Name of the London publishing company that puts out the magaiine cal l ed "The Rac ing Pigeon Pictorial" is the Coo Press. So valuable are vanilla beana that growers mark tbem with pinprick brands, but rustlers steal them In the night nonetheless. U a woman doesn't tnarry unUl she's 30, chances are the man she eventually does marry, if any, will be at le11t 12 yean <'lder than herself. Tl'HNIYI, P. Haley PubHSher . T...._ A. Mlillii•1 Editor BarWa Knlllllcll EdltC!'lal P• Editor '~i'Z£!' Even FBI can lose evidence WASHINGTO N -The glamorous side of the FBI's work has been chroni- cled on television and in the movies. But as any FBI agent could attest , there's a vital part of the G-man·s life that wUl never make it to the screen, mainly because it la b-o-r-i-n-g. That's the seizure and safekeeping of propert)' against the day when it will be lntrodu- ced as evidence in a federal trial. Pro- bably not even Nonnan Lear could make the Top 20 with a show titled, "FBI Property Clerk." 'MUNDANE AS IT IS, the CUl10dy of evidence is a crucial lngredient of any successful pro1eeution. And an internal Justice Department draft report charges that the FBI clerks could be blowing some cases. The nub of the still-secret draft, pre- pared by auditors in the department's management division, is that nobody keeps proper track of property that has been seized for evidence. Titlnp are ao sloppy, t he auditors complained, that evidence could be lost or otherwise dis- appear and no one would know it. In their low-key, bureaucratic jargon, the a udit ors put it t h is way: "The systems used by the FBI for the hand- ling of seized and recovered property are out-of-date and lack the specificity to effectively meet the ri!SJ>Onslbllities and requirements imposed by regulation." The audit.ors noted that "we were told a number of times that 'we (the FBI) have never lost any evidence,'" but ad· G.' -J1-c1-11-1-111_1_1 -.,.,, ded coldly: "In our opinion, the system now ln use would not disclose the loss of evidence if it did occur." The basic problem, the audit.ors con eluded, is that property take n into cus- tody by the G-men is "not effectively superviaed by either agents or Support Service Supervilors." As an example of th.is distaste for im- portant but dull detail, the draft report cited "extensive time lags" between the seizure of property for possible use as evidence and its ultimate recording in FBI logbooks. In the Detroit field office, the investi-1 gators found many items of rersonal property that had been in FB custody for more than eight years without being entered ln the record. Time lags in the Philadelphia and Atlanta regional offices exceeded a year in some cases. "Once personal property ls taken, the FBI becomes responsible for it and ac- counta bility is mand,atory," the draft report points out, and adds: "Delays such as we found (in recording) are unwar- ranted and unjustified." IN ADDmON TO the agents' casual attitude toward seized property -pas. sibly because of it -the subseQuent handling by property clerks ''is neither proper nor adequate," the auditors com- plained. The reason for this, they deci- ded, was inadequate training and a poorly written manual of instructions. The Justice Department investigators found some ridiculous examples of pro- perty that had been retained long alter it was useful -like the mink coat that had been stored in a cardboard box at the Philadelphia FBI office since 1972, even though it was involved in a case that was closed in 1977. Evacuation plans delude the people To the F.dltor: The "crisis relocation" plan on which the federal and state governmenta are working would e vacuate populations from areas experiencing the dire effects of nuclear war. This plan is a hoax, ac- cording to Beverlee A. Myers, California MAILBOX Director of Health Services. It is unfstlr, deluding the people ~nto thinking that there can be an escape. The state Office of Emergency Ser- vices, working with the federal govern- ment, has stated that we would have three to five days advance notice from the Soviet Union. This is utterly falla- cious, for surprise is an effective ele- ment of attack. A miscalculation almost triggered an attack a few months ago. For neither the well calculated firing nor the impulsive release of a bomb would have there been a warning. HOW WOULD an evacuation take place? During peak traffic periods, such as we now experience on popular beach recreation d ays, or at times of special events, such as the Pasadena parade , traffic Is so congee1ed as to be practically immobile. Our highways would be enti- rely inadequate to enable a terrorized population to flee from a threatened area. Where would the evacuees go? With the U.S. and the Soviet arsenals armed with thousands of nuclear warheads an explosive power approaching more than a million Hiroshima bombs could be re- leased. Over thoUAands of square miles the air. wate r and land w ou ld be blanketed with deadly radioactive con- taminants. The earth could become as devoid of life as the moon. Survival? No. The nuclear arms race ls not confined to the U.S. and the Soviets. Great Bri- tain, France, China and probably India have nuclear weapons. Several of the lea stable countriea are lntent on aoqul- ring them. The nuclear arms race la a matter that should be of concern to all of ua. MARY SCX>'IT Support indexing To the Editor: I would ,llke to extend my genuine thanks for your editorial support of my permanent Income tax indexing legisla- tion. The three-year long battle haa en· ded. . We aucceeded ln adtina legislation to ~flt the wage eamert of Callfom1a for two years and now the only ho~ left is for the people to undentand that there will be an indexlna meuu.re on the June balloL It is now up to them. IT IS IMPE RAT IVE tha\ thls Jarvb·tponaored measure rec:eivff an overwhelmln l 1upport vote. The wordlna la identbl to my flnt lndextna bill, ,,. 21e. Al\houah J am unhap~he ln- dex ~. the C..Ufomla Price Index, I feel that ft II nee ry to have lndexing of personal income taxes to al- low the-wage earner to keep pace with inflation. We can work together to see that the CPI flaws are changed by the Federal Bureau of Labor Statistics. It will conti - nue to be the thermometer that does not give the right temperature unt.il the housing costs and other luxury elements are recalculated. I hope you will continue to support all permanent income tax indexing. MARIAN BERGESON Assemblywoman, 74th District Likes the log To the Editor: I wish to congratulate you on the new Pilot TV log whic h you s tarted last week. It is by far the most complete TV guide of all channels and makes it easier for the "addict" to know what is prog- rammed. thereby eliminating going through three or four separate logs. The format is excellent. and 1 hope this will be a permanent addition to your fine newspaper. ROBERT GUGGENHEIM Comparison To the Edit.or: It seems to me the situation in El Salvador is very comparable with that in Poland. U we object to the Soviet Union's support of an unpopular government in Poland, then the U.S. should stay out of supporting the unpopular ~overnment in El Salvador. U we believe it is legitirrlate to support the unpopular government of El Salvador, then it eeems hypocritical to blame the Soviet Union for its role In Poland. BRIAN H. KLEINER Good work To the Editor: The California Coastal Commission should be commended for its decision to delete the eX1ension of University Drive 1rom the Newport Beach Local Coastal Plan. The extension of this road, if built acro11 Upper Newport Bay, would threeten the nesting grounds of the Llght Footed Clapper ilaU, an endangered species of bird native to this area. It la a fact th*t the Rall ii m ptible to extinction; two ~ of Hawailan Rail now no longer eldst. The Global 2000 Report to the Premdent. a U.S. Govwn· ment atudy, predJeta a ~ kJ9 of 6001000 to 2 million s~ of ~t and animal lit. flOm the e.nh by the year 2000, a trlak: pndjcdon bMed an the rate of lOll of ba&tat due to urbanised de- veJopnent. · wmu: MOST ot UUa loll ii OClCWTin& ln tlopa1 arw, we w: thil phenomenon bappen.lna rilbt mn ID Soutbem Call- f omla, w6ere the Capper Raij. Callfw- ni. LeMt Ter1a. and &eldinl'• Savannah SJ*IOW are~ ..... bece\m • Letltfltr""'r....,t«•_.._ ,,.,._.. .. ,..._ .. ··" .. "'--·" .,.._ -.. ,_,,. .....,, .. -_.,. -wtft • """' ~· All ....... lllllM .... <NW .....,._ .,. INMIN .._ _. ._... ~ .. ........... ,..,.. .. , ~ .. , ............. ....,, •Ill lltl "..,..,..,.. 1.ttttn _, • , ........... ~ .. _ ... ~__,fll .. t.,....., ......... --...,.,~ ...... of the 1088 of their living space. Roughly 90 per~ent of the original coastal wet- lands that these birds need for their survival have disappeared under urban development. The pressures of coastal development are just too great for local governments to handle right now. jud- ging !rom recent actions of the Orange C.oUnty Board of Supervisors vis a vis the Bolsa Chica wetlands, and the propensi- ties of the Newport Beach City Council vis a vis the University Drive extension. We need a more responsible, less my- opic, view of the precious little coastal wildille habitat that remains in Southern California. The Coastal Commission, mandated by the Coastal Act of 1976, is now fulfilling that need. I hope they continue their good work. JAN D. VANDERSLOOT MD R em ember inflation? To the Edit.or: It wouldn't hurt if you would remind your readers that scarcely a year ago, everybody was wringing their hands over a high rate of inilat1on. This. we were told, and I believe rightfully so, was our biggest problem. Look at us now. Inflation is down and has been down to a single digit number these past few months. Now everybody wants to increase the money supply. It seems our biggest problem is high inte - rest rates. So, start the money presses and bring back good old inflation! Our President said long ago that licking inflation would not be easy. How quickly people forget! J .W. REID How dare he? To the Editor Once again it becomes "us" va. "them." "Us" being the ones who elect "them" often to our sorrow and detri- ment. I listened to Sen. Williams the other day as he crawled back under hit rock. His statement to the effect that he had not done anything contrary to the stan- dards of the Senate should anger the remaining Sena ton with any integrity. I'm sure it does the electorate who cll09e him to represent them. How dare he try to tar everyone with the same brush? And how dare he blame the FBI for th~ fllC\ that. (to quote from "L9dy ln the Dark") "ln 21 lan,u..ge. he couldn't uy NO"? . MARY JANE WOO rm bec'nNnl to wonct.r If &he ''M Majority" ll (wu ever) really the (a majority. 8. ====r=, .. 1.-:z-.: .. ·-........... ,... ... ....... • l!'J .. ;>/ 1-:- 1 UP 4.28 CLOSING 127.12 • Will listings suit. LOS ANG~ (AP) -Three real estate orga- nizations have won tMir copyright infringement suit against a firm that sold Multiple Listl.ni Service aheeta to the public. Attorney Moses Lasky of San Francisco, repre- senting the plaintiffs, Mid Wednesday that U.S. DI· strict J udge Mariana Pfaelzer returned the dectsion against Supermarket of Homes Inc. in Northrldge, with damages to be decided. The plaintiffs are the California Association of Realtors, the San Fernando Valley Board of Realtors and the National Asaociation of Realtors . Airline m erger due LOS ANGELES (AP) -Texas Air Corp., which won control of Continental Airlines as the Calllornia carrier was poeting a $60 million loss, announced p~ to combine Continental with Texas International Air· lines . . Texas Air, a Howton-baaed holding company which owns TIA and acquired 51 percent of Conti- nental's common stock last year after a fierce legal struggle, said Wednesday it plans to combine the companies. T elephone earn ings up SAN FRANCISOO (AP) -First-quarter earnings for Pacific Telephone were 50 cents a common share, up from 33 cents a share for the same period a year ago, the rompany announced. Net income for the 1982 quarter was $124 million, up $50.8 million from the same period 1981 , which was one of the lowest earnings periods in Pacific Tele- phone history, Boa.rd Chairman Donald E. Guinn said Wednesday. Housing aid proposed WASHINGTON (AP) -Senate Democrats are proposing a multibillion-doUar program aimed at reviving the nation's housing industry from the deep slump brought on by the recession and high mortgage interest rates. The program, announced Wednesday, is designed to stimulate construction of 600,000 new single-family homes and provide 782,000 jobil. It was formulated by a task force under the guidance of Sen. Henry Jackaott of Washington. Seattle la yo ff s seen SEA'ITLE (AP) -Todd Pacific Shipyard offi. cials say they might need 'to lay off several thousand workers in Seattle because the Navy has awarded contracts for three new guided missile frigates to shipyards in Maine and Los Angeles. "It was a mighty blow to us," although there are yet no definite layoff plans. said John T. Gilbride Jr .. Todd vice president and general manager. Regan raps p an els WASHINGTON (AP) -Treasury Secretary Donald Regan has criticized the committees of Con- gress for rejecting President Reagan's caJJ for new budget cuts, and predicted ''even larger deficits" will result. "I've bee~ rather dismayed to' see that many of the committees now have not gone along with those cuts," Regan told the House Budget Committff on Wednesday. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS UPS AND DOWNS HEW 'ICM W'l-TN '-"t lief -.. ..... ,..,_ .... lllCfWltit -----...... ----.. --.. --~,_..._-----.-.. ...... 11 ... -.. -,.._...,. Chell ... .,. I ... tit,..,._ ""-' .. .-....--. ..... -...... _,.._ METALS NEW YORI< (AP) -Spot ponlwrout me- !-' prlcM tod•Y. c...-78-78 -''' a pound, U.8. «*111-netlonL LMll 21-32 centa • pound n..o 37...0 c.ii.. pound. dlllvwed ""'M.1097 Met.i. w.-~lb M:11:1111-76-n own•• • pound, N v ...,_, '* 00 P« 1111111 .....,_ '305.00 lroy or.. N.Y SILVER GOLD QUOTATIONS .. ""'. 11••·• ,,_ Selee1ed WOrid 90ld prlOl9 tod41y: L°""9ft; momtng fllllnQ '321.00, Oft 13. 75. L•~11: •lt•rnoon ll•l"G 1327.76, off *400 ltertel $338.AS. up I0.19. ~rllllllfwtl '3211,M, ott U .07 z.tlllll Late ftlllng 1329.00, °" .. 00 *· .132' 00 -..is. M111t1, a Het111••11 (onl~ dan, quote) 1327.7&. Ofl 14.00. ••-• 1• cW'f QUOtel m11s.. °" *4o0 ......... (CMlly dl#y qwl9) labnGlllecl ~. 14, Ofl M.20 SYMBOLS